"The idea of an organized church in an intelligible form indeed marks the close of the living spiritual movement. The great ecclesiastical establishments are the dykes and the dams to retain the current that cannot be held by any such contrivances. They, indeed, indicate a desire on the part of the masses to exploit a spiritual movement for their own purpose. They also unmistakably indicate the end of the absolute and unconventional guidance of the bona fide spiritual master.
Exploitative desires reduces a living spiritual movement to a stagnant organised church
Huge preparations in Bhaktivedanta Manor, UK, for the Janmastami Festival 2014 (Album 71 photos)
→ Dandavats.com

Gurukule Nanda Gram, Children (Nigeria) In Janmasthami Painting Competition
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Harinama in Jackson Heights 74 St (New York City Subway) (Album 10 photos)
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Despite heavy rain the preaching goes on in Poland’s Pobierowo city (Album 112 photos)
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11 August ’14 Sringar Darshan at ISKCON Juhu
→ Gouranga TV - The Hare Krishna video collection
11 August ’14 Sringar Darshan at ISKCON Juhu, Sri Sri Radha Rasabihariji Temple
Don’t blame others – accept responsibility
→ The Spiritual Scientist
“You say ‘they mistake.’ Who are they? You say, ‘you do mistake’ don’t say ‘they.’ This is bureaucracy, ‘they.’ You are all ‘they.’ (conversation in ‘76 in Hyderabad).
- Srila Prabhupada
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-13 02:50:00 →
Jaladuta Journal :: 1965
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-13 02:45:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969
HG Narottamananda Prabhu / Kalachandji’s Bhagavad-Gītā Meditation Course – 31
→ Kalachandji's Audio Archive
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-13 02:41:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-13 02:38:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-13 02:37:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974
HG Bhadra Prabhu / SB 10.67.24
→ Kalachandji's Audio Archive
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-13 02:32:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-13 02:31:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-13 02:30:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974
His Grace Madhudvisa Das
→ Ramai Swami
His grace Madhudvisa prabhu was a great inspiration to the Australian and New Zealand yatras being the GBC and a wonderful leader from the early to mid 70s.
Friday, August 8th, 2014
→ The Walking Monk
A Fight in the Tree
Fierce fighters they were. One block from our ashram were a family of four ‘rascal raccoons’ as some people would call them. They were cussing and snapping at each other off of narrow branches from a single tree. It was 4 AM, they would not let up. It was a real show, or rather, a show down. It halted my short trek, it was a station break for me. Entertainment at its best.
Seeing those guys lunging at each other was a simple reminder that species outside of humans usually occupy themselves, in and amongst other things, with this kind of fare – fighting. Oh, there are plenty of testimonies given by people of spiritual things that animals sometimes enact. Some of those creatures demonstrate great qualities of benevolence and virtue, such as the dog’s loyalty, which is a far cry from what you find in many humans.
A raccoon’s snarl, such as what I heard and witnessed when seeing those perfect rows of jaws jutting out, was a family feud performance. It seems to be quite common amongst these guys. I believe we all have aggressive little raccoons in our head.
Aggression was probably the theme of our drama practice this evening. As the director, I was bringing out the raccoon in everyone. Aggression is what the scene calls for. I applaud my tree friends, the raccoons, taking the lead in showing this passion. The rehearsal was good. By the way, you really get to know people when you ask them to surrender who they think they are and when they’re trying to be someone else. Deep down inside we are humble entities and naturally take a service role.
May the Source be with you!
4 KM
Are tragedies in our lives such as a relative committing suicide God’s punishments on us?
→ The Spiritual Scientist
How should relatives of a suicide resolve their anger towards that person?
→ The Spiritual Scientist
Should relatives communicate via planchette with someone who has committed suicide?
→ The Spiritual Scientist
If a good person commits suicide due to some frustration, what is their destination?
→ The Spiritual Scientist
Does a sudden tragedy in the lives of God’s worshipers indicates that God is too busy in his own kingdom to protect?
→ The Spiritual Scientist
Gita 08.13 – Cherish remembrance of Krishna to relish the fruit of meditation
→ The Spiritual Scientist
ISKCON Scarborough- Recently uploaded videos
→ ISKCON Scarborough
Bhagavad Gita 5.29:
Live Tamil Radio program- BG 9.25:
Live Tamil Radio program- Mind control
Home program- 3rd Aug 2014:
Balaram Jayanti:
Travel Journal#10.13: The North of England and Edinburgh
→ Travel Adventures of a Krishna Monk
By Krishna-kripa das
(July 2014, part one)
(Sent from Bratislava, Slovakia, on August 13, 2014)
It was also special because every member of the party, whether singing the lead or the response or whether playing harmonium, mridanga, or karatalas,if they noticed an attracted onlooker, would walk over to give the person an invitation to our programs. Such enthusiasm for outreach is rare!
Because we had a lot of enthusiastic devotees many people danced with us, took photos, and were curious to read the “On Chanting Hare Krishna” pamphlets.
Jake, who has just been coming to the Newcastle temple for a year, came out, although Chester-le-Street is just the next town from where he lives, and he knows many people there. He even led kirtana at one point.
The jolly man later gave me a picture of himself dressed as Santa Claus.
Their son (on the right) also came as well as a devotee from India who lives in Chester and his two children. Thanks to Agi for the picture. Thus on our inaugural Chester harinama we had seven people! We chanted about an hour.
“Whatever the Supreme Lord does is good for us. The moment we forget this fact we fall into danger. Therefore may we cherish the prasadaof those whom the Lord favors. I offer my obeisances at the feet of those great devotees who have received the Supreme Lord’s mercy.” (p. 291)
“On one hand we say the word govindais transcendental, and on the other we are determined to measure Him. We want to lop off the branch on which we are sitting.” (p. 294)
“By taking shelter of the holy name with determination, all anarthasare vanquished. Then Krishna’s form, qualities, characteristics, etc., gradually manifest in the holy name.” (p. 305)
“There is no sadhanaother than chanting the Lord’s holy name. Elsewhere in the Bhakti-sandarbha Sri Jiva writes that although we should perform other limbs of devotional service, in Kali-yuga they should be combined with the chanting of the holy name. By chanting the holy name all anarthasgo away. Chanting namaparadhadoes not free us of anarthas.But as soon as our anarthasare vanquished, the Supreme Lord’s form, qualities, associates, and pastimes will automatically manifest in the pure heart. At that time, hoping to understand the highest transcendentalrasas,we become qualified to study books like Bhakti-rasamrita-sindhuand Ujjvala-nilamani.” (p. 306)
“After the ten offenses against the holy name are destroyed, we begin to chant at the stage of namabhasa,and then when the pure holy name is uttered, all anarthasare vanquished and all auspiciousness arrives.” (p. 306)
“To protect ourselves from committing offenses we must hear from the spiritual master about the ten offenses against the holy name. The fierce demon in the form of inattentiveness drowns us in the deep ocean of disregarding the spiritual master. At that time chanting becomes as useless as a flower in the sky.” (p. 307)
“We have no business but to chant Hari’s holy name, but as long as we have anarthaswe cannot chant it. In most cases we are chanting at namaparadhaand, occasionally, namabhasa.We should try our best to first get rid of our anarthas.Simply by sincerely calling out the Lord’s name we become free of anarthas.There is no other way. harer nama harer nama harer namaiva kevalam kalau nasty eva nasty eva nasty eva gatir anyatha” (p. 307)
“People have a variety of tastes. Some people are emotional, some more discerning, some suspicious, some doubtful, and so on. Our flow of thought and tastes develop according to the kind of society and surroundings in which we grew up. Topics other than those we’re used to seem revolutionary, unheard of, or strange. But if we want real benefit, we should hear with patience. Our duty lies in walking the sreyaspath [the path of ultimate benefit]. We should consider without duplicity whether it is the duty of our human life to follow an apparently pleasing path of instant gratification or something else. If we care for spiritual upliftment, we must hear from the disciplic succession and stop surrendering to the many popular opinions that fill the air.” (pp. 309–310)
“A platform speaker or professional priest cannot be a guru. If I read in an advertisement that I can make more money as a sweeper than in reciting Srimad-Bhagavatam,I will immediately give up my recitation of Srimad-Bhagavatamand submit an application for the job of sweeper. If people are not constantly engaged in worshiping Hari, then we can be certain they are becoming involved in inferior activities unrelated to the Supreme Lord. This means they are engaging in sense gratification on the strength of chanting the Lord’s holy name, and this is a grave offense. One should not think that reciting Srimad-Bhagavatamis one of his ordinary duties, no different from his other duties like eating, walking, talking with people, and so on. If serving Srimad-Bhagavatam becomes one’s only duty, then with every step he takes, with every morsel of food he swallows, and with every breath he will be serving Lord Hari. A salaried or contract speaker can never explain Srimad-Bhagavatam.” (p. 311)
“Fearing that if I speak the impartial truth I will become unpopular means giving up the authorized path of truth for the unauthorized path. This leads me toward becoming non-Vedic, or an atheist. It means I have no faith in the Absolute Truth, the Supreme Lord.” (p. 315)
“As soon as we know the truth we should become fixed in it. Of the time we have left in this life, we should not spend even a moment of it on material activities but use it to worship Hari. King Khatvanga used his last forty-eight minutes, and Ajamila spent the moment of his death, worshiping Hari. Both attained perfection. We may say we have many responsibilities, but visayah khalu sarvatah syat: ‘These four principal necessities of the body are available anywhere.’ Our other duties can be carried out in any lifetime, but the living being’s only duty is to worship Hari, and that cannot be carried out in any life except when one has a human form.” (p. 316)
“The followers of sreyas[ultimate benefit] want only one thing in life, and that is to hear the truth from the disciplic succession. If we glorify the actual truth and then allow it to enter our ear, only then will we be able to accept the value of aural reception from the disciplic succession. If we remain inattentive while hearing, we will not learn the actual truth or gain experience of it.” (p. 317)
“Someone may consider himself the world’s best chemist or logician. Perhaps he has studied all the different philosophies. Yet such persons wonder why they can’t understand Him! “If those who have not been brought up as happily as us – who were never given the opportunity to enter a laboratory or study logic – can understand Vasudeva, why can’t we, who have had these advantages?’ What they don’t know is that Vasudeva is fully transcendental; He is beyond the reach of the mundane senses. He is not some river water or the fruit off some tree that we can take Him into the lab and study Him. Nor is He an ordinary hero or heroine with a body made of flesh and blood. No one can know Him until and unless He reveals Himself. He reserves the right and power to reveal Himself whenever He likes. He is not an object we can perceive with our eyes and ears. If He could be understood through investigation or analysis or deliberation (like using atomic theory) He would just be another material object. That which can be understood through this world’s knowledge, ultimately gathered through sense experience, is not God but simply a mundane object of enjoyment.” (p. 324)
“If we try to turn God into our cashier, we cannot be benefited because the day He will fail to supply our favorite objects we will ban or suspend Him. This mentality leads to atheism.” (p. 324)
“When we try to challenge or argue with our spiritual master, when we try to rectify or even belittle our spiritual master by showing that we have more knowledge than him, and when we try to imitate him rather than follow his instructions, we end up on the unauthorized path of argumentation rather than the authorized path of the disciplic succession. But if we give up this type of evil mentality and surrender at our guru’s lotus feet without reservation, only then are we benefited on the path of aural reception.” (p. 325)
“In the constitution of spirit, it is not that the tiny can never serve the unlimited. A tiny spark from a fire can burn the world to ashes if it is given sufficient support.” (p. 331)
“If we approach the truth, we can see the truth directly. We have to understand the sun with the help of sunlight. Through spirit we can know the supreme spirit. Guessing or hypothesis cannot help us.” (p. 333)
“In reply to a question put forth by the residents of Kulina-grama, Sriman Mahaprabhu said, ‘Service to Krishna, service to the devotees of Krishna, and congregational chanting of the holy name are the living being’s three duties.’” (p. 334)
“Krishna, who is the form of sankirtana,destroys demons like Agha, Baka, Putana, and so on in the hearts of even the most unworthy persons. We have no duty other than to serve this Krishna. Being Himself Krishna, Gaurasundara, in the dress of a devotee has taught us in various ways and with different moods and words to worship Krishna exclusively.” (p. 335)
“Lord’s devotees mercifully inform us that service to God is our prime duty. The demigods, humans, animals, birds – everyone’s duty is to serve God. We think, ‘I have become a stone, so I have a particular duty,’ or, ‘I have become a tree, and it’s my duty to produce fruits.’ When we come to the human form we think it our duty to become good human beings – get an education, become civilized, create a functional society, help our nation advance, and so on. We should live at home, sail on a boat – the mind fills with countless resolutions. This is called non-Vaisnavism.” (p. 341)
“From a Vaishnava we will hear that simply by serving Lord Vishnu we automatically serve all animate and inanimate atoms. Our main self-interest is Lord Vishnu’s service.” (p. 342)
“One of the roles Sri Gaurasundara performed in this world was spiritual master. In this role He revealed that for us, serving the guru’s lotus feet is more important than serving Krishna Himself. Krishna personally advertised Himself as a devotee. As a result, the devotees came to know, ‘I am also a devotee, a servant of Krishna, and Krishna is my worshipable Lord.’ It is Krishna who taught the living beings how to search for Krishna as a devotee; it is He who taught them that they had no duty other than to cultivate their Krishna consciousness. He also taught that the living beings cannot find permanent happiness in temporary, imperfect objects. By presenting Himself as the servant of the servant of the Vaishnavas, Sri Gaurasundara, although Krishna Himself, bestowed great favor on the logicians. He poured water on the fire of their arguments – He blessed those logicians who appeared after Krishna instructed Arjuna and became mental speculators after reading the Bhagavad-gita. These logicians came to think of the most merciful Lord Krishna as proud and selfish, but after seeing Sri Gaurasundara’s characteristics, they realized the sweetness and meaning of Krishna’s supremely independent nature. Sri Gaurasundara is the guru of all other gurus. He taught that although the guru is nondifferent from God, he is God’s principal devotee.” (p. 344)
“Gaurasundara gave no instruction but this one: Vaishnavas have no duty other than to call out the names of God. Those who call out these names act on the spiritual platform; their calling is not a function of the gross or subtle body.” (p. 345)
“When the master of the mind, the soul, awakens and sees the soul’s activities, it cannot rush toward inferior activities and cheat its master. Rather, it must follow its master’s orders. When the soul is awake, the representative mind works completely under its master’s will. If the mind somehow or other tries to go toward other activities, the awakened soul will stop it, saying, ‘You want to consider what is good and what is bad, you want to become a great fruitive worker, but I will not allow you to engage in such useless activities. Instead, you will help me in my service to the Supersoul.’” (p. 345)
“When a soul realizes he has no other business than to serve Krishna’s lotus feet, and that service to the Lord’s lotus feet becomes his only religion because it is the only actual religion of all living beings for all time, then his wicked mind no longer dances wildly under the covering of the desire for wealth, women, and fame.” (p. 352)
“The soul is an ingredient meant for the Lord’s pleasure.” (p. 355)
“Moreover, many people want to become Vaishnavas without first becoming servants of Vaishnavas. Many of us think ourselves devotees even though we are nondevotees. We think we are qualified to hear about the rasa-lila.But where do I stand? I am not a devotee. I am not constantly engaged in serving the Lord. Sometimes I think myself an enjoyer and become attracted to the female body, and sometimes I become attracted to a male body thinking myself a woman. How can an atheist, a sinful, wretched person like me be addressed as a bhakta,or devotee?” (p. 355)
“We have no right to hear the songs about Radha-Krishna that are fit only for liberated persons. As long as we are attracted by the mundane world and the rush of sense gratification, overwhelmed by maya’scovering and throwing potencies, we will not be able to go to the rasaarena, where the visible world appears before us as full of vasudeva. To imagine such a thing before we are qualified is like a mad dwarf trying to catch the moon. It is not possible to climb on Krishna’s chest with this bag of flesh and bones. One who shows such audacity is certain to become degraded. A person who considers the glories of his education, high birth, beauty, and opulence worth spitting at, only in his ears can krishna-kathaenter.” (p. 356)
“No object in this world is fit for my meditation. In His direct form the Supreme Lord is the pure Absolute Truth. That eternal Absolute Truth and His associates is what we should be meditating on. Indirectly, the Supreme Lord is creator, maintainer, and annihilator of this world.” (p. 360)
“Sometimes with a desire to enjoy the fruits of our karma we accept heavenly pleasures, but these are like flowers in the sky – they are completely perishable. And when they fade, we tend to think of becoming renounced. All this is because we have mistaken the mind for the self. The mind is the enjoyer. The mentality to seek enjoyment or practice renunciation destroys the natural propensities of the soul.” (p. 362)
“Out of the flames of a fire fall innumerable tiny sparks. Similarly, from the rays of the transcendental sun, Sri Hari, emanate millions of minute particles of consciousness, the infinitesimal spirit souls, or jivas.The jivais nondifferent from Sri Hari and yet simultaneously distinct. The eternal difference between the Supreme Lord Sri Hari and the jivais that the Lord is always the master and controller of the maya-sakti,whereas the jiva,even in his liberated state is, by his very constitution, vulnerable to the maya-sakti’slure. [quoted from Jaiva Dharma]” (p. 376)
“ . . . if one assumes the goal of life to be something to create better material facility, one will practice unjustified rules and regulations to attain that goal. Therefore, although the anartha-nivrttipracticed by those who are trying to clear their way to devotional service will appear fruitive to such ordinary people, sadhana-bhakti will never become just a function to regulate the mundane mind. Rather, it aims at the unalloyed propensity, and, as a result, indirectly serves to control the mind, pulling it away from its contact with matter.” (p. 382)
“All the acaryaswho have appeared in this world have described the relationship with the Supreme Lord as the sambandha,service to Him as the abhidheya,and love for Him as the prayojana.” (p. 385)
“But that magnanimous person, Sri Gaurasundara, arranged for the Srimad-Bhagavatam,spoken by Sri Vyasadeva, to be recited. Hearing Srimad-Bhagavatamremoves those three material miseries, which the Lord placed into this temporary, limited, and perishable world for our benefit. Moreover, to satisfy the needs of His associates and devotees, He personally took on the guise of an acaryaand freely distributed the secrets of performing bhajana.Among those secrets we find that out of thousands of limbs of devotional service, Srila Rupa Gosvami considered sixty-four prominent, and out of those, nine limbs have been described as more prominent. Out of those, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu considered five limbs most prominent, and out of those five, chanting the Lord’s holy name is the best.” (p. 387)
“The Supreme Lord’s name, form, qualities, associates, and pastimes are the entire holy name Himself. Present within the personality of the holy name are the name, form, qualities, and pastimes. Although for a chanter, distinction between the name and form, the name and qualities, the name and pastimes, and so on may exist, the fact is, they are not independent. In other words, the form, qualities, pastimes, and associates are nondifferent or separate from the holy name.” (p. 391)
“Sri Krishna and Sri Krishna’s names are not two things but one. Even though they appear and are accepted as different, Krishna’s forms, qualities, associates, characteristics, and pastimes are all part of the holy name.” (p. 392)
“With material objects, there is a difference between the thing and its name. But this is not true of the transcendental name of Krishna. Therefore Sri Gaurasundara instructed us, ‘Let sri-krishna-sankirtanaalone become our only “abhidheya,” our only way of achieving the ultimate goal of life.’” (p. 392)
“Sri Krishna + sankirtana= sri-krishna-sankirtana. Sri Krishna = Sri + Krishna, where Sri refers to Laksmidevi or Srimati Gandharva, the fountainhead of all Lakmis. So Sri Krishna means Giridhari Vrajendranandana and Gandharva.” (p. 392)
“When many people chant or glorify Krishna together, we call that sankirtana.But sankirtanaalso means ‘proper kirtana’ or offenseless chanting. sankirtanameans the glorification of Sri Krishna’s names, forms, qualities, associates, characteristics, and pastimes. May that sankirtanabecome glorious above everything else.” (p. 392)
“Among a thousand limbs of devotional service mentioned in the Vaishnava smriti,or among the sixty-four limbs of devotional service, srinama-sankirtanais topmost. All auspiciousness is obtained simply by performing the nama-sankirtana yajña. Nama-sankirtana includes all nine limbs of devotional service. Sravana, kirtana, smarana, vandana,and so on are included in sri-nama-sankirtana. The internal desire of Jagatguru Sri Gaurasundara, who enacted the pastime of preachingacintya-bhedabheda siddhanta,is that sri-krishna-sankirtana is the only abhidheya.” (p. 395)
“No other limb of devotional service – not mathura-vasa[living in Mathura] or sadhu-sanga[associating with devotees] is complete without sri-krishna-sankirtana,because simply by engaging in sri-krishna-sankirtanathe benefit of living in Mathura, associating with devotees, worshiping the Deity with faith, and hearing Srimad-Bhagavatam is obtained. By chanting, the living beings attain all perfection in life.” (pp. 395–396)
ISKCON, devotees go out
on harinama.Some temples
send devotees out once
a week for an hour, and
a few groups go out every
day for many hours.
It should be taken as
a priority service, as it
used to be in the early 1970s.
In many cases the public
thinks the Hare Krishna movement
has ceased to exist when
they don’t see devotees
chanting in the streets.
Theharinamachanters
in the City are an
ideal example.
They go every day
and are making a
big impact on the public.
They are first-class followers
of Lord Caitanya
and are carrying out His legacy.”
from The Wild Garden:
comment by me: Krishna says our speech if it is pleasing, truthful, and beneficial is in the mode of goodness and is liberating. Otherwise our free speech will result in bondage.
Pleased And Convinced
→ Japa Group
From Viraha Bhavan #169
by Satsvarupa dasa Goswami
When the danda falls…
→ KKSBlog
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 08 August 2012, Slovenia, Balkans, Srimad Bhagavatam 1.3.28)
Sometimes we try to do too much on Janmastami. Anyway, we learn from that and we get purified. In some temples, devotees would read Krsna Book for the entire day. They would read stories about Krsna from morning till night and that was very nice.
In the beginning, Srila Prabhupada had not yet translated the tenth Canto of the Srimad Bhagavatam. He would make all the devotees fast and they had to stay up until midnight. Prabhupada would read the Sanskrit verses from the tenth Canto and would say, “It doesn’t matter that you don’t understand Sanskrit. It’s transcendental and you will be purified.”
He would read one Sanskrit verse after another in New Vrndavan. At that time, there were a lot of sannyasis present. They had their dandas and were sitting with them. Gradually, they all fell asleep and all of their dandas started to fall over, like a forest… and in the end, everyone was asleep apart from Prabhupada!
Slovenian Summer Camp
→ The Vaishnava Voice
Just in case you’re not familiar with the country’s location: this is Slovenia on the Europe map
Last week my wife and I were guest speakers at a summer camp for Vaishnavas in Slovenia. Slovenia is north of Croatia and part of it borders Italy. It has a population of around two million and 60% of it is forest, which makes it rather scenic and gives the people there room to breathe and move around. As a result the people are very friendly. It was one of the first countries to declare independence from the former Yugoslavia.
My wife and I had been invited to come and spend a few days at the annual summer camp held on a devotee’s farm. Because there are many young families, we were to speak on marriage, family, raising children and building community. We spent two days in the city at the temple situated in an old school. The Pancha Tattva deities there are quite the most beautiful I’ve seen anywhere. There is a very good Govinda’s restaurant that seemed to be popular with the locals, serving up healthy prasadam, and we stayed in an apartment above the restaurant.
The other guest for the camp was Hari Sauri prabhu who served Srila Prabhupada as a personal assistant for almost two years. He is an expert story-teller and writer and has a great memory for details. When you’re with him you feel as if you’re getting to know Srila Prabhupada personally, as he did.
The devotees arranged for us to see a bit of Slovenia while we were there and took us to a scenic place known as Bled, a popular spot with tourists. It was a large lake surrounded by imposing mountains and forest with an island in the middle that had a fairy-tale castle built on it. The water was crystal clear so we went for a swim and chanted Gayatri while half-submerged, just like we do in India.
We were also taken to a deep, mile-long ravine, where the icy mountain river water rushed down in swirls, pools and rapids. We were able to walk along a wooden platform edging the entire length of the cliffs above the thundering water. Again the water was the cleanest I’d ever seen and the air pure. It was a great spot for yogis.
The summer camp was some miles to the south of the country, just a short distance from the border with Croatia. Although there was another camp running simultaneously in that country, some of the Croatian devotees chose to drive up north and camp with the Slovenian devotees instead. The drive there was uncharacteristically stormy, and the car was lashed with heavy rain while thunder pounded the skies and lightning flashed every few seconds. As a result, the campsite was muddy but the devotees very warm and welcoming.
My job was to lead kirtans and to give classes, but to also encourage the families, some of whom are separated from other devotees by many miles of countryside. The landscape of Slovenia may be beautiful, but the geographical distances between families can sometimes serve to lessen their spirits, particularly amid all the challenges of raising children and pursuing a career. Spiritual life is made less arduous when we have the company of fellow travellers, and this camp was one way to inspire each other and to share useful knowledge. My hosts seemed almost apologetic as I began my first talk, sitting in a white plastic tent with the rain lashing down, but I explained that my first experience of Kirtan forty years ago was in a similar tent in the rain, in a muddy field, so I was actually happy to be with them in similar circumstances.
The sun shone the next day and after the morning talks we were served delicious hot meals cooked in the camp kitchen. I am always amazed at just how expert devotees are at preparing food under challenging kitchen conditions – and how they can cook for 100 or more at a time!
We stayed for two nights in a small bungalow in a vineyard, surrounded by more vineyards stretching out to the horizon where they met forested mountains. I didn’t see any of the bears and wolves this area is known for, but chanting japa out on the dirt road each morning was remarkable, possibly the quietest place I’ve ever been in. It was another superlative for Slovenia. On our last night we stayed at the campsite in a small, locally-made caravan.
Rising at 3.00 am on our last morning we got up ready to be driven to Venice to catch a flight for Belgium. Early as it was, the devotees still got up to see us off. I can’t remember ever being given so much affection. The temple president of the Ljubljana centre, Ananta Das, a long-term brahmacari monk, happily drove for three hours as we sped through Slovenia and crossed the border into Italy at Treviso then on to Venice. We talked the whole way about education for devotees.

Sri Govardhan Parikrama (Album 77 photos)
→ Dandavats.com

Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-12 14:28:00 →
"To start for U.S.A. by
MV. Jaladuta from Calcutta
port (King George's Dockyard)"
1965 Jaladuta Journal
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-12 14:27:00 →
Jaladuta Journal :: 1965
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-12 14:26:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-12 14:25:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-12 14:23:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-12 14:19:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-12 14:18:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971
Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-08-12 14:14:00 →
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971
August 12th, 2014 – Darshan
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