Caitanya-caritamrta.
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Websites from the ISKCON Universe
Caitanya-caritamrta.
The post One can only understand the pastimes of Radha and Krsna through the grace and mood of the gopis appeared first on SivaramaSwami.com.
Radhakunda Seva: Sakhi Kunda project.
We just got a cash donation of $3934 USD / 240,000 Rupees donated towards the Sakhi Kunda project. This brings our total to about $7500. We do need a total of $12,000 to complete the work.
Here are the latest pics of the support wall going up.
http://goo.gl/YMcSO8
40th Anniversary Kirtan Mela - ‘Vraj Ras’ ACBSP Vaisnavi’s invited to lead!
Yesterday Iskcon Vrindavan’s 40th Anniversary Planning Committee agreed to invite Srila Prabhupada’s Vaisnavis to lead kirtan during the upcoming ‘Vraj Ras’ Kirtan Mela.
His Holiness Gopal Krishna Maharaj visited out meeting and answered my question about the Vaisnavi’s leading kirtan during the kirtan mela. He smiled and said, “What do they do in Mayapur, we can do that?”
Bhakti arts : cup cake decoration class, a big success! (Album 6 photos)
In the Padma Purana, Krishna says, mad-bhakta yatra gayanti tatra tisthami narada: “O Narada, I am present wherever My devotees are chanting.” (Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya-lila, 17.132 Purport)
See them here: http://goo.gl/heuLQy
Harinam in Stockholm (Album 10 photos)
Srila Prabhupada: If one chants the holy name of God-Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare, Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare-eventually he will see Krishna’s form, realize Krishna’s qualities, and remember Krishna’s pastimes. That is the effect of the pure chanting of the Hare Krishna maha-mantra. (A Second Chance, 16)
See them here: http://goo.gl/MjTLGy
Harinama and book distribution right in the center of the kingdom of Kali! Auckland, New Zealand (Album 45 photos)
Srila Prabhupada: In the Age of Kali, there is no religious principle except chanting Krishna’s name. It has been ascertained from all the scriptures that Krishna’s holy name is the essence of all mantras. (Renunciation Through Wisdom, 5.1 Purport)
See them here: http://goo.gl/5qRszH
So, how is it that vegetarian animals like cows and sheep can make their own B12 but humans cannot? One reason is because many vegetarian animals (like cows and sheep) have stomachs with four chambers. The first chamber, called the rumen, is rich in bacteria which can make B12. Other animals also have stomachs which are shaped differently and allow more bacterial fermentation.
Another reason that vegetarian animals aren’t B12 deficient is that they often consume soil along with their food. Soil often contains cobalt, which is necessary for making B12 in the intestines. As Dr. Justine Butler points out, many primates have been known to eat dirt to naturally treat/combat nutrient deficiencies. When moved to a zoo and fed a sterile diet, many primates develop B12 deficiencies.
Krsna Himself, endowed with sixty four transcendental qualities, is the perfect embodiment of continuous rasa.16 Of these fifty qualities are present in small amount in the jivas. These fifty qualities and an additional five qualities are present in Siva, Brahma, Ganesa, Surya and other devatas. For that reason, though they are not God, they are also called isvara or Lord.
Chaitanya Shikshamrita, Bhaktivinoda Thakura
By Madhava Smullen
“Krishna by His practical example taught us to give all protection to the cows and that should be the main business of New Vrindaban,” Srila Prabhupada wrote to his disciple Hayagriva Das in 1968, leaving little doubt as to the community’s focus.
Since then, New Vrindaban has always protected cows. But this year, the Eco-Vrindaban organization – which looks after 640 acres of rolling green forests and pastures – has renewed its focus, overseeing multiple improvements in the quality of cow care.
To begin with, a higher budget and a larger number of experienced devotee staff have been assigned to the community’s 48 cows, calves and oxen. The team, consisting of longtime program overseer Ranaka, inspirational guide Varshana Swami, ox teamster Daivata, caretakers Radhanath and Ray, and milkers Anandavidya, Lalita Gopi, and Radhapriya meet every month.
One major step they’ve made this year has been to increase medical care, proven by the case of milking cow Shankari, who fell and broke her leg on the pasture in March.
In the world of commercial dairy farming, this would mean an instant death sentence. Shankari’s devotee caretakers, however, spent $10,000 to give her the best veterinary care available at the OSU veterinary hospital in Columbus, Ohio. There, she received an X-ray, surgery to fix the break, and a high-quality cast. Now, she’s walking again, healing in her own private pasture.
In April, older cows Bahula and Kalindi developed eye cancer and were brought to OSU for an operation to remove the infected eyes. Radhanath then washed their wounds daily and applied localized penicillin when Kalindi developed an infection. Since then, both cows have healed.
Besides immediate medical needs, ECO-V’s cow caretakers add other personal touches too. Head milker Anandavidya is doing a trial run on the product Fly Predator to rid the cows of bothersome flies. “The company sends you the larvae of a particular species of fly, which eats the larvae of the pest flies,” he says.
Meanwhile his wife Lalita Gopi has spent a lot of time cutting back the thorny wild rose bushes in the field next to the milking barn so that the cows don’t hurt themselves.
The milking cows can also look forward to a clean and cosy winter this year. Radhanath and carpenter Vyasasana Das have extended the feeding aisle in the milking barn to accommodate twice the number of cows, and created an enclosed “loafing area” where they can lie down in a clean, comfortable, hay-covered space.
There are also plans to create a new drainage system for the “hospital pasture” next to the milking barn where pregnant cows and calves are kept. This will prevent the cows from getting hoof rot, which can be extremely painful and is caused by too much time in mud.
The devotees caring for the cows also need to be cared for, and there are hopes to insulate the milking barn by this winter to keep the milkers warm.
“I was there last winter, and it’s brutal!” says part-time milker Radhapriya. “By the time you’ve finished milking it’s like you don’t have feet anymore. No matter how many socks or how many layers of clothes you wear, you just can’t stay warm!”
That hasn’t stopped the milkers from working hard. Anandavidya and Lalita Gopi are now milking nine cows – twice as many as last year – in the mornings and evenings. That means double the milk too, with an average of thirty gallons every day. In the afternoons, Anandavidya makes butter, yoghurt and panir from the milk, providing most of the dairy for the Deities, devotees and the community Govinda’s Restaurant during offpeak times.
The focus on cow protection at New Vrindaban has encouraged other devotees and guests to help with the cows too. Milking times are advertised as part of the temple schedule, so devotees occasionally come to milk, wash, feed or brush a cow. And South Indian brahmana Venkat Chalapati brings a group of guests nearly every morning for Go-puja and a chance to milk a cow.
“Lalita Gopi says that everyone should milk a cow at least once in their life,” Radhapriya enthuses. “And she’s right. When you spend time with cows, it automatically transports you into a relaxing, sattvic environment. You can go into the barn all stressed out, and being with the cows just makes it better. It slows you down – cows are not going to rush for anything!”
To add extra incentive for guests to visit, devotees have made the milking barn more attractive by painting Rangoli designs in the interior, and adding landscaping, freshly painted fences and a swing bench flanked by large, ornate flower pots to the exterior.
Of course, it’s not just the cows that are being cared for. Exciting developments are also afoot for oxen. Vyasasana Das is currently rebuilding an old barn in the Bahulaban area where the animals will be kept and trained separately from the main herd. The first floor will include spacious stalls for each ox and a tack room for equipment, while the second floor will be a hay loft. Outside there’ll be a training yard and holding area, with grazing pastures beyond.
Six bull calves between the ages of one month and one year – Pundarikaksha, Priya Darshan, Amani, Harichand, Nandi and Ishan – are already residing in Bahulaban and beginning their training to be oxen. Varshana Swami and Daivata Das, who worked with oxen in New Vrindaban’s early days, are leading the program.
The oxen are currently walking with a training yoke so that they get used to working together in pairs and learning commands. After that, they’ll start pulling a rope, then a chain and then a sled carrying firewood. Next, they’ll train for all the stages of breaking up soil until it’s fine enough to plant in – first plowing, then discing, and lastly harrowing.
Finally, when they’re two years old, the oxen will be ready to tackle the real precision work — pulling a cultivator between rows of crops. Varshana Swami hopes that they’ll make their first appearance at the community’s Garden of Seven Gates by next summer, and will be in serious production mode the summer after that.
Oxen, Varshana Swami feels, symbolize the kind of spiritual community Srila Prabhupada envisioned in New Vrindaban. “When you hitch two oxen together, the team dynamic kicks into play,” he says. “And Krishna is attracted where there’s teamwork, where there’s synergy, where there’s harmony, where everybody’s working together.”
“Which is,” he concludes, “What we here at New Vrindaban call the Brijbasi Spirit.”
Rama Charan Prabhu Caitanya Caritamrita Madhya 19 18 19 20141202073908
Daily-Bhagavatam Podcast:
Waldorf School Visit in New Dwarka, LA, 02 December 2014 (Album 51 photos)
Sixteen 5th grade students and 3 adults visited. The kids were very engaging and enlivening. They chanted with enthusiasm, ate prasadam with gusto, and shopped at Govinda’s Imports.
See them here: http://goo.gl/NEiFm8
Gita Jayanti in Los Angeles 07 December 2014 (Album 33 photos)
Nirantara Prabhu led the chanting of the entire Bhagavad-Gita. He keeps the participants interested and alert by adding cogent remarks at the end of each chapter. A remarkable, inimitable performance as usual!
See them here: http://goo.gl/CqWV5S
The week before Canadian Thanksgiving weekend, His Grace Radha Jivan prabhu, International Director of Fundraising for the TOVP, made his inaugural visit to Toronto, Canada. When prabhu landed in Toronto he was rolling a large duffel bag which actually looked like a Canadian ice hockey bag. However we quickly learned he came to play a different type of sport on behalf of Srila Prabhupada.
Radha Jivan prabhu’s weekend started with a TV interview on a popular Indo-Canadian TV Show, “Eye on Asia”, followed by a radio Interview. He was joined in the studio by His Holiness Bhaktimarga Swami, Canadian GBC, and they both delivered informative and rousing nectar on Sri Mayapur Dhama, The Temple of the Vedic Planetarium, Srila Prabhupada’s vision, and the wonderful work being carried out by Sriman Ambarisa Prabhu (Alfred Ford) and the TOVP team.
After an enlivening Vyasa-puja evening for His Holiness Bhaktimarga Swami and a Sunday morning Bhagavatam class, Radha Jivan prabhu was raring to go with his first official program at ISKCON Brampton (a burgeoning Vedic Education Center on the West end of Toronto). At that program, the devotees got a glimpse of the Mayapur commemorative coins which were the treasures in Radha Jivan Prabhu’s “hockey” bag. As prabhu enlivened the devotees with stories of generosity by other devotees worldwide and shared Srila Prabhupada’s vision, dozens of congregation members and devotees stood up and sponsored Golden Bricks for the Panca-Tattva altar. Each sponsor received a commemorative coin from Bhaktimarga Swami along with a warm hug! The stack of Golden Brick coins with Mahaprabhu’s image were melting away and quickly “sold out” with devotees clamoring for more. The fundraising then switched to Tiles for Sri Nrsimhadeva’s altar, and within minutes the commemorative coins with Nrsimhadeva’s picture were also gone. It was a sight to be seen as the 2nd floor of the Vedic Education Center was transformed into a mini Mayapur Dhama in consciousness and love for Mahaprabhu!
ISKCON Brampton was also the launch site of the new ISKCON 50thAnniversary Gratitude Coin collection campaign with special Silver, Gold and Platinum Gratitude Coins which will be used to present a collective gift of gratitude to Srila Prabhupada in 2016. Our very own TOVP Canada team member Rajasuya Prabhu and wife Saurabi dasi were the first ones to sponsor the $11,000 Silver Coin which they dedicated to their guru, His Holiness Bhaktimarga Swami. As they say, “put the money where your mouth is”, and TOVP Canada members are doing just that.
The evening program was at ISKCON Toronto – New Remuna Dhama’s Sunday Feast. ISKCON Toronto is special since it is one of the original 108 temples Srila Prabhupada established and it was under Prabhupada’s personal order it was acquired, just as the TOVP is being established under Srila Prabhupada’s instructions. Fortunately, Radha Jivan prabhu had left some commemorative coins back in his room and we secured every last one from his “hockey” bag. After Radha Jivan prabhu enlivened the packed house about the glories of Sri Mayapur Candradoya Mandir, the anticipation in the air was so thick you could have cut it with a knife. Another TOVP Canada team member, Indresh das, asked his father Subhavilasa prabhu, a Prabhupada disciple and long time member of the local Canadian yatra to inaugurate the ISKCON Toronto collections by sponsoring a special ISKCON 50th anniversary Gratitude Coin which was followed by other silver coins and even an anonymous gold coin from some wonderful local devotees. Radha Jivan prabhu started announcing the Gold Brick program which literally caused devotees and congregants to rush the stage. Multiple devotees were trying to jot donors’ names down, Bhaktimarga Swami was trying to keep up with the hugs and coin giveaway, and the all of us were just astounded with the outpouring of support and love for Srila Prabhupada and ISKCON’s TOVP project. The conchshell blew for Sri Sri Radha Gopinatha’s arati and in this way the inaugural TOVP fundraising drive in ISKCON Canada came to an end.
It was in this way that Radha Jivan prabhu’s heavy duffel bag which we termed the “hockey bag”, full of commemorative coins, was quickly emptied and we all witnessed how devotees in Canada can have an outpouring of love…one brick at a time.
The Sunday pledges were over $320,000 including 1 Gold Gratitude Coin, 7 Silver Gratitude Coins, 67 Golden Bricks and over 50 donors who contributed Nrsimha Tiles or Square Foot donations. All this is simply the first step of support from devotees “up north” with more coming next year as we lead up to ISKCON’s 50th Anniversary in 2016.
The post Heartwarming Support from Canada for TOVP appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.
Caitanya-caritamrta class.
The post Dancing according to Krsna’s will appeared first on SivaramaSwami.com.
Deity Worship at Home Temple - Making small car temple (Album 28 photos)
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)
See them here: http://goo.gl/wF1iFy
Harinama and book distribution in Tel Aviv, Israel (Album 66 photos)
Srila Prabhupada: One who has got a helpful wife at home does not require to accept sannyas. Letter to Krishnadevi, October 29, 1967.
See them here: http://goo.gl/Ct4LUf
The Hare Krishnas Are Back! (3 min video)
Meet a new wave of young Hare Krishna followers chanting daily on the streets of New York City.
Watch it here: http://goo.gl/KO7r93
Symphony of the Soul - playlist of 10 devotional songs by Havi Das (ACBSP), better known as Ilan Chester.
The following link will open a playlist of beatifully arranged musical mantras, with symphonic music by famous composer and singer Havi Das, disciple of His Divine Grace, professional and devotional at the same time!
One better than the other! Listen to them here:
http://goo.gl/qwjnsH
The Birth Of Hanuman – Radhanath Swami Humpi Yatra 2014
“So these duties are there in New Vrindaban, and we shall have to live there self independently, simply by raising cows, grains, fruits, and flowers.” – Srila Prabhupada, January 1969.
Click here to read the rest of the letter at the Vanipedia website.
"We should not disturb the newcomers immediately with opposite proposals, but tactfully we shall try to teach him in our ways."
Srila Prabhupada Lilamrita 6 October 1968
Gita verse-by-verse study Podcast:
Gita verse-by-verse study Podcast:
Gita verse-by-verse study Podcast:
The post Pax TV interview appeared first on SivaramaSwami.com.
Gita verse-by-verse study Podcast:
The 2015 New Vrindaban calendar is here. You can download it with this link.
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, October 2014, Mayapur, India, Siksastakam Seminar: Verses 1&2, Part 1)
Burning material desires may manifest in various ways. One way is that we think of sense objects. Another way may be that we do not think of sense objects – as devotees, we can come to a stage where we do not allow our mind to think of sense objects, so we do not think of sense objects – but then, the blazing fire of material desire manifests in dissatisfaction. And for a long time, we are dissatisfied. When a devotee is not happy, that is dangerous, because we need happiness. A devotee MUST be happy! That is very important. We should not just ignore that, su-sukhaḿ kartum avyayam (Bhagavad-gita 9.2). It must be joyfully performed; you must have some fun in spiritual life. It is important that everyone, not only the mahabhagavats – the topmost vaishnavas are having all the fun – and for everyone else, it is just duty, duty, heavy duty spiritual life; that cannot not last, for how long can one do so? Then one will surely embrace the material energy so we must also cultivate some fun. Part of this Kirtan Academy (in Mayapur) is for that; to just have some fun – have some kirtan; that is great fun.
By Madhava Smullen
“Krishna by His practical example taught us to give all protection to the cows and that should be the main business of New Vrindaban,” Srila Prabhupada wrote to his disciple Hayagriva Das in 1968, leaving little doubt as to the community’s focus.
Since then, New Vrindaban has always protected cows. But this year, the Eco-Vrindaban organization – which looks after 640 acres of rolling green forests and pastures – has renewed its focus, overseeing multiple improvements in the quality of cow care.
To begin with, a higher budget and a larger number of experienced devotee staff have been assigned to the community’s 48 cows, calves and oxen. The team, consisting of longtime program overseer Ranaka, inspirational guide Varshana Swami, ox teamster Daivata, caretakers Radhanath and Ray, and milkers Anandavidya, Lalita Gopi, and Radhapriya meet every month.
One major step they’ve made this year has been to increase medical care, proven by the case of milking cow Shankari, who fell and broke her leg on the pasture in March.
In the world of commercial dairy farming, this would mean an instant death sentence. Shankari’s devotee caretakers, however, spent $10,000 to give her the best veterinary care available at the OSU veterinary hospital in Columbus, Ohio. There, she received an X-ray, surgery to fix the break, and a high-quality cast. Now, she’s walking again, healing in her own private pasture.
In April, older cows Bahula and Kalindi developed eye cancer and were brought to OSU for an operation to remove the infected eyes. Radhanath then washed their wounds daily and applied localized penicillin when Kalindi developed an infection. Since then, both cows have healed.
Besides immediate medical needs, ECOV’s cow caretakers add other personal touches too. Head milker Anandavidya is doing a trial run on the product Fly Predator to rid the cows of bothersome flies. “The company sends you the larvae of a particular species of fly, which eats the larvae of the pest flies,” he says.
Meanwhile his wife Lalita Gopi has spent a lot of time cutting back the thorny wild rose bushes in the field next to the milking barn so that the cows don’t hurt themselves.
The milking cows can also look forward to a clean and cosy winter this year. Radhanath and carpenter Vyasasana Das have extended the feeding aisle in the milking barn to accommodate twice the number of cows, and created an enclosed “loafing area” where they can lie down in a clean, comfortable, hay-covered space.
There are also plans to create a new drainage system for the “hospital pasture” next to the milking barn where pregnant cows and calves are kept. This will prevent the cows from getting hoof rot, which can be extremely painful and is caused by too much time in mud.
The devotees caring for the cows also need to be cared for, and there are hopes to insulate the milking barn by this winter to keep the milkers warm.
“I was there last winter, and it’s brutal!” says part-time milker Radhapriya. “By the time you’ve finished milking it’s like you don’t have feet anymore. No matter how many socks or how many layers of clothes you wear, you just can’t stay warm!”
That hasn’t stopped the milkers from working hard. Anandavidya and Lalita Gopi are now milking nine cows – twice as many as last year – in the mornings and evenings. That means double the milk too, with an average of thirty gallons every day. In the afternoons, Anandavidya makes butter, yoghurt and panir from the milk, providing most of the dairy for the Deities, devotees and the community Govinda’s Restaurant during offpeak times.
The focus on cow protection at New Vrindaban has encouraged other devotees and guests to help with the cows too. Milking times are advertised as part of the temple schedule, so devotees occasionally come to milk, wash, feed or brush a cow. And South Indian brahmana Venkat Chalapati brings a group of guests nearly every morning for Go-puja and a chance to milk a cow.
“Lalita Gopi says that everyone should milk a cow at least once in their life,” Radhapriya enthuses. “And she’s right. When you spend time with cows, it automatically transports you into a relaxing, sattvic environment. You can go into the barn all stressed out, and being with the cows just makes it better. It slows you down – cows are not going to rush for anything!”
To add extra incentive for guests to visit, devotees have made the milking barn more attractive by painting Rangoli designs in the interior, and adding landscaping, freshly painted fences and a swing bench flanked by large, ornate flower pots to the exterior.
Of course, it’s not just the cows that are being cared for. Exciting developments are also afoot for oxen. Vyasasana Das is currently rebuilding an old barn in the Bahulaban area where the animals will be kept and trained separately from the main herd. The first floor will include spacious stalls for each ox and a tack room for equipment, while the second floor will be a hay loft. Outside there’ll be a training yard and holding area, with grazing pastures beyond.
Six bull calves between the ages of one month and one year – Pundarikaksha, Priya Darshan, Amani, Harichand, Nandi and Ishan – are already residing in Bahulaban and beginning their training to be oxen. Varshana Swami and Daivata Das, who worked with oxen in New Vrindaban’s early days, are leading the program.
The oxen are currently walking with a training yoke so that they get used to working together in pairs and learning commands. After that, they’ll start pulling a rope, then a chain and then a sled carrying firewood. Next, they’ll train for all the stages of breaking up soil until it’s fine enough to plant in – first plowing, then discing, and lastly harrowing.
Finally, when they’re two years old, the oxen will be ready to tackle the real precision work -- pulling a cultivator between rows of crops. Varshana Swami hopes that they’ll make their first appearance at the community’s Garden of Seven Gates by next summer, and will be in serious production mode the summer after that.
Oxen, Varshana Swami feels, symbolize the kind of spiritual community Srila Prabhupada envisioned in New Vrindaban. “When you hitch two oxen together, the team dynamic kicks into play,” he says. “And Krishna is attracted where there’s teamwork, where there’s synergy, where there’s harmony, where everybody’s working together.”
“Which is,” he concludes, “What we here at New Vrindaban call the Brijbasi Spirit.”
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