Another Block on the ToVP Dome
→ ISKCON News

This spectacular four-minute video from BhakTV shows a massive crane lifting a one-ton stainless-steel panel onto the center dome of the Temple of the Vedic Planetarium in Sridham Mayapur, India. The crane is accompanied by a remote-controlled miniature helicopter with an on-board HD video camera.

Monday, May 5th, 2014
→ The Walking Monk

Halifax, Nova Scotia
 
Last Day in Halifax
 
The hearty daffodils stand in all their glory. Even in the dark, early hours, they transcend without sunshine and with mouths wide open.  Raccoons screech at each other – a fight no doubt.  I can hear them, but I can’t necessarily see them.  For years in my travels I’ve heard their sounds, predominantly their whimpering.  Then the birds pick up with their morning welcome songs.  It’s all awesome, and it really beats the noise of the maddening traffic, when passions kick in and the nocturnal peace that’s punctuated with raccoon party fights is all done.  This transition of sound and activity is my observation for many years now on early morning early walks.
 
Corey and Theresa had us over for lunch.  Once again, I’m impressed what a little training has done for younger folks such as the youth.  Corey, in particular, travelled with our east coast monks one summer and is now enjoying the lasting and favourable effects.  He whipped up this fabulous meal for a group of us.  His service mood was excellent.  The apartment he and Theresa share is a small oasis of sacred books by Bhaktivedanta Book Trust.  They have a modest but beautiful shrine of Krishna deities.  They keep a clean place.  I see a smooth assimilation of Vedic culture in their lives.  I’m happy for this young couple who might otherwise be prone to stay on the grid of sense gratification.
 
With it being my last day in Halifax, I called on a small ad hoc meeting amongst faithful followers to discuss vision and organization for the sharing of Krishna Consciousness in this neat old city.  There’s a rich history here of the acceptance of waves of immigrants at this natural and national port of entry, of taking a major blow when explosives from the harbor went off a century ago, flattening the city, and of a ready response to burying hundreds of corpses, victims of the fateful Titanic.  I think we can fit Krishna into the multiple experiences of Haligonians, residents of Halifax. 
 
May the Source be with you!
 
6 KM

Fascinating Mahabharata Characters online course
→ The Spiritual Scientist

The “Fascinating Mahabharata Characters” course by Chaitanya Charan das covers systematically the biographies of  sixteen important Mahabharata characters. Drawing insights from the broad Vedic wisdom-tradition, the course explains their qualities, resolves controversies and demonstrates the perennial relevance of this timeless classic.

The characters covered are:

  1. Bhishma
  2. Drona
  3. Vidura
  4. Dhritarashtra
  5. Kunti
  6. Yudhisthira
  7. Bhima
  8. Arjuna
  9. Nakula
  10. Sahadeva
  11. Duryodhana
  12. Karna
  13. Draupadi
  14. Ashwatthama
  15. Ghatothkacha
  16. Abhimanyu

To know more about the course, visit www.bhakticourses.com.

 

What Is The Question Of Mind?
→ Japa Group


When discussing the correct method of chanting japa, Srila Prabhupada generally advised his disciples to "just hear the name." In Bhagavad-gita, Sri Krsna orders Arjuna to do the same, tat srnu, "Just hear Me." Once a disciple told Srila Prabhupada that it is very difficult to control the wandering mind during japa. In reply, Prabhupada said:

"What is the use of controlling the mind? You have to chant and hear, that's all. You have to chant with your tongue, and the sound you hear, that's all. What is the question of mind?"
Srila Prabhupada Morning Walk 3/2/75

From Art Of Chanting Hare Krsna by Mahanidhi Swami

Why are there differences among different religions?
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Different countries have different water, air, mountains, forests, eatables and clothing. Because of this, the people of these places have naturally developed different physiques, complexions, customs, clothing and food. Similarly, the peoples' mentality will differ. And thus various people's ideas of God, though being basically similar, will differ in details. When men in various countries surpass the uncivilized stage and progress to the civilized stage, the scientific stage, the moral stage and the devotional stage, they will develop differences, in language, dress, food, and mentality. This gives rise to difference in the mode of worship of God. Considering the matter objectively, there is no harm in secondary differences. If there is agreement concerning the essential nature of God and His worship, there should be no obstacle in attaining the same result. Thus Mahaprabhu has instructed that we should instruct everyone to worship the pure form of the Lord, but at the same time we should not criticize others' modes of worship.

Because of the above reasons, we see the following differences amongst the religions of different countries.

1. difference of teachers or prophets
2. difference in worshipper's mentality and consequent expression of reverence. 3. difference in procedures of worship
4. difference in conceptions of God
5. difference in God's name and statements due to difference in language

- Chaitanya Shikshamrita, Bhaktivinoda Thakura,

Urban Yoga
→ Ramai Swami

IMG_0671IMG_0672

The Urban Yoga program in Melbourne is still going well. It is held on the next floor up from our Crossways restaurant downtown. The devotees teach yoga as well as having kirtan and lecture nights.

I was asked to give a talk and spoke on developing spiritual qualities. There were probably 40-50 people who attended and most were new guests. It was enthusing to see everyone listening intently to the subject matter.
IMG_0673IMG_0669

The greatest thing
→ KKSBlog

(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 20 April 2014, Durban, South Africa, Ratha Yatra Initiation Lecture)

kks initiationIn the Bhagavad-gita (7.19), we have that verse:

bahūnāḿ janmanām ante
jñānavān māḿ prapadyate
vāsudevaḥ sarvam iti
sa mahātmā su-durlabhaḥ

It is a rare person who, after many many births, is coming to the point where they say,”Krsna is everything,” or “Krsna is the priority in my life.” So initiation stands for that – that Krsna becomes the priority. So that is wonderful. That is actually the greatest thing.

After so many lifetimes of being distracted by so many secondary things, now the most wonderful, ultimately the only wonderful objective, has become the priority in our life. So it is a glorious moment. It is a blissful moment. It is a happy moment. It is a time when we become finally relieved from being misguided and we are taking our steps on the spiritual path which is a blissful path. It is a path that brings us more and more auspiciousness with every step that we take.

So in this way, it is indeed a very important and significant moment. 

 

Travel Journal#10.8: Dublin, Northern Ireland, London, Holland
→ Travel Adventures of a Krishna Monk

Diary of a Traveling Sadhaka, Vol. 10, No. 8
By Krishna-kripa das
(April 2014, part two
)
Dublin, Northern Ireland, London, Holland
(Sent from Newcastle upon Tyne, England, on May 7, 2014)

Where I Went and What I Did

After returning to Dublin from India, I did harinama for three days and attended the evening programs at our temple there. The final day we had a nine-hour harinama. Then I went to Govindadvipa, the Krishna island in Northern Ireland, where I got to give the Sunday feast lecture and chant for 3½ hours afterward as part of a extra kirtana program. I did not do harinama in public on Easter Sunday, but because it was three-day holiday weekend in Ireland, many people visited the temple and heard the extra kirtana. On Easter Monday, a bank holiday in Northern Ireland, eleven devotees chanted in Enniskillen, half an hour from Govindadvipa. Then I went to Belfast for three days of harinama and an evening outreach program. Then I took an overnight ferry and bus to London, where I arrived just in time for the monthly Bhagavatam class time harinama. The following night I traveled by ferry and van with Parasurama Prabhu and his party to Amsterdam for the mammoth King’s Day harinama with over a hundred devotees chanting for eight hours or so. Then I joined His Holiness Janananda Goswami’s party and did harinamas and evening programs in the Rotterdam area. The last day of the month I flew with Janananda Goswami and his party from Amsterdam to Manchester, where I did three hours of harinama in the late afternoon. Actually I am becoming tired just recalling all the traveling, but there were many fulfilling devotional experiences.

I share quotes from Srila Prabhupada’s books and Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami’s journal. I share many, many notes on Janananda Goswami’s lectures in Holland. I share notes on a japa seminar by Tulasi Priya Prabhu, a senior devotee in the Irish Yatra. I share notes from the speeches of several devotees at an outreach program in Belfast and comments by some participants.

Thanks to Gopalacarya Prabhu (Govindadvipa), Kevin (Govindadvipa), Premarnava Prabhu (Dublin), Shelina (Govindadvipa), Syamamayi dd (Belfast), and Bhagavati Dasi (Belfast), and Madhava Gauranga Prabhu (Rotterdam) for their kind donations which allow me to continue traveling and promoting the public congregational chanting of the holy name. Thanks to Vicaru Prabhu for the nice pictures of the harinama in London.

Itinerary

May 7–9: Newcastle area
May 10–11: Birmingham 24-hour kirtana
May 12–13: Newcastle
May 14: Sheffield harinama and nama-hatta program
May 15: Preston harinama and nama-hatta program
May 16: Manchester harinama / Leeds evening program
May 17: Manchester
May 18: Sheffield Ratha-yatra
May 19–20: Manchester harinamas
May 21: Sheffield kirtana night
May 22: Preston kirtana night
May 23: Liverpool evening program
May 24: York harinama and program
May 25: Leeds harinama and program
May 26–June 2: Newcastle area (May 31: 8-hour kirtana, June 1: Sunday lecture)
June 3–6: Scotland
June 7–8: Newcastle Green Festival harinama
June 9–10: Newcastle area harinama
June 11: Sheffield?
June 12–21: London (June 15: Ratha-yatra, June 20–21: Stonehenge Solstice Festival)
June 22–29: Manchester area nama-hattas with Sutapa Prabhu’s party
June 30–July 11: Newcastle area
July 12: York?
July 13: Manchester harinama and Sunday program
July 14–18: Manchester
July 19: Manchester Ratha-yatra
July 20: Prague Ratha-yatra
July 21–25: Baltic Summer Festival in Lithuania
July 26–27: Warsaw harinamas?
July 28–August 3: Kostrzyn (Polish Woodstock)
August 4–7: harinamas in Germany or Czech Padayatra
August 8–9: Ancient Trance Festival (near Leipzig)?
August 10: Bratislava?
August 11–12: Bratislava or Prague
August 13: Prague
August 14–17: Trutnov (Czech Woodstock)
August 18–23: France / Holland
August 24: Amsterdam Ratha-yatra
August (last week)–September (first half) – The North of England / Ireland
September (rest) – New York

Harinamas in Dublin

The day I arrived from India, Ananta Nitai Prabhu and I did harinama for about an hour and a half. Then I attended the Thursday evening program and was happy to see they have some enthusiastic regulars who love kirtana there, some I recalled from before.


The next day, Premarnava Prabhu, Bhakta John, and a couple of devotees who work at Govinda’s chanted with us.


That Saturday we had the nine-hour harinama.


We arranged a number of amplifiers for its duration.

At least eleven devotees participated at least some of the time, many visible in these photos.


Premarnava Prabhu, playing the drum above, chanted for over eight hours. Nanda Kumar Prabhu, front and center, who was recovering from a flight from India, must have chanted about five hours, much longer than usual.





Most amazing for me was Eleanora, who has just been coming around for a few weeks. She had never been on harinama before. Judging from her gray hair, she must have been at least fifty years old. She was the only person who was on time. I was five minutes late myself. She stayed out for almost five hours, taking a break once to get something to drink. She had a wonderful time, chanting, clapping, and dancing. I saw it as evidence for how universal harinama is.If anyone is serious to take the trouble to go on harinama, the holy name is willing to reciprocate and bless that person with a wonderful joyful experience.


Many, many, people danced with us.





Even this dog sculptor moved with the music..


Some danced in the distance as we passed.
  




At Temple Bar, three musicians played with us.




Govindadvipa, the Krishna Island in Northern Ireland


Govindadvipa is special because of the beautiful Radha-Govinda deities.



In descriptions of Krishna’s abode, Goloka Vrndavana, in the spiritual world, animals such as deer and peacocks are found, and these animals can be found at Govindadvipa as well.




There we did extra kirtana on Easter Sunday,



both outside the temple,



and within it.


Harinama in Enniskillen



No more than half an hour from Govindadvipa is Enniskillen, the largest nearby town in Northern Ireland. On Easter Monday, a bank holiday in Northern Ireland, eleven devotees chanted there for two hours near lunch time.



One nice devotee lady, Karunesvari dd, who plays the harmonium, did an excellent job singing much of the time. 



My friends Kevin and Shelina, who I met doing Bhakti-sastri in Mayapur, came out with their son, Tukarama, demonstrating that harinama can be a family affair.

Harinama in Belfast

I did harinama in Belfast for three days.


The first day it was just Bhagavati Dasi and myself, until Damayanti dd, who happened to be in the area, walked by, and joined us, playing the karatalas. We chanted in an area called Victoria Square, in front an abandoned shop, where there was an alcove protecting us from the intermittent rain.

In Belfast, in general, it is the kids who are most attracted by the harinamas.

A teenage girl, walking with a group of friends, smiled as she glanced at our harinama party, moving her hands in time with the music. As she passed in front of us, she said, “I can feel it!”

During the course of the harinama, a boy donated a Pepsi and a girl donated a fruit drink. At the day’s end, we chanted to Poundworld, and I went to the closest cashier, setting the Pepsi on the counter and saying, “Didn’t realize this had caffeine in it. Can I trade it for something else?” Thus I traded the Pepsi for half a liter of sparkling water and 10 pence, both of which we used in the Lord’s service!

After chanting for over two and a half hours, we walked to our evening outreach event, a meeting of a group of Belfast seekers, called Connected Awakening, where we were the guest speakers. As we made our way through the streets, I sang a lively Hare Krishna tune from Lokanath Swami’s Eternal Bliss album. There is a pause in the tune after the phrase “Hare Hare,” each time it occurs, and a group of three kids, who heard us singing, would spontaneously shout “Hare” during that pause and raise their hands in the air with great delight. This continued for several mantras our until our paths diverged.

The Connected Awakening people listened respectfully in the first kirtana and chanted and danced in the second one. It was wonderful to see their participation.



The second day on harinama, for part of the time we had five people, with Syamamayi dd, Caitanya Candrodaya Prabhu, and Bhakta Alex from Slovenia, joining me and Bhagavati Dasi.



The third day it was Nitai Prabhu, Syamamayi dd, and Bhakta Alex.

Syamamayi dd was reminded of her love for harinama and is enthusiastic to come out more often. She and other devotees talked about creating a special kirtana and prasadam event for the Belfast youth at a venue downtown, and she began searching for a venue.

A very pregnant lady on the boat from Ireland to England asked me to say a prayer for her. She said she had to see her relatives in England but had to return to Ireland to have the baby. She did not want to go into labor before returning to Ireland. I said I would say a prayer. I offered a common prayer to Lord Caitanya and asked Him to fulfill her desire and increase her devotion for Him.

Harinama in London


The last Friday of the month at ISKCON London the devotees do harinama, chanting in procession on Oxford Street instead of Bhagavatamclass. By Krishna's mercy I arrived at the temple via an overnight ferry and bus from Dublin that was an hour and a half early, just five minutes before the harinama started!!!


I led for the beginning.


Later Murli Manohar Prabhu, the head pujari and a senior brahmacari, led a very lively kirtana.

I was so happy Krishna made that arrangement for me to arrive just in time for the harinama.

Harinamas in Holland

As I have done since 2009, I chanted in the King’s Day (formerly Queen’s Day) harinama in Amsterdam. As usual Kadamba Kanana Swami brought three busloads of devotees from Radhadesh, many from his Vyasa Puja festival, to join the Dutch Hare Krishna devotees in chanting for about eight hours on the streets of Amsterdam for King’s Day, celebrated on April 26.


Kadamba Kanana Swami, originally from Holland, was our leader.


Parasurama Prabhu, traveled from the UK, with eleven devotees, and his wonderful harinama rickshaw, with his Gaura Nitai deities and a powerful sound system, that added a lot to the event. In the above picture, he is coming out of a museum building.

Many, many people danced with us.


Sometimes the dancers formed a bridge of pairs of people holding hands, and then the pairs went under the bridge, coming out, and adding themselves to the end of the bridge. Both the devotees and people from the crowd took part in this.


  

Sometimes rows of people danced.


Sometimes a chain of dancers snaked through the crowd.




One man danced on a roof.


Some devotees would swing the people around.


One devotee lady taught three happy girls to chant the mantra, which they read from a card.



His Holiness Janananda Goswami was so enthusiastic that after chanting at King’s Day in Amsterdam till 4:00 p.m., he wanted to return to Rotterdam and do harinama there! On that Rotterdam harinama,one girl named Vera danced with us, bought a book and took an invitation to their monthly Sunday program. Vera bought a friend, Dana, to that program and they stayed the whole time and then came on harinama with us afterward for over two hours! It was truly amazing to witness such participation from very new people!

Between a lunch program and evening program we did a harinama for almost an hour and a half in a small suburb on the north side of Rotterdam named Hillegersberg. We encountered two groups of children who participated by dancing with us. Janananda Goswami is very good at interacting with the children.


One group was smaller kids.



The other group was bigger kids.


Thanks to Sivananda Sena Prabhu for the nice pictures of them and to his wife, Moksa Lakshmi Devi Dasi for this Facebook video of our harinama with the bigger kids: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10203548444572636


Vera and Dana came to the evening program at Madhava Gauranga Prabhu’s house, and Dana brought her boyfriend, Anthony.


Janandana Goswami led a lively kirtana.

 

Dana, Anthony, and Vera (from left to right), on the right side of the above photo, all participated beautifully in the chanting and dancing.

I was happy to attain the association of Janananda Goswami and go on harinamas and to evening programs with him. 

To see the photos which I did not include in this blog, many of which are from the King’s Day harinama in Amsterdam, click on the link below or copy it to your web browser [note that the unused pictures follow the used pictures in the album]:

Insights

Srila Prabhupada:

from Srimad-Bhagavatam 7.9.47, purport:

Whatever manifestations exist, their cause is the Supreme Personality of Godhead. This cannot be understood by so-called silence or by any other hodgepodge method. The supreme cause can be understood only by devotional service, as stated in Bhagavad-gita(bhaktya mam abhijanati[Bg. 18.55]).”

from Srimad-Bhagavatam 7.9.49:

Neither the three modes of material nature [sattva-guna, rajo-gunaand tamo-guna], nor the predominating deities controlling these three modes, nor the five gross elements, nor the mind, nor the demigods nor the human beings can understand Your Lordship, for they are all subjected to birth and annihilation. Considering this, the spiritually advanced have taken to devotional service. Such wise men hardly bother with Vedic study. Instead, they engage themselves in practical devotional service.”

from Srimad-Bhagavatam 7.9.49, purport:

After understanding the Supreme Lord through devotional service, such devotees are no longer interested in studies of the Vedas. Indeed, this is confirmed in the Vedas also. The Vedas say, kim artha vayam adhyeshyamahe kim artha vayam vakahyamahe. What is the use of studying so many Vedic literatures? What is the use of explaining them in different ways? Vayam vakshyamahe. No one needs to study any more Vedic literatures, nor does anyone need to describe them by philosophical speculation.”

from Srimad-Bhagavatam 2.3.10, purport:

Srila Jiva Gosvami has explained this desirelessness as bhajaniya-parama-purusha-sukha-matrasva-sukhatvam in his Sandarbha. This means that one should feel happy only by experiencing the happiness of the Supreme Lord.”

In the mundane field such an outlook of doing good to others in the form of society, community, family, country or humanity is a partial manifestation of the same original feeling in which a pure living entity feels happiness by the happiness of the Supreme Lord. Such superb feelings were exhibited by the damsels of Vrajabhumi for the happiness of the Lord. The gopis loved the Lord without any return, and this is the perfect exhibition of the akamah [desireless] spirit.”

from Srimad-Bhagavatam 7.10.13, purport:

Srila Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura says: evam prahladasyamsena sadhana-siddhatvam nitya-siddhatvam ca naradadivaj jneyam.There are two classes of devotees—the sadhana-siddhaand the nitya-siddha. Prahlada Maharaja is a mixed siddha;that is, he is perfect partly because of executing devotional service and partly because of eternal perfection. Thus he is compared to such devotees as Narada. Formerly, Narada Muni was the son of a maidservant, and therefore in his next birth he attained perfection (sadhana-siddhi) because of having executed devotional service. Yet he is also a nitya-siddhabecause he never forgets the Supreme Personality of Godhead.

Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami:

from Radio Shows:

Why do we settle for so much less? Dream and try to carry out those dreams. Be humble and patient, but don’t be stingy.”



Today’s drawing shows three
bhaktas dancing and chanting
with upraised arms.
They appear to be
having a lot of fun.

Harinamais actually
a recreation only.
It is profoundly
grave spiritual prayer
more holy than
mystic yoga,
practice of austerity,
or study of the Vedas.
It is so powerful that
it pleases Krishna
very much yet
it is performed
in a lighthearted
way, bringing bliss to the chanters.
This is the practice
of
harinama.It is
the heaviest
yajna
yet the performers do it in joy.”



Today’s drawing shows four
devotees dancing and chanting
with upraised arms.
Although they are only four
they look like a strong attractive
presence as many devotees
as possible should go out
on harinamatogether.
A large number inharinama
breaks the modes
of nature, and the holy
name becomes dominant
over the local
mundane forms. But
if only four or five
or six go out together, they
can transform the
air space and bring
the spiritual world
by the great chant
for deliverance.
Who knows
the power of harinama,
how it is changing the world for the better
and how it is spreading its influence.
By the will of Krishna anything is possible.”

Janananda Goswami:

That person who feels and loves and who interacts with the mind but is beyond the mind is neither human nor nonhuman.

The human body is suitable for spiritual life while the plant and animal bodies are not so suitable for spiritual life, but unfortunately most people do not use their intelligence for spiritual purposes.

Often people just conceive spiritual to just be something subtle, beyond the body, beyond the intelligence.

When we speaking of loving someone we do not speak of loving people with our brain, but with our heart, not the physical organ of the heart, the region of the heart. [That is said to be the location of the soul, according to the Vedas.]

We do not mind drunkards [who we encounter in our public chanting]; we are drunkards in a different way.

Individual desires may be satisfied but the incessant flow of desires cannot be satisfied.

Although the body and mind are changing, the self, which experiences the changes, is unchanging. To realize that spiritual identity is the goal of spiritual life.

To understand who are we, why we are where we are, and if that is the best place for us, is what we are meant to learn.

Whatever we get, we lose in this world. This experience of termination is not natural for the soul. It is also not natural for us to be ignorant.

People say ignorance is bliss, but if we are ignorance we may suffer in the future because of it.

So much discrimination is there based on the body: nationality, gender, race, etc.

If we enter the room through different doors and we fight over which door we came in through, it is foolish. Similarly it is foolish to fight over bodily differences.

Our modern civilization has no organized program for spiritual life.

In China, you can only believe in reincarnation if you approved by the government.

What have I done to deserve this?” we think. That is what my mother said when I joined the Hare Krishna movement.

Yoga is not just a practice to feel good, but to link up our actual self with the Supreme Self.

Meditation is not meant to focus on a temporary feature of this material world but to eternally fix the mind on Krishna.

When we hear the vibration of Hare Krishna, it enters our consciousness, and not only purifies us from karma, but satisfies our soul.

Krishna consciousness is not so much about giving things up but adopting things.

Yoga is not just to make us more peaceful or to make life more pleasant but to awaken us to self-realization.

When our heart becomes purified of lust, greed, and anger, we can attain eternal spiritual bliss.

Through bhakti we connect to Krishna directly.

In this world of names we live in, the name and named are not the same. This is not true with Krishna whose name, form, and pastimes are Absolute.

Dancing and chanting does not seem like yoga to most people, but it connects us to Krishna. It is conscious connection with the supreme consciousness, Lord Krishna.

Our real problem is internal not external.

If there is no peace within, there is no peace without.

Q: What is the easiest way to attain success in spiritual perfection?
A: The easiest way is find spiritual teacher who is connected to God and to attain spiritual knowledge from him. Though the guidance of a pure devotee, by ultimate revelation from the Lord within, one attains enlightenment.

We are encouraging people to chant Hare Krishna, but we are happy to see other people chanting any name of God.

The more we connect with the sound vibration, the more we experience the presence of Krishna,

With meditation, if the mind wanders there is no benefit, but if one chants, even if the mind wanders, there is still some benefit.

Meditation does not do much to benefit others but the chanting benefits everyone.

You chant, chant, and chant, and you become enchanted.

Kirtana is so wonderful because even if we are mixed in consciousness, we can still experience some spiritual taste.

We have many songs describing Krishna, how to attain Krishna, and the nature of this world.

There is a process of experiencing the fire in wood, or the taste in water, and other things that cannot be perceived with the eyes. Similarly there is a process for experiencing the soul.

We have a desire, and in time, that desire is facilitated.

We are gradually evolving, and we get to the point of inquiring, “What is the purpose of life? Why am I suffering?” The Supersoul gives us the association so we can broaden our prospective.

The sun removes the fog, but it takes some time, similarly spiritual activities take some time to remove our material darkness.

Being in the material world is like being in the dark or in the fog.

As we may live in an apartment but it does not belong to us, similarly we are living in this body but it does not belong to us. We have a lease on this body, but the owner can cancel it at any time.

One by one, things are changed or decayed by the force of time.

People spend billions of euros to avoid suffering and death.

Lust is when we think we are the enjoyer of that which does not belong to us.

If we just use things for their material purpose, that is lust.

The Rolling Stones are still rolling, still stoned, and still cant get no satisfaction.

When one has deep inner happiness, external material happiness is very shallow, and one does not depend on it.

Saint Francis was minimally dressed and was walking in the winter in Italy with another monk who kept asking him where he will find happiness. They got to the monastery too late, and the doorman would not let them in. They were freezing and decided to try again. The doorman yelled at them and struck them. The other monk complained, but Francis smiled, and said, “This is real happiness – to not depend on external situations for happiness.”

As long as we are thinking some material adjustment will bring us happiness, then we will never experience real happiness.

Krishna says, “Therefore, O Arjuna, best of the Bharatas, in the very beginning curb this great symbol of sin [lust] by regulating the senses, and slay this destroyer of knowledge and self-realization.” Krishna does not say to stop the senses, but to regulate the senses.

In Liverpool I got arrested every day for eight days in row. The policeman knew all my data. He would see me and say, “Mr. Norman, I see you. You better get out of here!”

When I was a kid I remember that it was in the news that the archbishop of Argentina was praying that his country’s team would win the world cup. They did win so he must have had some connections. But that is not the way to pray. We are asking God for peanuts, when God can offer us so much more.

By chanting we do not become zombies. Actually, the chanting opens up our perception, even of this world.

Try to hear the chanting carefully; forget about the world.

There was one police officer who worked in a Oxford Street police station who would have his constables arrest us whenever possible. Then when we were brought in, he would have us sing for him. He liked the singing and was stuck in the police station all day.

If we are absorbed in Krishna consciousness, we will not be disturbed. One should be so busy in devotional service, he does not have to worry about lust.

We cannot fight with Kali-yuga, but we can take shelter of the chanting of the holy name.

Lokanath Swami when he gave me sannyasa, the renounced order of life, said, “Body, mind, and words must be engaged in Krishna. Body, mind, and words, BMW. That is the real BMW.”

You can chant when you are in pain, or in the rain, or on a train, or in Spain or Ukraine, in a drain, or even if you are insane.

When we are preparing for an exam, we usually take help someone who knows. Similarly in preparing for death we should take help from someone who knows.

As we cook for our children because of natural affection, similarly we can cook for God.

If you think about it, you have never seen your face, you have only seen an image of your face in a mirror.

The relationships we have in this world are reflections of the real relationships there in the spiritual world, which are the most beautiful relationships.

If you love your boss and you like your job, you may continue working if they stop paying you, but it is unlikely. Thus service in this world is motivated.

We are all looking taste in relationships. In neutral relationships we are satisfied if the relationship is peaceful.

Service is there in all relationships.

We have to learn to relate to each other in this world in such a way that we attain the spiritual world.

Nature, love, energy, etc., come from a source, and we offer it back to that source.

Anyone can read the Bhagavad-gita, but the actual realization is given by the object of realization and that is in response one’s bhakti, or devotion.

When Krishna says, “If one offers Me with love and devotion a leaf, a flower, fruit or water, I will accept it,” that does not mean that is all that He will accept, but rather it indicates that anyone can find something to offer Him.

In an orchestra if everyone plays as they wish without considering the conductor it is doubtful the result will be harmonious.

People talk about love of God. They institutionalize it. But it is a reality that becomes manifest when our heart becomes pure.

Devotional service is most easily experienced through hearing and chanting the Hare Krishna maha-mantra.

Just as if you get in the tram, you will go to the destination of the tram, if you just hear and chant Hare Krishna you will attain the spiritual world.

We think “I do not like the reflection, so let me adjust the mirror,” but it is better to understand the reality beyond the reflection.

This is Bhagavad-gita As It Is not Bhagavad-gita As I See It.

Q: You say when you put Krishna in the center, we will be harmonious, but I am in management and although we are all devotees, it seems that all is not harmonious.
A: You can see the apparent conflict as an opportunity to surrender more to Krishna. See it as a difference of opinion about how to serve Krishna, and not that one is right and one is wrong. Pray to the Lord to guide you in management. Read Srila Prabhupada’s instructions on this matter, and read Srila Prabhupada-lilamrita and learn from Srila Prabhupada’s example. Consult with other devotees.

Once in Vrindavan we had a program and invited all the important people in Vrindavan, but we forgot to invite the mayor. It was a big blunder, and everyone in the town was talking about it. The people involved in organizing the program were discussing what went wrong. Rather than blaming each other, each of them considered how in some way it was his fault, and they all apologized.

Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura said, “One who thinks this world is in need of reform is himself in need of reform. The only reform that is required is a reform of our own perception, and that is possible by hearing the holy name.”

One contemporary follower of Lord Caitanya wrote, “Even the topmost devotees occasionally become perplexed about what to do and what not to do in this age of Kali Age.”

I recommend devotees to read Markine Bhagavata Dharma, a poem Srila Prabhupada wrote upon his arrival in America. Practically everything about Srila Prabhupada’s mood is there.

The cow wants to offer its milk to Krishna. That is its service. What else can it do?

In our offerings to Krishna in this contaminated age, you just have to do the best you can.

Srila Prabhupada never advised us once to be vegan. Many, many times he said that he wanted us to have our own cows and produce our own milk.

People say because of the redirection of her waters and because of pollution, the river Yamuna at present is not really the Yamuna, but Yamuna is not controlled by businessmen, politicians, and engineers. The last two years I had the most ecstatic experiences bathing in the river Yamuna.

When Kirtanananda first went to Vrindavana and asked Srila Prabhupada, “Why is Vrindavana so dirty?” Srila Prabhupada replied, “Because your heart is so dirty.”

I personally purchased vegetarian ice cream for Srila Prabhupada, at his request, in London.

In Hong Kong he said the devotees could offer mushrooms because they so much a part of the diet there.

I worked in a slaughterhouse before I became a devotee. I do not know what planet the people who work in those places come from, but they are not ordinary people. You have to have a certain mentality to work in such places. I could not last there very long.

There was a cow who would come to our Hare Krishna programs. She was always on time, not like some of the devotees. She would always sit down for the class, always with the women, never with the men. She would stand up for the kirtana. When we served prasadam, she got a banana leaf with food on it like everyone else. She would eat the prasadam, the banana leaf plate, and everyone else’s leftovers. She would bring other cows to the program. She would take part in dramas. You would not have to call her for go puja[worship of the cow], she would come up for it and return to her place when it was done. A devotee in the village began having mangala-arati in his house, and the cow found out about it, and would show up at 4:30 in the morning for it. After she stopped giving milk her owner sold her to the devotees, and she stayed with them for the rest of her life.

Tulasi Priya Prabhu (Ireland):

A devotee regrets offenses and makes plans to avoid repeating them.

The chanting itself teaches us how to chant. Lord Caitanya also teaches about many aspects of chanting in His eight verses (“Siksastaka”).

Bhaktivinoda Thakura prays to Krishna, “As much as I attached to material things let me be attached to Your holy feet.”

Prayers with regret and humility inspire Krishna to grant His mercy.

We can pray to Krishna to swap our negative material attachments for positive devotional attachments.

Siksastaka 3 tells how we can come to the point of constant chanting, and constant chanting frees us from all offenses.

The man in ignorance identifies himself with the body and tries to create a situation where he is honored for some attribute of his body. But when he is enlightened and understands he is not the body, he loses interest in pursuing such illusory fame.

A devotee does not think, “I am so humble,” rather he thinks “I am so proud. I wish I could be humble.”

One can have anarthas [unwanted desires] and not be willing to give them up because he has subordinated his desire for pure devotional service to them.

One cannot be going after all these external things [dhanam (wealth),janam (fame),sundarim (women)] and get krishna-prema (love of God).

Siksastaka 5 teaches that we cannot make spiritual advancement on our own strength.

We have to be very aware that the material world is a horrible place in order to pray to Krishna to lift us out of it.

There was once a devotee who left ISKCON and lived with some babajis in Radha Kund and was chanting 64 rounds a day. He told Srila Prabhupada the babajis told him if you chant 64 rounds, Krishna has to bestow his mercy on you. Srila Prabhupada said that this was karma-mimamsa philosophy. So although he was at Radha Kund, associating with babajis and chanting 64 rounds, he was a becoming follower of karma-mimamsa.

Although Srila Prabhupada said to just chant and hear, he also said a lot of other things about chanting.

Is your mind bringing you to the chanting or is it bringing you away from the chanting?

Urmila dd once said in class in Chowpatty, “How is it that devotees say that you can think about Krishna at any other time except when you are chanting the holy name?”

Our attention goes to whatever has more meaning for us than the mantra. Thus we must appreciate the meaning of the mantra. If we just bring the mind back to the mantra, unless the mantra has meaning for us, our mind will not stick to it.

Bhagavati Dasi:

We attain knowledge by becoming a disciple of one who has knowledge.

By serving the spiritual master, we please him and attain knowledge and become qualified to distribute knowledge ourselves.

We are simultaneously one with and different from God. We have the same qualities as God, but He has them to an infinite extent. We have some beauty, some knowledge, and some strength, but He has unlimited beauty, knowledge, and strength.

Tata means bank, like the bank of the river, not Lloyds Bank. [laughter]

Syamamayi Dasi:

Prabhupada came with to the West with two trunks of Srimad-Bhagavatams.

Silent meditation is subject to distractions by material sound, so meditation on spiritual sound is superior.

At a certain point Srila Prabhupada did something he did not originally plan to do, to go back to India and inspire his countrymen to take their own spiritual culture seriously by showing how his western disciples were taking it seriously.

Caitanya Candrodaya Prabhu:

The scriptures such Srimad-Bhagavatam are eternal and are revealed.

The body gives you trouble but it is nothing compared to the mind.

You can check how purified you are. You do not have ask anyone.

The name of the Lord is not part of the material energy.

Patanjali says that after samadhi is the path of bhakti-yoga.

Anasuya:

Cooking for someone else is more exciting than cooking for yourself. So you can cook for the Lord.

Alec, president of the Connected Awakening club in Belfast:

When I encountered Hinduism, I came across Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva. I found myself attracted to the name of Vishnu. Then I came to understand that there is a relationship between Vishnu and Krishna, and I encountered the Hare Krishna temple. Later I saw a devotee and got Bhagavad-gita As It Is, and I have been reading it every since.

comment from member of Connected Awakening club in Belfast:

I can tell you from my personal experience with Christianity many years ago that what is spoken by the people in tongues is not always completely pure.

-----

This verse is a favorite because it tells how to easily attain Krishna:

ananya-cetah satatam
yo mam smarati nityasah
tasyaham sulabhah partha
nitya-yuktasya yoginah

For one who always remembers Me without deviation, I am easy to obtain, O son of Pritha, because of his constant engagement in devotional service.” (Bhagavad-gita 8.14)

Chandan Yatra, May 2, New Dvaraka, Los Angeles
Giriraj Swami

03.05.15_02.ChandanYatra_LAGiriraj Swami read and spoke from Sri Caitanya-caritamrta Madhya-lila 4.105-161.

TEXT

gopinatha amara se eka-i anga haya
inhake candana dile habe mora tapa-kshaya

TRANSLATION

“There is no difference between My body and Gopinatha’s body. They are one and the same. Therefore if you smear the sandalwood pulp on the body of Gopinatha, you will naturally also smear it on My body. Thus the temperature of My body will be reduced.”

PURPORT by Srila Prabhupada

Gopala was situated in Vrindavana, which was far from Remuna. In those days, one had to pass through provinces governed by the Muslims, who sometimes hindered travelers. Considering the trouble of His devotee, Lord Gopala, the greatest well-wisher of His devotees, ordered Madhavendra Puri to smear the sandalwood pulp on the body of Gopinatha, which was nondifferent from the body of Gopala. In this way the Lord relieved Madhavendra Puri from trouble and inconvenience.  —Cc Madhya 4.160

COMMENT by Giriraj Swami

“So, this is the beautiful relationship between the Lord and His pure devotee. The pure devotee is ready to take any trouble for the pleasure of the Lord: in fact, he doesn’t take it as trouble—he takes it as pleasure. Even though externally it may be very difficult, internally he takes it as pleasure, because he is able to serve his Lord. But the Lord, knowing the consciousness of His devotee, wants to serve His devotee by saving him the difficulty. This reciprocation is important for us to know because it will serve as a guideline for how we should act, and it will inspire in us greater appreciation for the Lords’ kind and merciful nature. Even though He is the Lord and is meant to receive all service, He is also a person and wants to reciprocate with His loving servant. If the devotee passes a test, then the Lord doesn’t want him to endure any more pain than necessary.”

03.05.15_04.ChandanYatra_LA03.05.15_05.ChandanYatra_LA03.05.15_03.ChandanYatra_LA03.05.15_01.ChandanYatra_LA
05.02.2014 Chandan Yatra Cc Madhya 4.105-161 Los Angeles

Prabhupada Letters :: Anthology 2014-05-06 13:46:00 →

1968 May 6: "Any sincere person, never mind whether he is hippy or Beatle, if he is actually searching for something beyond this hackneyed material sense gratification, surely he will find the most comfortable shelter. We should try our best, begging every person to give us some time to listen about this Krishna Consciousness movement, as it is taught by Lord Caitanya."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

ISKCON Scarborough – Special Mother’s day weekend programs- May 9th to 11th 2014
→ ISKCON Scarborough


Hare Krishna!

Please accept our humble obeisances!

All glories to Srila Prabhupada!

All glories to Sri Guru and Sri Gauranga!

We would like to warmly invite you and your family to join us for the wonderful Mother’s day weekend celebrations from May 9th (Friday) to May 11th (Sunday) at ISKCON Scarborough.

During this weekend, we would take the opportunity to honour and thank all the Mother's for their selfless, tireless and unconditional service.

May 9th 2014 – Friday - Special guest speaker - HG Shyamasunda dasa (ACBSP). Program starts at 6.45 PM

May 10th 2014 – Saturday - Special Mother’s day class will be given by Her Grace Sita Thakurai DD. Program starts at 6.45 PM

May 11th 2014 – Sunday – Grand Mother’s program - Special Mother’s day class will be given by HG Jagannath Misra das. Program starts at 10.40 AM.

ISKCON Scarborough - Video recording of Mother's day program from 2013:


ISKCON Scarborough- Slideshow of Mother's day program from 2013


Bio Data of HG Shyamasundara dasa:
  • Initiated Brahmana (Vedic priest), disciple of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada since 1976. 
  • Student of Vedic Astrology since 1977. 
  • Given scholarships by the Bhaktivedanta Institute and Bhaktivedanta Book Trust to study Vedic Astrology in India. 
  • Trained in India for 6 years with recognized pandits of Jyotish 
  • An authority in all the main branches of Vedic Astrology: Ganita (mathematical calculations), Jataka (Natal), Prashna, Muhurta and Nimitta.






ISKCON Scarborough
3500 McNicoll Avenue, Unit #3,
Scarborough,Ontario,
Canada,M1V4C7


Email Address:


iskconscarborough@hotmail.com


website:


www.iskconscarborough.com

Sunday, May 4th, 2014
→ The Walking Monk

Halifax, Nova Scotia
 
May the Fourth
 
After a leg journey’s venture along the North West Arm of Halifax Harbour, I decided to sit a few minutes out at the Saint Mary’s Boat Club dock.  I was there in meditative pose on a bench, and without him noticing me, I observed a Mariner coming in to the shore.  I guess that’s what you could call a guy in a kayak.  He came to dock and took meticulously to the care of his boat.  He hosed it down and set it upright after propping it on some stilt stands, and then slipped it over to wash the salt water.  Then he wiped it dry very lovingly and did so twice by flipping it again.  He executed the same for his oars, and all this was done before he set it in place stacked up with hundreds of other kayaks.  Such devotion.
 
I wish I had that much bhakti, devotion, for my paraphernalia.  God knows, as a monk, I own little, but whatever I have, I should treat it like gold, like this guy treats his sporting goods. 
 
Not but two hours later, I saw Nitai Ram, who is such a real brahmin (priest) treat his paraphernalia with similar prudence and care.  Nitai Ram, along with Fernanda and Nina, set up this beautiful havan kund (small fire arena) for a fire ceremony on Nina’s initiation.  Nitai’s execution of the ritual was just fantastic.  It was impressive, like the kayaker’s handling of his equipment. 
 
I’d like to congratulate Nina on her new spiritual name which is, Nirmala.  It sounds like Nirvana.  It means one without pride.  Her parents drove all the way from Saint John, New Brunswick. 
 
My second major destination was to a kirtan kattha session (chant and talk) located on Hollis Street across from the Wired Monk Café.  I avoided cars as much as possible on this gorgeous, fresh and sunny day.  While on foot at Robie Street, two young guys across the road were sitting on their lawn chairs in the front yard sipping pop.  They beckoned me to come to see them, so I crossed the street.  We started to chat.  They were interested in my monkism, and finally invited me into their home to go through their whole house and in to their back yard, and to “bring in good energy” as they put it. 
 
They told me they are musicians and I told them I do Sanskrit mantras.  Spontaneously they took to recording my recitation of the mangala charana mantras, while Michael hit the keyboard for a sitar twang.  And the other fellow (forgot his name), made percussion sounds.  It was a jamming on the spot session for sure. 
 
On this day I saw devotion coming from different directions; a little bit like, if I could use the term, “angles from angels”.
 
May the Fourth be with you!
 
10 KM

Power Of The Hare Krsna Mantra
→ Japa Group

"Everyone of you should be thoroughly convinced of the power of the Hare Krsna mantra to protect you in all circumstances and chant accordingly at all times without offense. Then advancement will be swift and you will gradually come to see everything clearly so that you may act for the pleasure of the Lord without uncertainty."

Letter to Damodara
January 10, 1971

The first austerity
→ KKSBlog

(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 29 April 2014, Radhadesh, Belgium, Srimad Bhagavatam 6.4.49-50)

japaOur purposes are fixed and we do not let obstructing circumstances to block us permanently. Somehow or other, we must go through and to fulfill our purpose – to chant sixteen rounds and to follow four regulative principles – because that is our first austerity, to chant these rounds and to follow these principles.

Then, as we see, the austerities do not come alone. We also need support. It’s not just a matter of the right frame of mind. It is also a matter of favourable conditions so that it becomes feasible and possible. One must protect the rounds. One must put other things out of one’s life and then put the rounds in, otherwise it is not going to happen. One cannot just think, “I’ll see how far I get today.” Then there is a good chance that it won’t work. So chanting sixteen rounds is about making an arrangement to chant sixteen rounds. That is the very first thing and actually so important!

It is not all about a mood and getting absorbed. That comes after. If the arrangement is wrong then how can you get absorbed? First the arrangement has to be in place. When that is all there, then stage two comes, “Yes, how to get absorbed.” I find one thing that helps me is to read a little bit. It’s not that we just to get up and immediately be in the mood, “Okay, let’s get these rounds done! I’m up (shuffling to do things), quickly get stuck in. Then that’s behind me.”

That is one way of chanting. But another way is where I say, “Okay, I’ll read for five or ten minutes.” And I read until I come across something that strikes me. Something that while reading, it strikes me and then I start chanting and that gives some energy to get into the mood. Then the mood starts happening, better. Like that there are impetuses. Ālambham is there, the impetuses in spiritual life that help us to awaken our attraction for Krsna.

 

New Vrindaban Daily darsan @ May 5, 2014.
→ New Vrindaban Brijabasi Spirit

01

Please meditate on the youthful couple who, Their love for each other eternally increasing, and the hairs on Their fair and dark forms erect in ecstasy, are now intoxicated by the sweet nectar of Their amorous pastimes in this forest grove.
[Source : Nectarean Glories of Sri Vrindavana-dhama by Srila Prabodhananda Sarasvati Thakura, Sataka-2, Text-32, Translation.]

From the New Vrindaban Garden: ECOV & Amish Auction 5/5/14
→ New Vrindaban Brijabasi Spirit

Flowers at New Vrindaban

Beautiful flower pots made by Vidya

 

Greetings From the Garden:

This week as I was harvesting asparagus I was asked, “what do you do with all of the vegetables that are picked from the garden?”. What a great question. The vegetables, fruits, and flowers grown here at New Vrindaban are used for the deity kitchen, prasadam, and Govinda’s Restaurant. The organization responsible for the planning, maintenance, and harvesting is ECOV. ECOV is a 501(c)3 nonprofit dedicated to cow protection, local production of food, sustainable housing, alternative energy production and energy conservation. We are also working towards having active teams of oxen, planting 1000 fruit and nut trees and building earth sheltered low impact housing using recycled or locally produced materials. ECOV stands for Earth, Cows, Organics, and Village. Check out the ECOV website

This year we are starting many new garden projects and were in need of garden tools. I have always enjoyed a good auction so when Madhava Gosh suggested we attend an Amish consignment auction in search of tools I was quite intrigued. We left early in the morning for the Captina Auction house in Monroe County, OH. I have been to many animal and produce auctions before, therefore I thought I would know what to expect. I was wrong. There was an almost even mix of Amish and English (English is what the Amish call non Amish people). Horses and buggies surrounded the auction building. The amount and variety of auction items was mind blowing. Large carts filled with tools, buildings, furniture, animals, boats, all things equestrian, tractors, building supplies, trees, hand crafted items, and so much more.

Three auctioneers began the bidding in three locations, it was almost sensory overload deciding which area to watch. We started with the tool carts. It took only a few minutes for the auctioneer to mark Gosh as the dollar man. Or in other words when no one was bidding they could rely on Gosh to pay a dollar for anything that seemed to have at least some value. We were able to get shovels, rakes, boots, and tools for just $1.00. Some items were more expensive than I would have expected, notably pitch forks were going as high as $30.00. I found this odd because I saw a beautiful horse saddle for only $15.00. In a moment of auction weakness I even bid on a deaf puppy (which would have made for an interesting ride home). Luckily I was out bid by a young girl super excited for her $12.00 puppy. In the end we FILLED the van with an assortment of items including a 150 gallon water tank for tree planting, many hand tools, and a very large sorghum & maple syrup evaporator. We had a great day with successful purchases and I can’t wait until next year.

Sridhar Swami and Mayapur
- TOVP.org

Article written by His Holiness Giriraj Swami

The Mayapur Temple of Vedic Planetarium (TOVP), under construction, recently opened an office in the ISKCON Juhu temple, at Hare Krishna Land in Mumbai. In honor of the occasion, and to further the cause, I thought to share an excerpt adapted from my article “Memories of Sridhar Swami” in my book Many Moons.

In November 2003, Srila Prabhupada’s staunch disciple Sridhar Swami phoned me from Bombay and told me that he was planning to go to Vancouver in April for four to six months. Soon thereafter, however, he sent an e-mail saying that he had been diagnosed with liver cancer and was going to Vancouver immediately to see if he could get a liver transplant, which was his “only hope.” There the tests revealed that his cancer had spread beyond the limit allowed for transplants, and so his “only hope” was dashed, and it seemed like he was soon to leave his body. I phoned Maharaja from Santa Barbara and eventually got him on his cell phone. “Where are you?” I asked. “I’m shopping,” he answered. He seemed so jolly—like always. But then he confirmed my worst fears: “The doctor says that I could go at any time. Phone me back later. We have to talk.”

After that, we would speak every day, usually twice a day. And we had wonderful talks. Then the question arose whether he should go to Mayapur—and when. He decided he would go to Mayapur and concluded that he should go as soon as possible.

SDHS-GRS-Carp

He had three desires, he said: “I just want to survive until I reach Mayapur. Then, if possible, I want to live to see the Panca-tattva installed. And then, if possible, I want to live until Gaura-purnima. And then—whatever.” (He meant, of course, “And then—whatever Krishna wants.”) No one knew how much travel Maharaja’s weakened body could bear, but with these three desires in his heart, he flew to London and then to Kolkata, and eventually he arrived in Mayapur.

I wanted to phone Maharaja every day, but the way it worked out with the time difference and all the difficulties in just getting through to Mayapur, we only managed to speak every third day or so. The last time, two days before he left, he was having a good day. The previous day had been a bad one, but the night before, they had given him some additional medication. So when I spoke with him that last time, he was having a good day, and we had one of the best talks I have ever had with anyone in my entire life. We spoke mainly about the Mayapur project and Srila Prabhupada’s mission. It’s really something that I’ll cherish for my whole life—the experience of it and the lessons it contained.

That was Thursday, March 11. The next day, Friday, we installed beautiful brass Deities of Gaura-Nitai in our Carpinteria ashram. They had come from Vrindavan, originally commissioned by Mother Kirtida for Tamal Krishna Goswami. I felt that Their coming was also part of Sridhar Swami’s mercy, because he so fervently desired that the glories of the Panca-tattva be spread and that we build the great temple for Them in Mayapur. So, two representatives of the Panca-tattva had come, and I felt that Their arrival was his desire.

On Thursday I had told Maharaja, “I don’t know if I will be able to phone you again before then, but the Deities have come and we will install Them Friday evening, and by your mercy we’ll try to serve Them and Their dhama.” And now, whenever I look at Their beautiful forms and appealing faces, I feel that we have to do something for Them—we have to build Their wonderful temple, as Sridhar Swami always reminded me.

I think this may have been Maharaja’s main contribution in recent years, at least to me in my service: He impressed upon me—and upon our entire movement—the importance of the Mayapur project, of the “wonderful temple” (adbhuta mandira) that Nityananda Prabhu had desired for the service of Caitanya Mahaprabhu, and that Bhaktivinoda Thakura had envisioned. (One day, when Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura was chanting japa on the balcony of his house in Godruma-dvipa, he looked across the Jalangi River to Mayapur and had a vision of a transcendental city with a magnificent temple rising like a mountain in its midst.) Maharaja’s whole life was dedicated to Srila Prabhupada, and I think he felt that this was one of Srila Prabhupada’s main desires left to be fulfilled. And he felt that we had to do it—and that we had to do it; it would benefit the whole society, and the whole world. He would quote Ambarisa Prabhu: “This will be the tide that will make all the boats rise.” So, although Sridhar Maharaja left so many wonderful legacies for us in terms of his personal qualities and activities, I think one legacy that may serve to unite the movement and fulfill one of Srila Prabhupada’s main desires is his inspiration to push on the construction of the great temple in Mayapur.

When I was a new devotee, maybe less than two years in the movement, I approached Srila Prabhupada one day while he was getting his massage on the veranda of the Calcutta temple. “Srila Prabhupada,” I said, “I have been thinking about what pleases you most.” Srila Prabhupada was so pure he took every word into his heart. He replied, “Yes.” I said, “The two things that seem to please you the most are distributing your books and building the big temple in Mayapur.” Srila Prabhupada smiled with great appreciation and said, “Thank you very much.”

So, those were Srila Prabhupada’s two main strategies for spreading Krishna consciousness, and Sridhar Swami helped him in both. In his early days, Sridhar Swami was instrumental in developing book distribution in North America. And in his later years, he was very involved with the Mayapur project, planning and raising funds for the great temple. And by Maharaja’s mercy, on Gaura-purnima, standing in front of the Panca-tattva Deities in Laguna Beach, I got the inspiration: “Now it’s time for Mayapur. Sridhar Swami understood that long ago. Now it’s time for you [me] to join the effort, too.” And that was important for me in other ways as well—to let go of the past: “Forgive and forget. Now let’s all work together for Mayapur, for Sridhar Swami, for Srila Prabhupada, to build the wonderful temple.”

When I asked Sridhar Swami how I could help, he requested me to speak about my experiences of Srila Prabhupada related to Mayapur. So, in 1973, when Srila Prabhupada came to Calcutta from England, he was very excited and enthusiastic about Mayapur. Tamal Krishna Goswami had gotten the first land, we had observed the first Gaura-purnima festival there, and now Srila Prabhupada had come with the plans for the first building. There was a detailed discussion, and at the end Srila Prabhupada said, “If you build this temple, then Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura will personally come and take you all back to Godhead.”

Now I think, “That might be my only hope, so I’d better get to work. We’d better build the Mayapur project, because I don’t know how else I will ever get back to Godhead.”

His Holiness Sridhar Swami has given me a lifetime of work in service to Srila Prabhupada. Although jivo va maro va, to live or die is the same for a devotee—and certainly that was true of Maharaja—my own feelings are mixed. I think, “He has left so much service for me, given me so many instructions. So I must stay and execute his mission.” I think the same about Tamal Krishna Goswami. Even though part of me misses them terribly and wants to be with them, mainly I think, “They left me so many instructions. I have so much service to do for them here.”

Of course, how long we have to do what they have asked—what they would want—all depends on Krishna. Therefore, whatever time we do have left we should use in the best possible way—in Krishna consciousness.

The post Sridhar Swami and Mayapur appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.

Mumbai for Maypaur
- TOVP.org

Mumbai being the largest metropolis of India, Srila Prabhupada endeavored enthusiastically and established a large temple at Juhu Beach. Mumbai temple has influenced the preaching of ISKCON in India greatly. Srila Prabhupada’s vision was that the congregation and life members of Mumbai can very easily establish the city of Mayapur by building the TOVP and therefore he said, ” Mumbai is my office, Vrindavan is my home, and Mayapur is my place of worship.”

For the last year the TOVP fundraising team has diligently worked and made presentations to the ISKCON India leaders and in return is receiving enthusiastic feedback and commitment from the entire India Yatra to participate in the fundraising endeavors. Mumbai temple president His Grace Braja Hari Prabhu, Zonal Secretary His Grace Devakinandan Prabhu, Sriman Bhima Prabhu, and the local GBC His Holiness Gopal Krsna Maharaj have all together blessed the TOVP fundraising activities by providing a very nice office at the Juhu temple for this purpose.

The TOVP office is located above the life membership office, and the Grand Opening was celebrated by the presence of the above leaders with a Guru puja to Srila Prabhupada and enthusiastic kirtan of hundreds of resident devotees. This auspicious celebration commenced on Sunday morning, April 27th, 2014. We thank the leaders of the Mumbai Yatra for their devotion to the TOVP project and hope to organize many fundraising events there in the near future.

The post Mumbai for Maypaur appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.

Nrsimha Caturdasi – Tuesday, May 13, 2014
→ The Toronto Hare Krishna Temple!

The beginning of a new month marks the beginning of a busy summer season with festivals, seminars and much more! To kick it all off, on Tuesday, May 13th, 2014, Toronto's Hare Krishna Centre will be celebrating Nrsimha Caturdasi (the appearance day of Lord Nrsimha). We are super excited to announce that one of our special guests for the month of May, HG Vaisesika prabhu, will be giving an enlivening discourse on Lord Nrsimha, which will be followed by an abhisheka (bathing ceremony) and of course, kirtan!

Schedule (subject to change):
6:00pm - 6:30pm: Kirtan (Arati)
6:30pm - 6:35pm: Welcome and Announcements
6:35pm - 7:30pm: Discourse on Lord Nrsimha by HG Vaisesika Prabhu
7:30pm - 8:00pm: Abhisheka (Bathing Ceremony)
8:00pm - 8:30pm: Kirtan (Arati)
8:30pm - onwards: Vegetarian Feast

Please join us on this auspicious occasion with your entire family and please stay tuned for the many festivities during this month!