Hare Krishna! Why Is the Bhagavad-gita So Pessimistic? Here’s my…
→ Dandavats.com



Hare Krishna! Why Is the Bhagavad-gita So Pessimistic?
Here’s my short four-point answer: • The Bhagavad-gita is not pessimistic, but realistic; the reality is that the pleasure-pain balance of the world is tilted heavily toward the pain side. • Even if we still consider the Gita philosophy pessimistic, that pessimism is only initial, not final. In its conclusion, the Gita offers a supremely optimistic message. • Even the best worldly optimism pales and fails in front of the longing of our heart, a longing fulfilled only by the vision of reality offered by the Gita. • The Gita doesn’t teach us to reject this world for the spiritual world, but to harmonize this world with the spiritual world. Let’s look at these points systematically.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18574

The Day Punk Rock Learned the Dark Side of Hare Krishna
→ The Enquirer

Ray Cappo was on the east coast getting Shelter ready for the hordes of Youth of Today fans. I was on the west coast doing Inside Out and Enquirer zine. Between the two of us, and a few others like Kalki of Razor’s Edge, Krishna was pushing into the hardcore scene in a huge way. But in December of ’89 the scene pushed back for the first time. Maximum Rocknroll, the biggest zine in hardcore punk, delivered an issue called “Inside Ray Cappo and the Krishnas” with a creepy infinity-mirror photo of Ray on the cover and 15 no-line-spacing-tiny-font packed pages tearing Hare Krishna to shreds and then shredding those shreds.

I bought a copy while at a show at the Gilman Street Project in Berkley. There was a five page interview with Ray called, “Ray of Yesterday Meets Ray of Tomorrow: It’s Enough to Make me Start Drinking!!!!!” followed by a ten page article called, “The Truth, The Whole Truth, And Nothing But The Truth, So Help Me Krishna?”

The more I read, the more I wanted to fall into a crack into the earth.

Compared to the “Whole Truth…” article, Ray’s interview wasn’t too bad. It was basically just an argument between him and Tim Yo. Usually Tim sounded a lot smarter than Ray, but Ray had his moments too – especially considering that his expertise in Krishna consciousness was the result of hardly a year of familiarity with it. The worst part was where Tim embarrassed Ray for thinking that his body was completely different from the body he had been in as a child.

The “Whole Truth…” article was more like several articles and interviews stitched together in a rambling frankenstein of nausea. It started off with a woman’s story of intrigue about how her husband Ed had become brainwashed by the Krishna cult and how she turned to ex-Hare Krishna’s to successfully get him out. Then MRR interviewed Ed and the ex-Hare Krishna’s who had helped him “exit” ISKCON. These guys convincingly depicted ISKCON as a deviant and dangerous branch of an otherwise admirable religious and philosophical movement.

Then we heard about the deceitful fund-raising practices pervasive in ISKCON, called saṁkīrtan (making it a deception not only of the public, but of ISKCON members as well – since actual saṁkīrtan was nothing of the sort). This was followed by a long list of serious crimes the Krishna’s and their leaders had been convicted for: huge drug rings, illegal possession of firearms, murder, and child molestation, to name a few.

Next the ex-Krishnas talked about the sexism rampant in ISKCON, saying there was a hierarchy considering cows more important than women: “Man-Cow-Woman-Dog.” They explained that ISKCON leaders encouraged physical “discipline” of women, quoting the former ISKCON guru Bhaktipāda who said, “There are three things that get better when you beat them — your dog, your wife, and your drum.”

Finally – there was a section on how mind-control and brainwashing work, and how deprogramming worked.

I felt like I was in the vortex of a black hole as I stood on the sidewalk outside Gilman, flipping from one emotion to the next with exhausting speed. One moment I was fucking furious at MRR for giving such a “one-sided story.” The next moment I was pitifully embarrassed to be a a spokesman for such a freak-show circus of lunatics. How the fuck would I manage to explain all this shit to all these kids who were getting interested in Hare Krishna because of me? Then I felt like vomiting or crying because I didn’t even know how much of what I read was true, or to what extent – maybe it was bad enough that I myself would have to get the fuck out? By the time we were heading for the car to go home, I had wound up feeling less like a human being and more like a growling wolf backed into a corner, bearing his fangs and posed for a battle to the death.

Over the next few weeks, though, I realized that nobody in the straightedge crowd seemed to really cared much about what Maximum Rocknroll had printed. I think MRR was just too fucking hard to read – disorganized, rambling, and way too unpackaged – the underbelly side effect of crust-punk ideals of anarchy and anti-capitalism. And straightedge kids didn’t really seem to care much what the crusty Berkley punks had to say, anyway. After all, they were just crust-punks with their constant bitching and moaning. Yeah, the issue phased people – but not half as much as it phased me. The thing that disturbed them the most, I noticed, was the sexism. More than the drug-running, abject exploitation and mind-tyranny, straightedge kids were disgusted by the sexism MRR depicted in Hare Krishna.

As for me, the whole thing set me off balance. Devotees assured me the people behind MRR were “envious demons,” and the ex-Krishnas interviewed were just “too weak to make it at devotees” and came up with all these things as excuses to justify their weakness.

I wasn’t dumb enough to believe any of that crap.

Instead I just steeled myself to the ugly reality that a good percentage of ISKCON was really fucked up in a big way. But even if a diamond is covered in shit, I reasoned… just wash off the shit and take the diamond. Devotees assured me that the vast majority of all the insanity MRR revealed was a thing of the past, and ISKCON was now making strides forward to reform themselves and represent Krishna and Prabhupāda more purely.

I could buy that, it seemed true.

I decided I would be one of the guys helping the reforms.

– Excerpt from an early draft of
Train Wrecks and Transcendence:
A Collision of Hardcore and Hare Krishna

by Vraja Kishor

VrajaKishor.com

Screen Shot 2015-07-22 at 19.08.09


Tagged: cult, Krishna, maximum rocknroll, Punk

Hare Krishna! My Experiences And Associations With Srila…
→ Dandavats.com



Hare Krishna! My Experiences And Associations With Srila Prabhupada
Bhakti Caru Swami: They asked Srila Prabhupada, ‘Why are you converting the Christians into Hindus?’ Prabhupada’s response was, ‘No, I am not converting Christians into Hindus or Muslims into Jews. I am simply making better Christians out of Christians, better Jews out of Jews and better Muslims out of Muslims, better Hindus out of Hindus. Prabhupada is situating them in their perfect identity. Jesus came and spoke. Who is a Christian? A true follower of Jesus Christ is a Christian. And what did Jesus preach? Jesus simply spoke about God, the Father. Who is God the Father? Are there many Fathers? Are there many God, the Fathers? There is only one God, the Father. So that God, the Father is Krsna. Who is Allah? Is there any difference between God, Allah, Krishna, Jehovah? So we have to understand that essential truth. If that essential truth is properly understood, then there cannot be any conflict between different religions.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18571

Hare Krishna! Celebration of Lord Jagannatha Rathayatra Festival…
→ Dandavats.com



Hare Krishna! Celebration of Lord Jagannatha Rathayatra Festival in Canberra, Australia
By the mercy of Their Lordships Sri Sri Jagannatha, Baladeva and Subhadra and His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada we had wonderful Lord Jagannatha Rathayatra in Canberra, Australia on 18 July 2015. The Hare Krishna (ISKCON) Canberra devotees along with local community members celebrated Rathayatra Festival seeking the blessings of Their Lordships. Fortunately 18 July 2015 coincided with this year’s actual date of Lord Jagannatha Rathayatra at Sri Ksetra Jagannatha Puri Dhama; especially this year marking the first Rath Yatra with Nabakalebara Deities at Jagannatha Puri. Please find below Rathayatra photos and videos.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18563

Issue Two of Enquirer (Fall 1989) Summary and Photos
→ The Enquirer

I set out to do a second issue of Enquirer – this time without all the dot-matrix stuff that was all over the first issue. My dad now had an actual laser printer for the text, and I used a photocopier more than a prehistoric photo-editor to make the graphics. Using a typewriter I wrote “enquirer” in lower case – enlarged it a zillion times on a xerox machine, and then shrunk it down to the size I needed. It made a really cool, grainy, rough-edged effect, so I did the same thing with “inside out” and it stuck as our logo.

Next to the sideways logo on the cover, which was an orange, thicker stock paper, I border-taped a flash-obscured photo of me moshing with a guitar at Che Cafe, below a drawing of Krishna holding a lotus flower while moshing on the hoods of a many-headed dragon. I was never shy to put my pictures and my bands in my zines.

Violence on the Dance Floor was a couchy explanation of how ego is the ultimate root of violence. Equality was a three page article explaining how spirituality generates equality amidst diversity. This one had an inset about Black Power / White Power which always wanted to transform into the lyrics of a song but never quite made it past a demo years later.

Black power / white power
What power is in your black/white skin?
The skin that yellows in the grave.

This was followed by Mantra Six of Īśopaniṣad (with Sanskrit lettering I hand-moused pixel by pixel, dot-matrix style): “He who sees everything in relation to the Supreme Lord, who sees all entities as His parts and parcels, and who sees the Supreme Lord within everything, never hates anything nor any being.”

Towards the end of the zine I also printed this lyrical rap on the subject of equality:

Equality,
is a reality.

Look within yourself to find the unity you seek.

Not along the edges.
Not in the skin.
It’s at the core of your existence, untouched within.

Find it.
Know it.
And share it with the world, ‘cause man we gonna grow in it.

*Truth*

Joe Hardcore: Open Minded Liberal or Biased Rascal Sap? was a half-page rant about how un-punk it was to censor punk, even when the censored subject was traditionally un-punk, like religion. I followed this up with a full-page rant about how straightedge itself was nothing short of a secular religion. On the next page I debated the modern mechanistic theory that consciousness is a property of matter, and printed a conversation between David Shapiro and Śrīla Ācāryadeva on true strength. A Fad? was a two page article saying that, regardless of whether or not Krishna was becoming a hardcore fad, the fact remained that it was an ancient Vedic philosophy deserving serious attention.

In the centerfold was the ISKCON painting of Krishna showing Arjuna his infinite-headed “Universal Form,” with an explanation of Krishna’s statement, “Time I am.” This shared the page with a short sermon entitled Death – which made much of the point that even Atheists have to succumb to a higher power: death.

Stambha dāsa (a favorite of Ray and I) got two full pages devoted to edited transcriptions of his hip and intelligent lectures. Then, I gave three pages to my friends in bands answering the question, “What is the need for a spiritual dimension in life?” Sergio (the bassist of Amenity) said that people should get down the the essential truths common to all religions and use that as a way to change themselves, because all social change begins within. Mike Madrid (the singer of Against the Wall) answered that spirituality is much bigger than hardcore, but most of the best hardcore bands are spiritually motivated. Mike D (the singer from Amenity) answered that there is obviously truth beyond human conception, and human beings ruin themselves when their lives are completely out of touch with that.

The zine closed with a two page article called Spiritual Life: A Cop Out? explaining that religion may or may not always be a cop out, but this doesn’t change the fact that the essential topics of religion are crucial to examine in life.  The big inset quote in the article read, “Just because 99% of so-called religion is completely bogus, that doesn’t affect the fact that we have to find out who we are, Why am I here?”

I gave two pages to explaining the lyrics of No Spiritual Surrender and a new Inside Out song called Land of the Lost.

On the last, orange page, was an article entitled The Truth.

“There is no Absolute Truth.”

A breeze barely strong enough to scatter her hair moves the leaves; on the tree as well as the ground. The sunlight quickly makes its way to her face and is again cut off behind racing clouds. She’d heard this countless times before. “There is no Absolute Truth,” the other half of the conversation would tell her; always with that peculiar righteous air, as if, “you poor fool, you’ve been so mislead. The Truth is that there is no Truth.”

– Excerpt of an early draft of
Train-Wrecks and Transcendance:
The Collision of Hardcore and Hare Krishna

by Vraja Kishor dās
vrajakishor.com

IMG_1056 IMG_1057 IMG_1058 IMG_1059 IMG_1060 IMG_1061 IMG_1062 IMG_1063 IMG_1064 IMG_1065 IMG_1066 IMG_1067 IMG_1068 IMG_1069
Tagged: enquirer, hardcore, straightedge

Fatalism or pragmatism? (Ramayana reflections 3)
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Indian thought is sometimes deemed fatalistic, as holding that everything is destined by past karma, thereby leaving little room for human initiative. While Indian literature is filled with diverse thoughts – some of which may be fatalistic – the bhakti literature, which is among the most influential Indian literature, offers a far more nuanced and empowering outlook to life.

Ancient echoes of modern concerns

The Ramayana features an emotionally and intellectually riveting conversation about the interplay of destiny and human initiative. This conversation occurred at one of the epic’s defining moments: the moment when Rama, who was about to be crowned as prince regent, was instead sentenced to forest exile for fourteen years.

While Rama gracefully accepted the exile as the will of destiny, his faithful younger brother Lakshmana was outraged by the injustice and called for rebellion. Rama calmly responded that he considered his exile the will of destiny and so intended to accept it. He said that nothing else could explain how his stepmother Kaikeyi who had loved him like her own son and whom he had served like his own mother had suddenly become so malevolent towards him. Rama hadn’t done anything to offend Kaikeyi and certainly didn’t deserve to be exiled. Yet his exile was the boon that Kaikeyi had extorted from her husband, the monarch Dasharatha. Rama deemed obedience to his father his duty – a duty that he intended to follow unflinchingly.

If some of us find Rama’s deference to destiny too docile, we may be intrigued to know that so did Lakshmana. Rather than ascribe Rama’s exile to destiny, he sought to lay the blame on the human actors involved: Kaikeyi’s scheming and, more importantly, the king’s complicity. He alleged that the king had become infatuated with his beautiful wife and so had abandoned his duty to protect his own son. To Rama’s deference to destiny, the incensed Lakshmana countered that only the impotent accepted injustice passively as the will of destiny; the strong fought injustice to protect their rights – and the kingdom was Rama’s right. Lakshmana’s arguments may make us feel that his is an intriguingly modern voice railing against the fatalism prevailing in those times.

Seeing through the stereotype of fatalism

Significantly, Rama was not fatalistic, as was evident from his dynamic response to other adversities such as the abduction of his wife Sita. He didn’t passively accept her abduction as an act of destiny. When she was abducted, he had no guards, servants or royal resources for finding her. He could well have seen his destitute condition as the arrangement of destiny and passively accepted Sita’s abduction. But the thought of such passivity didn’t even cross his mind.

To the contrary, he always discharged his duty of protecting her actively, even proactively. Throughout their stay in the forest, he always ensured that either he or his brother were at hand to protect Sita. And the moment he discovered that she was missing and found signs of a scuffle that pointed to her abduction, he immediately started searching for her. To rescue her, he formed an unlikely alliance with monkey forces, marched hundreds of miles through difficult terrain and fought against a formidable foe who had bested even the gods.

If Rama responded to Sita’s abdication so resourcefully, even forcefully, then why did he accept his own exile so passively? If he didn’t ascribe Sita’s abduction to destiny, why did he ascribe his own banishment to destiny? Because the defining decider of his responses was the consideration of not destiny, but duty. For Rama as a husband, the protection of his wife was his prime duty and he didn’t even consider abandoning that duty in the name of destiny, no matter how difficult that duty was. For Rama as a son, obedience to his father was his prime duty – a duty he did even if it required renouncing his right to the kingdom.

So the Ramayana’s message is not that we passively give in to destiny, but that we gallantly stick to duty. And if in the course of duty, some inconceivable calamity strikes, we can attribute it to destiny – and continue to do one’s duty.

Throughout the bhakti literature, this subtle relationship between right, duty and destiny plays out fascinatingly. Let’s analyze events from two other jewels in the bhakti library: the Mahabharata and the Srimad Bhagavatam. 

Destiny doesn’t rationalize passivity

The Mahabharata depicts and decries an attempt to abuse the concept of destiny for rationalizing one’s own passivity. Before the fratricidal Kurukshetra war, Vidura urges his brother, the blind Dhritarashtra, to correct his son, the evil Duryodhana. The stubborn prince refused to grant his cousins, the Pandavas, their due half of the kingdom. Vidura warned that Duryodhana’s obstinacy would cause the extermination of the entire Kuru dynasty.

In response, Dhritarashtra invoked destiny to justify his passivity. He argued that if destiny willed that their dynasty be destroyed, who was he, a tiny mortal, to stop the workings of almighty destiny?

Vidura responded by reminding the king that destiny determined the results of our actions, not our actions themselves. We all need to do our duty – that will bring auspiciousness in our life in all circumstances. If our destiny is favorable, then the auspiciousness will manifest immediately. If our destiny is unfavorable, then we will have to undergo some unavoidable reversals, but our dutifulness will create positive karmic credits that will shape a brighter future for us.

An agrarian analogy can illumine this point. For farmers, plowing the field is the duty, whereas the occurrence of timely rains is destiny. Both are needed for a good harvest. Destiny determines whether the plowing will yield harvest, but it doesn’t determine whether the farmers plow or not. If they don’t plow, then even if the destiny is favorable, rains will cause the growth of weeds, no crops. Significantly, this understanding of the dynamics of duty and destiny is empowering: It offers impetus to do duty even when destiny is unfavorable. Though the farmers’ may get no harvest when destiny is unfavorable, still their diligent performance of duty will create positive karmic credits that will contribute to their positive future destiny. Thus, the execution of duty doesn’t go in vain, even when it doesn’t produce any result.

So, the question Dhritarashtra should have asked was not whether the war was destined or not but whether he was doing his duty or not. As the king, it was his duty to ensure that justice was done for all his citizens, what to speak of his own nephews, what then to speak of nephews who were fatherless and for whom he was expected to act like a surrogate father. To let his son continue the atrocious exploitation of his nephews was a grievous dereliction of duty on Dhritarshtra’s part. Vidura rightly reproached his brother for not only abandoning his duty but also for falsely invoking destiny to whitewash such abandonment.

Destiny as a check against unrighteousness

A pastime from the devotional classic, Srimad Bhagavatam, depicts the right use of destiny in an argument. When Vasudeva and Devaki, who later became Krishna’s parents, got married, their wedding procession threatened to become a funeral procession. Devaki’s cousin brother Kamsa had been driving the chariot of the newly-weds. On hearing a celestial prophecy that Devaki’s eighth son will kill him, the benevolent-seeming Kamsa turned violent – he grabbed his sister by her hair and raised his sword to decapitate her.

Vasudeva tried to check the vicious Kamsa by reasoning with him. One of the arguments he used centered on destiny: If destiny had decreed Kamsa’s death, then nothing, not even killing Devaki, would stop destiny from taking its course. Why then should Kamsa accrue bad karma by committing a triple sin: killing a woman, killing on a sacred occasion of marriage and killing his own sister?

Vasudeva could well have turned the same argument of the inescapability of destined death to Devaki. He could have asked himself: If she was destined to die, why should I strive to prevent it?

Why didn’t Vasudeva argue thus? Because his focus was not on destiny but on duty. It was his duty to protect his wife and he was going to do his best to protect her, while knowing that destiny would determine whether his effort would be successful or not. But destiny didn’t decide whether he would do his duty or not – that was in his hands and he did it resourcefully and fearlessly.

Kamsa, on the other hand, was giving up his duty by attempting to assassinate his sister. So Vasudeva reminded him about destiny to get him back on the path of duty or to at least stop him from doing the very opposite of his duty – killing the very sister he was dutybound to protect.

Duty comprises the best response to destiny

While the relationship between free will and destiny is complex, it can be summed in the broad principle: what happens to us is destiny, how we respond to it is our free will. And we can choose the best response by sticking to our duty, as given in scripture and guided by the bhakti tradition. Here it’s important to note a significant difference in different connotations of the word ‘duty.’ Nowadays, the word is often used in the sense of a burden, something that one is expected to do or something that has to be done. So if someone exhibits stellar qualities and does something extraordinarily positive, we laud it as “going beyond the call of duty.” In the bhakti tradition, ‘duty’ refers to the Sanskrit concept of dharma, which in turn conveys activities that bring out our best and enable us to fulfill our potential and harmonize with our innate spiritual nature. Doing one’s duty, in this sense, is not about stoically carrying a burden allotted by others, but about resourcefully unleashing one’s potential by making scripturally-guided choices and in the process manifesting laudable qualities.

Consider, as an analogy, a card game: Destiny decides the hand we get, while a sense of dutifulness guides us to the best use of that hand. Claiming that there’s no such thing as destiny is like claiming that we have full control over the hand we get – patently untrue. In the game of life, we all get different hands; we are all born with different sets of talents and resources and throughout our life we face different challenges based on our individual situations.

For Rama as an obedient son, his duty was to serve his father. He would normally have done so by accepting the post of prince regent and eventually of the king. But when extraordinary circumstances conspired to have him banished, he stuck to his duty, albeit in a drastically different form – not as a prince, but as an ascetic. And he attributed those extraordinary circumstances to destiny; inconceivable, inexorable destiny had moved his stepmother to express such uncharacteristic greed for power.

Rama rejected Lakshmana’s call for rebellion not because he was fatalistic and feeble, but because he was resourceful and courageous enough to do his duty even when it was exceptionally difficult. To Lakshmana’s charge about the king’s motivation, Rama pointed out that their father had acted not because of infatuation but because of obligation: he had long ago promised Kaikeyi two boons and was honor-bound to grant them, even when doing so caused him heartbreaking agony. Rama stressed that the king’s readiness to do so demonstrated not his weakness but his truthfulness.

Rights don’t trump responsibilities

Rama’s refusal to seize his right to the kingdom by sacrificing his responsibility as a son is instructive. Though something may be our right, it may not always be right for us to claim it. Considerations of our rights need to be balanced with deliberations on our responsibilities. We live in a culture that frequently champions rights and downplays responsibilities. Parents often find it extremely difficult to raise children who feel that they are entitled to lots of things without feeling that they need to do anything to get them.

John F Kennedy’s exhortation, “Ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country,” was a call to shift the focus from rights to responsibilities. Such a shift comes much easier when we have a spiritual conception of life, when we understand ourselves to be souls and see life from a multi-life perspective wherein results for dutifulness are guaranteed, but not always in this life.

When we are faced with problems, we can deal with them better if we approach them with a positive attitude, focusing, for example, on how the glass is half-full, not half-empty. Illustrating how spiritual wisdom engenders positive outlook, Rama responded to his banishment by stating that he didn’t see any cause for distress: He had the satisfaction of ensuring that his father’s word is honored; he had the joy of facilitating the enthronement of his younger brother, who was like a son to him; and he had the opportunity for spiritual growth by the association of sages in the forest, an opportunity that he would otherwise have got only towards the end of his life when he retired to the forest. Thus, Rama’s spiritual vision grants him extraordinary positivity. He accepts the adversity of banishment not with hand-wringing and teeth-grinding, but with dignity and determination, looking to make the best of the situation.

That Rama ascribed the adversity that befell him to destiny is significant because he is God himself – he is the Lord of destiny. He had descended as an avatar not so much to demonstrate his supremacy as to demonstrate the life of an ideal human being. And he did so by exemplifying how to respond to adversity with maturity. If we focus too much on our rights, we may end up beating our head against a wall, trying in vain to get things which we think are our right but which have been taken away by unchangeable circumstances – by the will of destiny. On the other hand, if we focus too much on destiny, we may end up doing nothing at all, thereby depriving ourselves of our authentic rights and letting the world walk all over us. Acceptance of destiny is not a recipe for sentencing oneself to weakness and helplessness; it is the pathway for the most constructive channeling of our energies.

The sense of dutifulness can help us in our spiritual life too. In our devotional practices, if we focus too much on our rights – especially if we imagine and expect that higher spiritual happiness is our right because we are practicing bhakti-yoga – then, during the dry phases of our spiritual life, we will sentence ourselves to dissatisfaction and doubt, worrying unnecessarily whether bhakti works or not. By cultivating dutifulness, we can practice bhakti steadily till we eventually relish the higher happiness that comes from purification and the mercy of the Lord, who is pleased by our selflessness.

To conclude, the bhakti literatures teach not fatalism but pragmatism: the sound practical intelligence that refuses to buy the lie that everything is in our control. By remembering that there is much we cannot control, pragmatism urges us to focus our energy on those things that we can control.

Nowadays many people suffer from depression, inferiority complex and suicidal urges. A major reason for such psychological problems is an underlying misconceptions about controllership: they are led to believe that they can control everything and when they can’t control things, they think that something is intrinsically wrong with them and sink into self-flagellating thought patterns. That’s why a proper understanding of destiny can be salutary; it can prevent dissipation of our energy in fruitless fantasies or lamentations, and can channelize it towards growth-inducing choices.

 

The post Fatalism or pragmatism? (Ramayana reflections 3) appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Bhagavatam-daily 275 – 11.13.8 – Illusion makes us to stick to the source of suffering
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Bhagavatam-daily Podcast:
Download by “right-click and save content”

The post Bhagavatam-daily 275 – 11.13.8 – Illusion makes us to stick to the source of suffering appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Is Illusion the Essence of Reality?
→ The Enquirer

The monistic Theory of Division states:

“Brahman is like the sky. Parts of the sky can be divided by being contained within pots. When the pot is made of ignorance, the Brahman within is an individual (jīva). When the pot is made of knowledge, the Brahman within is the master of illusion (Īśvara), God.”

This theory is illogical and based on over-extended metaphor. Since Brahman is supposed to be indivisible, it is an over-extension of metaphor to compare it with the divisibility of the sky. Brahman’s indivisibility renders the theory illogical, for how can a pot divide an indivisible thing?

Some monists reply that the division is just an illusion. This remains illogical because Brahman is the essence of reality itself. How can reality itself be subjugated by illusion?

The monistic answer to this question is that reality itself is essentially an illusion (māyā). Proponents of this answer are described as members of the School of Illusion (māyā-vāda). Although this school picks and choses a handful of Vedic statements to support their claims, it cannot be considered a truly Vedic school because it contradicts the fundamental Vedic principle that consciousness (brahman) is the essence of reality, not illusion (māyā). It is also an illogical school because illusion cannot exist without consciousness – it is a particular condition of consciousness – so illusion cannot logically be more primordial than consciousness. However, members of the school rarely mind being called illogical, since they are, after all, in the School of something fundamentally illogical: illusion.

– Excerpt from
This is Gauḍīya Philosophy:
Part 1 – Fundamental Realities

A rendering of Śrī Tattva-sandarbha
of Śrī Jīva Goswami

by Vraja Kishor dās
vrajakishor.com


Tagged: Advaita, Impersonalism, Mayavada, Monism, nondual

How Potent Is The Holy Name?
→ Japa Group

So the Lord has further glorified the Holy Name namnam akari bahudha nija sarva-saktis.
How potent is the Holy Name. How potent is the Holy Name? The Lord has invested "all" His energies - nija! Take note of these two little words but important ones. He has invested energies - whose energies has he invested? Nija - His own energy.
And how much energy has he invested - nija "sarva" saktis. All His energy He has invested in the Holy Name of the Lord.

Lokanatha Swami
Japa Seminar Part 1

Brindaban’s Bliss (Govinda-līlāmṛta 1.1)
→ The Enquirer

Ever since I heard a recording of someone singing it at Rādhā-Ramaṇa mandīr in Vṛndāvan, I’ve been charmed by the opening verse of Krishnadās Kavirāja’s Govinda-līlāmṛta.

श्री गोविन्दं व्रजानन्दं सन्दोहानन्दमन्दिरम् ।
वन्दे वृन्दावनानन्दं श्री राधासऩ्गनन्दितम् ।।

śrī go vin daṁ vra nan daṁ | san do nan da man di ram
van de vṛn va nan daṁ | śrī dhā saṅ ga nan di tam

The bold syllables are held twice as long as the few that are not in boldface. The meter is nice because it is so languid, slow, relaxed – so many long syllables. The pattern is also quite unusual, 17 syllables per line. 17 is prime and doesn’t divide evenly, so the second half of each line has one more syllable than the first – each line is 8 syllables in the first half and 9 in the second. This gives it a sort of “tilt” on its symmetry which is beautifully balanced in a curvy way – a lot like Krishna’s own tri-bhanga way of standing.

The word ānanda / nanda appears so much, and the sound of “n” joining “d” is so pervasive through the entire thing – it really is a beautiful sound and a real joy to recite – even from a purely sonic and linguistic point of view.

The meaning is exquisite, though its impossible to convey the beauty of it in English.

Śrī Govinda is Braja’s bliss;

the home of concentrated bliss.

Praise to Brindabana’s bliss;

Who finds bliss in Śrī Rādhā’s company.

The name Govinda itself indicates bliss – “the one who supplies and nurtures bliss.” This being, Govinda, is the “home” of concentrated bliss. It is special bliss, concentrated. The spiritual bliss of Brahmānanda is the same in substance but is diluted and latent. In Govinda this brahmānanda becomes concentrated, activated, exalted, excited beyond limits.

The use of the word “home” is interesting too. The word is mandir, which is also used for temple. Govinda is the temple of concentrated bliss.

Kavirāja addresses Govinda first as Vraja-ānanda, then as Vṛndāvana-ānanda. What is the difference? Vraja is the entire 12 forests of Goloka, but Vṛndāvana is one of those forests, where rāsa-līlā happens on the bank of Yamuna, especially in autumn. So, the conentration of Govinda’s bliss becomes thickest and most intense there, in Vṛndāvana.

Yet, the final line is really profound and expresses the mystery of bhakti. Govinda is the source of bliss, but what good is it to be only the source of bliss? One also wants to taste bliss! So Govinda’s bliss exists as a distinct entity – his śakti, Śrī Rādhā, who allows Govinda not only to be the source of all bliss, but also the enjoyer of all bliss.

Govinda gives bliss to everyone – but he finds bliss in Śrī Rādhā.

Vraja Kishor dās

VrajaKishor.com

Radha_Krishna_R pbaaab054_krishna_and_radha radha_krishna_on_the_banks_of_yamuna_bj54 radha_krishna_on_the_banks_of_the_yamuna_bj96 radhakrsnapeacocks
Tagged: govinda-lilamrta, krishna lila, krishnadas kaviraja, Radha Krishna

Hare Krishna! The Krishna-Approaching Body Ravindra Svarupa…
→ Dandavats.com



Hare Krishna! The Krishna-Approaching Body
Ravindra Svarupa dasa: As soon as I am desiring something, immediately my body is formed. Immediately a particular type of body begins to form, and as soon as I am mature to change, my next body I get according to my desire. Therefore we should always desire Krsna. Then from this life, the Krsna-approaching body or the spiritual body will be formed. The more you become sincere servant of Krsna, the more your body becomes Krsnaized, electrified. Therefore advanced Krsna conscious person is considered to have a spiritual body. The same example, as I have given several times: just like iron rod. You put into the fire, it becomes warmer, warmer. The more it is connected with fire, it becomes warm, warm, warm. And at last it becomes red hot, so that at that time, if that iron is touched to any other thing, it burns. It does not act as iron; it acts as fire. Similarly, by this Krsna consciousness, continuous chanting, you will make your body spiritualized.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18560

Wednesday, July 8th, 2015
→ The Walking Monk



Wednesday, July 8th, 2015
Toronto, Ontario

Where is Raganuga?

A group of doctors from Iran came to see me today.  No, I'm not sick.  The group leader happens to be a personal friend and he introduced his friends to the temple food, and me.  Dr.Shahi and I have known each other for years.  His medical profession has brought him to various parts of Canada.  During my cross-country walks I would bump into him at places like Fort Frances and New Glasgow.  During a walk, I would be in a quiet residential area, cross the street and suddenly come face to face with him as he just came out from around the corner.

Tonight he brought his friends over.  They enjoyed a feast, but he fasted in order to honor Ramadan.  He told me of his early days when in Iran a Krishna devotee by the name of Raganuga would work in the kitchen together with him. 

"I'm indebted for his teachings and association.  I've lost track of him.  Can you find him for me?" asked Shahi.

One of his doctor visitors was questioning whether God is being or an entity.  He was more inclined to believing in God as a force.  I gave the example of the sun which is obviously an entity radiating so much light and heat energy.  We know this to be the sunshine.  We can appreciate that this force, the sunshine, has a source.

Our discussion went on and we eventually finished with kirtan,which always opens up the chakra of understanding.

May the Source be with you!

5 km

Gita 06.26 – Overcome discouragement with the inner light and the inner map
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Lecture Podcast:
Download by “right-click and save content”

The post Gita 06.26 – Overcome discouragement with the inner light and the inner map appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Latest album of beautiful photos from the Hare Krishna Festival…
→ Dandavats.com



Latest album of beautiful photos from the Hare Krishna Festival Tour in Poland
Indradyumna Swami: If public opinion were to gage the popularity of our festivals I’d like to think we’d get, “ten out ten.” Both on the streets when we do harinama and at the festivals, people show their appreciation with great enthusiasm. What more could a devotee ask for?
“Incessantly they discuss the narrations of Sri Krsna ’s pastimes which bestow pure devotion. Overwhelmed with ecstasy they preach the Maha-mantra throughout the earth when Gaura descends to destroy the sins of the age of Kali.” [ Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya, Susloka Sarakam, verse 77 ]
See them here: https://goo.gl/SsDYTy

Sravanam Kirtanam Festival in Italy, 2015
→ KKSBlog


Written by Bhakta Matthew

From the very start, Villa Vrindavan, in the region of Tuscany, on the outskirts of Florence was a wonderful backdrop for a weekend of glorifying the Lord through the chanting of His holy names (11-12 July). With peacocks roaming the grounds and not a cloud in the sky, we eagerly awaited the start of the festival.

Devotees young and old, gathered in the blazing Italian sunshine at the Machiavellian castle to sing and dance and to partake of the sweet nectar of Lord Caitanya’s Sankirtan movement. The beautiful spacious temple room rocked and swayed through kirtan after kirtan performed by some of the greatest kirtaniyas in the world. Included in this eclectic mix of musicians were Madhava, Ojasvi, Manu, Cintamani, Radha London Isvara and of course HH Kadamba Kanana Swami, who sung his heart out and had most of the temple room on its feet dancing in complete ecstasy.

The kirtans continued on well into the wee hours of the morning, and so, as the night shift crew were on their way to bed, the devotees started to assemble for mangala arati, so in this way there was an almost continual presence for their Lordships Radha Vraja Sundara, Gaura Nitai and Jagganath, Baladev, Subhadara. Then, after guru puja, the devotees were able to taste more sweetness as HH Kadamba Kanana Swami gave  two very nice Srimad Bhagavatam classes. There was also a seminar on vaisnava songs given by HH Gaura Vani Swami which was very well received by the devotees.

The stunning gardens and views from the villa made it a nice spot for devotees to relax, make new friends and to honour the exquisitely prepared prasadam, and yes, there was even pizza and pasta on offer. So the weekend passed blissfully into Monday and as the majority of the devotees departed for home, serenaded by ecstatic kirtans from local temple devotees, those that remained were treated to a very informal and intimate kirtan session with Maharaj on the grass in the sunshine.

There was also an initiation ceremony for our newest godsister, Chandra Koti Devi Dasi. She was formerly called Claudia, and is an expert cook. Devotees were also thrilled to be able to take darshan of the new baby calf in the Goshala. All in all, it was a fantastic weekend, filled with Vaikuntha vibrations at the amazing Villa Vrindavan in Italy, which I heard described on more than one occasion as being like a Heavenly Planet.


The recordings and photos are courtesy of Bhakta Matthew and Bhaktin April who are from Karuna Bhavan in Scotland.

Audio

KKS_ITA_Villa_Vrindavan_11 July 2015_SB 2.1.11

KKS_ITA_Villa_Vrindavan_11 July 2015_Kirtan

 

Photos

Visit flickr to see the full slide-show.

villa_vrindavan_2015 (18) villa_vrindavan_2015 (4) villa_vrindavan_2015 (10) VV-2015 (17) VV-2015 (10) VV-2015 (16) VV-2015 (30)

 

Sri Ksetra Puri Parikrama 2015
→ Mayapur.com

Sriksetra Parikrama Team invites devotees from around the world to perform the most auspicious Sri Ksetra Parikrama 2105. This year the parikrama day falls on 30th November. On this day, devotees will circumambulate the entire Sri Ksetra dhama, a distance of around 21 Km. This parikrama has been performed since the time Vidyapati visited Sri […]

The post Sri Ksetra Puri Parikrama 2015 appeared first on Mayapur.com.

Hare Krishna! Surfing or Suffering? Sometimes when sitting on…
→ Dandavats.com



Hare Krishna! Surfing or Suffering?
Sometimes when sitting on the beach blanket in New Jersey, Srila Prabhupada would look out at the waves while chanting japa. He was very beautiful and serene, always absorbed in Krishna, yet also carefully scrutinizing the world around him. On some days there were big waves and surfer boys would be out, swimming and surfing in the waves. Srila Prabhupada watched with great interest as they mounted their boards and slid down the faces of the waves. He asked us: “What is this?” Gaurasundara and I replied that this is a sport called “surfing” … Srila Prabhupada watched intently for some time, then began to chuckle. He said: “You call it surfing; I call it suffering. They are simply wasting their valuable human form of life by jumping in the ocean waves. They have no idea what will happen next. If they become so much fond of remaining on the ocean, then Krishna is very kind: he will satisfy their desire and give them bodies of fishes so that they can enjoy jumping in the ocean more and more, but that will be greater suffering . So I call them sufferers, not surfers.”
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18555

Hare Krishna! Tears of Sorrow, Tears of Gratitude: Seeing…
→ Dandavats.com



Hare Krishna! Tears of Sorrow, Tears of Gratitude: Seeing Krishna’s Hand in the Tragic Deaths of Devotees
The name of this all-consuming disaster is the relentless approach of death: A hundred percent of the people reading this article will be wiped out a hundred years from today. Despite this hundred-percent casualty rate, most of us don’t feel that life is like a disaster movie. One reason is that the movie of life unfolds in slow motion, allowing us to forget the direction of its motion if we want to. And we fervently want to. Why? Because the reality of death is inconvenient and unpleasant for us. It ruins our hopes for success and glory in the material realm. So we want to forget it. And forget we do.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18551

Hare Krishna! Receiving Lord Jagannatha’s mercy in Kuala…
→ Dandavats.com



Hare Krishna! Receiving Lord Jagannatha’s mercy in Kuala Lumpur
Every year Sri Jagannatha Mandir celebrates its Ratha Yatra on the same day as that of Jagannatha Puri. The Presiding deities Sri Sri Jagannatha Baladeva Subhadra Devi and Sudarshana go on a chariot ride giving mercy to all the residents near the temple and ends the procession in MCA hall which is located in a Chinese predominant area.This year, ratha yatra was attended by more than 1000 devotees and well-wishers who joined forces in making the festival a huge success. Devotees were fortunate to have the association of HH Bhakti Vrajendranandana Swami who graced the festival.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18546

Gita 17.03 – Gita’s categorization goes deeper than just believers and nonbelievers
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Class Podcast:
Download by “right-click and save content”

The post Gita 17.03 – Gita’s categorization goes deeper than just believers and nonbelievers appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Gita 14.18 – The modes present choices and propel us to choose
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Talk Podcast:
Download by “right-click and save content”

The post Gita 14.18 – The modes present choices and propel us to choose appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Gita 14.02 – Take shelter of the knowledge that inspires us to take shelter of Krishna
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Class Podcast:
Download by “right-click and save content”

The post Gita 14.02 – Take shelter of the knowledge that inspires us to take shelter of Krishna appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

CC daily 171 – 6.255 – Sarvabhaumas devotion manifests as aspiraton for total absorption
→ The Spiritual Scientist

CC daily Podcast:
Download by “right-click and save content”

The post CC daily 171 – 6.255 – Sarvabhaumas devotion manifests as aspiraton for total absorption appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

CC daily 170 – 6.254 – Sarvabhauma’s prayer expresses his philosophical insight and personal realization
→ The Spiritual Scientist

CC daily Podcast:
Download by “right-click and save content”

The post CC daily 170 – 6.254 – Sarvabhauma’s prayer expresses his philosophical insight and personal realization appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Bhagavatam-daily 274 – 11.13.7 – Guided destruction facilitates regeneration
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Bhagavatam-daily Podcast:
Download by “right-click and save content”

The post Bhagavatam-daily 274 – 11.13.7 – Guided destruction facilitates regeneration appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Bhagavatam-daily 273 – 11.13.6 – Cultivate goodness as a foundation for spiritual takeoff
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Bhagavatam-daily Podcast:
Download by “right-click and save content”

The post Bhagavatam-daily 273 – 11.13.6 – Cultivate goodness as a foundation for spiritual takeoff appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Eternal Hellfire for Abortions
→ The Enquirer

I used to go to LA’s FOLK (“Friends of Lord Krishna”) dinners on Wednesdays in the building right next to the temple. One night, a black devotee walked up the stairs to give the lecture while we ate, seated on the floor in front of our low tables. He looked incredibly cool with imposing muscles under his smooth and jet black skin contrasting so dramatically against saffron Krishna robes. I felt like I was going to hear someone from the Bad Brains talk to me about Krishna!

Sure enough he preached with charisma, confidence, and absolute conviction and I almost felt like I was at the Vedic equivalent of a Christian revival. At a certain point he turned the blast of his fire and brimstone upon the topic of abortion. In a booming, bass voice, he declared, “Anyone who aborts the unborn child in the womb will go to hell and never again see the light of day!

Whoa, what? Yeah, OK, Abortion is nasty, but what’s this Christian shit about eternal hell doing in a Hare Krishna temple?

I raised my hand. He called on me.

“What about reincarnation?” I asked. “Won’t they eventually be reincarnated and leave hell?”

“In Bhagavad Gītā,” he rallied, “Krishna declares that he throws the demoniac into hellish births life after life. They will be reincarnated in hell, and never again see the light of day.”

I just wasn’t buying it. This guy was importing his biblical past and imposing it on Bhagavad Gītā. It wasn’t “Bhagavad Gītā, As It Is,” it was Bhagavad Gītā Through the Eyes of a Baptist.

“In Bhagavad Gītā, Chapter Eight,” I challenged, “Krishna says that heaven and hell are not permanent places. We go there temporarily and then get reborn again on earth after our rewards or punishments are done. So, how can you say that a person could go to hell and never get back out?”

This made him really mad. Here was a sassy little 19 year old kid, a guest at the Wednesday night FOLK dinner, trying to out-quote him and one-up his authority! I don’t remember what he said next, but it was loud, and I shut up.

– Excerpt from
Train-wrecks and Transcendence:
A Collision of Hardcore and Hare Krishna

by Vraja Kishor dās
VrajaKishor.com


Tagged: abortion, hell, ISKCON, Reincarnation

An Example of What’s Wrong with Modern Medicine
→ Karnamrita.das's blog

Author: 
Karnamrita Das

County clinic photo Rockingham County Medical Clinic_zpshocxph5i.jpg
When we are sick and not getting better we may imagine going to some kind of medical professional who is knowledgeable, compassionate, and knows something about our medical history—even about us personally. Today this seems more of a fantasy we cling to, or hope to encounter if we have a lot of money to spend for the best care available.

Some months ago I visited a clinic in the next county, as this was recently given to me by my new medical insurance. During and after this experience, I had firsthand experience of is wrong with the American medical system. Let me recount:

Walking through the door to the desk, a sign informs me that I need to sign in. After doing so, I look up at the busy workers behind the counter, hoping someone will notice me. The minutes tic off and I wonder if I am invisible. Closest to me are two ladies busily engaged, one on the phone, and another on the computer. Behind them are 3 other women busy with conversation, and behind them are 2 other ladies with their back toward me, busy with data entry. No one notices me. After about 8 minutes I am checked in and told to take my seat and wait for my name to be called.

In the building directory two doctors and nine nurses are listed with various titles. In the front office I counted nine office staff and there must be more inside. I wonder what the payroll is for all these employees.

read more