Sunday, April 5th, 2015
→ The Walking Monk

Durban, South Africa

Momentless

More rain.  More greyness.  I don't mind.  Temperatures are comfortable.

Even in the tent called “Bhakti Cloud”, designed as a young person's place for devotional dance, it gets hot.  It's usually like being in a sweat lodge.  And I'm supposed to be the “dance master”.  That's how it’s dubbed.  I'm the dance master.  Today with cooled down temperatures it was pleasant.

What happened during that session, some women had come from church, stumbled upon our fest and joined in our improvised dance.  My God! Did they work up a sweat!  They were Zulu, rather elderly, and not slim but they got everyone going with their Zulu steps to the djembe beat and the mantra I was resounding.  They were appareled in their Sunday dresses and hats.  They were enjoying the rousing music and took it, I am sure, like a Gospel-thumping ecstasy dance.

That one-half hour session went in a flash.  Time takes on a different meaning when caught in the fever of devotion. It's a timeless zone.  You can chuck out your watch and forget tomorrow.  A sumptuous of transcendence.  It's a great moment, or non moment if you will.

May the source be with you!

5 KM

Saturday, April 4th, 2015
→ The Walking Monk

Durban, South Africa

Guy From the Street

It was a hard and yet fun full day at the site of the festival.  I was immersed in staging the drama “Sati”, a story of heroism the wife of Lord Shiva.  She stood up against her own father's mistreatment towards her due to the malice he felt over her husband Shiva.  In any event the story was highly appreciated in its presentation well rendered by my usual local crew from Durban and Pretoria mostly.

One other person who pitched into help in the production, back stage, was a fellow from another city in South Africa – Newcastle. He agreed to walk with me, a short distance really, to his hotel.  From there I was to be picked up for the journey to my flat in Chatsworth. After a day of people, it really was an ideal “chill”.  It's also unusual to have so much rain happening in Durban at this time.

Mathuranath from Newcastle, and I, took those unwinding steps under an umbrella when a young man, a Zulu, squeezed his way through a fence to access the streets.  He began speaking and even boasting about his life in the street.  “I spent three years in Joburg, then some time in Pretoria and now I've been in Durban for a few month living on the street.  Sometimes I stay under a bridge.  But yah know as long as yah live, right?” I could not one hundred per cent agree with his philosophy on life but he had an upbeat attitude towards living and didn't mind saying “Hare Krishna” a few times in his dialogue with us.

May the Source be with ou!

5 KM

Why does Jiva Goswami deem Bhagavatam 2.2.37 its phala-shruti?
→ The Spiritual Scientist

The phala-shruti usually comes at the end of the book. So how can it come so soon after the Shukadeva-Parikshit conversation has just started?

Answer Podcast:

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No mercy
→ KKSBlog

(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 19 March 2015, Pretoria, South Africa, Evening Lecture, Bhagavad-gita 1.1)

krsna_paintingIn the third chapter of Bhagavad-gita, Krsna speaks about lust. There are several verses describing lust and how lust is the nitya-vairina (Bhagavad-gita 3.39), the eternal enemy of the living being and how the living being is, somehow or other, caught by lust. Not only human beings but all living beings are caught by lust, so it is described. There are 8 400 000 species of life – so many, from very complex species to germs but all are driven by lust! So even germs are driven by lust. Lusty germs! Ever thought of that! Anyway, so that is interesting.

From the fourth chapter in the Bhagavad-gita until the sixth chapter, we are slowly coming to the point that there is a need for sense control, that unless we control the senses, we will be a slave of the senses. Rupa Goswami describes that kamadinam kati na katidha palita durnidesas tesam jata mayi na karuna na trapa nopasantih (Caitanya Caritamrta Madhya 22.16) and he explains that the senses are merciless. They are na karuna na trapa nopasantih, they are merciless because whatever you do for them, whatever you do for them, it is never enough.

“Bring, bring now for my enjoyment! Now!”
But when you bring, then the senses say, “Is that all? Is that all? Bring more!”

It is never enough, na karuna na trapa nopasantih. Rupa Goswami explains. No mercy. No matter how much trapa nopasantih, no matter how much austerity you perform.

Hare Krishna! Krishna, Lord of Paradox The Bhagavad-gita is one…
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Hare Krishna! Krishna, Lord of Paradox
The Bhagavad-gita is one of the world’s perennial wisdom texts. Because it offers knowledge of the Absolute Truth, some of its texts can be difficult to understand. Few are as difficult as verses four and five of Chapter Nine: “By Me, in My unmanifested form, this entire universe is pervaded. All beings are in Me, but I am not in them. And yet everything that is created does not rest in Me. Behold My mystic opulence! Although I am the maintainer of all living entities and although I am everywhere, I am not a part of this cosmic manifestation, for My Self is the very source of creation.”
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=16831

Hare Krishna! Desire Nothing But Bhakti By His Divine Grace A….
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Hare Krishna! Desire Nothing But Bhakti
By His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhuapada
Suppose you go to Svargaloka and become Indra, the king of the heavenly planets. That is not a permanent position. By pious activities you can become Brahma, Indra, and so many demigods. You can hold such posts. But even if you go to Brahmaloka, the planet of Brahma, what is the benefit? You have to come back. Similarly, even you go to the Brahman effulgence, the impersonal spiritual energy emanating from Krishna, you will eventually fall back to the material world.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=16828

What is the difference between energies in Gita chp 7 and potencies in chp 9?
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Srila Prabhupada says that Krishna has discussed energies in chp 7 and will discuss potencies in chp 10.

Answer Podcast:

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Hare Krishna! Swami Baba Ramdev visits ISKCON Melbourne As part…
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Hare Krishna! Swami Baba Ramdev visits ISKCON Melbourne
As part of our ongoing efforts to establish good relations with the wider Hindu Community, ISKCON’s Melbourne Mahaprabhu Mandir Temple was honoured to welcome Swami Baba Ramdev, the famous yoga teacher from India, on Friday 10th April. It was just a short visit (part of an official welcome to Melbourne) as Swami Ramdev gave his yoga programs elsewhere.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=16820

Looking For Preschool Teachers! Inspired by the success of…
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Looking For Preschool Teachers!
Inspired by the success of Krishna conscious schools in various parts of the world, the devotees in the Greater Toronto Area are inspired to begin with a Krishna conscious pre-school in Toronto, Canada. Below is the formal job description: Full time preschool teachers required for a new Krishna Conscious preschool in the Toronto, ON, Canada Area. The school is scheduled to launch in Fall 2015. Seeking role models of high moral character and strong Krishna Conscious lifestyle who can enthusiastically impart knowledge of Krishna consciousness.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=16824

Bhagavatam-daily 179 – 11.10.21 – Extension of vision from this world to the next doesn’t help without extension of conception of self
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Bhagavatam-daily Podcast:

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Is That Yoga?
→ Atma Yoga Brisbane

by Prem Yogi (Elliott Ramm)

‘Look in the mirror. Look at yourself’. Our teacher, in sports-bra and hotpants, directs the sweating heap of bodies flushed red in the ultra-heated room. I don’t usually practise Bikram (aka hot) Yoga, but, once a year during winter, I get the idea that it will help my body loosen up and shake off its winter stiffness. I forget that this style of class is a draw for gym-junkie-style yoga obsessives. It’s something about the look on their face—the intensity of their focus on their own reflection—that gives them away. Across from me, a stocky man in glasses practises on his tiger-skin-print towel, which of course matches his tiger-skin Speedos. It’s my friend Josh, and he is loving it. ‘This is awesome,’ he says to me between poses. He has just signed up for a sixty-day challenge, where he has committed to attend at least one class per day for sixty days. I couldn’t commit to even six days. The heat is getting to me, and despite my decade of teaching and practising yoga, I start to struggle. My body isn’t used to being subjected to such extreme heat, and halfway through the class, I have to stop and lie down. The failure is not unnoticed by my ego. As I lie there, I wonder how different this experience of yoga is from how it was originally practised. I have read stories about bearded yogis in the Himalayas who lived to hundreds of years of age, who did not eat or drink, sustained solely by sunlight. But what about the less extreme, everyday yogis from ancient India, and what was yoga to them? ‘Get up and finish the class with us, all of you on the floor,’ says the teacher. I close my eyes and continue to lie on my yoga mat.

Bikram Choudhary (the founder and guru of Bikram Yoga) calls his heated studios ‘torture chambers’, and I don’t disagree. The self-proclaimed creator of hot yoga is famous for his ego, and, expectedly, he is proud of this. He focuses on the physical benefits of yoga postures (or yogasanas in Sanskrit): the increased flexibility, toning, strengthening, cleansing, and even healing effects of the practice. This physical focus is common among the new wave of yoga classes being held in gyms and hot yoga studios that cater to people’s desire for physical improvement and self-mastery. As a result of this predominantly physical focus, yogasanas have become isolated from the other seven limbs described in Patanjali’s Ashtanga Yoga Sutras (not to be confused with the brand of yoga known as Ashtanga). Other foundational limbs—such as yama and niyama, which guide the moral behaviour and spiritual stability of the yogi—have been excluded. The word ‘yoga’ is now synonymous with yogasanas, and this fact is confirmed by the schedule of the annual World Yoga Sports Championship: there aren’t any meditation competitions being held as part of the championship. Can this wholly physical practice still be called yogasanas? Can this limited focus achieve the goals of yoga when B.K.S. Iyengar, one of the forefathers of modern yoga, describes the practice of yogasanas without the support of yama and niyama as merely acrobatics?

Yogasanas were designed to refine the body, but the refinement was not intended to end there. Their practise was originally devised to prepare a yogi’s body to sit for long periods in meditation, and this intention is evident in their name: in Sanskrit, asana literally means ‘seat’. And not just any seat will suffice. The Bhagavad Gita, a two-thousand-year-old text from India, dictates that the seat should be ‘firm and clean, not too high or too low, and covered with kusha grass, a deer skin, and a cloth’. Quite specific.

The Bhagavad Gita further elaborates on the ideal conditions for the yogi, explaining that they should reside alone in a secluded space and be free from desire and devoid of possessions. A much later and detailed yoga text, The Hatha Yoga Pradipika, written by Swami Svatmarama in the fifteenth century CE, describes that the seat should be kept in a hut with a small door, free from dirt, filth, and insects, and plastered well with cow-dung. Thankfully, since cow-dung and deerskins aren’t so easy to come by, these details are presented as suggestions rather than necessities. However, the intention is clear: sit.

In Patanjali’s Ashtanga Yoga Sutras, written not long after the Bhagavad Gita, he describes the term ‘yoga’ as the ‘cessation of fluctuating consciousness’. I love this phrase, and I’m often tempted to begin teaching my yoga classes by announcing, ‘And now we begin the cessation of our fluctuating consciousnesses’. Patanjali details the means to attaining this state in eight not-so-easy steps: yama (ethical disciplines), niyama (rules of conduct), asana (posture), pranayama (breathing techniques), pratyahara (sense withdrawal), dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation), and samadhi (spiritual stillness).

While Patanjali does not mention specifically what the yogi should sit on during these practices, he extends the purpose of yogasanas beyond the physical, defining them as ‘perfect firmness of body, steadiness of intelligence, and benevolence of spirit’. Within Patanjali’s eight-limbed yoga tree, yogasanas are foundational and support progress through the subsequent limbs: a firm body allows for continual sitting; continual sitting enables the yogi to practise breathing techniques; practising breath control supports the withdrawal of the senses from external objects; and withdrawal of the senses supports the inner progression from concentration, through meditation, to complete absorption or spiritual stillness. The yogasanas, therefore, aren’t the goal, but are a tool for attaining still consciousness.

But what about yama and niyama and how do they transform a physical practice into a spiritual one? Yama consists of five moral imperatives to guide the yogi in becoming a morally refined beacon of purity: ahimsa (non-violence), satya (truthfulness), asteya (non-stealing), bramhacharya (chastity), and aparigraha (non-coveting). These can be simplified to don’t kill, don’t lie, don’t steal, be chaste, and don’t hoard unnecessary things. However, non-violence (the ‘don’t kill’ imperative) includes vegetarianism, which can be a deal-breaker for many aspiring yogis. Thankfully, chastity can refer to committing yourself to one relationship, which means that you can be a yogi and have a partner and kids—you don’t have to live like a monk.

The niyama comprise five individual disciplines that cultivate a spiritual refinement: saucha (cleanliness), santosha (contentment), tapas (austerity), svadhyaya (study of the self), and ishvara pranidhana (dedication to the Lord). Being clean in mind and body, content, and even austere, is relatively simple, but study of the self and dedication to the Lord require a more philosophical approach. The self and the Lord that niyama refers to are known in Sanskrit as the atma and paramatma, respectively. Within the stillness that is samadhi, the yogi endeavours to purify the gross and subtle layers that obscure the realisation of the real self, the soul or atma.

This atma is considered to be different from the body and mind, and is described as sacchittananda, which means eternal, full of knowledge and bliss. The word ‘yoga’ literally means ‘union’, which refers to the union between this atma and the paramatma. When the yogi discovers the atma and paramatma within, it is called atmadarshan, sight of the soul, and this discovery is the purpose of yoga, as conceived by Patanjali’s Ashtanga Yoga.

With this awareness of the spiritual goal of yoga, it is easy to understand how the current trend focuses on yoga as a physical practice. Religion is a dirty word in contemporary society, and performing yogasanas as a religious practice is not as attractive to the yoga market, nor is it as tangible, as their physical application. In a body-obsessed culture, it makes sense to contain yogasanas to their physical aspect, but should we still call this ‘yoga’? Of course, regular practice of yogasanas still offers physical benefits and refinement similar to acrobatics, but what of the inner progression, the attempt to extend beyond the temporary, egoistic self?

Yoga, according to the traditional definition, is a means of holistic self-improvement—one that benefits the practitioner physically, intellectually, and spiritually—which contrasts starkly with the popular and lucrative practice common today: the former is a means of disrupting ego; the latter reifies it. Sure, yoga needs to adapt to suit modern culture—not too many people in Australia would be keen to line their yoga-hut with cow-dung as Swami Svatmarama recommends—but if the practice has changed to the point where the purpose behind it has been lost, can we still call it yoga?

As the other students get up from their mats and start to leave the room, I start to get a glimpse of my real yogi. His eyes open, adjusting to the predawn light that gives shape to his hut’s solitary room. He hasn’t been sleeping, but has spent the night in meditation, conscious and lost within. He uncrosses his legs and leaves his kusha-grass seat, which is covered with deerskin and a cloth. By lamplight, he prepares an offering of fruits, flowers, water, and incense for his Lord, ringing a small brass bell as he chants Sanskrit mantras of worship in front of a simple altar. As the sun spreads light on his hut’s cow-dung and mud-brick walls, my yogi, dressed only in a loincloth, walks to a nearby stream to bathe, preparing his body for his daily practice of yogasanas. ‘Wasn’t that awesome?’ asks Josh as he rolls up his sweaty mat, snapping me out of my reverie. ‘Yeah, it was an experience,’ I reply.

 Elliott Ramm (Prema Yogi) has taught at Atma Yoga for the past 10 years. He is into Permaculture gardening, cooking, writing, and teaching.

Opening the Classroom’s Doors
→ TKG Academy

Over the years, we have presented many dramas, bhajans and other devotional productions; less frequently we provided opportunities for the parents to actually see what their children are learning in the classroom on a daily basis.

On Friday, March 13th, the parents gathered to observe their children’s academic achievements, as if peering behind the doors into the classrooms (though not literally).  (Pictures below.)

The preschool students shared their learning through songs. The Kindergarten and first grade students presented their knowledge in USA Geography and Language Arts. The Middle Elementary students demonstrated various skills: Two students were “spelling bees”, one a grammatical sentence analysis wizard, and one student defeated his own mother by completing a math fact sheet in half the time she did. One other student presented a book review and the last one gave a speech on protecting the ocean creatures. A couple of students from the Upper Elementary class demonstrated a science experiment with cold and hot water, relating it to the Bhagavad-gita verse 2.14. One student solved a math problem. A couple of other students described and displayed a “Romanmon” card game they made for learning ancient history. Two students analyzed poetry and correlated it to their Krsna conscious realizations.

What an impressive bunch they are! It was very pleasing to witness their progress and the confidence with which they presented. Their parents’ participation will further enhance this confidence and their support will strengthen their children’s commitment to their studies.

Many thanks to Prema Sindhu Prabhu for the beautiful pictures!

Nama Prabhu Is A Person
→ Japa Group

"Nama Prabhu is a person with all the qualities of Krishna just as good as His form, but when you chant mechanically it's like you're chanting the puppet rather than the person. The body is tired and can't give it's energy in devotion as it would like to. But you push on and pray for the best."

From Bhajan Kutir #401
by Satsvarupa dasa Goswami

Ratha Yatra in Durban, 2015
→ KKSBlog

In Durban, the Easter long weekend represents a time of celebration for Hare Krsna devotees as it is time for their world famous annual Ratha Yatra festival. The four day festival took place from 03-06 April and is widely considered to be the largest of its kind outside India. Devotees travelled from all over South Africa to be part of it. There were also many prominent international guests who attended. This was one of the rainiest Ratha Yatra festivals in the last decade which did dampen the attendance but still thousands came.

The festival started-off with the Ratha Yatra itself. As it happens every year, Kadamba Kanana Swami took lead of one of three kirtans that accompanied each of three massive chariots mounted by Their Lordships Jagannatha, Baladeva and Subhadra. Singing for three hours under the African sun, in front of Baladeva’s cart, Maharaj had the crowd dancing in ecstasy.

This festival has become famous for many exhibitions that have endured over the years, for example: the main stage cultural entertainment, Q&A tents, an onsite Jagannatha temple and various Govindas food stalls. Some newer features of the festival were the youth tent called Bhakti Cloud and Kirtanuity tent which as the name suggests had ongoing kirtan through the duration of the festival. This year Bhakti Marg Swami directed the local youth in two dramas called Blue Mystic and Sati.

Just as it started, the festival ended with a Ratha Yatra procession on Monday night and an ecstatic final kirtan. There are many pictures in the slide-show below trying to capture the spirit of this wonderful event.

I am grateful to the following devotees who assisted with taking recordings and photos: Vibhu Caitanya das, Bhadra Balaram Das, Merumala dd and Nicole.

 

Photos

Visit flickr to see all the pics.

A wonderful set of photos was taken by Indradyumna Swami which has been posted to Facebook. Click here to view.

RY (3) RY (1) ry (36) RY (2) RY (4) ry (2) ry (3) ry (1) ry (4) ry  (3) ry  (1) ry  (2)

Audio

Lectures

KKS_DBN_RY_03April2015_Lecture_Sexuality_and_spirituality

KKS_DBN_RY_03April2015_Lecture_The_power_of_humility

KKS_DBN_RY_04April2015_Lecture_The_golden_incarnation

KKS_DBN_RY_05April2015_Lecture_Main_Stage

KKS_DBN_RY_06April2015_Lecture_The_secret_of_spiritual_advancement

KKS_DBN_RY_06April2015_Lecture_What_is_devotional_service

 

Kirtans

KKS_DBN_RY_03April2015_Kirtan_Intro

KKS_DBN_RY_04April2015_Kirtan_Bhakti_Cloud

KKS_DBN_RY_04April2015_Kirtan_Open_Air

KKS_DBN_RY_05April2015_Kirtan_Main_Stage

KKS_DBN_RY_06April2015_Kirtan_Intro

 

 

April 11, Maha Gaura-purnima, Laguna Beach
Giriraj Swami

04.11.15_05.LagunaTRUST THE SIMPLE PROCESS

“People don’t get to have any fun in this world. If you go to LAX Airport with a garland like this on everyone will look at you like. ‘You cant do that! where did you get that anyway buddy? Why do we have to wear these polyester things and you get to wear flowers?’ That’s Caitanya Mahaprabhu. You get to wear flowers, you get to dance. And, all you have to do is follow this simple order. Because if you just trust Lord Caitanya’s process — that’s all it is — just trust the process. And, do the simple things strictly, with full faith, then all success will be there.”

—Vaisesika Dasa

04.11.15_01.Laguna04.11.15_02.Laguna04.11.15_03.Laguna04.11.15_04.Laguna

—————-
Vaisesika Dasa
Giriraj Swami

Hare Krishna! First Stone Grounding And Ananta Sesa Installation…
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Hare Krishna! First Stone Grounding And Ananta Sesa Installation In Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia
For the last two year the devotees did preaching programs like book distribution, food for life and Sunday feast. Their preaching center is located in community complex that consisted not only Hindu but also from other faith. When they did Sunday feast, some of the neighbors had complained about the program and came to the center in angry mood. This condition sometime make the devotees feel uncomfortable and decided to have some land not far from the city and planned to build a temple and a farm.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=16813

Hare Krishna! Book distribution to Ijtema teacher Suddenly, a…
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Hare Krishna! Book distribution to Ijtema teacher
Suddenly, a loud strong feminine voice screeched our conversation, “Who is Muslim among you”? All three of us (including Smita Krishna Prabhu) turned towards that voice and found a fat middle aged lady, veiled from head to toe by burqa with only eyes uncovered sitting little far on a bench with a big purse on her shoulder. I tried to ignore her question and started preaching that man again but the lady did not stop and shouted again boldly, “I am asking who is muslim among you?” The man turned towards her and said,”I am”. The lady immediately asked me, “Then, what is your business with him, what are you talking to him?”
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=16810

Hare Krishna! Keep it up Hema! You have set an example! You…
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Hare Krishna! Keep it up Hema! You have set an example!
You represent women community who normally grab attention of people in general only for wrong reasons while their finest contributions are rarely appreciated and encouraged. Most importantly you represent women in Krishna Consciousness who are seen more from a perspective of theoretical varnashrama dharma and accordingly guided but with no practical concrete direction given to them with regard to excellence in service especially in a noble working atmosphere like yours.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=16805

Hare Krishna! Revelations about the Book of…
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Hare Krishna! Revelations about the Book of Revelation
Astrological portents are described in the Bible (Luke 21.25) “And there shall be signs in the Sun, the Moon and the stars.” All over the world people are waking up to such signs of the times, including followers of Christianity. Many have tried to decipher the Bible’s Book of Revelation and its prophecies of “end times” to come. And naturally many wonder when these final days of will arrive. By examining the Book of Revelation through the looking glass of Vedic knowledge many of its mysteries are unraveled and light is shed on its prophecies.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=16801