New Devotee Relations Dept. at New Vrindaban Aims for Happy, Healthy Devotees
→ New Vrindaban Brijabasi Spirit

By Madhava Smullen

A brand new Devotee Relations Department was officially established in March 2014 at the ISKCON New Vrindaban community. The new department is headed up by Sukhavaha Dasi, who joined ISKCON in New Vrindaban back in 1974 and has lived and served there for many years.

Sukhavaha holds a degree in social welfare from Penn State University, and has taken courses on leadership, leadership training, and compassionate communication. She’s also the author of the book, Revealing the Heart: The Practice of Compassion.

Sukhavaha dasi

Sukhavaha dasi

Her vision for the new department includes supporting devotees to grow and mature in the ways they relate to one another (hence the name “Devotee Relations”), as well as providing care and support to the community by empowering devotees to care for themselves.

“To me, it’s the difference between feeding somebody, and teaching someone to grow a garden so they can feed themselves and others,” she says.

The department’s new home, a house with four rooms and a kitchen located just across the road from Sri Sri Radha Vrindabanchandra’s temple, will undergo renovations this winter.

Sukhavaha hopes to turn it into a “holistic center for mind, body, spirit and emotions” by spring 2015, complete with sauna, exercise equipment and spaces for life coaching, energy healing, cooking classes, as well as medical care by visiting and local devotees in the health field.

As well as these ongoing services, the Devotee Relations Department will hold one-off courses. Sukhavaha is currently completing her pilot course, “Empowered Empathy,” to a small group, with a second run open to the whole community to begin Tuesday, October 14th.

She is also planning two weekend workshops in spring and fall 2015, entitled “Healing the Pain of Childhood Wounds,” which will be facilitated by professional psychologists. The workshops will be offered to second generation devotees free of charge, including dormitory accommodation and meals.

For the more long term, Sukhavaha aims to train devotees as mentors for those living in the temple. This mentoring system will provide care for physical, mental, emotional and spiritual needs of devotees.

She also wants to inspire devotees to create and lead a network of small groups that will provide support for different areas of life, such as men’s, women’s, parent’s, and health groups, as well as a book club.

“In small groups, you can feel safe and comfortable enough to be yourself and express yourself,” she says. “And the power of them is that you can get nourishment and support from the other devotees, and learn from one another.”

Although the Devotee Relations Department is new and yet to develop a team, other individual devotees, like Lilasuka Dasi, have been doing their part to assist devotees in various ways. Sukhavaha hopes to train other staff in the future. But it’s something she expects to be a gradual process.

“I’m not in a rush just to throw something together, if it would be counterproductive or fall apart,” she says. “I want to very organically and methodically create structured systems that are sustainable over time.”

In the meantime, devotees who have already taken her coaching or Empowered Empathy workshop are encouraged by the results and returning for more.

Sukhavaha is delighted. “I love to see happy, healthy devotees,” she says. “Not just on the surface, but on a deep level, from the inside out.”

Ineffective Chanting
→ The Enquirer

Ineffective Chanting

You’re chanting and chanting, but are you learning any philosophy? Really learning it so it makes sense? Chanting without knowledge of what the chanting means is not very effective.

bahu janma kare yadi śravaṇa, kīrtana
tabu ta’ nā pāya kṛṣṇa-pade prema-dhana

— Caitanya Caritāmṛta (adi.8.16)

Chanting can go on ineffectively for many, many births (bahu janma). Something is required before it becomes effective. That requirement is Śrī Caitanya’s “mercy” – what is that “mercy” it is the instructions about the meaning of Śrīmad Bhāgavatam left behind by his followers, particularly the Six Goswami’s of Vrindavan. So we have to study their books (particularly bhakti-rasāmṛta-sindhu, ṣaḍ-sandarbha, and bṛhat-bhāgavatāmṛta) until we really understand what they are saying. Then our chanting has effect very quickly, because we chant properly, without mistake, without “offense” without misconception.

Śrīla Prabhupāda therefore instructed us to study these books. We have to study Śrīmad Bhāgavatam through understanding the way Bhāgavatam is explained in these books. Śrīla Prabhupāda’s writings lay the foundation for this study, but one cannot really say he follows Śrīla Prabhupāda’s instructions unless he also takes the trouble to follow his instructions to directly study the works of the Six Goswāmīs.


Don’t reduce all thinking to logical thinking
→ The Spiritual Scientist

“No, no, you are not thinking; you’re just being logical.” This was Noble Laureate physicist Neil Bohr’s startling admonition to a student. Bohr was a pioneer of quantum physics, a field of science whose insights have stretched the limits of logic well beyond breaking point. To defend his field, he often had to challenge the widely held presumption that only logical things are intellectually acceptable. In this quote, he exhorts his student to open his thinking to channels that transcend logic.

It’s immensely significant that a field of science, which is celebrated for being logical, needs to go beyond logic for progressing. No doubt, logical thinking is a desirable and essential feature of human thinking. But what is unessential and undesirable is to reduce all thinking to logical thinking – and by extension to reject as nonsense whatever doesn’t make logical sense.

Bohr challenged the widely held presumption that only logical things are intellectually acceptable.

Just as uni-dimensional devotion to logical thinking can shackle our understanding of complex subjects such as quantum physics, so too can it shackle our understanding of the most complex subject – the Absolute Truth.

One question that perplexes logicians is the nature of God’s relationship with the world – is he immanent, existing in nature, or transcendent, existing beyond it? The Bhagavad-gita (09.04) points to his immanence, stating that he pervades and sustains the world. Yet the next verse (09.05) states that he doesn’t sustain the world, thereby underscoring his transcendence.

How do we understand these apparently contradictory assertions?

By freeing our thinking from the straitjacket of logic, as Bohr exhorts, and studying the Gita open-mindedly.

How a being can be both immanent and transcendent is difficult for us to understand logically. But such difficulty is to be expected because God being supreme is superior to logic – he is not illogical, but trans-logical. This, of course, doesn’t mean that we need to accept anything in the name of trans-logicality. It just means that we don’t let adherence to logic stonewall our quest for understanding.

Gita wisdom explains that God being unlimited can exist at multiple levels simultaneously. It reveals a magnificent conception of God who exists in multiple manifestations, including an immanent manifestation, Paramatma, and a transcendent one, Bhagavan. And the Gita (09.02) also declares that its revelation can be experientially verified by the practice of bhakti-yoga.

By the purification resulting from bhakti, our trans-logical spiritual perception awakens. Gradually, we realize experientially that God though being far away in his abode is right next to us in our own heart, closer than our closest loved one can ever be. We will rejoice in his inconceivable glory, seeing it not as a failure of human logic, but as a triumph of divine love.

 

Can we take charanamrita when curd is forbidden during Chaturmasya?
→ The Spiritual Scientist

From Dinabandhu P

Answer Podcast

hari-bhakti-vilAsa 12.100aṣṭaitāny avrata-ghnāni āpo mūlaṁ phalaṁ payaḥ
havir brāhmaṇa-kāmyā ca guror vacanam auṣadham

"These eight do not break a fast — (1) water (2) roots (3) fruits (4) milk (5) haviḥ (anything offered to the Lord viz. charanamrita) (6) brāhmaṇa-kāmyā (offerings usually dear to a brahmana viz. ghee, curd etc.) (7) guror vacanam — (anything ordered by a guru) (8) auṣadham (medicine)

(My thanks to Hari Parshad Prabhu for providing this reference)

ISKCON Scarborough – Govardhana Puja celebrations coming Friday- 56 different varieties of Bhoga will be offered
→ ISKCON Scarborough





The devotees of ISKCON Scarborough will be celebrating Govardhana Puja on Friday- 24th Oct 2014.

On this auspicious day, 56 different varieties of Bhoga will be offered to Supreme Personality of Godhead Lord Krishna in the form of Govardhana Hill.

On the same day, it is also the auspicious birth star Swati Natchatra of Lord Narasimhadev

There will be grand Abhishek performed on Lord Narasimhadev

The events on this auspicious day are:
Tulasi Arti, Grand Abhishek on Lord Narasimhadev, 56 offerings to Govardhana Hill, Class on Govardhana Lila by HG Rupanuga das prabhu, Damodarastakam prayers followed by a Grand feast


The story behind Govardhana Puja

Govardhana Puja, Go-Puja and Annakuta are all connected with the story of Lord Krishna lifting Govardhana Hill to protect the inhabitants of Vrindavan.

The day after Diwali is referred to as Annakuta, or Govardhana Puja. On this day the inhabitants of Vrindavan (Lord Krishna’s abode on Earth) would hold a harvest festival in honour of King Indra, the demigod who provided the rains essential for the harvest.

One day, however, Lord Krishna wanted to teach Indra a lesson. He convinced the inhabitants of Vrindavan to honour Govardhana Hill instead, whose fertile soil provided the grass upon which the cows and bulls grazed, and to honour the cows and bulls who provided milk and ploughed the lands. Outraged, Indra retaliated with terrifying thunderstorms. The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krishna, calmly lifted Govardhana Hill with the little finger of his left hand. For seven days and seven nights the Lord held up Govardhana Hill, providing a giant umbrella to shelter the inhabitants of Vrindavan from the torrential rain. Realizing the futility of his actions, King Indra bowed down before the Lord with folded hands and offered prayers of supplication. In this way, Lord Krishna demonstrated that He is Deva Deva, the lord of the demigods, and that any purpose for which demigods might be worshipped could easily be served by worshipping Him, the cause of all causes.

We warmly welcome you and your family to ISKCON Scarborough coming Friday to take part in the Govardhana puja.

Swamiji
→ travelingmonk.com

Last night Brahmananda Dasa launched a new book “Swamiji” wherein Steven J. Rosen ( Satyaraja dasa ) recounts Brahmananda prabhu’s service and association with Srila Prabhupada in the early years of the Hare Krishna Movement. While reading and commenting on the book, published by Torchlight Publishing, Inc. Brahmananda prabhu gave rare and valuable insights into [...]

What’s To Come
→ Mayapuris.com

We are excited because we have a handful of events that are nearby.
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There is the famous ‘Sacred Sounds’ event in Rutgers University that inspires 500 students to chant and dance the entire night.
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Then we catch our flight from New Jersey straight into the Birthplace of Jazz. Pick up our Rental and head across the border. Not to Mexico of course, but to the state that is the funnest to spell out loud,
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There is a Krishna community 45 minutes from New Orleans known as New Talavan.
It is known for its natural and organic way of living: they make organic Blueberry jam, collect fresh honey, pick organic fruits and vegetables from their garden and orchid, and of course make all sorts of milk products. 60 cows roam in their open fields and with their help the community gets Milk, yogurt, cheese and a variety of milk sweets for the deities that reside in the temple,
Sri Sri Radha-Radha Kantha. Yup, two Radha’s in that name.
Another fun fact is that it’s the birthplace of one of the Mayapuris! that would be me, Kish.
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We are also super excited that all the Mayapuris will reunite for this awesome festival!
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After the weekend festival in Mississippi we get in our tour van and head towards Alabama for our first “JUGGERNAUT TOUR”.
Gauravani will be meeting us and we will do 4 events back to back.
Starting the 28th of October and ending the 31st.
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One more thing to add!
We are very fortunate that we are able to do so many events in this special month of Kartik. This is a month where any spiritual activity is magnified and multiplied 1000 times. One easy way is to offer a candle to God.
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To know more about each event just click on “Events” or I’ll make it easy for you and you can just click right here
Keep in touch :)

Australia, October 2014
→ KKSBlog

Report by Kadamba Kanana Swami

This afternoon (19 October), I left Australia. It was a good tour with so many different programs. First up, we headed north for a home program in Burleigh Heads. There is a cafe there and most devotees who are involved with the cafe came to the program. It was nice; everybody was young and enthusiastic. Then we had a kirtan program in New Govardhana. My stay at New Govardhana was too short – just two days but it was nice and peaceful, in a pleasant room. Devotees were enthusiastic about the programs; there was a lot of kirtan. We had a good time. There is a WWOOFer (World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms) village, where about 40 volunteer workers from all over the world are staying for a while. I did a program with them and that was fun.

Then next morning, we had to return to Sydney for a boat program. I like boats and water and kirtan, so it was a winning combination! We are going to do it again.

I did a great variety of programs all over Australia – Sydney, Gold Coast, Murwillumbah , Melbourne, Canberra‎ – university programs, home programs, hall programs, Indian programs, Western programs, meditation programs and yoga programs. My stay in Melbourne was very dynamic.

This morning, we had a program in Govinda Valley for an audience of Australia’s leading yoga teachers – very nice, quality people who are serious about the mode of goodness. ‎It was nice to meet them and share something about Bhakti Yoga. Emmanual, the flute player, had brought all these little percussion instruments, chimes and created amazing musical effects. It created a nice atmosphere.

Now, I am ‎on the way to Tirupati for a few days of meetings about Mayapur. Then Govardhana Puja in Vrndavana as well as some small parikrama and singing for the Deities.

Okay, time to board the next plane!

 

Photos

To see more pictures, kindly visit flickr.

sydney_cruise (4) sydney_cruise (16) superr (1) superr (2) sydney_cruise (2) heart&soul_Cronulla (2) sydney_cruise (8) heart&soul_Cronulla (4) Z_melbourne (7) gopuja_mel (7) sydney_cruise (19) Z_melbourne (1)

Meet the Tour Guides at Prabhupada’s Palace of Gold in New Vrindaban
→ New Vrindaban Brijabasi Spirit

Five interviews between Lilasuka and five of the main tour guides at Srila Prabhupada’s Palace of Gold.

 TRIPAD VIBHUTI DAS

Tripadvibhuti das, long-time manager of Palace of Gold.

Tripadvibhuti das, long-time manager of Palace of Gold.

Lilasuka (L): We understand that you have managed Srila Prabhupada’s Palace here in New Vrindaban for a long time, Tripad prabhu. How long have you been giving tours here?

T: Since 1985.

L: What do you feel is the most important thing to tell visitors?

T: We cover many topics in the tours. But the three points I emphasize are: 1 you are not the body.   2 we make sure they hear the chanting of the holy name of Hare Krsna. 3. devotional service or serving god is the important goal.

It’s also very important that they leave the Palace thinking we’re normal people , not fanatics or crazies. Most people do leave thinking that.

L: What kind of questions have people asked you?

T: Oh, the usual stuff: why do the men shave our heads, what’s with the peacocks, what is that marking on the forehead. Occasionally if they’re more familiar with vedic culture, they’ll ask deeper questions.

Then, on maybe 5% of tours, westerners will ask about the pictures they see of Krsna’s pastimes, since most of them are not familiar with these.

L: What are some people’s comments that you hear?

T: It’s funny but even though we who work here at the Palace clearly see the repairs that are needed, visitors just don’t often see this. They come up here “ooo”-ing and “aaaaa”-ing! This Palace is really the greatest thing, in most of the visitors’ eyes. As a matter of fact, I was just walking past a couple of Americans outside yesterday, and despite the construction with new drainage and pipes going on, they are exclaiming, “This place is unbelievable. I’ve never seen such a beautiful place!” I remember them saying that even though there are problems here, it’s an unbelievable place!

L: Do you have any stories you would like to share?

T: Once on a tour these two older ladies were in the back hallway, when suddenly from the corner of my eye I saw something small dart across the hall. When I checked it out, I saw that there was a raccoon in the office. As soon as I informed the ladies, they freaked out and left immediately. I ran back and was luckily able to chase the raccoon outside. It actually stayed out there for a couple of days and looked kind of rabid.

L: What is your favorite thing about the palace that has kept you going for almost 30 years here?

T: You get to tell people about Krsna and Srila Prabhupada, and that is very enlivening. The high point of any tour is when you get questions. Sometimes their questions pleasantly surprise you. Once someone came and I don’t know if he was a local from West Virginia, or a hippy or who he was, but I sure didn’t suspect that he knew anything about Krsna or Prabhupada, but then he asked a powerful question about Lord Nrsimhadeva.

Srila Prabhupada’s Palace is a great place to be!

CHAITANYA BHAGAVAT DAS

Chaitanya Bhagavat das

Chaitanya Bhagavat das

L: How long have you been doing tours at the Palace, Chaitanya Bhagavat prabhu?

CB: Nine years now.

L: What is the most important thing that you want to convey to the visitors?

CB: I like to emphasize three things: 1.that we are all soul, not the body, and that real happiness doesn’t come just in relation to the body. To understand this, we have to stay in close touch with God and godly people. 2. that this world is not our real home.   3. that chanting the name of God is the best way to associate with God.

I also like to talk about the cows, with whom I work a lot.

L: Really? What do you tell people about cows?

CB: Humans are meant to eat plants.   I talk about vegetarianism. I tell them that cows are Krsna’s favorite animal. I say how cows are affectionate and they are meant to be protected and cared for, just like everyone else.

L: What kinds of questions do the visitors ask?

CB: Many people pick up very quickly that Srila Prabhupada was a very special person and that we love him very much. So they ask about him. A lot of people ask if he ever lived here. They also ask about reincarnation when we get to the “changing bodies” exhibit. I like to explain that we are not so different from other religions. We are eternal souls and the reason we came to this earth is because we have individual free will, because things are based on the concept of love. Love can only come about by individual choice. So the Lord creates this material world, where we can choose to either love Him or not. These are universal principles. This is not sectarian. I ask them, “Isn’t this what Jesus also taught?” People like that.

L: What’s your favorite thing about giving tours?

CB: Connecting with people. We often have this arrogant attitude that “I am giving THEM Krsna.” But Krsna works through these people too.

For example, I’ll tell you a story about this really nice, neatly dressed couple, a man and a woman, who came during a raging blizzard. They told me, “We had a coal miner friend. His dying wish was that we come here and visit the Palace of Gold. He said that he had had the most amazing religious experience here.”

So I started the tour. As soon as we got down to the end of the hallway to Srila Prabhupada’s lotus footprints in concrete under the glass panel, suddenly the man (who was a minister by the way) looks wide-eyed, at me. He shouts out, “THE FEET OF A PROPHET!” Then his wife, also a minister, immediately lays her head on Prabhupada’s feet and begins offering prayers. Her husband asks me, “Do you know why the feet of a prophet are worshipable? Because they go from town to town preaching the gospel of the Lord!”

I was amazed. The verse “prithivite ache yada nagaradi grama” came to mind. Prabhupada himself declared, “Prthivite, all over the world, as many towns and villages are there, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu predicted that His mission will spread. This prediction was made by Caitanya Mahaprabhu personally five hundred years ago.“

When the tour was finally over, we hugged and they left in the snow. You become renewed in your Krsna consciousness and in appreciating the Palace when things like this happen.

L: Thank you.

PARAMDHAMA DASI

Paramdhama dasi

Paramdhama dasi

L: Paramdhama, we understand that you’ve been working at Prabhupada’s Palace of Gold for over 30 years. Is this correct?

P: I guess that’s right. I love it here. But I’ve only really been giving tours for the last eight or nine years.

L: You must have some stories to tell.

P: Recently, a visitor came to the Palace on his way from Baltimore to Las Vegas. I teased him, ‘Don’t you think it’s a little unusual that you’re stopping at the memorial of a saintly man on your way to a gambling place?’ He told me that he was stopping here to get some protection from the sinful lifestyle prominent in Las Vegas.

L: How do visitors react when you talk about the “changing bodies” exhibit photo that is up on the wall? I think sometimes there are opposing reactions.

P: Yes. One person blurted out, emphatically, “NO!”   Like “wait a minute – back up here”. A lot of people just listen and don’t say anything. Some people nod their heads, as if they’re intrigued by what I’m explaining. Others sometimes will even go up to the picture and jokingly comment, “So that’s me over there,” as they point to either a young man, middle-aged man or old man.

L: You must have fun with that. What do you think is the most important thing to emphasize?

P: I feel it’s very important to show them the chanting on beads. I try to first explain how we are not this body, and how we need to accept a spiritual master in order to make real progress in our lives, and then I emphasize the importance of chanting Hare Krsna, which is the highest instruction given by the spiritual master.

L: What do you like about giving tours?

P: I like to find out about how people heard about the Palace. If they are really interested, I like to give them one of Srila Prabhupada’s books.

L: What kind of questions do people ask?

P: Where did we get the money? I tell them donations. They also are curious about the tilak that we wear. Surprisingly, there is this guy from Washington, PA who rides a motorcycle and comes here to visit every year. You would be surprised by what kind of people come back here for repeat visits.

L: Anything else you’d like to share?

P: Whenever I take people in Prabhupada’s study, I like to briefly explain, “These books you see here that Prabhupada translated and gave to us are very important. And, most importantly, Prabhupada recommended that we chant on these beads.” Then I repeat the maha mantra and chant for a while.

JAYA MUKTI DAS aka BHAKTA TOM

Jaya Mukti das aka Bhakta Tom

Jaya Mukti das aka Bhakta Tom

Lilasuka (L): When did you start giving tours at Prabhupada’s Palace of Gold, Jaya Mukti prabhu?

JM: Five years ago.

L: And what do you feel is the most important thing to tell people on a tour?

JM: Well, I like to put emphasis on different things according to the people on the tour and their particular interests. There are such topics as the building and its architecture, there’s the philosophy of Krsna consciousness, there’s Srila Prabhupada, the person, there’s the community and how we work together. Of course, if it’s a mixed group, I touch on each of these subjects, in order to keep everyone’s interest.

L: What are the kinds of questions that people ask?

JM: One popular question is: If Srila Prabhupada was a renunciate, why such a grandiose building? So I’ll tell them the analogy about a small child making a nice picture for his grandparents. He wants to use all the crayons in the box, and fill in the whole page so it’s the very best picture he can create. Well, when we get donations for Prabhupada, we want to use them to create the very best thing we can for him since he is so important in our lives.

L: What kind of comments do people make?

JM: People comment on the murti (statue) of Srila Prabhupada in the study, and how real he looks. And once, when I described how the beautiful Ming Dynasty vases in the study are from China, one little nine year old boy commented, “So what? I’ve got lots of stuff from China!”

L: What do you like about giving tours?

JM: Connection with people! I’ve met so many nice people giving tours here and I’ve even stayed in touch with some of them. I’m always curious about why they came, and where they are from. The transmigration picture in the back hallway is an important tool that I use to explain the gist of our philosophy.

L: Do you have any stories you can tell us about the guests?

JM: Sure. Two things: once a young woman from Cameron almost went into labor at the changing bodies exhibit (ironically)! They rushed her to the hospital, but it was false labor. She came back the following week to finish her tour!

And one time there were these tough bikers on a tour. When I mentioned that Srila Prabhupada, a holy man, went to preach in the bowery of New York City, the apparent leader of the bicycle gang couldn’t get over that Srila Prabhupada, a real holy man, had actually lived in the bowery!

SADARUCI DAS

Sadaruci das

Sadaruci das

Lilasuka (L): Sadaruci, I understand that you used to give tours at the Palace at the beginning of the 21st century, back in 2001.

Sadaruci (S): That’s right. And I even gave tours farther back than that, when I lived here in NV from 1995-2001.

L: That’s cool! And now that it’s 2014, what is your connection with the Palace of Gold?

S: Well, beginning in April of this year, I’ve been giving Palace tours five or six days a week.

L: It sounds as though you’ve conducted a lot of tours here at the Palace. What do you like about giving tours?

S: I get to talk about Srila Prabhupada all day!   For a devotee, what can be more blissful than that?

L: That’s for sure! What do you feel is the most important thing you can tell the visitors?

S: That everyone needs a guru. Lord Krsna had a guru. Lord Caitanya had a guru. Srila Prabhupada also had a guru. A guru is necessary in order to be successful in your spiritual life. I emphasize that.

L: How does a typical tour go?

S: I start by introducing Srila Prabhupada and his history of coming to America back in the ‘60’s, during the height of the hippie movement when everyone was looking for peace, love and happiness. Prabhupada himself gave the peace formula: “chant and be happy”.

L: How do people react to hearing that?

S: I’ve seen many people have life changing experiences coming to Prabhupada’s Palace. There are a variety of reasons. For instance, when I explain the “changing bodies exhibit”, it opens many people’s eyes to the fact of life after death. Many people didn’t understand that. But they can see the progression of life. I tell them that they have a chance to change their destiny for the better. I tell them they don’t have to take another birth, and that they can actually go back to the spiritual world. A lot of people are fascinated. I encourage people that no matter what religion they are following, if they just add the chanting of Hare Krsna, they will make rapid advancement spiritually.

L: I see. Anything else?

S: Well, I think it’s important to convey the message of hope for the future – everyone’s future – if they can take to some spirituality.

L: So what do you think is the importance of the Palace of Gold to the NV Community?

S: I think it is the Palace that is the magnet that draws people to NV. Some of them don’t even go down the hill to visit the temple, but they still get a lot of information and a great impression by just taking a Palace tour. I feel that the more we restore and improve the Palace, the more good things will happen here in NV.

L: Do you have a final message?

S: Yes! If you’re not too busy, come and pick up a shovel or a paint brush. We have lots of work to do here and we can sure use your help.

END

Tuesday, October 14th, 2014
→ The Walking Monk

Montreal/London/Hyderabad


The Grand Poem

I just can’t resist sharing an offering sent on my birthday from a soul who loves walking.  Here is the poem entitled, “The Grand Beaver”:

THE GRAND BEAVER

In the great and natural North
Was a hill of sticks and logs
Nestled in the clearest pond
Created by a Beaver’s song
He, pure servant of the Gods

All were welcome to the lodge
And put to steady use
This Spirit Beaver glowing grand
Always lent a helping hand
And tail and foot and tooth

All who joined him found a home
And a window in the nest
That opened to another world
Where dancers sang and singers twirled
Where all were duly blessed

Grand Beaver on occasion made
His way both far and near
To share spirit ways of family
And what is truly enemy
And what is truly dear

Nearby a moose walked forest trails
Of bramble, switch and thorn
And came upon Grand Beaver glad
Who noticed that the moose was sad
Entangled and forlorn

Grand Beaver said, “Be less like Moose
And more like Caribou,
Alone you haven’t stamina
And even saintly brahmina
Must work within a crew”

The moose then bowed and acquiesced
To Beaver’s mystic call
And with Beaver’s flick of magic tail
Came cool winds and sparkling gale
Moose – no longer Moose at all!

Now Caribou who humbly knelt
Before Grand Beaver, prayed,
“Please help me to stay nearer you
And aid you in the work you do;
Let not my mind be swayed”

Grand Beaver lead Now Caribou
Back to the spirit lodge
And gave him many roles to play
Bright colours to the darkest grey
Expression’s camouflage

Grand Beaver knew Now Caribou
Occasionally would fail
And at those times
Forgave the crimes
And offered massive tail

To give Now Caribou a push
And all else who sought his charge
This tail that built
Ne’er based on guilt
But compassion in the large

Grand Beaver gave wise counsel
And Now Caribou could be
An Otter and a Beaver too
As long as there were things to do
And done so lovingly

There never was so grand a Beaver
As Grand Beaver solely was
Save for his much beloved master
Who saved the world from disaster
And moved all creatures to his cause

-          Written by Nitai Priya

May the Source be with you!

0 KM

Monday, October 13th, 2014
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Val-des-Roches, Quebec

Thank Your Shapers


It being Thanksgiving Day, we can consider a day to express gratitude.  “For what?” you may ask.  For at least what has come to you today, because the task to say merci beaucoup to all the nice people that have come to your life would be impossible.  Consider, however, that whatever has come to you as good or bad circumstances, are all welcome, because they shape us all.  Thank the shapers and love who you are.

I decided to be grateful for the people in my presence today, and the environment of today.  I decided to BE HERE NOW.  After hummous and toast sandwich, I took to a trail which might lead me to where the other three monk had apparently slipped off to.  I wanted to relay to them my thanks to them about the good company they provide. 

Well, I never did detect them.  No foot tracks or evidence of their wanderings were clues for me.  I then took to one of dozens of trails.  I stepped by moose hoof prints and felt the animal’s spirit.  I spotted a grouse, a chipmunk, and felt their presence.  Even so, I heard the woodpecker tapping his tree and viewed the green moss and the white of the peeling birch.  The smell of the spruce spurred me on.  All this was my company and I said, “Hare Krishna,” as a way to express thanks. 

The footpath was the way I like it.  It was sloping up and down and sideways.  There were areas of moistness and dryness, of sand and black soil, of laden twigs, leaves, bark and rock.  The path was an ankle strengthener and an eye alerter.  I was grateful even though I could not find the lost monks. 

It’s all quite relative, isn’t it?  Perhaps I’ve become the lost monk.  Let’s take this as a metaphor on life and when on the spiritual path, there must always be a sense of direction, and even more so, a sense of gratitude.

Thus ends the walk for today, and the super meetings of the weekend.  En route to Montreal’s airport, my auto companions, Sahadeva, Vrinda, and Gauramani and I, spent the hour pulling out the highlights of three days.  It was so fitting considering the day.

May the Source be with you!

6 KM

Sunday, October 12th, 2014
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Val-des-Roches, Quebec

Gold Then Gold Now
 
We did plod the country road, but in the dark, after meetings that mattered.  Three Canuck monks and I took to the gentle up and down course.  It was down time after a long but rich day of discussion and presentation.
 
These presentations of a "close-to-the-heart" sort moved my emotions as there was vision behind such initiatives.  "Think for the future" was the theme.  And as I heard the voice of 'care' in the air I looked out several times through the resort's window to trees drip of tears.
 
I think they were hearing our message of opportunities missed, hence the tears.  They were an actual transformation of the lightest frost melting in the sun's warmth.
 
Triumphantly rose the yellow leaves of the aspen shaking for joy because not all occasions we spoke of were grim.  There has been far greater victory over defeats of the past.
 
Once our walk had terminated we found some of the weekend crew still in the dining lounge space engaged in happy chatter over the old and gold days, of the times spent in jail because we were misunderstood.  I joined in and oh yes, lest I forget, I escaped a near-death fire and when a moving train bashed again and again at our stalled vehicle on the tracks while I, the driver, sat there frozen in shock.
 
When I think of life as a Krishna monk in the 70's and the monks of now who live on easy street, it is like night and day.
 
May the Source be with you!
 
5 KM

Saturday, October 11th, 2014
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Val-des-Lacs, Quebec
 
Millions
 
Millions of fallen leaves were under the foot until it stepped down to be submerged by them, both moist and dry.  But not so dry were they that they would break to flakes.  The challenge was to take them at a slope with the extra stretch and stride for a leap over the log.
 
The log was also a submergee.  You are looking for a solid something to anchor your foot but it most helplessly falls prey to the rot beyond the bark.  It's deceptive.  You then pull out the captive foot and search for a more secure footing.
 
This climb is not possible without the young and older living trees that serve to offer themselves as we grasped them.  Speak of anchor, well, that's exactly what they are.
 
The water cascading over rocks is the creek that makes the sound pleasant enough for our meditation, japa or chanting to the finger-roll on our beads.  Only a few minutes is sufficient for relishing a moment before it was time to trail on.  The rocks we sat on were just too nippy on the butt.
 
There were four butts, excuse me, bhaktas, devotees who decided on this brief trek of adventure, which lead us to wonder and wander this wilderness.  We had spent a full day on couchy-material over meaningful meetings.  Our stroll through the woods, reminding us of mutual guardianship, was of equal significance because you couldn't help but think of the master craftsman behind it all.
 
May the Source be with you!
 
5 km

Friday, October 10th, 2014
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Val-des-Lacs, Quebec

Points
 
It takes some hours to reach this destination near the reputed Mount Tremblant in Quebec.  Unfortunately it was not on foot but cab, plane and car.  I had great company though, Vrinda from Winnipeg and Sahadeva from Calgary.  We travelled and wish listed much of the way over en route to partake in our annual Krishna Consciousness leaders meetings for Canada.
 
We had reached a rustic retreat place nestled in Laurentian Mountain territory.  Once we arrived and settled in I took note of remarks made by our guru, Srila Prabhupada, from an article recorded on Dec 1, 1966 in New York City.
 
Some significant points made are as follows:
 
Kirtan usually means describing.
 
Unless you hear you cannot describe
 
God has given you power of hearing,
 
The process to acquire knowledge is hearing.
 
There are two processes of knowledge, ascending and descending.
 
The ascending process means trying to go high by your (own) strength and the descending process means receiving the pure knowledge from above.
 
And we have four kinds of imperfectness - (the tendency) to commit mistakes, to be in illusion, our senses are imperfect, and the propensity to cheat.
 
Our attempt to understand the Absolute Truth by our faulty senses and experience is futile.  We must hear, sravanam.  That is the Vedic process.
 
May the Source be we with you!
 
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Kartik 2014 celebrated in Iskcon’s Krishna Balarama Mandir in Vrindavana (Album 142 photos)
→ Dandavats.com

Lord Krishna stresses the importance of remembering Him. One's memory of Krishna is revived by chanting the maha-mantra, Hare Krishna. By this practice of chanting and hearing the sound vibration of the Supreme Lord, one's ear, tongue and mind are engaged. This mystic meditation is very easy to practice, and it helps one attain the Supreme Lord. (Bhagavad-Gita 8.8 Purport) Read more ›

A special day at the Hare Krishna Temple in Germany (13 min video)
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On 15th of August 2014, two days before Krishna Janmastami, H.G. Krishna Kshetra Prabhu has arrived in Goloka Dhama, Abentheuer Germany. He will be taking sannyasa initiation from H.H. Sacinandana Swami. Devotees and disciples have been arriving and preparations are under way. Everyone is very excited. Then, unfortunately, word comes from H.H. Sacinandana Swami that he will not be able to officiate because of his bad health. On his behalf, H.H. Candramauli Swami will give sannyasa initiation to H.G. Krishna Kshetra Prabhu soon to be HH Krishna Kshetra Swami. Following this announcement H.H. Sacinandana Swami speaks on-line to the devotees who have gathered for the occasion. This movie tells the story of that day. Read more ›

How festivals such as birthdays are celebrated in Vedic culture
→ The Spiritual Scientist

It is the Vedic system to observe all kinds of festivals, including birthday festivals, marriage festivals, name-giving festivals and festivals marking the beginning of education, by especially inviting brāhmaṇas. In every festival the brāhmaṇas are to be fed first, and when the brāhmaṇas are pleased they bless the festival by chanting Vedic mantras or the Hare Kṛṣṇa mahā-mantra.

Chaitanya Charitamrita Adi 12.20 purport

Preaching in Durban, South Africa (Album 79 photos)
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One should not artificially try to see the form of the Lord while chanting Hare Krishna, but when the chanting is performed offenselessly the Lord will automatically reveal Himself to the view of the chanter. The chanter, therefore, has to concentrate on hearing the vibration, and without extra endeavor on his part, the Lord will automatically appear. (Srimad Bhagavatam, 4.8.53 Purport) Read more ›

Swamiji (Album 49 photos)
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Indradyumna Swami: Last night Brahmananda Dasa launched a new book "Swamiji" wherein Steven J. Rosen ( Satyaraja dasa ) recounts Brahmananda prabhu's service and association with Srila Prabhupada in the early years of the Hare Krishna Movement. While reading and commenting on the book, published by Torchlight Publishing, Inc. Brahmananda prabhu gave rare and valuable insights into the life of Srila Prabhupada in those formative years. Recounting his spiritual masters glories he was several times moved to tears, as was the audience. There were a number of senior Prabhupada disciples present. I considered the evening one of the highlights of my visit to Vrindavan this Kartika. I am forever indebted to Brahmananda prabhu for he, along with his brother Gargamuni dasa and Visnujana Swami, stayed with me in my apartment in Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1971 and influenced me to become a devotee. [ 'Swamiji' will be available in a couple of weeks on Amazon.com ] Read more ›