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Free will, desire and karma
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Monday evening meeting with Turkish devotees in Istanbul.
Preaching program in Bulgaria with Indradyumna Swami (38 photos)
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ISKCON Disciples Course
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In pursuance of the GBC’s recent recommendation that the ISKCON Disciples Course be taught to all of the Society’s aspiring initiates, Namhatta leaders and preachers recently attended the course in Sri Dham Mayapur, with the aim of making it available to more than 2000 Namhatta centers throughout West Bengal, Assam, and Odisha. Taking a break […]
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October 1st, 2013 – Darshan
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Evening Program in Iskcon-punjabi Bagh Delhi with Kratu Prabhu (64 photos)
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Vaisnavi Holy Name Retreat
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The Second Vaisnavi Holy Name Retreat at Ekachakra By Devaki devi dasi All of us chant the maha-mantra, but how much are we struggling to come to the platform of purely chanting the holy name. This struggle is so important for we all contend with constant stimulation from our mobile phones and the Internet that […]
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Kirtan Mela at Iskcon Ghaziabad, near Delhi, India, 2013 (32 photos)
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Where Is Our Education Leading Us? Lecture, given at Wits University in Johannesburg
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Madhava prabhu – Day 4 of Polish Woodstock 2013
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Madhava prabhu – Day 4 of Polish Woodstock 2013
Do women have the right to dress however they like? Is modest dressing old-fashioned?
→ The Spiritual Scientist
Answer Summary: Yes, they definitely have that right, but the issue is not of rights, but of sending the right message about ourselves to others. When rights blind us to the right, we brand the right - modest dressing - as wrong, as old-fashioned.
Answer:
Today’s culture makes women believe that they have the right to wear any kind of dress, no matter how revealing. Those women who buy into this belief bristle at any suggestion that their provocative dresses might be a factor in sexual violence against women: “No matter how we dress, men have no right to force themselves on us.”
They are right, of course, that nothing makes sexual violence right. Offenders need to be punished. Swiftly and strongly.
But might bringing the question of rights be blinding us to the right issue?
Suppose a person walked down a dark alley with dollar bills sticking out of his pockets. If muggers rob him, they are culpable. But cops would also offer the common sense suggestion: “Better don’t keep your bills sticking out like that in future.” Suppose that person retorted: “I have the right to keep my money however I like.”
Agreed, that’s his right, but is it the right thing to do? After all, bills sticking out attract the wrong attention. Why attract trouble?
Researchers Carmine Sarracino and Kevin M. Scott in their book The Porning of America give the above example and point out the logical fallacy in the rights argument: “The issue of slutwear is often framed in terms of the wrong argument. ..The question is not, ‘Don’t I have the right to wear a micro-miniskirt and belly shirt?’ The more precise and pertinent questions are, ‘What do I want my clothes to say to the world about me? Do my clothes in fact say what I want them to say, so that others will be more likely to treat me as I want to be treated?”... What we wear, all of us, signals others in society about how we see ourselves… Slutwear (in itself, apart from any behavior) indicates, in the words of the APA [American Psychological Association] report, that girls dressed this way ‘exist for the sexual use of others’.”
The Bhagavad-gita (03.37) declares lust, the dark inner force that impels people to sexual violence, as the enemy of the whole world. Everyone needs to cooperate in combating this Public Enemy Number One. As an essential first strategy in combating lust, the Gita (03.41) urges regulation of the senses. Such regulation implies modest female dresses, for it limits exposure of their skin, which is one of their senses and which is the primary trigger for lust.
Yet today those making suggestions for modest dressing are verbally lynched as politically incorrect, as male chauvinists, as hopelessly outdated self-appointed moral police.
In our obsession with rights, have we ostracized common sense?
Chanting Is The Prime Necessity
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Sunday, September 29th, 2013
→ The Walking Monk
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
I met Willis at German Town, he was just having a smoke outside the pub when we greeted each other. First of all, because he was curious, I had to clarify which monastic order I belong to.
“What’s your belief system?” he asked.
“We follow the ancient teaching of Bhagavad Gita.”
“Hey, I read Bhagavad Gita,” which he pronounced perfectly.
“What do you think of it?”
“It’s got a lot of positive energy,” remarked Willis who I learned is a writer and a real estate agent.
Eventually our conversation lead to many spheres and especially the topic of male/female union. He asked me what advice I could give of his urge and pursuit in this direction. Frankly, I suggested to find the right partner and be committed to the one. This way you both work on patience, tolerance and selflessness. “We will all exit from this world at one point, and we want to leave this world being very clean inside,” I said. To this he nodded in agreement. It seems that Willis knows the people in the neighbourhood where two blocks away from our ISKCON centre, he succeeded in pulling a couple of guys over to let them in on the conversation. We eventually parted on amicable terms.
Hours later I found myself in the office of Ravindra. I had asked him for a critique on our dramatical rendition of the Bhagavad Gita called, “Gita: Concise”. He was just cool with everything he had seen and had heard on the stage the previous day. He did offer a brief suggestion for perhaps inserting a script, an emphasis on everyone’s natural role in this world as a servant. Thanks, Ravindra, consider it done.
By the way, my performance towards walking was poor today, but a second take on the drama where my energy went, enthralled our Sunday crowd at the ISKCON Open House, including the university students that came.
3 KM
Saturday, September 28th, 2013
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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
How is a person to walk without his shoes? May he go barefoot?
There is one criticism that I have when visiting a Vedic centre, temple, or even a yoga studio. While some of these destinations do not subscribe to the mayavad or ‘all is one’ philosophy, when it comes to precious shoes, you might experience a free for all culture. It’s a little bit odd, but arrangements for the deities in a temple is totally together, or orderliness in a yoga session, but if you’re looking for a good first impression at the shoe shelf entrance area, then look elsewhere.
It was embarrassing for me when I discovered that Ravindra, the leader of the community, spent a good portion of his morning trying to track down my footwear. He is my senior of nine years, he is my big bro, and to have him do this for me, well, it was a moment of humility that struck me. I had left my pair of shoes at the entrance before retiring for the night. By morning, prior to a proposed walk, they had vanished. It ends up that they were borrowed. Humourously, my crocs, a couple, if you will, had gone for separation. One was found in the kitchen and another was found by some stairwell, a result of enthused chaos in preparation for the Chariot Fest today.
In any event, we were all “happy feet” again, and I became majorly involved in a chanting procession which began at noon at Ben Franklin Parkway to the art museum where according to one devotee is the famed place where Sylvester Stallone had himself go up and down those steps for training in the classic film, Rocky.
For the entertainment at the “Parade of Chariots” many Bharat Natyam dances took place. There’s a mesmerizing pull that these dance presentations offer, but after a while, I think, the audience wants something more comprehensible (the style of dance has vocalists using non-English formats). Our troupe of monks from Canada came on the stage to demonstrate a different art form with a predominant male presence for “Gita: Concise”. It went over really well.
As the day rolled on, my shoes stayed put at the base of my legs. At one point I tucked them under a table situated near the mantra yoga tent where I also conducted a session.
You might lose your shoes, you might lose your soles, but you should never lose your soul.
8 KM
To become a messenger
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(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 8 September 2013, Johannesburg, South Africa, Home Program)
Our position is to become a messenger, to become an instrument and follow the path that Krsna went, then we will transform in the process. We “desire” our whole life so we must adjust our life.
The Hamsaduta is a work of a hundred and forty verses and today I will not go into so much detail.
Lalita is an expansion of Srimati Radharani. It is explained that Radharani has these eight principle gopis and they are her expansions. For different pastimes, different moods, she manifests these other forms. Therefore these gopis; Lalita, Vishaka and the other astasakhis; are described as shakti tattva. They are not jivas or living beings, like we are. These gopis are assisted by manjaris who are jivas. So, Srila Rupamanjari is the assistant of Lalita, a very intimate assistant of Lalita, and Srila Rupamanjari is none other than Rupa Goswami. So Rupa Goswami is the leader of our line, of our tradition. We are following Rupa Goswami and it is Rupa Goswami’s plan for us that is really the guideline for our life.
Rupa Goswami has given us the teachings in the Bhakti-Rasamrta-Sindu (Nectar of Devotion) and he continues in Ujjvala Nilami a then, he summarizes the points of Bhakti-Rasamrta-Sindu in the Upadesamrta, The Nectar of Instruction. They are very similar in context but summarized; very short. In the Upadeshamrta, he describes:
vaco vegam manasah krodha-vegaFirst we must be controlling the senses because one who can control the senses, he can be a teacher for the entire world. That is a messenger; he is transparent. He is a messenger of Krsna or a messenger of the representative of Krsna. Ultimately, he is doing Krsna’s work. That is where it begins.
Krsna’s Mercy In Bulgaria
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Farm Circle Fiesta in New Vrindaban
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03.20 – Devotion encompasses both reconnection of the world and its renunciation
→ The Spiritual Scientist
Some people fear that devotion to Krishna will require them to renounce the world.
However, devotion requires not renunciation of the world, but its reconnection with Krishna. Arjuna, the Gita’s original student, didn’t renounce the world; he became a world ruler.
Why did Arjuna get so involved?
Because devotion is meant to include the world, not exclude it. That’s because the enlightened vision sees the world as it actually is, as the property of Krishna meant to be used by devotees in his service.
Of course, we can’t acquire this vision overnight; it requires sustained practice of devotional service. That practice fosters intellectual illumination and emotional reorientation: illumination to understand ourselves as souls whose real fulfillment comes by loving Krishna, and reorientation to direct our heart towards Krishna, not the world.
As we don’t yet have this enlightened vision, we need to be cautious. That’s why we stay away from some activities that are especially entangling and we make time regularly to keep our devotional connection strong. But beyond that we do our worldly duties responsibly to set an example for others and to thereby attract them to Krishna and to the path of devotion. The Gita (03.20) declares such example-setting a vital social responsibility that does loka-sangraha, a word that literally means maintenance of the world order.
This may raise a question: If setting an example is so important, then why do some devotees renounce the world?
Devotee-renunciates focus not on renunciation but on devotion; they use renunciation as a tool to focus singularly on sharing Krishna’s message of love with the world. Thus they inspire more people to reconnect with Krishna and reconnect the world with him.
Such is the glory of devotion – it includes in its fold both the world and renunciation of the world.
**
03.20 - Kings such as Janaka attained perfection solely by performance of prescribed duties. Therefore, just for the sake of educating the people in general, you should perform your work.
SB 5.11.16 – The mind is the foundational designation on avoiding which all other designations crumble
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Gender should be no bar for preacher
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"In Bhagavad-gita we find that women are also equally competent like the men in the matter of Krsna consciousness movement. Please therefore carry on these missionary activities, and prove it by practical example that there is no bar for anyone in the matter of preaching work for Krsna consciousness." (Letter to Himavati, December 20th, 1969)
Harinama of Iskcon Chosica devotees, Chosica, Lima, Peru (44 photos)
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Can we attain a level where nothing that Krishna does can stop us from loving him?
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From Vidya Kotwani M
From the personal collection of Guru Das: Srila Prabhupada San Francisco temple room ( initiation of Visnujana Maharaja and Tamal Krsna Goswami) (72 photos)
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Freedom
→ Servant of the Servant
William Wallace gave his entire life in pursuit of freedom. At the end of the movie Braveheart, William was being tied to the stake and about to die, I was anticipating with eagerness William's next move? Is he going to seek forgiveness from the British Rule and be released from death or continue his defiance towards the King? I was surprised - William does not relent but shouts out "freedom" as he lay his life for his motherland Scotland. The feeling is still fresh, I was drenched with feelings of awe towards William Wallace's chivalry and his pursuit of freedom.
I had the same if not even intense feelings of awe and reverence towards Krishna when I first read the Bhagavad Gita As it is. It also was a scene set in a battlefield in pursuit of freedom. Krishna urges Arjuna to fight to annihilate adharma and reinstate dharma. But the freedom of Bhagavad Gita and the movie is not the same. Although William's cause was noble as he sacrificed his life for his countrymen, still he and his countrymen were bound to the identity of being a Scotsman. After we die we are neither British nor Scot nor Indian etc. We are spiritual beings encased within a physical body. So when the identity of the physical body is enhanced then our cause will be bound to this material world of birth and death - a temporary world. We will believe that pursing freedom for sensual enjoyment is the highest and ultimate purpose of life. We will not cultivate a desire to practice austerity to give up the physical identity. In that sense William's pursuit of freedom was binding.
Today this is also our thinking. Practicing rules of spiritual purity such as chanting God's names, refraining from eating meat, intoxication, illicit sex and gambling in a regulated manner is seen as a restriction. We think these rules restrict us from enjoying this world. This idea of binding restriction is there within us because we are intensely attached to this body and mind. We think it is unnatural to practice such rules which brings pleasure to the body & mind. In the ultimate sense, we think such rules bind us against living our life freely - the opposite of freedom!
Krishna, however, says that these very same regulative principles that we think is the opposite of freedom actually give us freedom. It gives us freedom by reinstating us back to our spiritual world free from the bondage of this physical world of birth and death. We no longer have to be subjected to state, physical, material and karmic laws. We no longer are forced to suffer old age, disease and death or miseries caused due to the body/mind, or natural disturbances or other living beings. According to Krishna, this is real freedom.
William Wallace gave freedom from the rule of British and Krishna is giving us freedom from the rule of this entire material creation (not just the British). So it is in our benefit that by practicing the regulative principles as enunciated in the Gita, we can achieve eternal freedom from the clutches of cruel death.
But a person free from all attachment and aversion and able to control his senses through regulative principles of freedom can obtain the complete mercy of the Lord.- BG 2.64
Hare Krishna
HH Giriraj Swami & HH Giridhari Swami / The Holy Name Game Quiz
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HG Visvambhar Prabhu / SB 10.47.61
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HH Giridhari Swami – BG 7.27 – Why did we leave the spiritual world
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Mind Games
→ Tattva - See inside out
it as a subtle instrument at our disposal – an instrument which needs to be strictly controlled and eventually befriended. Why?
The Mind creates reality: everything starts in our heads - thoughts to words to actions to habits to a character, which ultimately designs our destiny. What we contemplate, consider and generate conviction in through the thinking process, will determine what we practically strive for in life.
The Mind translates reality: all of the situations and interactions (that we have created) are then translated by the mind. Depending on our state of mind, we experience a proportionate amount happiness, growth and contentment in response to the rollercoaster journey of life.
An uncontrolled mind will agitate, misguide and implicate the soul, forcing us to glide down to the lower nature of lust, anger and greed. That mindset emphasizes problems in every opportunity, dissatisfied with the present and perpetually hankering for a better future. The controlled mind, however, acts as a friend on our spiritual journey, helping us to make progressive and healthy choices which create wellbeing on all levels. That mindset is able to identify opportunities in every problem, ever-satisfied come what may. Now it makes sense: it’s all in the mind.
HOW CAN PEOPLE GET CONFIDENCE THAT THEY CAN BE SUCCESSFUL?
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Inverse evolution
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ISKCON Scarborough – Live radio program with HG Ananda Caitanya das
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ISKCON Scarborough- Class by HG Ananda Caitanya das
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September 30th, 2013 – Darshan
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Krsna consciousness in Bulgaria, a deeply Christian country, with a population of over 7 million people (95 photos)
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Bada Hari Prabhu – Day 3 of Polish Woodstock 2013
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Bada Hari Prabhu – Day 3 of Polish Woodstock 2013
The “Friends and Family” service in Mayapur can make your visit to the Holy Dham a safe, healthy, disturbance free, memorable and transcendental experience
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Friday, September 27th, 2013
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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
It was near the commuter train that I entered a winding trail near these black walnut trees, a peaceful path it is. I came upon a seniors couple on the whole hour there. The rest of the time I was to myself. It seems to be an unofficial trail which is the best kind. For the most part, it’s a neat trail, a clear trail. However, in certain sections, but rarely, you could find broken glass, a result of outdoor partying by youth most likely.
Ravindra had earlier on told me of these entangling trails. While dark, we tread one on the course of our japa walk which didn’t end up being a mantra meditation walk at all. He is full of talk with the rich history of the area of German town and Chestnut Hill. He let me in on all that he wanted to say. We also touched on some details of his half Christian half Jewish heritage. I did feel like I achieved a lesson in history of a portion of this city of brotherly love, Philadelphia.
If you go to a place like Europe, you’ll hear about Philadelphia for its cream cheese. According to Ravindra’s wife, when Europeans speak of the renowned cheese, they only use the word Philadelphia as the spread you put over sandwiches, bagels and other foods. No mention of cheese in the conversation. Philadelphia is synonymous to cream cheese. In fact, this is the common food product that I use in applying to tortillas to make wraps with veggies when I trek across Canada, it nourishes me.
The only other thing that makes me think of this city is Shyamalan, the director of the film The Sixth Sense, whom I met when before he became a noted master in film.
I had delivered a class at the Radha Krishna temple on Allens Road this morning. It turned out as much of a discussion as it did a discourse or talk. The verse from which I spoke mentioned the Kumaras who were lifelong monks. That then lead to the topic of the marital status of people, in many cases people do stay single, but what makes life a fulfillment is through a spiritual channel where a relationship has a solid base only.
7 KM
Thursday, September 26th, 2013
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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
A true friend is someone who leads you on to a trail.
The small group of us from Canada had made the trip to Philly. I met with Ravindra Svarup and his wife who told me of trails in the Mount Ary district. Mount Ary is a place where there’s old growth trees. It’s also the area of the first integrated neighbourhood in America where people of black and white origin found comfort in coexistence. Though the trails are here, it wouldn’t be until tomorrow morning that I would do some exploration in the vegetation.
Back to Ravindra and wife, Saudamini – I admire them so much. Here are a couple who have remained as such for decades. You can say they survived the test of time as a couple. At a time when the family unit faces challenges in this age of modernity there are some shining representatives of loyalty that exist. We don’t talk about them because on the very personal note, they have not produced sensational news.
Ravindra in particular, has practically document research history of the Hare Krishna society likely more that anyone. If not documented, he has that retaining brain of accounts in its development, challenges and triumphs of what seemed like an idealistic group from the 60’s. He and I, and for some minutes, Saudamini, sat for quite a while looking at an interesting path of a culture that soon turns 50 in the year 2016. To say that Krishna Consciousness is new would be fallacious. It’s an old culture. Krishna devotionalism has existed for thousands of years with roots in India.
It is my wish and deep desire to trek the US in 3 years from now and follow the trail of how the Krishna Culture spread from Boston, to New York to San Francisco to Los Angeles. In fact, today marks the anniversary that our guru, the founder, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada anchored ship in America in September 1965. The society became official in ’66 in New York. I became a monk with the group in the spring of ’73 in Toronto, Canada.
No regrets from my side, especially when I have friendship from Ravindra and Saudamini. By the way, Ravindra legal academic name is Dr. William Deadwyler III. He is one of my favourite authors of theological essays.
For today – no walking, a long time was spent on wheels to get to Philly. It’s a kind of a curse.
0 KM/0 miles
Service Attitude Towards Others
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Radhanatha Swami
Live in pure waters
→ KKS Blog
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, August 2013, Abentheur, Germany, Hamsaduta Seminar Part 1)
Sri Lalita speaking to a swan (from the Hamsaduta), “You live in pure waters. You find happiness among the lotus stems. Your heart is pure. For this reason, I, a very unhappy women, take shelter of you. A request to a saintly person is never fruitless”
I like that point, “A request to a saintly person is never fruitless.” That puts a great responsibility on a saintly person. Really, if you think about it, we are all meant to be saintly persons because this is part of the story. Who is the messenger? Who is meant to be the messenger? It is not the swan. Gradually, as the narration unfolds, it may dawn upon us that we have to be the messenger. We have to be the duta and we have to be qualified as the duta. Now the swan is highly qualified because the swan is living in pure waters and the swan is eating only lotus stems. So, one must reside in a sacred place. One must take only Krsna prasadam. One must be pure, in other words, pure in his activities which will purify the consciousness. So our residence must always be a sacred place… there is no question. That is an important principle.
In the course of preaching, didn’t Nityananda go into the liquor store? Wasn’t Nityananda seen in the house of a prostitute? Isn’t that the case? Didn’t Lord Caitanya and Lord Nityananda go to a sannyasi who was staying with a women? Didn’t they even take some fruits there? Didn’t they only leave that place when the sannyasi offered alcohol? Then it got too much.
A preacher may go into sinful places but cannot live there, cannot reside there. One must reside in a place of purity. That place cannot just be external. One’s residence must be in one’s heart. One must be face-to-face with Krsna. Therefore, early in the morning, we are not performing our sadhana for the sake of just completing our vow. In the morning, we are meant to get absorbed in our worship. We are meeting Krsna face-to-face really. When we are chanting the holy name, which is identified as non-different from Krsna, we are meeting Krsna face-to-face and we are making our offering because the chanting of the holy name is a mystic process.
It is a process where on the one hand, we are producing the sound with our lips, with our consciousness concentrated, we are fixing the mind. The ear is there and as we are making the sound with our lips, our voice and mind are concentrated on making this sound, then part two! There is a part one – the offering that we are making. And part two is that because the sound itself is Krsna then Krsna manifests to us. We hear the holy name. There we are getting the darsana of Krsna through that sound. So, these two aspects are there and it is very interesting. So, we must meet Krsna. We cannot just mechanically chant! Then our residence comes at the lotus feet of Krsna. Then we can be the messenger, otherwise how can we be a messenger? What kind of messenger are we when our residence is not at the lotus feet of Krsna?
When it says, hrdaya-kandare sphuratu vah saci-nandana (Caitanya Caritamrta Antya 1.132) that in the innermost core of the heart must be Sacinandana or the Supreme Lord, what does that mean? It says what our actual interest is? Our actual interest must be fixed at the lotus feet of Krsna. That we must cultivate. Otherwise, how can we be a messenger? So today we are sort of beginning… let us realize that we are to be the messenger. We can, in our reading of the Hamsaduta, identify with the swan – as you always have to identify with one hero – and that is the swan is us!