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Harinama in Times Square Subway Station, January 10, 2013. |
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Harinama in Times Square Subway Station, January 10, 2013. |
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Global Kirtan for Yamuna Gears up Amidst Political Breakthroughs
Originally posted by Madhava Smullen for ISKCON News on 15 Feb 2013
Second generation ISKCON devotees working with the Kuli Mela Association are calling out to friends and ISKCON temples all over the world to join in a Global Kirtan for the Yamuna river on March 1st.
It’s the second time the worldwide prayer will be held for the beleaguered holy river, after the hugely successful January 30th, 2010 kirtan, which saw 130 groups participating along with prominent kirtaniyas Aindra Babaji, Shyamdas Ji, Radhanath Swami, Jai Uttal, Gaura Vani, Karnamrita, and The Mayapuris.
Back then, devotees were protesting the construction of a highway overpass across the river at Keshi Ghat in Vrindavan, the sacred land of Lord Krishna’s birth.
Soon after, construction was stopped when the Allahabad High Court declared the overpass illegal on the grounds that it was less than 200 meters from an ASI protected monument, the Jugal Kishor Mandir.
After this, however, an even bigger outrage came to light. Eighty-five per cent of the Yamuna, which emerged crystal clear from its source in the Himalayas, was being held back by an irrigation dam in the state of Haryana. Meanwhile, Delhi City sewage and industrial waste was being emptied into it, until not a single drop of original Yamuna water was left by the time it reached Vrindavan.
Activists and devotees headed by Vrindavan-based group Maan Mandir fought for their beloved Yamuna, forcing the government to take notice with a series of protests and marches.
On March 1st, the biggest march yet is planned, with an astonishing half a million people expected to embark on a ten-day walk from Vrindavan to Delh in protest of the sacred river’s plight.
To add devotional power to the march’s political clout, devotees around the world will hold their second Global Kirtan on the same day, raising their voices for the Yamuna river.
In Berkely, California, Global Kirtan organizer Krishna Devata McComb will be singing along with Mantralogy artist Prajna Vieira.
Major kirtan singers all over the US will join in, with Gaura Vani of As Kindred Spirits chanting in Washington D.C., the Mayapuris in New York, and the Kirtaniyas in Los Angeles.
In Canada, Govinda Ghosh will sing at the Saranagati rural village in British Columbia.
Many South American communities have also just confirmed their involvement in the Global Kirtan, from the tip of Patagonia to the mountains of Peru.
In India, participants at this year’s Kumbha Mela in Allahabad, where the Yamuna meets the Ganges, will also join in with kirtan for the Yamuna.
Finally at the historic Jugal Kishor Palace Complex in Keshi Ghat, Vrindavana, Gaura Mani of Vrajavadhus’ Kirtan will sing on the banks of the Yamuna, as 500,000 people gather to walk to Delhi.
Altogether, at least one hundred groups of chanters are expected worldwide. Some groups may be big, some may be small; some may chant for 24 hours, some just for one; but all will be praying for the Yamuna with devotion.
To Krishna Devata, a second generation devotee who grew up holding Yamuna Devi in great regard, it’s an extremely personal cause.
“Each time I dedicate myself to this meditation, I can’t help but recall my childhood days, swimming and playing in the Yamuna with my little brother back in 1981 when I was five and he was two,” she says.
Sadly, the next time Krishna Devata returned to the Yamuna–in 1998–it was to offer her brother’s ashes into the sacred waters, two years after he had passed away. There, as Yamuna Devi provided her solace, a deep bond was forged with the holy river.
So when Krishna Devata again visited the Yamuna in 2010 with her own children—now aged five and two just like she and her brother had been—and saw it blighted by pollution, garbage and construction work, the sight moved her to tears.
“I was sitting in the rickshaw with my children, and I couldn’t approach the river,” she recalls. “It struck me in a very deep place how in one generation I had seen this happen before my very eyes. And I realized that I was in for a lifetime of service.”
There may be a lifetime of caring for the Yamuna ahead. But it’s likely that Krishna Devata and the other devotees aching for the Yamuna may see developments that will soothe their hearts soon after their global chant on 3.1.13, if not before.
Radha Jivan Das, an ISKCON devotee businessman and activist working with Maan Mandir, recently reported that representatives of the organization met with Delhi head of Congress Ms Sonia Gandhi on February 8th with positive results.
“We talked to her regarding the problems with Yamuna,” she says. “She was very serious on the matter and has promised to do the best she can by speaking to the chief minister of Haryana. She said she will see to it that water is released into the Yamuna [to restore it to its original clean state].”
Maan Mandir representatives also spoke with Lalu Yadav, one of the top political leaders of Bihar state and a current member of Parliament. He promised to aggressively bring up the Yamuna’s plight at the upcoming Parliament sessions in Delhi from February 21st to March 21st and see if something could be done.
Meanwhile, awareness for the walk beginning March 1st is high all over the region of Braj, where the towns of Vrindavana, Mathura, Gokul, Govardhan and possibly even Agra will be completely closed down for the day.
“Jai Guru Dev ashram has taken responsibility to feed the 500,000 protestors every day for ten days, and bus services, shops and offices will be closed,” says Radha Jivan.
The march is expected to completely block the major National Highway 2, and Radha Jivan has expressed the expectation that the government will intervene and promise action before the protestors even reach Delhi.
Meanwhile there’s no doubt that the activists on the ground will feel hugely inspired and supported by devotees all over the world praying for their success—what to speak of the auspiciousness such vast congregational chanting will bring to the whole effort.
“Our unified voices really make a difference,” Krishna Devata says. “Just gathering and agreeing to dedicate our prayer together, is a huge act of peace and hope.”
So if you want to make a difference, please organize a kirtan in your community—long or short, small or large—on March 1st, 2013; and email Krishna Devata at thedancingmama@gmail.com to let her know the location and details.
One thing is for sure: I did bake a cake yesterday and here it is. At least this is a photographic record that it existed. As all things in this real but temporary world, it has now gone the way of all great gateaux.
For your culinary and orally-fixated pleasure: it is (or was) a two layer peach, nutmeg, coconut and lemon zest enriched sponge cake sandwiched together with mixed berry jam, frosted with a combination of sweetened cream cheese infused with lime zest. I decorated it with toasted coconut ribbon and candied lemon peel. Yes, it tasted as spectacular as it sounds.
Finally: I would like to offer my apologies that this blog is very sparse these days. I am totally absorbed in looking after my father's affairs since his health has deteriorated. If you'd like to stay in touch, I suggest you follow me on Facebook, my only regular interface with the world these days. My Facebook name is private, but if you write me by commenting on this post, I can provide you with it.
Chakrini released her first kirtan recording when she was just fifteen years old, on cassette tape in those days. Since that time, and a number of albums later, she has been recognised as an important voice in the kirtan community.
In this podcast we hear Chakrini sing Om Namo Bhagavate, in Oxford, in 2011. Visit her website for more http://www.chakrini.com
Chakrini released her first kirtan recording when she was just fifteen years old, on cassette tape in those days. Since that time, and a number of albums later, she has been recognised as an important voice in the kirtan community.
In this podcast we hear Chakrini sing Om Namo Bhagavate, in Oxford, in 2011. Visit her website for more http://www.chakrini.com
Chakrini released her first kirtan recording when she was just fifteen years old, on cassette tape in those days. Since that time, and a number of albums later, she has been recognised as an important voice in the kirtan community.
In this podcast we hear Chakrini sing Om Namo Bhagavate, in Oxford, in 2011. Visit her website for more http://www.chakrini.com
venum kvanantam aravinda-dalayataksam-
Barhavatamsam asitambuda-sundarangam
kandarpa-koti-kamaniya-visesa-sobham
govindam adi-purusam tam aham bhajami
Peacock plume on his head, blooming eyes like lotus petals
Form of boundless beauty like a brilliant bluish rain cloud
Incomparable loveliness charming countless Cupids
Govinda, primeval person, I worship you my Lord
angani yasya sakalendriya-vrtti-manti
pasyanti panti kalayanti ciram jaganti
ananda-cinmaya-sad-ujjvala-vigrahasya
govindam adi-purusam tam aham bhajami
Completely conscious in his limbs and supernal senses
Full of bliss, eternal truth and ever sparkling splendour
Who sees, maintains and manifests the entire existence
Govinda, primeval person, I worship you my Lord
In the Month of January, we started an Astronomy Unit with the Upper Elementary class. Using our Abeka Science books for 3rd to 6th grade, we learned all the technical terms for the different parts of the cosmos and what has been discovered in the past hundreds of years.
It is also important that we understand the Vedic perspective of Science as presented by Srila Prabhupada in his many teachings. This fosters much discussion in our classrooms about the demigods, the creation, Lord Brahma, Lord Vishnu and Shiva and the cosmos as is described in the Srimad Bhagavatam. It is amazing to see the students faith and interest in connecting what they are learning to what they already know about Krishna’s universe.
We started our course learning about the Sun. Read about it in detail here!
The next week brought the study of the Moon, Chandra deva. We did a moon phases project and discussed the journey of the Astronomers to the Moon and the Vedic perspective. Take a look at our delicious healthy Moon Charts.
Our third week was spent doing study on all the planets of the Solar System and creating a Solar System in Art Class.
In the fourth week, we learned the differences between the Constellations in the night sky, read about Dhruva Maharaj’s planet the Pole Star, and made Constellations patterns shine through the window.
The Unit culminated in an incredible Field Trip to the Planetarium in UTA, where we saw the night sky and planets come to life in the IMAX theater presentation. The Field trip ended with a really cool science magic show.
The fifth week we did Review and Tests of all the information that the students had learned about the universe. This cemented the knowledge learned and showed us how much they had retained.
The Forest of Material Enjoyment offers meager and miserly, stingy and mingy sexual gratification in return for our constant struggling with its immense obstacles and exasperating deficiencies.
You see, on the material platform, living a "balanced life" is impossible, because the uncontrolled mind and senses dictate the whole temporary show.
The other option? Krishna's supreme playground, the Vrindavana forest, infinitely attracts all five senses. There, purely spiritual sense objects nourish each spiritual sense of the spiritual body. Krishna, of course, leads the way in purely blissful forest adventures. But eternally emember the crucial distinction: He enjoys directly, whereas we, His parts, enjoy by serving and relishing His enjoyment.
Just by our hearing of how Krishna enjoys the Vrindavana forest brings us precious relief from the blazing forest fire of material existence. What's more, simply hearing attentively of how Krishna enjoys gradually brings us the supreme dynamic of life: spotless love for Krishna.
Eyes: the stunning beauty of Vrindavana's forest scenery—trees, flowers, lakes, rivers—gladdens the sense of sight.
Nose: the omnipresent fragrance of lotus flowers enlivens the sense of smell.
Ears: the sounds of birds, bees, and other forest animals enchant the sense of hearing.
Tongue: delightful flavours from the sweet water of transparent lakes, transported by the forest breezes, enliven the sense of taste.
Touch: cooling droplets of water carried from those same forest lakes by those same breezes stimulate the tactile sense.
Krishna feels pleased by the atmosphere of the Vrindavana forest. The Supreme Personality of Pleasure, He personally appreciates how the forest strives to serve Him with pleasure.
Let's go there.
"The Supreme Personality of Godhead looked over that forest, which resounded with the charming sounds of bees, animals and birds, and which was enhanced by a lake whose clear water resembled the minds of great souls and by a breeze carrying the fragrance of hundred-petaled lotuses. Seeing all this, Lord Krishna decided to enjoy the auspicious atmosphere." (S. bhag. 10:15:3)
The Forest of Material Enjoyment offers meager and miserly, stingy and mingy sexual gratification in return for our constant struggling with its immense obstacles and exasperating deficiencies.
You see, on the material platform, living a "balanced life" is impossible, because the uncontrolled mind and senses dictate the whole temporary show.
The other option? Krishna's supreme playground, the Vrindavana forest, infinitely attracts all five senses. There, purely spiritual sense objects nourish each spiritual sense of the spiritual body. Krishna, of course, leads the way in purely blissful forest adventures. But eternally emember the crucial distinction: He enjoys directly, whereas we, His parts, enjoy by serving and relishing His enjoyment.
Just by our hearing of how Krishna enjoys the Vrindavana forest brings us precious relief from the blazing forest fire of material existence. What's more, simply hearing attentively of how Krishna enjoys gradually brings us the supreme dynamic of life: spotless love for Krishna.
Eyes: the stunning beauty of Vrindavana's forest scenery—trees, flowers, lakes, rivers—gladdens the sense of sight.
Nose: the omnipresent fragrance of lotus flowers enlivens the sense of smell.
Ears: the sounds of birds, bees, and other forest animals enchant the sense of hearing.
Tongue: delightful flavours from the sweet water of transparent lakes, transported by the forest breezes, enliven the sense of taste.
Touch: cooling droplets of water carried from those same forest lakes by those same breezes stimulate the tactile sense.
Krishna feels pleased by the atmosphere of the Vrindavana forest. The Supreme Personality of Pleasure, He personally appreciates how the forest strives to serve Him with pleasure.
Let's go there.
"The Supreme Personality of Godhead looked over that forest, which resounded with the charming sounds of bees, animals and birds, and which was enhanced by a lake whose clear water resembled the minds of great souls and by a breeze carrying the fragrance of hundred-petaled lotuses. Seeing all this, Lord Krishna decided to enjoy the auspicious atmosphere." (S. bhag. 10:15:3)
I came in touch with Krishna Consciousness in 2004 when I joined the Government Polytechnic College in Coimbatore. An ISKCON temple was near my college. I very much got inspiration from the lectures of HH Bhakti Vinode Swami Maharaj, who was at that time HG Sarveswara Prabhu, temple president of ISKCON, Coimbatore. I am always in debt to Maharaj and the Coimbatore devotees.
Around May 2010, I joined some college friends on a tour to Mayapur Dham for one spiritual camp from the VOICE (Student wing of Pune) program. At this time, I was completing my B.Tech and planned to do my MBA. My desire was to earn an MBA so I would be able to contribute to ISKCON a little more. The construction of the temple had started and when something is made gorgeously for God, it attracts me very much. I desired to take part in it. As far as I recall, that day was Bhisma Ekadasi. In May, by the mercy of the devotees, I was able to observe nirjala fasting. The next morning one devotee was describing the glories of Ekadasi. Prabhuji also informed us that if somebody asks something from the Lord after observing and before breaking the fast, the Lord fulfills his desire. So, before breaking the fast I prayed in the dham that I may take part in this wonderful project. At that time I didn’t know the glories of this magnanimous project (even now I also don’t know properly), I didn’t know that HG Ambarisha Prabhu was the chairman of this project.
I joined VIT in the same year. After few days of joining, I was walking on the footpath of our campus. Suddenly it came in my mind to invite HG Ambarish Prabhu for a visit. Fortunately I received Prabhuji’s mail id. One day I prayed to Prabhupada intensely before writing the letter. After sending the mail, I slept. I was almost sure I would not get any reply because it is easily understood that he is a very busy personality. After half an hour I woke up and wished to check the mail. When I opened the mail, there was a reply! I got an invitation to visit him on 1st November, 2010. The next day (another Ekadasi), we got his darshan during Mangal Aratik. Then I went to his office, from there one devotee showed me where he stays. Later I came to know that the devotee who showed us the way was our dear HG Sadbhuja Prabhu. I was feeling very nervous when I met Ambarisha Prabhu because I was aware that I am not qualified to meet him. We started communicating through mail after this meeting. HG Ambarish Prabhuji’s kind replies were so inspiring. It showed me that if there is love, duty automatically follows. He is so reserved I understood he would never glorify himself. When the time came for him to visit my university and I was preparing his bio data, I didn’t ask him anything. I came to know the struggle he tolerated for the TOVP as a service to Srila Prabhupada and for the welfare of humanity. His love and dedication to Srila Prabhupad are unbelievable. We can never repay him. I love him and honor him as my own father.
I had some laxmi in my hand before joining my company, Rs 60,000. One of my devotee friends from the Pune temple said they needed laxmi. I also heard that HH Radhanath Swami Maharaj desired to inaugurate the temple as early as possible. So, as we are in the shelter of Maharaj and Radheshyam prabhu, I felt it is my basic duty to serve the devotees and to fulfill Maharaja’s desire. I donated Rs.25,000 to the Pune temple and the remaining money I kept to offer Ambarisha Prabhu as my little service to Prabhupad and Prabhuji. I was very much interested to contribute from my first job and salary to the TOVP, but due to my salary limitation I was unable to do much. I use to get in hand Rs.13,000-14,000 per month max. My company timings were also hectic for my sadhana. I had to start at 11am at the office and use to return at nearly 11pm. And for mangal arati I used to get up at 3-3:30am. So, in average I used to sleep 3-4hours max. I wished to donate 1 lakh by October, the time when Prabhuji planned to visit India with his family. When I was leaving the company and got my last salary, altogether it just touched 1 lakh!! Krishna fulfilled my desire. Externally it may seem to be a little tedious but I felt great joy within and when I offered this little laxmi to Prabhuji, I felt so happy. So, if we can take Krishna consciousness and encourage others, it will be the real help to the needy. The secret of happiness is to offer to Krishna whatever we have to serve Him and His devotees rather than serve ourselves, ultimately we will only become happy and there is nothing to lose.
I wish rapid progress for the TOVP and beg blessings from all the Vaishnavas for my family and for me so that I may become eligible to serve and please HG Ambarisha Prabhu and all the Vaishnavas.
Thank you very much.
Your aspiring servant,
Saptarshi
This is a recording of Rasasthali Devi singing the maha mantra at an Oxford kirtan in 2009. Rasasthali, an Oxford DPhil student at the time, was a regular kirtan leader in Oxford. She is an accomplished musician and her tunes often hinted at her Polish origins.
She gained her doctorate in Oxford and moved, with her husband to the great state of Mississippi, USA, where they are both in University employment. They have expanded the population of the world with the birth of their baby boy. Happy chanting to all of them.
This is a recording of Rasasthali Devi singing the maha mantra at an Oxford kirtan in 2009. Rasasthali, an Oxford DPhil student at the time, was a regular kirtan leader in Oxford. She is an accomplished musician and her tunes often hinted at her Polish origins.
She gained her doctorate in Oxford and moved, with her husband to the great state of Mississippi, USA, where they are both in University employment. They have expanded the population of the world with the birth of their baby boy. Happy chanting to all of them.
This is a recording of Rasasthali Devi singing the maha mantra at an Oxford kirtan in 2009. Rasasthali, an Oxford DPhil student at the time, was a regular kirtan leader in Oxford. She is an accomplished musician and her tunes often hinted at her Polish origins.
She gained her doctorate in Oxford and moved, with her husband to the great state of Mississippi, USA, where they are both in University employment. They have expanded the population of the world with the birth of their baby boy. Happy chanting to all of them.
Everything we had learned the past month came to life in our UTA Planetarium Field Trip! Students got to see an IMAX size presentations of all the planets, go on a very dizzying roller coaster ride sitting right in the auditorium seats and pinpoint all the constellations that they had previously learned.
As the clocks tick and calendars turn pages, the verdict of Lord Nityananda manifests into a tangible reality. Weaving the thread between then and now is Srila Prabhupada’s instruction to our beloved Ambarisa Prabhu, who has laudably carried it in his heart for over 30 onerous years.
While Sadbhuja Prabhu ingeniously puts the works into motion, Bhavananda Prabhu creatively reflects– what would Srila Prabhupada like? The three form a fascinating team of directors on an onward journey and an intimate guiding force for the TOVP Architecture & Design Department.
Nested in the city of Pune, this department has become the design development centre of the TOVP, assisting Sadbhuja Prabhu to create the Architecture and Construction Drawings.
2012 has been a year of success for us in various ways, as we have completed the items below.
From an architect’s perspective, the temple is designed to facilitate the performance of devotional service by crafting constructional elements into a stage, in which the link between building elements and participants is direct and unmitigated. The architecture is aimed to serve either as a prop or at other times, a focus of devotion to aid the spiritual exercise. In essence, it is a direct catalyst of the experience.
A significant milestone in our design process has been achieved by modifying the proportions of the columns in the Main Temple interior elevation consisting of 3 gallery floors. As a backdrop to the altars, it now strikes the optimum balance between the splendor and the anthropomorphic scale – an architectural intent of poise and elegance, ushering the vision towards the Proprietor of the TOVP residing in the altars.
Anupama Gore overlooks the drawings released on the site and facilitates internal communication between the architects, at the same time acting as our ‘fireman’. Devendra Dhere and Vrushali Dhere, the architect couple complement each other in a way where one conducts the research of various suppliers and manufacturers while the other thoughtfully implements them on drawings and design research. For most of 2012, we also had Sandeep Khapte who tackled the challenging Staircase Towers, Kalash and other technical aspects of the building. Anup Shah, through his design and 3-D visualization skills, has facilitated in envisioning the temple interiors through experiential design process.
I am grateful for this team’s sincerity and attentiveness to the ‘mood’ of the TOVP.