ISKCON Scarborough’s 6th Annual Jagannath Festival – Saturday -18th Aug 2018 at the Milliken Park, Scarborough, Ontario, Canada
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Hare Krishna!
Please accept our humble obeisances!

All glories to Srila Prabhupada!

All glories to Sri Guru and Sri Gauranga!

ISKCON Scarborough's 6th Annual Jagannath Festival is scheduled to take place on Saturday -18th Aug 2018 at the Milliken Park, Scarborough, Ontario, Canada (McCowan & Steeles).

This grand event is free for everyone and includes a diverse assortment of multicultural activities for the entire family. The focus of this year is to make the stage programs newcomer friendly.

There will be several tents in the park where you can get your face painted beautifully, apply henna to your hands/palms and you will also find cookbooks, ancient Vedic texts and nice framed pictures.

The Merciful Supreme Lord of the Universe - Lord Jagannath and His brother Lord Baladeva and their sister Subhadra Devi will be coming out of the temple to the Park to give their unlimited blessings. 

The highlight of the event is the distribution of free vegetarian feast/free water for everyone throughout the day starting at 11 am.

Several dignitaries including Dr Raymond Cho (MPP) and Mr  Logan Kanapathi have confirmed their participation in the event.

The parade starts inside the Milliken Park at 11 am and the VIP inauguration is scheduled to take place at 12 noon.

This year the stage programs will feature several world-class performers including singers from Australia, lion dance from China and magicians who regularly perform in Disney cruises.

We are very pleased that HH Bhaktimarga Swami (The walking monk), HG Suresvara das and several other Srila Prabhupada's disciples will be in attendance.

Haribhakti Dey (Anup Jalota said the following about Haribhakti Dey - " This boy has the causeless mercy of Mother Saraswati"), Dhiragrahi das, Radha Murati kirtan group and others will be presenting melodious kirtan & Bhajans that will be accompanied by beautiful instruments like the harmonium, mrdanga-drum, bass guitar and more.

There will also be wonderful Bharatanatyam and Kuchipudi dance performances on the stage.

We are grateful to ATN for their confirmation to broadcast the event.


Spreading the message about the event:

Devotees have been spreading the message about this upcoming event through the door to door Tamil, English & Chinese flyer distribution & affixing the flyers at various grocery/Department stores.

Advertisements are ongoing through 102.7 East FM and through Geethavaani radio stations.
There are also full-page advertisements in local Tamil newspapers - Thangadeepam, Udayan and Senthamarai.

The Highlight of all the advertisements is that  Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) buses that originate at the Markham area are plying every day with the Jagannath Festival information at the back of the buses.

There is also a Billboard in the major intersection of Markham and Finch area that carries the message about the upcoming Jagannath Festival.
We kindly request you to spread the message about this event so that everyone can come to Milliken Park on Aug 18th to partake the blessings of the Lordship.



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

Email Address:

iskconscarborough@hotmail.com

website:

www.iskconscarborough.org

Tuesday, August 7th, 2018
→ The Walking Monk

Toronto, Ontario

A First Ever Man’s Retreat in KC

A MAN-tra retreat!

Hmmm?  What’s that all about?  Well, last summer, Anuttama, my dear friend, and I were walking in northern California. We were talking about how we need a men’s retreat for KC Guys—Krishna Conscious Guys.

The women have their Vaishnavi retreats, which empower females in a more potent, spiritual way.  Why don’t we do that for men?  They could use a little strengthening of compassion, and a boosting of the bhakti, devotion.  After all we want to see both men and women succeed in reaching goals of ultimate wellness.  Some attention needs to be going in the direction of bonding and building.  That is the logic of a retreat for men, to be held on October 5th, 6thand 7thin the beautiful hills of West Virginia, at the facility known as New Vrndavana.

“What is it that a lady wants from a Krishna Conscious man?” This is a proposed panel discussion. It’s something to explore.  There will be sangha, serious discussions, sports, walking, drama, comedy, food, chanting and worship.

It will prove to be team-building fun!

We thought, “It would be ideal to have stronger leaders, stronger fathers and stronger husbands who are very caring.”

There is a schedule and a charge, but nominal.  Something to look forward to.  Information is with the blog display.

May the Source be with you!
0 km

Calling all males!


Monday, August 6th, 2018
→ The Walking Monk

Jordan, Ontario

Bruce: Day 4

It’s another hot one but Karuna and I are protected by green canopies—trees, on the Bruce Trail.  Still there is this incredible work-up of sweat from the up and down terrain on the Bruce.  I have come to terms with the appropriate word—hike.  That’s more like it and less so, a walk.  It gets steep in parts.  The downward movement is tougher than the upper motions.  I’ve expressed this before but it is a reality that does exist.

On our four-hour journey through the bush, we only met seven persons along the way.  It was a sad experience, considering the gem that the trail is.  https://www.instagram.com/p/BmKOeQSn_tQ/?utm_source=ig_share_sheet&igshid=ixob9brjkdai

One other disappointment was the three waterfalls we were looking forward to seeing, and perhaps bathing under, were non-manifest. There was not enough water to fuel them. The lack of water probably did account for the low number of mosquitoes.  That’s a triumph.   https://www.instagram.com/p/BmNY5ppgvEW/?utm_source=ig_share_sheet&igshid=2269gsa339nx

The Bruce Trail is everything I wanted it to be and much more. The constant green, the interesting shapes and curves of paths along the way, and the solitude, shape this paradise.

The dualities are there—the poison ivy and its rival, the jewel weed, are next-door neighbours.  Pleasant were the occasional breaks and the sipping of juice of kale, mint, cucumber and apple.

Karuna and I are trying to complete the southerly stretch of the trail in order to get closer to the Brampton community and have them join us, but that will take some more sweat before we get there.

May the Source be with you!
14 km




Sunday, August 5th, 2018
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Scarborough, Ontario

Honouring Gopal

In both Scarborough and Toronto, I began my talk as an homage (eulogy) to someone by the name of Gopal.  Gopal’s surname was Agarwal, and he just passed away, at the age of eighty-nine, in Pennsylvania.

The significance of Gopal’s life is his contribution to the start of the world-wide movement of Krishna Consciousness.  It was Gopal’s father who was the connection for our guru’s entry into America way back in September of 1965.

Gopal had settled in Butler, Pennsylvania along with his American wife, Sally.  Actually it was Sally who signed visa papers on behalf of Swami Prabhupada, as she was an American citizen, and Gopal, her husband, didn’t yet have the necessary status. http://btg.krishna.com/when-swami-met-sally

Gopal and Sally looked after Prabhupada, who stayed in the YMCA, in Butler, for one month.  Culturally, they helped him through the integration that seventy-year-old Prabhupada needed at the time.  Prabhupada took walks in the middle-class town to and from the Agarwal’s home to the Y. Had he not been accommodated and assisted at that time, there might not have been a Hare Krishna movement to take hold in America where it all started.https://iskconnews.org/gopal-agarwal-prabhupadas-initial-sponsor-in-the-west-passes-away,6643  

In the evening, monk Karuna and I took a walk in honour of the Agarwals, who are credited in aiding in the humble steps of ISKCON’s birth. We walked Yonge Street.

May the Source be with you!
7 km




Saturday, August 4th, 2018
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Toronto, Ontario

To the Pitts

Karuna Sindhu and I had been talking about venturing over to Christie Pitts for a kirtan,as we had done two days ago.  Why is it so important to us to hold a chanting session in the park?  Well, there’s lots of people milling about on the green, and we believe we can offer something as an alternative, musically, and provide some joy.

Although the two of us can offer little in the way of a musical masterpiece, our simple drum and cymbals are motivated by the sacred mantrawhich possesses incredible potency to the listener. Fortunately, Subuddhi and some of her two next generations came to join us, being only three blocks away.  Then banker, Adi Kurma, and gardener, Amala Ratna, also saw the opportunity as favourable for a Saturday evening outing. A great couple they are.

There we sat on the grass, letting passersby take in an ear’s reception of the mantra.  Some stopped to listen and watch our group’s effort.  Again we were not expert at our presentation, nevertheless it is undoubtedly a heart-warming experience for park strollers to see a quaint community dynamic sitting in a circular fashion.  Not all people can boast they have family or a compatible group of friends. Loneliness lurks long in many people’s lives, that is for sure.

What is amiss in the world today is community, song, dance and wholesome partying in Krishna Consciousness.

I believe we have it all, but we also don’t lack gossip and rumour-mongering.

Please, Sri Krishna, help communities with this strong tendency to defame others.

May the Source be with you!
4 km

Sri Harinam Sankirtan Nectar – Sydney CBD – 10/08/18 (Album of…
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Sri Harinam Sankirtan Nectar - Sydney CBD - 10/08/18 (Album of photos)
The effect of chanting the names of Radha and Krishna is beyond material conception. We cannot describe it satisfactorily.
Krishna is so compassionate that if anyone calls His name even once, He destroys innumerable sinful reactions in their heart.
So kind is He that even if someone speaks his name accidentally, or even unwillingly, Krishna purifies them from millions of years of conditioning.
Tonight, as our Harinam Party passed a nightclub in the city, a number of the patrons came out and began to dance and chant with us. They put so much effort into it, they were chanting to the best of their ability.
Millions of years of conditioning were being purified as they were calling the names of Radha and Krishna.
30 books were distributed tonight including a number of books in Arabic and Chinese.
Please accept our invitation to come and share the Yuga Dharma, the spiritual practice for his age, with the people of Sydney.
Come along even once, just once, to help with the distribution process. Meet us this Friday outside Woolworths atTown Hall, in Sydney, at 6.30pm. We will finish at 8.00pm. we have a spot reserved just for you.
Sri Harinam Sankirtan ki Jaya.
Chant
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna
Krishna Krishna Hare Hare
Hare Rama Hare Rama
Rama Rama Hare Hare
And Be Happy …
Find them here: https://goo.gl/vNfh4X

ECO-Vrindaban Board Meeting Minutes 07/08/2018
→ New Vrindaban Brijabasi Spirit

ECO-Vrindaban New Vrindaban ISKCON cows gardens Prabhupada

ECO-Vrindaban Board Meeting Minutes 07/08/2018

Mission Statement: ECO-Vrindaban promotes cow protection, local agriculture, and above all, loving Krishna, as envisioned by Srila Prabhupada, ISKCON New Vrindaban’s Founder-Acharya.

Participating Directors: Anuttama, Chaitanya Mangala (chair), Jamuna Jivani (board secretary), Olivia, Ranaka, and Vraja.

Participating Advisors: Jaya Krsna, Kalakantha, and Kripamaya.

1. Ranaka’s Monthly Staff Report

Lalita Gopi

  • Ananda Vidya is currently milking eight cows: Jamuna, Surabhi, Laxmi, Sita, Anjali, Sriya, Malati, and Subhadra. Lalita Gopi, Jitendra, Nil Govinda, and Vrindaban Priya have been assisting as well.
  • The cows are producing approximately 30-32 gal of milk per day.
  • Butter and yogurt production has continued with Ananda Vidya transforming the extra milk into 15 lb of butter, 15 gal of yogurt, and a half gallon of ghee on a weekly basis. This month he produced one (8” diameter x 3.5” high) wheel of Colby cheese.
  • Subhadra gave birth to a healthy heifer calf named Jaya Sri on June 2nd.
  • Usha is residing in Nandagram and will be due to calf in late August or early September
  • The ISKCON North American Farm Conference took place on June 25-26 in Deland, Florida. Jamuna Jivani devi dasi and Lalita Gopi devi dasi attended on behalf of ECO-V.

Ray

  • has been harvesting hay, while Joshua Rama has been hay raking ahead of the baler and Pippalada assisted with moving hay into the barn.
  • 226 800-pound round bales have been harvested and stacked in the barn for storage in addition to the 250 bales from last year
  • cleared the calf pasture of three years of built-up winter bedding

Logan

  • prepped and painted board fences and barn trim at the Valley Barn
  • helped Caitanya Bhagavat with fencing and upgrade work at Nandagram

Caitanya Bhagavat

  • put up posts, gates, and fencing around our loafing shed in Nandagram to create a geriatric area for Tulasi, a 15-year-old retired milking cow. The veterinarian came to look at her and thinks it won’t be long before she goes down. She is in the company of her old herd mates Ganga and Punya. She is listening to Srila Prabhupada’s chanting and lectures, drinking charanamrita, and receiving Govardhan dust on her head daily.
  • removed two trees that came down in a storm on fence lines in both Nandagram and Bahulaban. All fences and gates have been repaired. All the cows were safe.
  • cut several dead standing locust trees from the Bahulaban forest for fence posts then brought to the Nandagram to be used to complete the new bullpen breeding area using high tensile wire and barbed wire for fencing.
  • created a new rotational grazing area for Madhu the bull alongside his pen. He now has more pasture for running, playing, and grazing.
  • added 3,000 feet of new barbed wire to the existing fences at Nandagram and Bahulaban to increase the height of the fence that will protect the cows and oxen.
  • and Logan disassembled the old ox paddock in Bahulaban. The wire was wrapped up and the t-posts removed from the ground to be reused for the Nandagram bullpen.
  • performed a daily cow check for the 17 cows at Bahulaban and 18 cows at Nandagram. This involves counting them to make sure everyone is present and to monitor their health.
  • weekly mowing and weed-whacking at Nandagram.

Suchandra

  • Community Garden:
    • planted sunflowers, zinnias, sweet corn, watermelon, beets, carrots, lettuce, spinach, and swiss chard
    • put in a second round of winter squash and green beans
    • sprayed potatoes with organic bug repellent to get rid of potato beetles, and sprayed vegetables and flowers with copper zinc to prevent fungi and diseases
    • staked tomatoes
    • replaced bad tomato plants with good ones bought from coop
    • sprinkled Epsom salt weekly onto soil of vegetables
    • weeded potatoes
    • picked two batches of basil and 400 big marigolds
  • Teaching Garden:
    • planted herb bed with parsley, thyme, rosemary, sage, mint, cilantro, etc.
    • planted beans (for teepee), bitter melon, purple fountain grass, and Mandevilla vining plants (on pavilion)
    • spread mulch in walkways throughout front beds
    • weeded lily beds weekly
    • harvested 6,500 small marigolds, 200 lilies, 30 zinnias, 50 snapdragons, and four batches of mint

Mukunda & Lila (at the Nandagram Garden) 

  • Harvested and delivered to temple kitchen:
    • kale – 5.75 Lbs
    • black raspberry – 1.25 Lb.
    • hot pepper – .81 Lb.
    • zucchini squash – 4 Lb.
    • yellow summer squash – 2.25 Lb.

Radhanath das (at Vidya’s Garden)

  • planted three 50’ rows of green beans, put down ground cover, and fenced it in
  • weeded the three perennial beds, asparagus, and lilies, and mulched one of them with newspaper and hay
  • weeded, mowed, and weed-whacked.
  • pruned tomatoes and successfully kept a blight of black dots at bay.
  • planted cucumbers, but they turned yellow and rotted, most likely due to some sort of fungus
  • turned the compost and kept building it with the weeds and cuttings out of the garden
  • harvested and delivered to Radha Vrindaban Chandra’s Temple:
    • asparagus – 4 bundles
    • green beans – 76 lb
    • basil – 6 batches
    • hot peppers – 2 batches
    • peony – 160
    • lilies – 320
    • marigolds – 3,575

Ranaka

  • Tejo has nearly completed the upgrade to the Nandagram water system, including installing a new submersible pump for the Garden House.
  • Tejo also finished work on the Nandagram Field House which included:
    • installing a new electric breaker box for the water system
    • installing a new water heater
    • repairing the electric, lighting, spout, shower head, lavatory faucet, and fan motor in the downstairs bathroom.
    • repairing lighting, bath tub, rebuilt the toilet, and installing a new shower door in the upstairs bathroom.
    • upgrading the kitchen lighting
    • hooking up a dryer and washer
    • servicing the A/C, heating unit, and evaporator

Announcement: Kalindi, a 19-year-old retired Holstein previously residing at the Valley Barn, died May 22, 2018. A few years ago she had one of her eyes removed due to cancer, but went on to live a happy, peaceful life for several more years, which is not always the case for cows with this condition.

2. Update on the NV50 Festival in September

Jamuna Jivani gave a brief update on the current plans for the NV50 event planned for September. In addition to honoring the past, members of the board suggest elements of the festival should also appreciate the current residents and projects in New Vrindaban, as well as offer opportunities for participants to envision the next 50 years. Jamuna Jivani will share this with the NV50 organizing committee.

3. European ISKCON Farm Conference and GEN training

Kalakantha invited ECO-V to send representation to the upcoming ISKCON European Farm Conference at Karuna Bhavan in Scotland, as well as a training with the Global Ecovillage Network (GEN) at their world headquarters in Findhorn. The GEN training is September 5, and the conference is September 7-9. There was a general agreement among the board members that ECO-V could send up to two representatives. Ranaka will share the info with the ECO-V staff to see if anyone would like to go.

Here’s a link to the ECO-Vrindaban website.

For regular updates, please visit, like and follow the ECO-V Facebook page.

The art of associating with advanced devotees
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We know the value of associating with advanced devotees and are keen for their darsana, guidance and blessings. Unfortunately, we quite often deprive ourselves of the full benefit of spending time with them. We tend to speak rather than hear and we try to bring them into our world rather than proactively and sensitively gain entrance into theirs. What an unfortunate misuse of a chance of mercy!

How Can I Serve You?
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How Can I Serve You?
HH Candramauli Swami: This topic is fundamental to everything we do in devotional service. Understanding this principle requires each of us to know clearly that as living beings our nature and our happiness in achieving that nature rests on the principles of service. When we say service as an activity, we mean service rendered for the benefit of the person being served. Service that is done without this motivation is defined more as using another to get something for ourselves. The dynamics on how service is executed solely for the benefit of the person served is described throughout the scriptures as pure devotional service. When we do something for someone in order to please or benefit that person in some way, then that service establishes a relation with that person that is pleasing and satisfying to both.

A Call to Spiritual Heroism
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Hare KrishnaBy Chaitanya Charana Dasa

Our society fosters neither love nor fear of God, but glamorizes godless, selfish materialism instead. Consequently nowadays many people are extremely selfish in their relationship with God. They don't give even a few moments to the person who has given them their entire life. In a family, if a son doesn't care for his father, who is his link with his brothers, soon he will stop caring for them too. In fact, he may even become malevolent toward them because they become his competitors for inheritance. Similarly, selfishness toward God is the origin of all evil. We have all sown that evil seed in our own hearts and are now force-feeding each other its bitter fruits—terrorism, corruption, crime, exploitation—all born from fighting with each other for the world's resources, God's inheritance for us. Continue reading "A Call to Spiritual Heroism
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Finding Shelter in True Identity
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Hare KrishnaBy Devika Rao

“One who has taken his birth as a human being in the land of India should make his life successful and work for the benefit of all other people.” (Sri Chaitanya-caritamrita, Adi-lila 9.41) Even though I wasn’t born in India, I’d like to take Lord Chaitanya’s instruction to heart. I’m an Indian-American in touch with Srila Prabhupada’s philosophy, so I feel well equipped with both cultures. Continue reading "Finding Shelter in True Identity
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ISKCON prison ministry – Strengthening my faith.
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Hare KrishnaBy Janardana Dasa

I joined The Hare Krishna movement in 1982 and have been chanting Hare Krishna regularly since about 1983. I have been more and less steady throughout the years. But never has it been as intense as it has been in these past months of incarceration.  It is said in the sastras that when you are put in adverse situations, all of a sudden, you can really call out to the Lord. Srimati Kunti Devi prayed, "I wish that all those calamities would happen again and again so that we could see You again and again, for seeing You means that we will no longer see repeated births and deaths."  Continue reading "ISKCON prison ministry – Strengthening my faith.
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Gita 18.51 Use intelligence to counter the mind’s centrifugal force
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Bhagavad-gita verse-by-verse podcast

The post Gita 18.51 Use intelligence to counter the mind’s centrifugal force appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Krishna is close to us, but we are far away from him
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[Sunday feast class at ISKCON, Brisbane, Australia]

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Dhritarashtra character analysis 2 – Do we need to lose everything before we lose our attachments?
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[“Live consciously” retreat, session 3, at Brisbane, Australia]

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Dhritarashtra character analysis 1 – Attachment makes us stone-hearted
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[“Live consciously” retreat, session 2, at Brisbane, Australia]

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Podcast Summary


 

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Understanding the mind and how it makes us unconscious
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[“Live consciously” retreat, session 1, at Brisbane, Australia]

Podcast


 

Podcast Summary


 

Video:

The post Understanding the mind and how it makes us unconscious appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Super Harinam in Miedzyzoroje, Poland (23 min video)
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Super Harinam in Miedzyzoroje, Poland (23 min video)
Srila Prabhupada: When one is free from offenses in chanting Hare Krishna, he develops the ecstatic bodily features called pulakasru. Pulaka means “symptoms of happiness,” and asru means “tears in the eyes.” The symptoms of happiness and tears in the eyes must appear in a person who has chanted the holy name offenselessly. (Srimad-Bhagavatam, 3.15.25 Purport)

The search for happiness – how bhakti pacifies, purifies and satisfies us
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[Congregation program at the Radha Krishna Cultural Center, Gold Coast, Australia]

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Podcast Summary


 

Video:

The post The search for happiness – how bhakti pacifies, purifies and satisfies us appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

How to choose our thoughts wisely – Science, Spirituality and Wellness
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[Talk at Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia]

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Podcast Summary


 

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The post How to choose our thoughts wisely – Science, Spirituality and Wellness appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Sun Love Feast – Aug 12th, 2018 – Vedic discourse by His Grace Bhagwat Prabhu
→ ISKCON Brampton

Chant: Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare 

And Be Happy!!

ayur harati vai pumsam
udyann astam ca yann asau
tasyarte yat-ksano nita
uttama-sloka-vartaya

Both by rising and by setting, the sun decreases the duration of life of everyone, except one
who utilizes the time by discussing topics of the all-good Personality of Godhead.
 ~ Srimad Bhagavatam 2.3.17




11.00 - 11.15      Tulsi Puja
11.15  - 11.30     Guru Puja          
11:30 - 11:55     Aarti & Kirtan        
11.55  - 12.00    Sri Nrsingadeva Prayers
12.00 - 1:00     Vedic discourse
  1.00 - 1.30      Closing Kirtan
  1.30 - 2.00     Sanctified Free Vegetarian Feast

COMING UP AHEAD

Pavitropana Ekadasi
Fasting.....................on Wed Aug 22nd,2018
Breakfast................  on Thu Aug 23rd 2018 b/w 6.31am – 11.03am


Every fortnight, we observe Ekadasi, a day of prayer and meditation. On this day we fast (or
simplify our meals and abstain from grains and beans), and spend extra time reading the scriptures
and chanting the auspicious Hare Krishna mantra.By constantly ‘exercising’ our minds through
regular japa we can train our senses to push the threshold of contentment.
English audio glorification of all Ekadasis is available here 




ONGOING PROGRAMS

Adult Education At The Temple
ISKCON Brampton offers various courses and Seminars for adults. The courses take a personal approach to learning. It encourages the student not only to study thoroughly the contents of Srila Prabhupada’s books but also to clearly understand the philosophy and practically apply it. The course focuses on behaviour and character, nurturing students in appropriate Vaishnava values.
Professionally designed and presented, it draws on the principles of Krishna consciousness
and the best of progressive education. In this way, it is true to ISKCON’s heritage and at the
same time relevant to its mission in contemporary society.

For further information, please contact HG Prema Gaurangi Devi Dasi @ premagaurangi.jps@hotmail.com


Sunday School

To register,contact us
Email:sundayschool108@gmail.com
Call:647.893.9363

The Sunday School provides fun filled strategies through the medium of music, drama, debates,
quizzes and games that present Vedic Culture to children. However the syllabus is also designed
to simultaneously teach them to always remember Krishna and never forget Him.
The Sunday School follows the curriculum provided by the Bhaktivedanta College of Education and Culture (BCEC).


Monthly sankirtan Festival(MSF)
“One who has life can preach, and one who preaches gets life.”(Previous Acaryas)
Every member of ISKCON should have the opportunity to make advancement in Krishna
consciousness by preaching.We encourage everyone to come out and participate and make
Srila Prabhupada happy.

Please contact:
Dharma Dasa- dharandev58@gmail.com-647.892.0739(Mississauga and Brampton regions)


The Mentorship Program

Please note that registration in the Mentorship System is now a mandatory requirement for all initiation requests at ISKCON Brampton.It

1.Facilitates  and nurtures devotees aspiring for first and second Initiation.
2.One-on-One personal follow up on a regular basis.
3.Systematic training to devotees in matters of Philosophy, Sadhna, Vaishnava behavior, etiquette, Lifestyle and attitudes.

To find details please click here


Gift Shop

Are you looking for some amazing gift items which are less expensive and more beautiful for your
loved ones for festivals or many other occasions??
Our boutique is stocked with an excellent range of products, perfect for gifts or as souvenirs of your
visit. It offers textiles, jewelry, incense, devotional articles, musical instruments, books, and CDs
inspired by Indian culture.We're open on all Sundays and celebrations marked in our annual calendar.

Chaitanya’s Sannyasa, Prabhupada’s Mercy
Giriraj Swami

We read from Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi-lila, Chapter One: “The Spiritual Masters.”

TEXT 62

sadhavo hrdayam mahyam
  sadhunam hrdayam tv aham
mad-anyat te na jananti
  naham tebhyo manag api

SYNONYMS

sadhavah—the saints; hrdayam—heart; mahyam—My; sadhunam—of the saints; hrdayam—the heart; tu—indeed; aham—I; mat—than Me; anyat—other; te—they; na—not; jananti—know; na—nor; aham—I; tebhyah—than them; manak—slightly; api—even.

TRANSLATION

“Saints are My heart, and only I am their hearts. They do not know anyone but Me, and therefore I do not recognize anyone besides them as Mine.”

PURPORT by Srila Prabhupada

This verse appears in Srimad-Bhagavatam (9.4.68) in connection with a misunderstanding between Durvasa Muni and Maharaja Ambarisa. As a result of this misunderstanding, Durvasa Muni tried to kill the king, when the Sudarsana cakra, the celebrated weapon of Godhead, appeared on the scene for the devoted king’s protection. When the Sudarsana cakra attacked Durvasa Muni, he fled in fear of the weapon and sought shelter from all the great demigods in heaven. Not one of them was able to protect him, and therefore Durvasa Muni prayed to Lord Visnu for forgiveness. Lord Visnu advised him, however, that if he wanted forgiveness he had to get it from Maharaja Ambarisa, not from Him. In this context Lord Visnu spoke this verse.

The Lord, being full and free from problems, can wholeheartedly care for His devotees. His concern is how to elevate and protect all those who have taken shelter at His feet. The same responsibility is also entrusted to the spiritual master. The bona fide spiritual master’s concern is how the devotees who have surrendered to him as a representative of the Lord may make progress in devotional service. The Supreme Personality of Godhead is always mindful of the devotees who fully engage in cultivating knowledge of Him, having taken shelter at His lotus feet.

COMMENT by Giriraj Swami

This verse is placed by Srila Krsnadasa Kaviraja Gosvami in the first chapter of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, which discusses guru-tattva, the truth about the spiritual master. First and foremost, the spiritual master must be a devotee of the Lord, and Krsnadasa Kaviraja Gosvami describes different characteristics of devotees. In the current series of verses, he discusses the Lord’s presence in the devotee’s heart. The devotee receives inspiration from the Lord within the heart, and thus the devotee should be identified with the Lord.

In the present verse, Lord Vishnu describes the beautiful reciprocation between the Lord and His devotees. In essence, the devotees know nothing but the Lord, and the Lord knows no one but His devotees. The Lord dwells in the hearts of His devotees, and His devotees remain in the core of His heart. As Lord Krishna says in the Bhagavad-gita (9.29),

samo ’ham sarva-bhutesu
  na me dvesyo ’sti na priyah
ye bhajanti tu mam bhaktya
  mayi te tesu capy aham

“I am equal to all living beings. I do not envy anyone, nor am I partial to anyone. But those who render service unto Me in devotion are in Me, and I am in them.”

When I came before Sri Sri Radha-Gokulananda this morning, I thought of Srila Prabhupada, how he came here and installed the Deities. There are many wonderful pictures and even live footage of him offering arati and dancing in kirtan before the Deities. And I thought of how Prabhupada endeavored ceaselessly to preach the message of Sri Krishna Chaitanya and to give facility to devotees to progress in Krishna consciousness. He voyaged alone by steamship, arriving in America at the age of seventy, not knowing anyone. On the order of his spiritual master, between the ages of seventy and eighty-two he preached and spread Krishna consciousness and created so many facilities for the devotees, like Bhaktivedanta Manor, all over the world. I thought, “What selfless service. What surrender. What dependence on the Lord. How much the Lord must love Srila Prabhupada.”

Then I thought of myself: “Now I am sixty-two. Who knows what condition I’ll be in when I am seventy, the age at which Srila Prabhupada arrived in America. And I have so many people to help me. By Srila Prabhupada’s grace, there are devotees practically everywhere I go. I have people to travel with me and to help me with my luggage. And I go by plane. I don’t go by steamship, by cargo carrier. Yet even then, it is so hard to travel—really hard.

“And Srila Prabhupada had no one. Externally, he was all alone. He began at the age of seventy—he traveled by steamship, cargo carrier—and he served the Lord in the best way by preaching the message of Krishna and making devotees, caring for them, protecting them, encouraging them, and giving them every facility to progress in Krishna consciousness. What deep love for the conditioned souls, for his spiritual master, and for Krishna resided in Srila Prabhupada’s heart! And reciprocally, what love for Srila Prabhupada resided in Krishna’s heart!”

When Durvasa Muni approached the Lord for protection from the reaction to his offense against His devotee, the Lord told him,

aham bhakta-paradhino
  hy asvatantra iva dvija
sadhubhir grasta-hrdayo
  bhaktair bhakta-jana-priyah

“I am completely under the control of My devotees. Indeed, I am not at all independent. Because My devotees are completely devoid of material desires, I sit only within the cores of their hearts. What to speak of My devotee, even those who are devotees of My devotee are very dear to Me.

naham atmanam asase
  mad-bhaktaih sadhubhir vina
sriyam catyantikim brahman
  yesam gatir aham para

“O best of the brahmanas, without saintly persons for whom I am the only destination, I do not desire to enjoy My transcendental bliss and My supreme opulences.

ye daragara-putrapta-
  pranan vittam imam param
hitva mam saranam yatah
  katham tams tyaktum utsahe

“Since pure devotees give up their homes, wives, children, relatives, riches, and even their lives simply to serve Me, without any desire for material improvement in this life or in the next, how can I give up such devotees at any time?

mayi nirbaddha-hrdayah
  sadhavah sama-darsanah
vase kurvanti mam bhaktya
  sat-striyah sat-patim yatha

“As chaste women bring their gentle husbands under control by service, the pure devotees, who are equal to everyone and completely attached to Me in the core of the heart, bring Me under their full control.

mat-sevaya pratitam te
  salokyadi-catustayam
necchanti sevaya purnah
  kuto ’nyat kala-viplutam

“My devotees, who are always satisfied to be engaged in My loving service, are not interested even in the four principles of liberation [salokya, sarupya, samipya, and sarsti], although these are automatically achieved by their service. What then is to be said of such perishable happiness as elevation to the higher planetary systems?

sadhavo hrdayam mahyam
  sadhunam hrdayam tv aham
mad-anyat te na jananti
  naham tebhyo manag api

“The pure devotee is always within the core of My heart, and I am always in the heart of the pure devotee. My devotees do not know anything else but Me, and I do not know anyone else but them.” (SB 9.4.63–68)

In the Bhagavad-gita also, Lord Krishna promises, ye yatha mam prapadyante tams tathaiva bhajamy aham: “As they surrender unto Me, I reciprocate accordingly.” He is always true to His promise, and he always reciprocates with His devotees. In fact, He reciprocates with everyone who approaches Him in whatever way they approach Him. But Krishna’s eternal, immortal promise was broken by the love of the gopis. This is a very elevated and confidential topic, but it is relevant to Lord Chaitanya’s acceptance of sannyasa.

Sri Caitanya-caritamrta explains that the Lord appeared for two reasons—internal and external. The external reason was to propagate the yuga-dharma of hari-nama-sankirtana, and the internal reason was to taste the love of the residents of Vrindavan, especially the love of Radharani, in separation—and to distribute that pure love to the conditioned souls in the material world. In the same way, there are two reasons for the Lord’s acceptance of sannyasa. The Caitanya-caritamrta explains that many of Lord Chaitanya’s contemporaries could not recognize Him. They thought He was an ordinary human being, and some disrespected and even blasphemed Him. The Lord knew that unless they accepted Him, they would not be able to get the benefit of Krishna consciousness, and so, out of His causeless mercy, for the fallen souls in general and the offenders in particular, He accepted sannyasa.

Sri Caitanya-caritamrta describes the effects of accepting—or not accepting—Lord Chaitanya:

more na manile saba loka habe nasa
ithi lagi’ krpardra prabhu karila sannyasa

“Lord Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu thought, ‘Unless people accept Me they will all be destroyed.’ Thus the merciful Lord accepted the sannyasa order.

sannyasi-buddhye more karibe namaskara
tathapi khandibe duhkha, paibe nistara

“ ‘If a person offers obeisances to Me, even due to accepting Me only as an ordinary sannyasi, his material distresses will diminish, and he will ultimately get liberation.’” (Cc Adi 8.10–11)

Unless people accept Lord Chaitanya, they cannot approach Lord Krishna. Thus Krsnadasa Kaviraja Gosvami implores us:

ataeva punah kahon urdhva-bahu hana
caitanya-nityananda bhaja kutarka chadiya

“Therefore I say again, lifting my arms: O fellow human beings, please worship Sri Caitanya and Nityananda without false arguments!” (Cc Adi 8.13)

Srila Prabhupada, following Srila Krsnadasa Kaviraja Gosvami, has advised us to chant the Panca-tattva mantrasri-krsna-caitanya prabhu-nityananda sri-advaita gadadhara srivasadi-gaura-bhakta-vrnda—before we chant the Hare Krishna maha-mantra. He said that the Panca-tattva will help us to chant Hare Krishna. Lord Chaitanya said, “If people do not accept Me, they will be ruined.” How? Their human form of life will be spoiled because they will not attain Krishna consciousness. In order to achieve Krishna consciousness, we must accept Lord Chaitanya. Then we can approach Lord Krishna. So, in the same way, before we chant the Hare Krishna maha-mantra, we first chant the holy names of Lord Chaitanya and Lord Nityananda: sri-krsna-caitanya prabhu-nityananda sri-advaita gadadhara srivasadi-gaura-bhakta-vrnda.

Lord Chaitanya took sannyasa so that offenders would not blaspheme Him; rather, they would offer Him respect, if for no other reason than because He was a sannyasi. In Vedic culture, even today, people offer respect to sannyasis. Thus Lord Chaitanya took sannyasa for the sake of the fallen souls, to deliver them. That is the external reason.

The internal reason is explained in a confidential talk that Lord Chaitanya had with Lokanatha Gosvami, as recorded in the book Prema-vilasa, by Nityananda dasa, a disciple of Jahnava-devi, the eternal consort of Nityananda Prabhu and the leader of the Gaudiya Vaishnavas after the disappearance of Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu and His associates. Srila Prabhupada cites Prema-vilasa in a purport in Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, quoting Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura’s Anubhasya.

In this confidential talk Lord Chaitanya reveals His innermost thoughts to Lokanatha Gosvami: “I feel restless remaining silent about My appearance and mission. I have come into the material world and have directed some people to Nityananda Prabhu and Advaita Acarya, but who will actually hear from Me and understand My personal mission? To whom can I reveal My heart?”

“I carry deep pain within My heart for two reasons,” He told Lokanatha Gosvami. “One is that there is a brahman who has criticized Me. He does not recognize Krishna’s supreme position. Instead of worshiping Krishna, he worships Krishna’s servants, the demigods, and for his offenses he is going to hell. For the sake of such brahmans, I shall accept the renounced order of life and become their guru.” (A sannyasi is considered the spiritual master of all the varnas and ashramas, and a brahman is also expected to offer obeisances to a sannyasi.)

Then Lord Chaitanya said that there was another, internal reason for His taking sannyasa. He said that He felt great pain in His heart because He was indebted to Srimati Radharani for Her glorious, pure love for Him and He was unable to repay His debt.

Srila Krsnadasa Kaviraja Gosvami alludes to this fact in Sri Caitanya-caritamrta (Adi 4.177–180):

krsnera pratijna eka ache purva haite
ye yaiche bhaje, krsna tare bhaje taiche

“Lord Krsna has a promise from before to reciprocate with His devotees according to the way they worship Him.

ye yatha mam prapadyante
  tams tathaiva bhajamy aham
mama vartmanuvartante
  manusyah partha sarvasah

“In whatever way My devotees surrender unto Me, I reward them accordingly. Everyone follows My path in all respects, O son of Prtha. [Bg 4.11]

se pratijna bhanga haila gopira bhajane
tahate pramana krsna-sri-mukha-vacane

“That promise has been broken by the worship of the gopis, as Lord Krsna Himself admits.

na paraye ’ham niravadya-samyujam
  sva-sadhu-krtyam vibudhayusapi vah
ya mabhajan durjaya-geha-srnkhalah
  samvrscya tad vah pratiyatu sadhuna

“O gopis, I am not able to repay My debt for your spotless service, even within a lifetime of Brahma. Your connection with Me is beyond reproach. You have worshiped Me, cutting off all domestic ties, which are difficult to break. Therefore please let your own glorious deeds be your compensation.” [SB 10.32.22]

Why is it that Krishna, who reciprocates the love of all devotees, is unable to reciprocate the love of Srimati Radharani? As Krishna told Radha and the other gopis, evam mad-arthojjhita-loka-veda svanam hi vo mayi: “You have renounced social customs, scriptural injunctions, and your relatives for My sake.” (SB 10.32.21) Radha and the gopis forsook their families and reputations—which Krishna Himself did not do. When Krishna played on His flute to call the gopis, they ran out of their homes, not caring for their husbands, children, or elders. They thought only of Krishna and Krishna’s service—nothing else. But Krishna would not do that. Late at night, He would carefully, stealthily sneak out of the house, and in the early morning He would sneak back in, back into His bed. His mother and father and others did not know that He had gone out, and His relationships with them remained intact.

Further, Krishna reciprocates the love of all devotees. He reciprocates the love of His parents, the love of His boyfriends, and the love of His servants; He even reciprocates the passive love of the sages in santa-rasa, and He reciprocates the efforts to love Him of the practicing devotees in the material world. As He says, “Saints are My heart, and only I am their hearts.” For every saint, there is only one—Krishna—but for Krishna, there are many saints. And especially for the gopis, there was only Krishna. For Krishna’s sake, the unmarried girls risked their relationships with their parents—like many of us did when we came to Krishna consciousness. And the married girls risked their relationships with their husbands and in-laws. They thought of nothing but Krishna. But Krishna’s position is different. He has to think of everyone, and so He could not reciprocate the love of the gopis, who sacrificed everything for Him. They knew no one but Him, but He was mindful of so many other devotees and relationships.

Still, He gave His promise, ye yatha mam prapadyante tams tathaiva bhajamy aham, and He wanted to reciprocate the love of Sri Radha, but He couldn’t, and that was causing Him great pain. And in His distress, as Sri Krishna Chaitanya, He revealed His mind to Lokanatha Gosvami: “The only way I can reciprocate Sri Radha’s love for Me is to leave My home and family and friends. Therefore I must take sannyasa.”

Before Krishna left Vrindavan, Srimati Radharani would wear garments that were blue, the color of Krishna, and thus feel happiness. But after He left, She wore saffron-colored dress, in the mood of separation, thinking of Herself as His maidservant. She would not eat or sleep or care for Her appearance. She simply absorbed Herself in chanting and hearing about Krishna, feeling each day’s separation from Him to be like a hundred years.

Krishna, as Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, thought, “The only way I can reciprocate Her love is if I take sannyasa and wear the saffron-colored cloth of separation. As a sannyasi, in the mood of separation, I will lie down on the bare floor. I also won’t be able to sleep at night, and I also won’t eat nicely”—just like Srimati Radharani in Her separation from Krishna. Krishna thought, “As the gopis, in their separation from Me, proclaimed My glories, so I too, in My separation, will proclaim the glories of the gopis, and in particular Srimati Radharani. In this way I will begin to repay My debt to Her.”

Sri Prema-vilasa (126–134) describes Lord Chaitanya’s words to Lokanatha Gosvami:

‘amara lagiya radha adi sakhi-gana
virahe vyakula haiya tejila jivana

‘amiha tejiba prana tanhara lagiya
se dasa ha-ibe tumi sunibe thakiya

“ ‘Feeling separation from Me, Radha and the gopis have given up Their lives. Now I shall also give up My life for Her. You will see Me in that condition, O Lokanatha.

‘dhariba tahara kanti pariba aruna vasana
ha-iba tanhara dasa anandita mana

“ ‘Adopting Radha’s complexion and the saffron-colored cloth of separation, I will become Her maidservant and get happiness.

‘ei lagi aruna vasana diba gaya
japiba tanhara guna kahilu tomaya

“ ‘Wearing the saffron-colored dress of separation on My body, I will sing the glorious qualities of Radharani.

‘tanhara yateka guna nariba sodhite
sata-janma ayu yadi haya prthivite

‘gune prite tanra sthane ha-iyachi rni
toma sthane lokanatha kahilama ami

“ ‘Her wonderful qualities are not possible to describe. Even if I took birth a hundred times in this world I could not describe them all. I tell you, Lokanatha, by the wonderful qualities of Her love She has put Me in Her debt.

‘jagat bhasaiba ami tanra yasa kirti
tabe jani krpa more karena emati

“ ‘Singing Her glories, I will flood the universe with Her fame. Then She will give Me Her mercy.

‘pa-iba tanhara prema kandiba nayane
dhulaya dhusara haiya naciba sankirtane’

“ ‘Getting Her prema, I will cry and dance in sankirtana with dust all over My body.’ (133)

iha bali phukariya kande gaura-raya
‘radha vrndavana’ bali dharani lotaya

“Saying this, Lord Gaura Ray began to cry. Chanting ‘Radha!’ ‘Vrndavana!’ He rolled on the ground.”

This is a very deep and confidential topic, revealed to us by the mercy of our acharyas so that we can understand how to receive Lord Chaitanya’s precious gift. Sri Caitanya-caritamrta describes and Srila Prabhupada has often repeated that Lord Chaitanya is Krishna Himself come as a devotee to teach us how to serve Krishna, how to worship Krishna, how to love Krishna. As described in Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, Lord Krishna, before manifesting Himself as Lord Chaitanya, considered what He would do:

apani karimu bhakta-bhava angikare
apani acari’ bhakti sikhaimu sabare

“I shall accept the role of a devotee, and I shall teach devotional service by practicing it Myself.”

yuga-dharma pravartaimu nama-sankirtana
cari bhava-bhakti diya nacamu bhuvana

“I shall personally inaugurate the religion of the age—nama-sankirtana, the congregational chanting of the holy name. I shall make the world dance in ecstasy, realizing the four mellows of loving devotional service [in Vraja].” (Cc Adi 3.20, 19)

Lord Chaitanya’s activities are absolute—both the external and the internal. That is the nature of the Absolute Truth, Krishna. There is no difference between His inside and outside, His internal and external activities. They are all absolute.

Lord Chaitanya came to show us how to worship Krishna. Externally, He chanted the holy names of Krishna, performing hari-nama-sankirtana. For all times, Sri Chaitanya’s followers will chant Lord Krishna’s names and perform hari-nama-sankirtana with rapt attention, without offense.

While instructing Srila Sanatana Gosvami, Lord Caitanya told him that of the different practices of devotional service, the nine processes (nava-vidha bhakti) are the best. And of them, nama-sankirtana is the best.

tara madhye sarva-srestha nama-sankirtana
niraparadhe nama laile paya prema-dhana

“Of the nine processes of devotional service, the most important is to always chant the holy name of the Lord. If one does so, avoiding the ten kinds of offenses, one very easily obtains the most valuable love of Godhead.” (Cc Antya 4.71) Of the nine processes (tara madhye), the best of all (sarva-srestha) is the chanting of the holy name. If one chants without offense (niraparadhe), one will get the treasure of ecstatic love for Krishna (prema-dhana). And because we want that treasure, which Lord Chaitanya came to give, we endeavor to chant without offense. That is the only way we can get that prema-dhana.

There are ten offenses, but the one we most scrupulously try to avoid while chanting is pramada, inattention. If the mind wanders from the sound of the holy name, we must bring it back. Making a conscientious effort to remove the offense of inattention puts us on the clearing stage of chanting, which by definition clears us of anarthas and offenses (aparadhas) and brings us, by Krishna’s and His associates’ mercy, to the perfect stage of chanting, to the coveted treasure of ecstatic love of Godhead.

Scripture says that one can be freed from the effects of all sins by surrendering oneself unto the Lord and that one can freed of all offenses at the feet of the Lord by taking shelter of His holy name but that one cannot protect oneself by any means if one commits an offense at the feet of the holy name of the Lord. Thus one should carefully avoid the ten offenses, and if one happens to offend the holy name, one has no recourse but to continuously chant the holy name and try to become free from the reactions.

Among the ten offenses is one that Srila Prabhupada calls “the worst offense at the lotus feet of the holy name”—sadhu-ninda, or vaisnava-aparadha. This offense was committed by Durvasa Muni, a great mystic and brahman, when he became angry with King Ambarisa.

As described in Srimad-Bhagavatam (9.4), Maharaja Ambarisa had been strictly observing Ekadasi, neither eating nor drinking. And to complete the observance properly, he had to break the fast within a range of times called the parana. It so happened that Durvasa Muni came to the court of King Ambarisa before then and said that he would return in time to break the fast. Following etiquette, Ambarisa, a kshatriya, waited for Durvasa, a brahman, to offer him the first food, but the time to break the fast was approaching and the sage Durvasa still had not returned. And without breaking the fast in time, the whole observance would be flawed.

Maharaja Ambarisa consulted the brahmans in his court and concluded that the solution would be to drink water. According to Vedic injunction, drinking water may be accepted as eating or as not eating. Srila Prabhupada comments that although Ambarisa was a kshatriya, because he was a Vaishnava he could find a solution to this dilemma, whereas the brahmans apparently could not. So he took a little water, but when Durvasa finally arrived, he became furious, thinking, “This impudent man has transgressed religious laws, eating before feeding me.” He blasphemed the king and attempted to kill him. But the king remained peaceful. He was not at all disturbed, and he simply depended on the mercy of the Lord.

The Lord immediately sent His divine disc, the Sudarsana chakra, to protect Ambarisa Maharaja and kill the offender, Durvasa Muni. The chakra, with its unbearable heat, pursued Durvasa Muni, a great yogi, wherever he went, and Durvasa could not find any relief, even on the heavenly planets. Eventually he went to Lord Brahma, and then Lord Shiva, but they simply referred him to the supreme authority, Lord Vishnu. Eventually he tried to take shelter of Lord Vishnu, who simply glorified his pure devotees (in the verses quoted above). And the Lord advised Durvasa that he must immediately approach King Ambarisa.

Ultimately, Durvasa fell at the feet of King Ambarisa, who as an exalted and humble devotee felt ashamed and embarrassed. The king offered prayers to Sudarsana and Lord Vishnu, and thus Durvasa was saved. Finally appreciating the glory of a devotee, Durvasa praised Ambarisa Maharaja: “My dear king, today I have experienced the greatness of the devotees of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, for although I have committed an offense, you have prayed for my good fortune. For those who have achieved the Supreme Personality of Godhead, the master of the pure devotees, what is impossible to do, and what is impossible to give up? What is impossible for the servants of the Lord? By the very hearing of His holy name one is purified.” (SB 9.5.14–16)

Here is an important lesson for aspiring devotees and chanters of the holy name: We must avoid vaisnava-aparadha, “the worse offense at the lotus feet of the holy name,” and if, unfortunately, we happen to offend a Vaishnava, we must directly approach him or her and beg forgiveness.

Sometimes we may think that our criticism of a Vaishnava is justified. In Sri Hari-nama-cintamani, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura discusses four grounds on which one might criticize a Vaishnava—low birth, previous sins (or faults), an accidental falldown, and present traces of previous sinful activity. But he says that although all these conditions may be present in a Vaishnava, they are insubstantial grounds for criticism and that one who so blasphemes a Vaishnava will be punished. He says that because the Vaishnava is spreading the glories of the Lord’s holy name, the Lord does not tolerate such criticism.

Now, when we live in a society of devotees, there are bound to be little irritations, but we should not take minor differences too seriously. Once, a disciple said to Srila Prabhupada, “If I have to offer obeisances and beg forgiveness every time I offend a devotee, I will be offering obeisances and begging forgiveness all day.” And Prabhupada replied, “In the morning program, you offer obeisances to the Vaishnavas. That is sufficient.” Every morning after mangala-arati, the devotees offer respectful obeisances to each other, reciting the Vaishnava pranama mantra. Within themselves they should beg the other devotees to forgive them for their incidental offenses, and they in turn should forgive the other devotees. Then they can start the day fresh and clean.

Sometimes, however, unfortunately, one may commit a more grievous offense, and in that case one should approach the offended devotee personally and beg forgiveness. Generally the Vaishnava will forgive. But sometimes the offense is such that the Vaishnava’s anger does not subside when approached by the offender, and in that case the offender should act in ways to somehow please the Vaishnava. In due course, the merciful Lord, the merciful holy name, and the merciful Vaishnava will relieve the devotee of the reactions.

Lord Chaitanya not only wanted to relieve the offenders of their offenses and save them from further offenses, but He also wanted them to accept Him and offer Him respects. And so He took sannyasa. Here too there is a lesson for us. Instead of criticizing and offending devotees, we should offer them respects and service. On the negative side, we don’t want to blaspheme devotees, but on the positive side, we want to glorify and please them. If we are fully engaged in the positive activities of appreciating and serving devotees, where is the chance of criticizing and offending them?

By Srila Prabhupada’s mercy, we are all here. He has given us all the knowledge we need to become Krishna conscious. As Srila Gour Govinda Swami Maharaja used to say, “Everything is in Prabhupada’s books. They are like an ocean, with many precious gems at the bottom. But to get those gems, we must dive deep”—deep into the ocean of Prabhupada’s books. There is so much in them—unfathomable. If we go deep, we will find the most precious jewels of transcendental knowledge, realization, and love, prema.

Srila Prabhupada has given us the holy name. We can get everything just by chanting the thirty-two syllables of the maha-mantra: Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare. If one is not very literate or scholarly, one can get all knowledge and realization just by chanting the Hare Krishna maha-mantra without offense (niraparadhe). Such pure chanting will lead us to the most valuable treasure of love of God (prema-dhana).

Srila Prabhupada has given us wonderful temples with beautiful Deities (as we are experiencing now). And he has given us the association of devotees, which is really what this chapter of the Caitanya-caritamrta is about. Every Vaishnava is a guru, siksa-guru. Srila Prabhupada said we should address each other as “Prabhu.” Prabhu means “master.” Every prabhu is our master, to be served and learned from. Srila Prabhupada wrote in a letter: “One who teaches can be treated as spiritual master. It is not that after we become initiated we become perfect. No. It requires teaching. So if we take instruction from them, all senior godbrothers may be treated as guru; there is no harm. Actually, you have only one spiritual master, who initiates you, just as you have only one father. But every Vaishnava should be treated as prabhu, master, higher than me, and in this sense, if I learn from him, he may be regarded as guru. It is not that I disobey my real spiritual master and call someone else as spiritual master. That is wrong. It is only that I can call spiritual master someone who is teaching me purely what my initiating spiritual master has taught.”

I once had an interesting talk with His Holiness Sacinandana Swami. Every year Maharaja goes to Vraja for Kartik and does a very strong nama-vrata, chanting the holy name so many times. One year, he was staying at Radha-kunda, and some of that time I was staying nearby at Govardhana, at the Bhaktivedanta Sadhana Ashram, which Tamal Krishna Goswami and I procured from the king of Chhatarpur. Although Sacinandana Swami hardly had time to eat or sleep then—he had such a strong nama-vrata—he did find some time to spend with me, and we discussed this point of sadhu-sanga, which is one of the five most potent forms of devotional service described by Rupa Gosvami in the Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu.

sadhu-sanga, nama-kirtana, bhagavata-sravana
mathura-vasa, sri-murtira sraddhaya sevana

 “One should associate with devotees, chant the holy name of the Lord, hear Srimad-Bhagavatam, reside at Mathura, and worship the Deity with faith and veneration.” (Cc Madhya 22.131)

Sadhu-sanga is defined—sajatiyasaye snigdhe sadhau sangah svato vare: “One should associate with the devotees who are more advanced than oneself and who are endowed with a similar type of affection for the Lord.” (Brs 1.2.91, Cc Madhya 22.131) Literally, sajatiya means “of the same caste,” or, more generally, “similar.” So the sadhu should be like-minded, having a similar kind of affection for the Lord, and be more advanced than oneself (svato vare).

On this point, Sacinandana Swami said that there are people who think that you have to go outside ISKCON to get sadhu-sanga, to associate with a more advanced devotee, but that he did not agree. We want to associate with a sadhu who is sajatiyasaye snigdhe, who has the same type of affection not only for the Lord but also—and in our case, most importantly—for Srila Prabhupada. The sadhu should have a similar understanding of Srila Prabhupada. For us to associate with someone whose affection and appreciation for Srila Prabhupada is not similar to ours will not be favorable for us. If our relationship with Prabhupada is important to us—and it certainly is for Sacinandana Swami and me, and I hope it is for everyone here—we must associate with someone who has our kind of appreciation and affection for Srila Prabhupada. Otherwise, for us, it will not constitute proper, favorable sadhu-sanga.

As for associating with someone more advanced (svato vare), Sacinandana Swami said that from the external point of view people may see that we are equals—“Sacinandana Swami and Giriraj Swami are peers”—but that internally, “I see that Giriraj Swami is more advanced than I am and that I can learn from him, and Giriraj Swami is thinking, ‘Sacinandana Swami is more advanced than I, and I can learn from him. I should associate with him and hear and learn from him and serve him.’ ” Thus, as humble devotees, we will see that there are many devotees in ISKCON more advanced than we are who have the same kind of understanding of Srila Prabhupada that we have and that therefore, according to Rupa Gosvami’s definition, we can get sadhu-sanga right within ISKCON. In fact, ISKCON is meant for such sadhu-sanga.

Srila Prabhupada has given us every facility. He has given the holy name, he has given the Bhagavad-gita and Srimad-Bhagavatam and Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, he has given us the Deities, he has given us temples in Mayapur and Vrindavan and in practically every major city of the world, and he has given us the association of his faithful followers. So we really have everything we need. We just need a humble, simple heart so that we can accept what he has given us and derive the full benefit. And in this endeavor, I pray that you will help me, and to my capacity, I will try to help you. And we will all go back home, back to Godhead together.

Thank you very much.

Hare Krishna.

Gaura Bhagavan dasa: Every day in the Guru-vandana prayers we sing, sri-guru-carane rati, ei se uttama gati, ye prasade pure sarva asa: “Attachment to the lotus feet of the spiritual master is the best means of spiritual advancement. By his mercy all desires for spiritual perfection are fulfilled.” So, if someone is attached to the lotus feet of Srila Prabhupada, he will achieve all perfection. He doesn’t need anything else but to associate with devotees who are attached to the lotus feet of Srila Prabhupada.

Giriraj Swami: I agree with you. What you quoted confirms what was said in the class.

Gopi Vallabha dasa: We see in the example of Mahaprabhu that He used the sannyasa- asrama to trick the blasphemers and induce them, often without their knowledge, to worship Krishna. The position of the scientists today is sort of like that of the impersonalists in the time of Mahaprabhu. But over the last two or so years, we have lost Sadaputa Prabhu and His Holiness Bhaktisvarupa Damodara Swami Maharaja, who helped spearhead the Bhaktivedanta Institute, which was a very dear project to Srila Prabhupada. Many of the academics and scientists today who are leading society away from personalism will not hear the tattva, truth, from you unless you have a doctorate or some sort of distinction within their particular disciplines. They seem to be hard of hearing unless you are within their fraternity, as it were. To me, having a PhD resembles how Chaitanya Mahaprabhu tricked the impersonalists, or the nondevotees, into listening to Him. But Prabhupada also said it is not necessary to have a doctorate to be heard by the scientists. So there’s this dilemma in some devotees’ minds, including mine. I wonder if you could resolve that. Am I being clear?

Giriraj Swami: Our godbrother Garuda Prabhu had the very same thought: Lord Chaitanya took sannyasa so people would listen to Him, so what is the counterpart in today’s society in the West? It is getting a PhD. And so he got a PhD, and people accept him as an authority.

Whether or not you need to have a PhD for people to listen to you will depend on the person. Some people will be open to you even if you don’t have a PhD. The disciples who joined the Bhaktivedanta Institute—Bhaktisvarupa Damodara Swami, Sadaputa dasa, and others—had PhDs, but the person who preached to them, Srila Prabhupada, didn’t. Still, they accepted what he said. Before taking sannyasa, Chaitanya Mahaprabhu also preached, and some people accepted Him. But when He took sannyasa, more people accepted Him.

So you can preach to scientists and scholars without having a PhD, but some may consider that you are not on their level to speak to them. Those types may hear better from someone who has a PhD.

I am not sure whether you are asking for your own sake or for the sake of others, but as a personal comment I would add that it is much less risky to get a PhD in mathematics or chemistry or biology than in religious studies. To enter religious studies and not be affected by the deconstructionist, skeptical approach requires tremendous spiritual strength and conviction. And even if one is able to go through the process and get a PhD, to actually have an effect on scholars in the field of religious studies, one has to be exceptionally competent and intelligent.

It is like any field. Many people play ball, but not everyone makes the team. And even if they make the team, not everyone becomes a major player. Some spend most of their time on the sidelines. So it is not that everyone who gets a PhD will be able to mold scholars’ views on Gaudiya Vaishnavism or religious studies. To come to that level of influence one must be extremely expert, intelligent, and Krishna conscious. Tamal Krishna Goswami, for example, was not only intelligent and Krishna conscious but also very expert in interpersonal interactions. And in a short time in academia he had a significant influence in religious studies. Garuda Prabhu is very Krishna conscious, very intelligent, and very adept at dealing with people. He has had and still has influence. But how many Tamal Krishna Goswamis or Garuda Prabhus are there? Very few. Even if a devotee is able to maintain his or her Krishna consciousness, working in academia can become more or less just a job, which is fine—“I am a devotee. I need money to maintain my Krishna conscious lifestyle. I like to study and teach. I like the subject of Vaishnavism, Gaudiya Vaishnavism, Vedic culture. I have to do something. So let me teach religious studies.”

But devotees who go into that field or who contemplate going into that field should be aware that for some it will put tremendous pressure on them to give up their faith and that even if they pass through it without losing their faith, it will take a very rare and highly qualified soul to really have influence in the academic study of Gaudiya Vaishnavism.

Radha Govinda dasa: In the beginning you described how Srila Prabhupada came to the West and preached. Can you find any internal reason why Srila Prabhupada came to do what he did—or would that be going too far? There is no doubt that he was an associate of Lord Chaitanya.

Giriraj Swami: Srila Prabhupada came to the West on the order of his guru maharaja with love for Krishna, for his guru maharaja, and for the fallen souls. The question is whether it would be going too far to ask if there was an internal reason.

In a way, the internal reason is similar to Lord Chaitanya’s: he wanted to give people vraja-bhakti. Bhurijana Prabhu analyzed this question. Srila Prabhupada had a burning desire to bring people to Krishna consciousness. If we are open and look at other religious or spiritual traditions, we will find that there is a lot there. Almost every broad religious tradition has an esoteric, mystical tradition within it. And there is a lot there. Much of what Prabhupada gave us is available in other traditions if you know how to find it. But the one thing that other traditions don’t have is Krishna in Vrindavan, vraja-bhakti. So, according to Bhurijana Prabhu’s analysis, which made sense to me, Srila Prabhupada was not sectarian or fanatic; he knew that there was God consciousness in other traditions—not just in ISKCON or in Gaudiya Vaishnavism or Vaishnavism in general—but still he gave all he had to bring people to Krishna consciousness. Why? To give them vraja-bhakti.

In the early days of Krishna consciousness in America, in 1968, a lady asked Srila Prabhupada, “Is there anyone similar to Joan of Arc in Srimad-Bhagavatam?” And Prabhupada replied, “You want to see Joan of Arc in Srimad-Bhagavatam? Why don’t you take Joan of Arc of Srimad-Bhagavatam? Any activities of devotees—that is Srimad-Bhagavatam. Bhagavatam: this word comes from bhagavan, meaning ‘God.’ Anything pertaining to Bhagavan is Bhagavatam. So Bhagavatam can be expanded unlimitedly. Anything in relationship with God—that is Bhagavatam. So if Joan of Arc was in relationship with God, she is also Bhagavatam. You should expand Bhagavatam in that way.”

Srila Prabhupada’s view was very liberal. Once, Atreya Rishi Prabhu, who used to preach in Iran, told Srila Prabhupada that his dream was that one day all the Muslims would chant Hare Krishna. Srila Prabhupada said, “Why do you want them to chant Hare Krishna? We’re not sectarian. Let them chant ‘Allah Allah.’”

Srila Prabhupada was not sectarian, not fanatical, not narrow-minded, yet he had such a burning desire to spread Krishna consciousness that he risked everything to do it. Given that there is so much richness in other traditions, why should he go to such extremes to give people specifically what we call Krishna consciousness? Bhurijana Prabhu concluded that it was because only in Krishna consciousness can one get vraja-bhakti, the opportunity to serve Krishna in Vrindavan in these intimate, loving relationships. And that was part of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu’s internal purpose as well—to give that specific type of love of Godhead found in the inhabitants of Vrindavan. Sri Caitanya-caritamrta (Adi 3.26) explains Krishna’s reasoning before He appeared as Krishna Chaitanya: Ama vina anye nare vraja-prema dite—“No one but Me can bestow the kind of loving service performed by the residents of Vraja.”

Rupa-vilasa dasa: It strikes me as very safe to say that Srila Prabhupada came to give vraja-bhakti. That is philosophically very sound. Now, I don’t know if you would call it an internal reason, but Srila Prabhupada many times referred to Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura’s commentary where he says that the duty of the disciple is to make the order of the spiritual master his life and soul. He has to try to execute that order as his only business. When we study Prabhupada’s life, we see that the force that drove him was that sense of obligation to his spiritual master, making the order of his guru his only desire. That was practically the only thing that was important to him, to try to execute that order.

Giriraj Swami: Definitely. And that supports Gaura Bhagavan’s reference to Sri Guru-vandana. Guru-mukha-padma-vakya, cittete koriya aikya, ar na koriho mane asa: “Make the teachings from the lotus mouth of the spiritual master one with your heart, and do not desire anything else.”

Devotee: Srila Prabhupada also said that his purports were his personal ecstasies.

Guru Carana Padma dasi: If someone does something to which you take offense, what is the attitude you can have so that you in turn don’t commit an offense by thinking badly of the person? Should you forgive in your heart? Sometimes it is hard to let go. Should you go up to the person and tell them honestly how you feel? What is the correct mentality to have so that it doesn’t hinder you in your spiritual progress?

Giriraj Swami: You mean if you feel offended by someone?

Guru Carana Padma dasi: Maybe Krishna sent the person to test me.

Giriraj Swami: You have posed an excellent question. The answer would depend a lot on who offended you, what the offense was, what your relationship with the person is, and other such factors. I heard that one year in Mayapur, our godsister Manmohini dasi, a very, very nice devotee, approached devotees by whom she felt offended, just to clear the air. And she is such a good, cleanhearted, openhearted devotee, I think there could be merit to that approach.

Usually when there is an offense, you can find something in your behavior that might have been offensive to the other person, even if, from a certain point of view, you think, “The other person was 99 percent at fault, and I was 1 percent at fault.” Still, this is how I tend to approach such situations. I feel that if I am 1 percent at fault I should apologize for my part and then at least I’ll get free from the reaction to my share of the offense. And it might happen—I wouldn’t do it with that intention, but it might happen—that the person feels, “Oh, this person is apologizing to me. I should probably apologize for my part as well.” That could also be an approach.

Another approach, again depending on who it is and what it is, and who you are and what you can do, is not to take offense. Just to let it go. See that it is something that happened and don’t take it to heart so much. It could also depend if there was malice or not, and if there was malice, how deep it was.

His Holiness Radhanath Swami gave a nice example for how to see a devotee’s so-called offensive behavior. He and I were walking on the beach in Santa Barbara, and he said that a devotee can be like the ocean. The ocean is very deep, and underneath the surface the water is still, but because of the wind, waves may come up. You might be near the ocean, and a big wave might come and hit you and get you wet—even knock you over—and so you might become upset and angry. So, the devotee’s love for Srila Prabhupada and Krishna may be deep and constant, but because he is in the material world, the winds of the material modes, of the society in which he lives, can influence him and give rise to waves that may come and hit you. But beneath the waves is deep devotion for Prabhupada and Krishna. So, if we think of the devotee’s underlying love and devotion, which is really the person’s essential character, and see the waves, which may happen to hit us, as temporary, superficial manifestations that arise due to the devotee’s being in the material world, then we can let it go and not take it too seriously. We will have a perspective that will allow us to see the good in the devotee and not take offense. Or if we have taken offense, we will be able to more easily forgive the devotee.

Rasa Sundari dasi: Maharaja Ambarisa was in a dilemma about breaking his fast. Being faced with offending the sadhu or not getting the benefit of the Ekadasi, wouldn’t it be better to not get the benefit of Ekadasi than to offend the sadhu?

Giriraj Swami: Whatever a pure devotee does, including observing Ekadasi, is for the pleasure of the Lord. A pure devotee doesn’t do anything with any selfish motive. The observance of Ekadasi is a basic principle, one of the ten first items in the Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu. Lord Chaitanya observed it strictly. Although we may do it to get some benefit, we really do it to please Krishna. What is the benefit we get? We increase our power to serve and please Krishna. I appreciate your point, but King Ambarisa wanted to accomplish both: to please Krishna by following His instructions for Ekadasi and to avoid offending Durvasa Muni.

Your question reminds me of a little story from when Srila Prabhupada was present in Vrindavan. One of his disciples, Gargamuni, had grown his hair long, and Prabhupada chided him. It happened to be Ekadasi, but still Gargamuni shaved up. He said that he feared Prabhupada’s wrath more than he feared the reactions to shaving on Ekadasi. Of course, Srila Prabhupada was his spiritual master.

Thank you very much. All glories to Srila Prabhupada.

[A talk by Giriraj Swami, January 17, 2010, Bhaktivedanta Manor, England]

Krsna’s Village Of Peace (17 min video)
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Krsna’s Village Of Peace (17 min video)
Indradyumna Swami: Krsna’s Village of Peace at this year’s Woodstock festival - renamed Pol’and’Rock - exceeded all our expectations. Tens of thousands of youth came through, 150,000 plates of prasadam were distributed, Ratha Yatra went on four days in a row and kirtan was roaring 11 hours a day in the Mantra Yoga tent. We couldn’t ask for more. Our only request is that we may continue to serve Srila Prabhupada in the same way for many years to come.

The forest of material enjoyment
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Hare KrishnaBy Candramauli Swami

It is explained in the fifth canto of Srimad-Bhagavatam in the fourteenth chapter - it is called the forest of material enjoyment. What is the enjoyment. Enjoyment in the forest is simply a hard struggle. Therefore according to how one approaches the material enrgy or how one connects with the material energy one is struggling in a different way. Here Srila Prabhupada pints out that it is darkness. Darkness indicates ignorance, forgetfulness. Ingorance is also mentioned in the translation. That the living entity is in utter forgetfullness of what? Who he is , his real identity. Continue reading "The forest of material enjoyment
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Russians Experience the Mysteries of the Sacred Universe
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Hare KrishnaBy Abhinanda dasa & Prishni devi dasi

On July 21-22, Yekaterinburg ISKCON hosted a landmark event – a conference of Russian Vaishnavas with scientific qualifications. The forum brought together scientists and scholars from dozens of cities – Moscow, St. Petersburg, Rostov-on-Don, Vladimir, Nizhny Novgorod, Yekaterinburg, Chelyabinsk, Omsk, Tyumen and Novosibirsk. This gathering of Vaishnava scholars was initiated by two Russian spiritual leaders – Chaitanya Chandra Charan Prabhu and Bhakti Vijnana Gosvami – whose long-standing desire to implement Srila Prabhupada's vision for organizing scientific activities in Krishna Consciousness was finally fulfilled. A scientist from the United States, Murali Gopal, PhD Physics, helped to realize the plan by joining the Yekaterinburg conference as a representative of the Bhaktivedanta Institute for Higher Studies. He offered a seminar on cosmology, as presented in the Srimad Bhagavatam and elucidated by the talented mathematician Sadaputa Prabhu in his pioneering work, Mysteries of the Sacred Universe. Murali Gopala also reported on the current stage of development of the Bhaktivedanta Institute in the United States and abroad. Continue reading "Russians Experience the Mysteries of the Sacred Universe
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Gita 18.50 The Gita’s purpose is not to describe spiritual paths but to analyze them for making an informed choice
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Bhagavad-gita verse-by-verse podcast

The post Gita 18.50 The Gita’s purpose is not to describe spiritual paths but to analyze them for making an informed choice appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Raghunandan Thakur Disappearance
→ Ramai Swami

Raghunandan Thakur was born in Sri Khanda, West Bengal, but he was a Vrajavasi in his previous life. In fact, he was the incarnation of one of Sri Krishna’s sakhas. His father, Mukunda Das, was the incarnation of Vrnda Devi, the goddess of Vrndavan forest.

As a small boy he would directly feed his father’s Gopinath deity.

Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu once asked Mukunda, who is the father, you or Raghunandan? Mukunda said, certainly Raghunandan is my father, and I am his son, for I have learned so much from him about bhakti.

By Mahaprabhu’s orders, Raghunandan served Gopinath till the end of his life. Due to his great devotion, at least two flowers bloomed every day on the kadamba tree in his yard, even though kadamba flowers only bloom in the rainy season. He would offer these special flowers to Gopinath.

ХВП в новостях (газета The Telegraph)
- TOVP.org

Недавно журналист индийской газеты The Telegraph («Телеграф»), Судешна Банерджи, взяла интервью у Садбхуджи прабху, исполнительного директора ХВП. Она написала очень позитивную и красочную статью о том, каким будет храм, и в особенности планетарий.

Телеграф – индийская газета на английском языке, которая издается и продаётся во всех крупных городах страны. Статья о ХВП была напечатана в изданиях всех городов, а также на веб-сайте газеты.

https://www.telegraphindia.com/calcutta/celestial-bodies-as-depicted-in-scriptures-250811

The post ХВП в новостях (газета The Telegraph) appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.

TOVP In The News (The Telegraph Newspaper)
- TOVP.org

Recently, Sudeshna Banerjee, a column writer from The Telegraph, an Indian newspaper, came to interview Sadbhuja das, the Managing Director of the TOVP. She wrote a very positive and colorful article detailing the plans for the temple and particularly the planetarium.

The Telegraph is an English newspaper in India that is published and distributed in all the major cities of India. The article was published in all of them, as well as on their website.

https://www.telegraphindia.com/calcutta/celestial-bodies-as-depicted-in-scriptures-250811

The post TOVP In The News (The Telegraph Newspaper) appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.

A KGB agent named Leonid…
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By Karma-jna Das

We were already sitting behind our coffee-table… but this KGB fellow was just speaking about ISKCON and was becoming more and more agitated. And I couldn’t figure out why. This man bit his teeth together and shook his finger in disgust: “Those hooligans! They are such HOOLIGANS! They are shaking the whole basis of our system. So clever! Those people are so sharp! Everywhere they sneak in with their books. We check the boats that come from Germany for example. And Scandinavia. The books are found in the most incredible places - from the cupboards in cabins, even some were lying in the kitchen on the cook’s recipe-shelf. We even opened the ventilation-system and THERE were these damn books and brochures! Continue reading "A KGB agent named Leonid…
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Manthan’18 – Youth Cultural Event
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Hare Krishna Yadukula: As Delhi went under a spell of monsoon this July, Yadukula hosted it's annual cultural evening- Manthan 2018- on the 29th of July. This event was conducted with immense enthusiasm and excitement by young practitioner devotees - most of whom are part of the cultural youth community, Yadukula- from different parts of Delhi/NCR.

Krishna as Supersoul- our friend within
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As aspiring devotees, many a times, we feel alone, sometimes even helpless. We, however, forget that Krishna as Supersoul is always with us. Due to our ignorance and dull consciousness we may not be able to see Krishna’s hand in our journey towards Him but He is very much with us. We may not be able to appreciate and value how Krishna, as Supersoul sitting in our heart, is inspiring us to progress towards Him at every stage in our Krishna consciousness journey. Supersoul plays a very important role in the journey of a devotee. Let us find out how we can connect with Supersoul and hear his voice and advice directly.


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Intelligence and Example
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Hare KrishnaBy His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

That is the difference between a devata, or godly person, and an asura, or atheist. Because the asura thinks he will live forever, he prepares big, big plans for material comforts. That is asuric civilization. No one will be allowed to stay here. In the Bhagavad-gita (8.15) Lord Krishna says: the material world is miserable and temporary. It is the place for suffering so that we can understand our position as souls subordinate to God. But fools do not consider the suffering. They make plans for more suffering. This is a foolish civilization. Continue reading "Intelligence and Example
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Exploring Love
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Hare KrishnaBy Vishakha Devi Dasi

True love is not casual but is an act of will that requires the lover’s concentration on and commitment to the beloved (in Sanskrit called asakta-manah — "mind attached"). In other words, love is about my beloved's—and not my own—thoughts, feelings, and desires. True love is selfless. One who would love is concerned with and alert to the beloved in every sphere of life. In fact, one who would love sees everything in relation to the beloved and sees the beloved everywhere. This does not mean losing oneself in the infatuation of love, but finding oneself. Those who truly love understand their own identity (vijnana — "realized knowledge"), and they act in accord with that understanding. Continue reading "Exploring Love
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Rain or Shine, Lord Jagannath will get his Festival
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Hare KrishnaBy Syam Mohini Devi Dasi

After the success of last year’s Chariot Festival, the anticipation of celebrating yet another successful festival was running high.  The International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) chapter in Saint Louis, Missouri was excitingly preparing for celebrating The Chariot Festival for the fourth year in a row. This year the organizers and volunteers had worked day and night for months to pull off this festival, wanting to make it the best one yet!. They had meticulously prepared for everything and were expecting a smooth sailing festival. But, the weather had other plans. Continue reading "Rain or Shine, Lord Jagannath will get his Festival
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