Rabbi and I: Equality Based on the Soul – Exploring The Jewish root in the Vedas
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Hare KrishnaBy Isa das

RABBI: In the Torah, Moses describes to the people some of the requirements of a king. One of the requirements is, "When [the king] is established on his royal throne, he must write a copy of the Torah as a scroll edited by the Levitical priests. [This scroll] must always be with him, and he shall read from it all the days of his life. He will then learn to be in awe of God his Lord, and carefully keep every word of the Torah and these rules. He will then [also] not begin to feel superior to his brethren, and he will not stray from the mandate to the right or the left. He and his descendants will thus have a long reign in the midst of Israel." [Torah, Duet., Shoftim 17:18] Do the Vedas give any description of the qualities of a king similar to these? Continue reading "Rabbi and I: Equality Based on the Soul – Exploring The Jewish root in the Vedas
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Maktar the bhakta. We were distributing in front of a church in…
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Maktar the bhakta.
We were distributing in front of a church in New Town, Sydney. One African bodied man popped his head out of an African restaurant next door. He said “What you got?” So I showed him Bhagavata Gita. He said “I got no money but can I have the little book (Perfect Escape written by HH Devamrita Swami)?” Though I thought he had been a bit abrupt I gave it to him and continued my service.
The next time I went to New town he rolled up on his bike, he is a chef at the restaurant. He said “I want the big one!” So I gave him the Gita with my phone number and he gave a nice donation. I was very surprised because I thought he was probably a Muslim and he seemed a bit arrogant so I didn’t think he would have liked the small book I gave him. Anyway I invited him for dinner at Govindas but I didn’t think he would call.
1 or 2 weeks later I was in Parramata and he called. His name is Maktar and he was really eager to meet for dinner. I was in ecstasy! We arranged to meet at Govindas.
I didn’t know what to expect, maybe an argument, so I just prayed to Krsna. Before I went to meet him I was talking to my godbrother Shastra Krit prabhu. I asked him ‘How can we keep going on doing books everyday?“ Shastra Krit prabhu said that Lord Caitanya lets you taste the nectar of bringing someone closer to Krsna and you will become addicted to it. After an amazing dinner with Maktar the bhakta I understood what my godbrother was saying.
My first impression of Maktar was way off. He is a the sweetest young man from Senaga, west Africa. Very sincere seeker of the absolute truth. We spoke about God the hole time but there was no clashing. He told me of cheating spiritual leaders (maybe voodoo) in Africa and he told me of his being influenced by Christianity and Muslim teachings.
He is very busy working full time for his sponsor to Australia. He is also studying english so he can get his permanent residency. Whenever he has spare time he calls me to come and meet again. He even gets someone to cover for him for a few hours to come and visit.
We had met three times at Govindas, I thought it time to bring him even closer to Krsna so I invited him to my home for dinner. I cooked nice prasadam. While we were taking prasad he asked me "Can Krsna appear in a dream?” I told him yes, I’m reading in CC about the lord appearing in His devotee Madhavendra Puri’s dream. Also when I was a young boy on New Govardhan farm I would sometimes have nightmares of drowning or sometimes demons would attack the farm and Krsna would save us.“ I also told him that recently I was preaching to an old (non-devotee) friend of mine, telling her all about Krsna and the nature of the material world. One day she wrote to me telling about Krsna’s appearance in her dream! She was in a boat and Krsna was there with her. So I sent her some beads, books and a picture of Krsna and the Gopies in a boat. She was in ecstasy!
I told Maktar that because the Lord is absolute, if He appears in someone’s dream He is really there. Then Maktar said to me, "I think Krsna appeared in my dream.” I said, “Really!!!!” Maktar said “Yes three times. Once as the blue person on the cover of 'Perfect Escape.’ Then he appeared as a white lady kneeling with Her hands as if offering something?” He showed me how She was holding Her hands. Straight away the picture of Srimati Radhika kneeling in front of Krsna offering flowers to His lotus feat came into my mind. At this point my hairs raised up all over. Then Maktar said “The third time He appeared as a Lion?!!!”
Maktar didn’t quite know what to make of it all, especially because all he had was the Gita and Perfect Escape so he had never seen any other pictures of ours, but I was finding it hard to contain myself! We were eating at the time so I just told him I have some pictures to show him after prasadam.
After prasad I got the Srimad Bhagavatam 7th canto and the Krsna Book and showed him the picture of Radharani offering flowers to Krsna. He was satisfied when he saw Her. Then I carefully showed him a picture of Lord Nrsimhadeva after Prahlada Maharaja had pacified Him and I explained the whole pastime in a nut shell using all the pictures, showing him Ugra Nrsimha and explaining how the Lord protects his devotees. Maktar was very pleased with it all.
Bhakta Maktar has sincerely said to me that he knows spiritual life is more important than anything else and that he wants to spend more time with us and meet our Gurumaharaja. So please everybody pray to Krsna to remove all the obstacles for him.
Lord Caitanya really gave me a drop of the nectar. Srila Prabhupada’s books KI JAI!!
Your Servent
Uddhava Dasa

Humility, best Vaishnava quality? Humble: “having or showing a…
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Humility, best Vaishnava quality?
Humble: “having or showing a modest or low estimation of one’s own importance.” (Apple Dictionary)
“Humility means that one should not be anxious to have the satisfaction of being honored by others.” (Srila Prabhupada, Bg. 13.8, purport)
“The only humility that is really ours is not that which we try to show before God in prayer, but that which we carry with us in our daily conduct.” –Andrew Murray
“God descends to the humble as waters flow down from the hills into the valleys.” –Tikhon

Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura made a blueprint for a marketplace of the holy name called the “Nama Hatta.” He designed a system through which people all over the world might not only take up the chanting of the holy names, but also learn the philosophy behind the chanting.

In drawing the plans for this sacred marketplace, Srila Bhaktivinoda listed various positions like, Chief Trader, Broker, and numerous kinds of salespeople.

He also gave himself a position: the sweeper of the marketplace.

Srila Bhaktivinoda’s illustrious son, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati said, “I am but one straw in the broom of Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura, the sweeper.”

To chant the holy names with feeling, I must cultivate such humility, feeling myself to be lowly, bereft of qualification, and dependent on the mercy of Krsna and His devotees.

Lord Caitanya taught that a person who maintains a humble state mind could go on chanting the names of the Lord without stoppage.
Vaisesika Dasa

The same script…
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(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 04 December 2016, Melbourne, Australia, Srimad Bhagavatam 3.26.41)

In this verse, we are reading about how the living entity in the embodied state is interacting with the material energy. Through the material senses, the living entity is experiencing material “rasa”. This is really the purpose of our material existence, to try and taste “rasa” because the soul by nature is meant to relish or taste varieties of “rasa”.

Now this tendency for “rasa” has become perverted and thus in the material world, we are interacting with the material energy trying to squeeze out a few drops of material pleasure. It is very difficult because this material energy is basically designed to frustrate us. The script is the same!

You can change the characters in script… you can change their names… you can change the names of places… you can go to valleys or to the top of mountains but the essence of the script is to squeeze out a few drops of enjoyment and the result is that one becomes frustrated! Whether on top of the mountain or in a valley… whether on this side of the ocean or the other, frustrated we will be in different ways. It is like that! Whether married or whether unmarried, still not fulfilled! Fulfillment cannot be found on the material plane.

Of course, once Krsna comes into the equation, everything changes. Srila Prabhupada was closely communicating with the son of Rupanuga, his name was Ekendra and Ekendra took a great liking to Srila Prabhupada and always stayed in touch with him on a personal level. So he wrote Prabhupada a letter about having to learn mathematics and then Prabhupada said, “5 + 5 is 10, 2 + 2 is 4, and everything plus Krsna is Vrindavan!”

Such a simple formula but an amazing one because that is the nature of the sankirtan movement and that is the nature of Krsna, that when Krsna is added everything becomes transcendental! Because ultimately the root of material existence is spiritual in the first place.

“Acharya” the mega movie about Srila Prabhupada, near completion
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“Acharya” the mega movie about Srila Prabhupada, near completion.
Yadubara and Visakha’s film “Hare Krishna” (“Acharya” film renamed) will be previewed at Iskcon Alachua’s Govinda’s Restaurant on Thursday Dec. 22, 2016, starting at 6:00 pm.
RELEASE UPDATE: Production on Acharya is projected to continue into 2016 with the aim to complete post-production on the film by December 2016. Upon completion, the plan is to enter the film onto the film festivals’ circuit, aiming primarily for a North American premiere in 2017, before hopefully seeing it travel around the world.

After premiering, the film will then be open to theatrical distribution. We also have plans for a grassroots distribution campaign, where global communities will host screenings of the film in their locality. Towards the latter half of 2017/2018, the film will be available on DVD or as an online download. The film also has exciting broadcast opportunities on television, especially in India and Europe.

Our Facebook and You tube site traffic already denotes a captive audience for the film. To give an indication of just a fraction of those figures, our Facebook page has over 48,000 likes and our two preview trailers together have had over 55,000 views.
Read more: http://www.acharyathemovie.com

Beautiful Sri Sri Krishna Balarama Mandir in Vrindavana (Album…
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Beautiful Sri Sri Krishna Balarama Mandir in Vrindavana (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: In the beginning, a conditioned soul is bereft of Krsna consciousness and is always morose in his material activities. Later, by associating with a pure devotee, one becomes inquisitive to know the Absolute Truth. In this way one begins to engage in the transcendental service of the Lord. Next, by the Lord’s grace all misconceptions are vanquished and the heart is cleansed of all material dirt. It is only then that the pleasure of transcendental bliss is awakened. By the Lord’s mercy one is completely convinced of the value of devotional service. When one can see the pastimes of the Lord everywhere, he is firmly situated in transcendental bliss. Such a devotee is relieved of all kinds of material desires, and he preaches the glories of the Lord all over the world. These Krsna conscious activities separate him from material activities and the desire for liberation, for at every step the devotee feels himself connected with the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Although such a devotee may sometimes be involved in household life, he is untouched by material existence due to his constant engagement in devotional service. Thus everyone is advised to take shelter of devotional service to become happy and liberated. >>> Ref. VedaBase => Madhya 10.119
Find them here: https://goo.gl/vn4grF

ISKCON Auckland NZ: Rathyatra festival 2016 (Album with photos)…
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ISKCON Auckland NZ: Rathyatra festival 2016 (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: His [the Supreme Lord’s] existence can be realized by one who has the single qualification of submissiveness and who thereby becomes a surrendered soul. The development of submissiveness is the cause of proportionate spiritual realization, by which one can ultimately meet the Supreme Lord in person, as a man meets another man face to face. [Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi-lila 1.55 purport]
Find them here: https://goo.gl/NT5dxJ

Harinama in a freezing Moscow (Album with photos) Srila…
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Harinama in a freezing Moscow (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: This is Vedic civilization, not to waste a single moment of life for useless attempt. That is Vedic civilization. Every moment should be utilized. Especially for the human being, it’s so valuable. And they are finding out sporting, swimming and surfing — simply all programs of wasting time, especially in the Western countries. How much they have invented, I see only and laugh. The elderly men of your age, of course, maybe my age also, they are swimming and surfing. (Srila Prabhupada, Morning Walk, November 11, 1975)
Find them here: https://goo.gl/vuhg39

Respecting Srila Prabhupada
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Hare KrishnaBy Padmapani das

Prabhupada never accepted anything for himself, nor did he ever enjoy the facilities offered to him by his disciples and followers. Those who had the good fortune to personally serve or spend time with Srila Prabhupada all attest to this fact. He was cent percent engaged in the service of Krishna 24 hours a day. It was his total surrender and dedication to the Lord's service which inspired so much love and adoration in the hearts of his followers. Srila Prabhupada not only talked the talk, but he walked the walk. Everyone respected Prabhupada, even those who didn't agree with his philosophy. Poet Allen Ginsberg said it well: "The main thing, above and beyond all our differences, was an aroma of sweetness that he had, a personal selfless sweetness like total devotion. And that was what always conquered me, whatever intellectual questions or doubts I had, or even cynical views of ego. In his presence there was a kind of personal charm, coming from dedication, that conquered all our conflicts." Continue reading "Respecting Srila Prabhupada
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The Necessity of Reading Srila Prabhupada’s Books to Keep Him in the Center
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Hare KrishnaBy Kesava Bharati Dasa Goswami

How to judge whether the hearing is being done properly by measuring its effect: "A devotee should always see that his Vaisnava qualities increase with the advancement of his Krsna consciousness. A devotee should be blameless because any offense by the devotee is a scar on the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The devotee’s duty is to be always conscious in his dealings with others, especially with another devotee of the Lord." (Bhagavatam 3.16.5, purport) Herein lies the secret to improving our dealings with one another and, by the cooperative spirit that results from such amicable dealings, to solve seemingly intractable problems. Continue reading "The Necessity of Reading Srila Prabhupada’s Books to Keep Him in the Center
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ISKCON Scarborough- HH Bhakti Raghava Swami giving class coming Friday
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Hare Krishna!
Please accept our humble obeisances!
All glories to Srila Prabhupada!
All glories to Sri Guru and Sri Gauranga!

We are very pleased to inform you that HH Bhakti Raghava Swami will be giving a class at ISKCON Scarborough coming Friday- 16th Dec 2016. The program starts at 6.45 pm.

We welcome you and your family to ISKCON Scarborough this Friday to get the association of Maharaj.

Bhakti Raghava Swami Biography

Born to French-Canadian Roman-Catholic parents in the Province of Ontario, His Holiness Bhakti Raghava Swami Maharaja spent seven years of his undergraduate studies in a seminary before completing his Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Ottawa in 1968, majoring in philosophy and social psychology. After serving as a Social Worker and Counselor from 1968 to 1971, he joined the Hare Krsna Movement in 1974 and was initiated the same year as Raghava Pandit Das.


From 1974 to 1976 he served at the ISKCON Ottawa temple. From 1976 to 1992, Maharaja lived in India, pioneering the New Bhakta Program and the Nama Hatta village preaching program from Sri Dham Mayapur and the Bhaktivedanta Youth Services (BYS) from ISKCON Calcutta. He accepted the order of sannyasa on Gaura Purnima of 1985. From 1993 to 2000, he served as Co-GBC for ISKCON Canada and as the Temple President for ISKCON Montreal.


From year 2001 to 2004 Maharaja was based in Indonesia where he helped to develop and oversee six rural community projects in addition to Youth Hostels. In the year 2004, Maharaja completed his Master’s degree in Education, Cum Laude, from the State University of Yogyakarta writing his thesis entitled “A Comparative Study of Gurukula and Pondok Pesantren – A Case Study of Three Gurukulas in India and Three Pondok Pesantren in Indonesia”.

In the year 2006 Maharaja became involved with preaching activities and community development in Cambodia where he established an NGO called the “Global Varnasrama Educational Social Cultural Organization” (GLOVESCO) and is spearheading a rural community called “Yasodapura Asrama”.


That same year Maharaja was able to return to India after a long absence of 13 years and spearheaded a rural project in South India called Sahyadri Sri Krishna Balarama Ksetra (SSKBK) from where courses on Varnasrama College were introduced. He was instrumental in establishing the national Varnasrama Development committee for India in the year 2007 and in November 2009 was appointed as National Minister for the Daiva Varnasrama Ministry – Promoting Rural Development in India.

Maharaja has concentrated his preaching mostly in Asian countries such as India, Indonesia and Cambodia. He travels extensively and holds seminars promoting the varnasrama mission. He has authored several books such a “Make Vrindavana Village” and “Varnasrama Education”.


ISKCON Scarborough
3500 McNicoll Avenue, Unit #3,
Scarborough, Ontario,
Canada, M1V4C7
Email Address:
iskconscarborough@hotmail.com
website:
www.iskconscarborough.com

Introducing “Aquafaba”
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Introducing “Aquafaba”
Citraka dasa: One more useful vegetarian and vegan ingredient, discovered recently, for rendering Krishna’s cuisine more attractive.
Aquafaba is the name for the cooking liquid of beans and other legumes like chickpeas. You may know it as the typically discarded liquid found in retail cans and boxes of beans, or as the liquid left over from cooking your own.
To give you a brief glimpse of what you can do with aquafaba, here are just a few vegan recipes you can make: Raw: Fluffs, whips, nice creams, and drink and pie toppings
Baked: Meringues, macarons, and pavlovas
Confectionery: nougat, marshmallows, fudge and icing
Savory: cakes, waffles, cookies, mayo, burgers, cheese, butter, breads, etc
It is all very simple, you do not need any particular kitchen tool or uncommon ingredient. It is cheap and easily available.
It DOES NOT taste like the beans of its origin. It doesn’t require much time for its preparation. I think Iskcon temples, restaurants, and vaishnava families will benefit by implementing its use. And of course it is healthy.
To learn more about it: http://aquafaba.com/faq.html
Articles in the media about it: http://aquafaba.com/news.html
Community with tons of recipes: https://www.facebook.com/groups/372343816286624/
Video-tutorials: https://goo.gl/nHkaqD
Or just google “Aquafaba”

Standing Rock: An American Kumbha Mela
→ NY Times & Bhagavad Gita Sanga/ Sankirtana Das



I want to acknowledge the boldness, heroism and humility exhibited by the US veterans, both men and women, and including Tulsi Gabbard -- a warrior and congresswoman. In solidarity, they joined the Native Americans and many others at Standing Rock. They are truly warriors and leaders. I practice the Vaisnava/Krishna tradition. And these vets, and indeed all who have gathered at Standing Rock, are for me paragons of my tradition. Three reasons:

1- There’s a Krishna prayer that "one should think of themselves as straw on the street, be more tolerant than a tree, devoid of false ego, and ready to offer all respects to others." That’s what I see happening in these photos of the vets.  

2 - In my tradition, it’s also explained that you should leave a place cleaner than you found it. So rather than thinking ‘I didn’t make this mess. It’s not my problem’ one should think ‘Ok, there’s a mess here. I didn’t make it,  but I take the responsibility to clean it up.’ So these vets are ready to do whatever they can to bring about healing in our nation, even to humbly submit themselves before others. This is courage.

3 - Finally, the Native American elders said their gathering was not a protest, but rather a gathering for prayer to protect the river and the land. This is in keeping with the long spiritual history of India. At Standing Rock I see the spirit of Kumbha Mela, a pilgrimage held every twelve years, by sacred rivers, welcoming all people everywhere to attend. The Kumbha Mela has been going on since time immemorial. The event takes place in northern India in January, the coldest time of the year. 

There, and at many other events, people have gathered in large numbers for prayer, chanting the sacred names of God for the benefit of all and the protection of Mother Earth. These gatherings also give the attendees a chance to perform austerities in the form of fasting, bathing in the river's frigid water, facing a harsh climate, and sleeping on the earth rather than in a soft bed. I’m sure those who have gathered at Standing Rock know what I’m talking about.

America, and the world, sorely needs these types of examples more than ever. But warriors have to be leaders and courageous and generous, all at the same time. It’s not easy. The responsibilities of a warrior/leader are brought in sharp focus in the ancient epic Mahabharata.  I think Mahabharata is one of the most valuable stories for healing and for seekers of spiritual wisdom in our time.

The story is about five warrior brothers - the Pandavas - struggling to stand up to tyranny and at the same time keep their humanity. There’s a monumental battle that takes place. One of the most important things for them is to abide in the Dharma, to live with integrity. They strive to live in the courage, justice and humility that is required of them.

But just like the rift in our nation, the Pandavas don't always see eye to eye. They have their contentious moments, but they work through it. This is the very task set before us today. In closing, I humbly request of those who are organizing various events to include prayer, chants, and sacred ceremony as a show of unity among all spiritual traditions. Mitakuye Oyasin.  


PS: I have been on a journey with Mahabharata for over three decades; first offering it as a full-length drama and later as sacred storytelling and more recently in a 'fast-paced, cinematic' book.  For more on his award-winning rendering of the epic see www.Mahabharata-Project.com


The Mindfulness Dilemma
→ NY Times & Bhagavad Gita Sanga/ Sankirtana Das

“I’m making a failed attempt at mindful dishwashing,” exclaims an exasperated Ruth Whippman in an Op-Ed in the New York Times:


What’s this world coming to when we’re having a ‘mindful moment’ and we still feel miserable, not having found the happiness we think we deserve? What’s the value of meditation if it only makes us all the more aware of our mundane reality?

Is it any wonder that we would want to retreat from a world that offers news of constant strife? What have we to look forward to? A world of uncertainty, a lackluster economy, a people divided, everyone talking past one another, hurtling slogans and accusations, and never connecting nor really listening to one another.

With these burdens weighing upon us, meditation doesn’t seem to be enough. Maybe it’s downright ineffective! At the end of her article, Ms. Whippman evokes some studies which conclude that the results of meditation are “underwhelming” and that it might only “bring some small benefits. . . . compared with pretty much any general relaxation technique at all, including exercise. . . .”

Uh-oh! I can see millions of folks bailing. Is the multibillion-dollar meditation industry about to implode? Haven’t we already had enough game-changing moments this year. Maybe we’ve forgotten what meditation is for. Or perhaps we never fully understood it’s purpose to begin with. This is a opportunity to take a closer look at what meditation is all about.

“Mindfulness,” explains Ms Whippman, “is supposed to be a defense against the pressures of modern life.” Well don’t tell Arjuna that. His mindful meditation took place on a battlefield. The Bhagavad Gita, which was spoken by Sri Krishna to the warrior prince Arjuna, is the original and superlative guide to meditation. A few points:

* Firstly, the Bhagavad Gita helps us understand that our existence is beyond the temporal body and mind.
“Never was there a time when I did not exist, nor you, nor all these kings; nor in the future shall any of us cease to be. As the embodied soul continually passes, in this body, from boyhood to youth to old age, the soul similarly passes into another body at death. The self-realized soul is not bewildered by such a change.” Gita 2:12-13

* At Arjuna’s inquiry, Krishna goes on to describe the qualities of those who live the spiritual life, so that we may ourselves understand what to strive for.
“One who is not disturbed in spite of the threefold miseries, who is not elated when there is happiness, and who is free from attachment, fear and anger, is called a sage of steady mind.” Gita 2:56
“One who can control his senses by practicing the regulated principles of freedom can obtain the complete mercy of the Lord and thus become free from all attachment and aversion. For one who is so situated in the Divine consciousness, the threefold miseries of material existence exist no longer; in such a happy state, one's intelligence soon becomes steady.” Gita 2:64-65

* Meditation helps us to regulate our senses and mind to attain inner peace.
“A person who is not disturbed by the incessant flow of desires—that enter like rivers into the ocean which is ever being filled but is always still—can alone achieve peace, and not the man who strives to satisfy such desires.” Gita 2:70
“For one who has conquered the mind, the Supersoul is already reached, for he has attained tranquility. To such a man happiness and distress, heat and cold, honor and dishonor are all the same.” Gita 6:7
“He who is temperate in his habits of eating, sleeping, working and recreation can mitigate all material pains by practicing the yoga system.” Gita 6:17

* The Gita gives us a true understanding of detachment from worldly affairs and provides insight on how to rise above the dualities of life.
“The intricacies of action are very hard to understand. Therefore one should know properly what action is, what forbidden action is, and what inaction is.” Gita 4:17
“He who is satisfied with gain which comes of its own accord, who is free from duality and does not envy, who is steady both in success and failure, is never entangled, although performing actions.” Gita 4:22
“The Blessed Lord said: One who is unattached to the fruits of his work and who works as he is obligated is in the renounced order of life, and he is the true mystic: not he who lights no fire and performs no work.” Gita 6:1

* Meditation helps us to see God working in our lives and to reawaken our relationship with that Supreme Transcendent Personality.
“That very ancient science of the relationship with the Supreme is today told by Me to you because you are My devotee as well as My friend; therefore you can understand the transcendental mystery of this science.” Gita 4:2
“For one who sees Me everywhere and sees everything in Me, I am never lost, nor is he ever lost to Me.” Gita 6:30
“I am the source of all spiritual and material worlds. Everything emanates from Me. The wise who know this perfectly engage in My devotional service and worship Me with all their hearts.” Gita 10:8

My article is not meant to criticize Ms. Whippman. Her general assessment is correct. The meditational process is difficult and even Arjuna has his doubts about it. But Krishna goes on to explain how we can achieve success in our meditation. He puts it quite succinctly to Arjuna in several places in the Gita. most notably: 

"And of all yogīs, he who always abides in Me with great faith, worshiping Me in transcendental loving service, is most intimately united with Me in yoga and is the highest of all." Gita 6:47

“Always chanting My glories, endeavoring with great determination, bowing down before Me, these great souls perpetually worship Me with devotion.” Gita 9:14

In our times, the kali-yuga (the age of rampant quarrel, greed, cheating and hypocrisy), the most potent and satisfying meditation is meditation on God’s holy names. God’s names are abundantly found in traditions all over the world. Especially recommended is the maha-mantra, the great mantra of peace: Hare Kṛiṣhṇa, Hare Kṛishna, Kṛishna Kṛishna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. It’s freely given. It can be sung, chanted softly on pray beads or it can even enhance one’s silent meditation by saying the mantra in the mind. The meditation is most effective when performed with humility and gratitude, and complimented with works of devotion.**

All quotes from Bhagavad Gita As It Is by A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.

Sankirtana Das, (ACBSP) is an award-winning author and storyteller. For more about his book Mahabharata: The Eternal Quest, a ‘cinematic’ rendition of the ancient epic, see www.Mahabharata-Project.com

The Soul of ISKCON
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Hare KrishnaBy Nashvin Gangaram

Srila Prabhupada is the soul of ISKCON and ISKCON is his body. Because ISKCON is a spiritual organization, both body and soul are non-different. Srila Prabhupada continues to act effectively in this world so long as ISKCON remains the instrument of his will. He holds a unique position in ISKCON as its Founder-Acharya: “Just like if I am taken as the origin of this Krishna consciousness movement, that means I know everything directly and indirectly of all this movement. If I do not know directly or indirectly everything of this movement, then I cannot be called the Founder-Acharya.” (Srimad Bhagavatam Lecture, Caracas, 21 February 1975) Continue reading "The Soul of ISKCON
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Srila Prabhupada Book Distribution Marathon Message
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Hare KrishnaBy Bhakti Charu Swami

Srila Prabhupada: “From your letter, I can understand that you are reading my books nicely and understanding our philosophy. This is wanted. By reading my books carefully, you will become enthused to distribute them more and more in greater quantities. If you continue in this way being very much determined to achieve success in this lifetime, following all the rules, chanting at least sixteen rounds, and reading my books, then all of your desires to advance in Krsna consciousness will be fulfilled and you will surely attain spiritual perfection and be able to go back to Godhead, very soon.” Continue reading "Srila Prabhupada Book Distribution Marathon Message
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How to Chant and Meditate Better. As we move towards the end of…
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How to Chant and Meditate Better.
As we move towards the end of the year we should be thinking how to do better in 2017. Endings are a natural time to reset, to take a good look at where we are and where we want to be. As chanting japa (mantra meditation) is one of the key ways we develop our relationship with Krishna the following excerpt by HH Sacinandana Swami shares some ways to be more focused and move to deeper levels of meditation in our chanting:
“At the very least, try to chant without external interruptions. Attach your mind to the Divine Names, one by one as They move over your tongue. To be attentive, you must be present ‘in the here and now’ – relentlessly. Practice it! Bind your mind to the ‘naked now’ – weld it to the Name, which is right now! Seize the present Name.

To be attentive and present you must be patient. Endure your inner dryness that always pushes your thoughts into seeking relief in the ‘oasis’ of past or future possibilities. There is no past or future; they are only figments of the mind. Krishna will be watching all this from a hidden place. He is especially interested to see where you will run for relief in those dull moments of dryness. Convince Him that you know that only he can truly relieve you, and then He will come out of hiding. He will respond to you in the heart when the time is right.

Meanwhile, be happy to stay in His presence. No matter how much you try to quiet your mind, thoughts are bound to disturb the peace, eventually. It is similar to the blue cloudless sky; eventually clouds are sure to form and roam across its vastness. There is no need to battle the mind in the hopeless effort to annihilate distracting thoughts. Let the impersonalist yogis try to fight the mind; they will find out that it will not work. Our strategy is positive. Instead of trying to empty the mind of what is bad, let us fill it with what is good: the Names.

If you fight the mind it will only get more strength from your attention. Attentive chanting is simply to lay aside our thoughts. It is not a savage fight of furious repression. It is a soft, beautiful, persistent act of engaging the thoughts within the Holy Name. Look up! Turn to the Lord! Ask for help with the expression of a joyful child turning to its mother. Then you will see the spiritual world unfold, not by your own power but by the power of the Name.

Above all, stay conscious of the people you are addressing – the ones named by the names. Then you can chant with a devotional mood and an inner attitude of worship, making the effort to please the Divine Couple by calling on Their names.”
Ananda Vrindavanesvari Devi Dasi

Let Srimad-Bhagavatam cleanse your heart from the dust of…
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Let Srimad-Bhagavatam cleanse your heart from the dust of material association, such as lust, anger and hankering.
Srimad-Bhagavatam is an unlimited source of spiritual knowledge and association. In his purport to SB 1.5.11, Srila Prabhupada notes that Narada Muni has personally appeared in the chapter!
This means by reading Srimad-Bhagavatam we actually associate with the Lord and His great devotees.
Those who develop an appreciation for the teachings and prayers of various great devotees in the Srimad-Bhagavatam become enlightened and enlivened, and there is so much one can choose from.

For example, in Srimad-Bhagavatam, 5.5.1-27 Rsabhadeva imparts His teachings to His one hundred illustrious sons. Rsabhadeva’s teachings are extremely practical and memorable. For instance, in verse three, Rsabhadeva tells His sons how householders should balance their family and spiritual duties.

Another vital section of Srimad-Bhagavatam is the first canto, second chapter called Divinity and Divine Service. The thirty-four verses that make up this chapter clearly explicate the science of bhakti and give encouraging advice about how to make progress.

Discover (or rediscover) the magic of carefully reading and studying the prayers and teachings given by the great souls and Avataras who appear within the pages of the Srimad-Bhagavatam.

Even if you only take a few minutes to scrutinize one small section of Srimad-Bhagavatam, you’ll feel new impetus for your spiritual practice; you’ll gain priceless spiritual insight; your questions will be answered and your doubts will be dissipated.

Lord Caitanya was particularly fond of hearing the sections of Srimad-Bhagavatam about Prahlada Maharaja and Dhruva Maharaja.

Some of my favorite sections are (but not at all limited to):

Divinity and Divine Service
The Prayers of Queen Kunti
All the teachings of the Nava Yogendras
Prahalada’s prayers to Lord Nrsimhadeva
Lord Brahma’s prayers (10 th canto, chapter 14)
Find, mark and regularly read your favorite sections of Srimad-Bhagavatam. Doing so will awaken love for Krsna in your heart.

“The sound incarnation of Lord Krsna, the Supreme Soul [i.e. Srimad-Bhagavatam], enters into the heart of a self-realized devotee, sits on the lotus flower of his loving relationship, and thus cleanses the dust of material association, such as lust, anger and hankering. Thus it acts like autumnal rains upon pools of muddy water.” (SB 2.8.5)
Vaisesika Dasa

Vraj Mandal Padayatra 2016 – video
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Hare KrishnaBy Parasuram dasa

When the full moon, marking the beginning of the month of Kartik, rose in the sky, we knew this was the start of a new adventure on the open road. Everything is there on Padayatra, the Harinam, Prasad distribution, book distribution, Deity worship, cow protection and adventure. There is nothing like preaching in Vraj. The Brajbasis love kirtan, love to feed the devotees and have a great sense of humour. 9 devotees went out this year, coming from UK, Ireland, Russia, Czech Republic and Estonia. 6 devotees would perform kirtan and 3 distributing books, a total of 43,000 books were distributed this year. Continue reading "Vraj Mandal Padayatra 2016 – video
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Eternal wealth
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(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 03 December 2016, Melbourne, Australia, Bhagavad-gita 10.10)

People are striving for wealth; they try to make material progress. This is not easy because we are not in control of destiny. One may get wealth but then, other circumstances may interfere and all the wealth may get plundered by some calamity. Therefore trying to secure wealth in the material world is an ongoing effort of hard work and one cannot be sure as to how destiny will unfold.

Today we are discussing a topic from the Bhagavad-gita of the eternal benefit of devotional service. Whatever that is cultivated on the spiritual path is never lost. In the second chapter, it is mentioned,

nehābhikrama-nāśho ’sti pratyavāyo na vidyate,
svalpam apyasya dharmasya trāyate mahato bhayāt (Bhagavad-gita 2.40)

That by devotional service, whatever spiritual activity we perform, the benefit will remain, it cannot be destroyed by any external force or by ourselves. In this way, the benefit of devotional service is lasting because it is of spiritual nature and anything spiritual in nature is ‘sat’, not bound by time.

Srila Yamunacharya said that spirit is not bound by time, space or thought. In this way, the spiritual world is never limited like how in this world where everything is limited by time. So many things are achieved but only to be limited by time and yet we invest so much energy. Therefore, it is said, that one should not waste time on these temporary things but mind you, some essentials may be required.

Previously, in India, if one could keep material needs to a minimum that was considered the highest progress, that person was held in the highest esteem in society and not someone who through business could become very wealthy. One who could become very wealthy through business was a vaishya. Vaishya was not considered to be of a very high nature.

Actually, in the Vedic culture, there were two higher classes of man – brahmana and kshatriya, and there were two lower classes – vaishya and sudra. The two lower classes were preoccupied with material things – the vaishya was busying making money and the sudra was enjoying his senses. The two higher classes were living for dharma; they dedicated their life to a higher goal, to a life of sacrifice for the benefit of the Supreme Lord.

Is it is interesting that in previous times, one who was making a lot of wealth was not considered to be high-class! Nowadays, this is the most important thing. Nothing else matters, if you are very wealthy then you are very aristocratic and then you matter! In this way, material wealth is valued out of proportion.

The sudras, as I said, are engaged in enjoying the senses, especially sexual activity and thus we see that the whole world is making too much out of sexuality. Sexuality has a place in life but it is not the goal of life nor is it the key to happiness. This is a big mistake! This is all going on because gradually we have lost the long-term vision and we have engaged in so many activities blindly which bind us to material life.

Where Lord Caitanya Traveled (Album with photos) Indradyumna…
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Where Lord Caitanya Traveled (Album with photos)
Indradyumna Swami: On our final day in Sri Rangam we visited many historic sites, culminating in a special darshan of the famous Ranganath deity. We also took darshan of Jagannatha deities said to be carved and installed in Sri Rangam by Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu himself. Though our visit to Sri Rangam was short, our hearts were completely satisfied.
“All those places where my Lord Gaura Sundara traveled for pastimes I will visit in the company of loving devotees.” [ From Saranagati, by Srila Bhaktivinode Thakur ]
Find them here: https://goo.gl/wgrXDR

Distributing Srila Prabhupada’s books dressed as Santa…
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Distributing Srila Prabhupada’s books dressed as Santa Claus.
Drumila das: 1rst time was in San Francisco. I had never been out on Sankirtan before, I was only three months in the movement. A brahmacari named Hrdayagovinda dressed me up in a Santa suit, and put me on the streets of San Francisco, where I was immediately mobbed by about 15 kids attacking me, literally for the candy canes that I started to hand out. I started running and had to ditch them inside a building. I was petrified. Somehow I mustered up the determination to keep going and I became a damn good Santa at the end of it all. I probably did about three years total, tours of Santa.
There was one Officer Small a sheriff who didn’t like us Hare Krishnas. This was back in the early 80s in Laguna Beach. There was one unincorporated city, that he patrolled. And he ran us out of there on more than one occasion. One Christmas a devotee named Krsna Kirtana and I were going door to door as Santas in his area, passing out candy canes and asking for donations. Someone called the authorities, and Officer Small showed up in his sheriff’s car. He put us in the backseat and said he was going to arrest us, but Amerendra Dasa who was our lawyer at the time had given us paperwork saying to the effect that we were legal to solicit donations in unincorporated areas. We had that paperwork and handed it to him saying he couldn’t arrest us. I told him to call his supervisor. We both watched in the backseat of his car, as a forlorn look appeared on his face when he was told by his superior officer, that in fact, he would have to let us go. To say the least, he was extremely disappointed, as he had his heart set on taking us in.
One time Krsna Kirtana and I, dressed as Santa’s were soliciting donations inside a drugstore (my bright idea), in a strip mall. The manager of the store walked down one isle, to see me, a large Santa with a big red bucket outstretched, and a lady, her arm hovering over it to place a five dollar bill there. The manager was furious and outraged and shocked to find me and his story collecting donations. He had me come up to the front counter, and on the way-in counter, the other Santa Claus! He was even more dismayed! He had us stand near him at the checkout stand while he audibly called his friend who is a law-enforcement officer. Yeah ask him if he could send a squad car down to pick us up. I looked at the other Santa Claus, and lean towards him, and in a soft voice, I said to him, “Santa, Exit… stage left, when I say go.” GO!!!! We ran towards the front doors of the store, and bolted for the parking lot, me from going with my keys while running there and candy canes falling out of my box. The manager was rather heavy-set, he must’ve been about 300 pounds. It was quite comical to see him running towards the front door, and then seeing the two doors, violently swing open crash into them. He was yelling, “Come back here! As he was trying to chase after us.” By this time, I had started the engine, and through the car in reverse, making skidmarks. And then I threw it in drive, and screeched out of there, us laughing merrily all the way!
Krsna Kīrtana and I used to go into bars together dressed at Santa’s, and I would walk up to grown men, pinch their cheeks, and ask them if they been a good boy this year. They would say, “Yes ”, and I would say, “Look what Santa’s brought you this year!” Placing the candy cane in their hand. I would proceed then, to ask them for a donation, telling them to ‘pitch-in!’ to my big red bucket full of candy canes and dollar bills. We would then proceed, to dance arm in arm the other Santa and I, all the while boisterously chanting Gaura Nitai and Nitai Goura to various famous Christmas melodies. Sometimes we would do this, before we went around asking for donations. I never had so much fun!
One Christmas I was going door to door as Santa Claus. I came across a butcher shop, which was very busy during rush hour. There must’ve been a line of about 15 people. I started from the back and was asking each person to place a donation in my bucket. I was quite successful! Just then the owner, an elderly Korean woman came up, and started yelling at me, saying, “Who are you!” It was quite surreal, and it startled everyone in the store, who all became very quiet. I would definitely put on the spot, and at first didn’t know what to do. But then I gathered my wits, and I looked at her, and said, “Why don’t you recognize me? I’m Santa Claus!” Clearly frustrated, she inquired again, even more intensely, yelling, “No! Who are you!?” I said innocently, “Why I’m Santa. Don’t you recognize me?!” Then I scolded her in my deep, thick Santa voice, shaking my finger at her, saying “Why, Santa can tell that you haven’t been a good girl this year!!!” The whole butcher shop, all of its patrons were laughing hysterically to see the fun. And most of them had already given a donation anyway by the time she discovered me. I really felt that day, that I was part of Lord Caitanya’s pastime of saving the most fallen souls. In a butcher shop of all places! And how he had save me that day.

As objectively as I can say this, I was a damn good Santa! I had the deep voice down, the long flowing white beard, and a big jolly belly cause I would stuff a big pillow in my suit.
Well, I had been going door to door all day long, and it was starting to get dark, and most all the shops were closing up for the day. So I thought I’d just do one more and go home. Well I went into this florist shop, and no one was at the front counter, so in a very deep Santa voice I said, “HELLO THERE!!! Is anybody home?!!” No sound. Then again I said, “HELLO!! Is anybody here?!”
From the back of the shop I could hear, growing louder and louder, a scampering, scratching sound, produced by the nails of an animal as he slid across the floor( about 10 ft.)all excited. It was a little hairy dog!! Then I heard a loud, sweet and simultaneously scolding voice coming from the back of the room yelling, “Krsna! Krsna!”
A young 16 yr. old girl came out, and I exclaimed (in my deep Santa voice),“ OH!!! What did you say little girl?” In a very calm, and mellow sweet voice she said “Krishna.” I said “Oh! (in a very deep Jolly voice full of surprise), and why did you name your dog Krsna?” (the whole time keeping in character as Santa) She thought for a moment and said, “I just liked the sound of it.” “And how long have you had this little dog?”, I said. She said, “Since he was a little puppy 5 yrs. ago.” I said, “And you’ve been calling him Krishna, all this time?” She said, “Yes.”
Then I said, “Well, do you know anything about Krishna?” She looked thoughtful and said, “No.” I pulled out a Hard bound Yoga for the Modern Age and as I handed it to her, in my deep Santa voice, I said,“ Here…this book, will tell you ALL about Krishna!” She was very grateful, and I remember clearly her giving a 5 dollar donation( although I don’t remember exactly at what juncture). Cool story huh? How fortunate was that dog, and that little girl!!
In the photo there is Kurma prabhu, the famous cook, dressed as Santa and ready for Sankirtana.

Make Allies With Krishna To Conquer Death – Class By Bhakti Charu Swami
Bhakti Charu Swami

His Holiness Bhakti Charu Swami gave an amazing class today, 14th December 2016, at ISKCON Kolkata on Srimad Bhagavatam 8th Canto, 2nd Chapter, verse 32 on Gajendra pastime. The theme of the lecture was how to conquer the most fearful situation of the material world...

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Why doesn’t Krishna Marry Radha? Lust, Adultry, Parakīya, …WTF!?
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People have such a hard time understanding Vrindavana Krishna!

Even if they figure out that the specificity of paramātmā is more infinite than the indefinite abstraction of brahman, they still have to figure the mystery of bhagavan: that the specific personhood and form of divinity does not exist merely for our sake, but has it’s own intrinsic desire and purpose that we are meant to participate in.

Even if they sort all that out, and comprehend bhāgavan, they will still have to figure out why unabashed intimacy with pure beauty (madhurya) expresses spiritual bliss (ānanda) more fully than awestruck reverence for absolute majesty (aiśvarya). 

Even if they comprehend madhurya-bhagavan Krishna, they will still have to figure out that the oneness of romantic intimacy (śṛṇgara-ujjvala-mādhurya – which causes God to be a teenage boy and us to be teenage girls), expresses more concentrated ānanda than mere friendship, or even the heart melting affection of motherhood (sakhya or vatsalya – which causes Krishna to be our peer, or even our baby).

Even if they sort all that out and comprehend the Romantic Divinity, Śrī Krishna, they still have not grasped Vrindavana Krishna. They still have to comprehend that romantic love expressed with the all devouring intensity of lust (kāmarūpa) expresses more intense ānanda than love which obeys norms, and stays within boundaries (dharmarūpa). To comprehend Vrindavana Krishna, they will not only have to be able to grasp this, but to take it to its ultimate extreme: realizing that the apex of Divine Bliss will manifest in forms which resemble what we conceive of as scandalous and adulturous affairs (parakīya) rather than lawfully wedded (or even mildly adventurous) nuptual bliss (svakīya).

Oh God… It’s a long way from brahman to braja, indeed!

The fullest perception of the Absolute Original Consciousness is a gorgeous heartbreaker engulfed in endless waves of coordinated multitutdes of mind-bendingly beautiful and mind-bogglingly talented mistresses of erotic bliss.

But, if we can put aside all our preconceptions and all our emotional and intellectual baggage, and just look at the above with fresh eyes, it does make perfect sense: the fullest perception of the Absolute Original Consciousness is a gorgeous heartbreaker engulfed in endless waves of coordinated multitutdes of mind-bendingly beautiful and mind-bogglingly talented mistresses of erotic bliss.

Ladies and (well… just ladies)… I introduce to you…. Śrī Krishna! The real one, behind all the closed doors and closed curtains. Vrindavana Bihari.

Objection!

Objection: Krishna says he doesn’t break the codes of dharma because whatever great people do, common people immitate!

Reply: Yes, but first of all he says that in Bhagavad-Gītā as a grown man, a kṣatrīya, and a king. When he was a kid living as a vaiṣya in a farmer’s villiage, he was not yet a “great man” of that sort, he was just a teenager. In Vraja, as a Kishor (teen) has no need to set any example for common people to follow.

Vraja Vrindavana is where Krishna gets to be himself. Elsewhere he is doing things for our sake, dharma-samsthāpana and so on (establishing morality, etc). But God’s existence is not limited to how he guides and helps and serves us (in fact, that is closer to a paramātmā conception than a bhagavān conception). God has his own life! And we can participate in it! We can serve, and help, and even guide and protect and delight him! The venue for this existence manifests in Vaikuṇṭha, and most fully in Vraja Goloka Vrindavana. There, and especially in Vraja, he isn’t busy setting examples – he is just being himself and sharing the feast of Supreme Bliss.

Śruti śāstra, with its oft-repeated and paraphrased “so kāmayata bahu syām prajāyata” phrase and several other key statements, describes the Absolute Consciousness as this Vraja Kishor Krishna, enjoying unabashed bliss in its most intense, “lusty” form.

We have a hard time understanding Vrindavana Krishna’s kāma-līlā because of our own experiences with lust. We experience it as something extremely selfish, and we assume that our experience of lust is accurate. However, we are avidya-baddha (bound by lack of knowledge) and our experiences are therefore more or less inaccurate. An accurate perception of Krishna’s “lust” is possible, but not easy. A) We have to be willing to have it. Not just willing, but wanting, really wanting. B) We have to find someone who has it and can explain to us how they obtained that from the ultimate source of accurate perception, śāstra. Only then can we too hope to directly see the indescribable beauty and dharma of Rādhā Krishna Parakīya Prema – the “lusty love” between Radha and Krishna.

What we will see is that, even in Vrindavana, Krishna is setting the right example.

The Bhāgavatam opens with “oṁ namo bhāgavate vāsudevāya” – explaining that Krishna is Vāsudeva, the Original Consciousness. It immediately follows this by, “janmādyasya yatā” – explaining śruti’s “kāmayata” point: that everything in existence manifests as a result of the perceptual hunger of this Original Consciousness; “unvayad itarataś cārtheṣu abhijñā” – explaining that everything comes from him and exists for the sake of manifesting his bliss. Everything is from him and for him.

Therefore there is no such thing as “parakīya” in a literal sense!

Rādhā and the Gopīs of Vrindavana are Krishna’s sva-māyā, svayaṁ prakṛti, svarūpa-śakti. They are inseparable components of Krishna himself! There is no literal truth to the concept of them being “unmarried.”

The parakīya-bhāva is a bhāva! mood! sense! The husbands of Radha and so on are abhiman (“big ideas”) only. Parakīya is the form that everything takes, to allow the Divine Bliss of the Original Consciousness to manifest its all-devouring, all-consuming, all-conquering nature to the fullest, most radical, wild, unrestrained extreme. It is the form of gopī-prema, but the tattva of gopī-prema is svakīya. More than any husband or wife we have ever experienced, they are eternally, constitutionally, inseparably married.

The example he sets, therefore, is that we should enjoy only what is constitutionally ours to enjoy. This is conformant with all dharma-śāstra.

If we are sincere, we will find that nothing is constitutionally ours to enjoy. Our proprietorship is never more than conditional. So what Krishna’s example is really showing is the example of what everyone really wants: unrestrained, unmitigated trilling bliss. And it is showing us how we can get it: not by trying to enjoy it as a proprietor, but by participating as something that belongs constitutionally to Krishna, the root of our very existence.

This is what Bhāgavatam and Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu are meant to show us: That we too  can also become a part of that most exquisitely blissful love.

Vraja Kishor dās

www.vrajakishor.com


Tagged: Adultury, Gopīs, Krishna, Parakiya, Radha, Radha Krishna, vrindavana

Bhakti Charu Swami’s Visit To Kolkata
Bhakti Charu Swami

His Holiness Bhakti Charu Swami Maharaj came to Kolkata on 8th December 2016. Maharaj gave seminar in Bengali on “Teachings of Lord Chaitanya” for thousands of devotees from 9th December to 11th December. On 12th, Maharaj awarded initiation in the family of Srila Prabhupada to...

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Sunday, December 11th, 2016
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Calgary, Alberta

Secret of All Secrets
  
Gaurachandra admits he went through a culture shock.  He and his wife, Vanipriya, and son, Jagannatha, were recently with us in Cuba, enjoying the perfect weather and warm-hearted people.  The family came back home to their place in north-east Calgary and got struck by frigidness.

They really hadn’t been out of the house for any length of time until I arrived, and it was suggested that we take a walk and brave a mind-over-matter experience.

With some apprehension, the coat, pants, and extra layers of them went on and we tackled the -20° weather.

“We are not these bodies,” is a helpful reminder for taking on the austerity.  An hour went by and the four of us were wrapped up in conversation.

“After you left Cuba (because we stayed an extra week), a woman at the cafeteria was asking about you. ‘Where is the monk?’”

People in Cuba have a natural proclivity toward the spiritual.  They, like everyone, have the same craving for self-indulgence.  Once given the opportunity, as doors open up to America, we shall see how “the cookie crumbles.”  Some surprises await us.  That appears to be the standard dialogue with Donald Trump as the new U.S. president.  We shall see how it all plays out.

In the evening, I attended the program at the Radha Madhava Cultural Centre and delivered a message from 9:2 of the Gita wherein Sri Krishna speaks of the most secret of all secrets.

May the Source be with you!


5 km

“Все те места, где мой Господь Гаурасундара…”
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On our final day in Sri Rangam we visited many historic sites, culminating in a special darsan of the famous Rangunath deity. We also took darsan of Jagannatha deities said to be carved and installed in Sri Rangam by Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu himself. Though our visit to Sri Rangam was short, our hearts were completely satisfied.

“Все те места, где мой Господь Гаурасундара, развлекаясь, побывал,
в компании дорогих мне преданных посещу и я”.

[ из “Шаранагати” Шрилы Бхактивиноды Тхакура ]

Фотоальбом на FB : Where Lord Caitanya Traveled

It’s Easier To Distribute Five Cases Of Bhagavad Gita’s Than To Distribute Only Five Books In The Streets!
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It’s Easier To Distribute Five Cases Of Bhagavad Gita’s Than To Distribute Only Five Books In The Streets!
AN AUDIO SEMINAR BY H.H. BHAKTI MADHURYA GOVINDA GOSWAMI
Who would believe that is easier to distribute five cases of Bhagavad Gitas (160) or even ten cases (320) than selling five or ten Gitas in the streets. Some prabhus work very hard all day long for ten hours and are happy if they can sell 32 Gitas. In this audio seminar, however, you will learn how to distribute cases of Gitas very easily. You will also learn professional techniques taught by the world’s top sales trainers, as to how to overcome objections, the biggest hurdle facing any sales person.
In a word, you are taking pledges for cases of Gitas with friends, family, work associates, businesses, fellow students, and any acquaintances you may know who you can approach for interest in distributing Gitas. You may say “I already did that years ago. Now I have exhausted all my resources for contacts.” This might be one of the first objections your mind creates before you even talk to anyone! Overcoming this and other objections will be discussed below.
The first point is “the power of positive thinking.” A famous theologian by the name of Dr. Norman Vincent Peale wrote a book in 1952 entitled “The Power of Positive Thinking.” It is good reading even for devotees, for the man was a genuine theist—not a Mayavadi or covered atheist. This book is so famous it is still studied all over the world as a treatise on how to be successful through positive thinking. You can match this with Srila Prabhupad’s statement, “Impossible is a word in a fools dictionary”; or the U.S. Army slogan, “Be all you can be.” So success of any kind begins with the right attitude. If a book distributor approaches anyone with a presumption, “oh, they’ll never take a book,” then, since this is the possibility you created, maybe they won’t; or conversely, perhaps you will be pleasantly surprised and they will take a book happily! “Never say never!” So attitude and depending on Krishna is everything. So many of the world’s top ISKCON book distributors had the experience of “bad days” when they would stop many people who would curtly say “not interested!” After many hours of this, the distributor might get somewhat discouraged and pray, “Oh Krishna, please send me just one sincere soul”. Not long after, the distributor would stop someone who not only expressed an interest in the book, but gave a hundred dollar (now it would be $200) donation!
That’s all very fine, but where does success in sales actually begin, next to attitude?
The answer is the all important phrase, “building value.” This is taught by professional sales trainers. For example, a real estate sales person might say to their client, “actually, this house is worth on the market two million dollars, but since you are my special client, I can offer it to you for a limited time only for only $800,000 which is not available to the general public! This is called “building value”, and the “take away close,” for you are stating the offer will end soon. This “close,” or technique for closing a sale, is used daily in television advertising for building value. Building value, then, is essential in selling Srila Prabhupad’s books also. In the seminar, I describe a dramatized scenario in which a very sinful man is saved from hell simply by seeing one of Srila Prabhupad’s books for only a moment! This anecdote can be told to people to enthuse them of the value of Prabhupad’s books. This works well for Indians who already believe in Yamaraj, judgment, etc, but many westerners also believe in some kind of judgment, or at least bad karma or varieties of inauspiciousness, or varieties of bad luck that one may otherwise have to encounter.
Some people will object by saying, “I already have Bhagavad Gita.” Many devotees might then more or less wilt, saying, “Oh, o.k. I thought I would just run it by you anyways,” and they might limp away like a sad puppy thinking, “Well, at least I tried.” But is that the only answer? Not at all! You then say, “You already have the Gita? That’s great! This means you truly know the value of the Gita! Wouldn’t it (a power phrase used in professional sales) be wonderful to share that value with others?” What are they supposed to say? “No, it wouldn’t,” but that wouldn’t look good, would it? Certainly not. People are controlled by “looking good” and “looking bad,” so from being confident that they have stopped you cold by saying they already have the book, they are now disarmed because you weren’t supposed to say “that’s great.” You were supposed to give up and they would “win.” So you have started overcoming their objection with THE POWER OF POSITIVE THINKING—suddenly transforming an unfavorable response into a favorable situation where you are back in control.
SELLING CASES OF BOOKS EASIER THAN SELLING A FEW IN THE STREETS? HOW?
But what about selling cases of books as easier than selling only one or three on the streets? Isn’t that a “pipe dream”—a mere wishful thinking fantasy? The answer is in selling cases of books in people’s homes, clubs, social gatherings, etc, by taking pledges at a Bhakta vriksa groups, as well as other such gatherings, or to individuals who are a little favorable to Krishna consciousness. You can be ready to answer any objections they may have. When you say “since you are already expressing your appreciation for Bhagavad Gita, can I put you down as pledging (pledging is the key word. You may not always be collecting cash or checks on the spot) for five cases?” “ Five cases of books? You’ve got to be joking!” they say in dismay. You then say, “Have you considered sharing this wealth of knowledge with others?” In India this is called “shastra dan,” or the auspicious giving away of sacred books, especially at this time of year surrounding “Gita Jayanti,” or the advent day of Bhagavad Gita in December. When they object—“five cases of Gita’s? Get real! What would I ever do with them?” You reply, “Give them to friends, relatives, work associates, etc.” They may say “I gave Gita to those people years ago!” undaunted, you reply “That’s great!” Again, you weren’t supposed to say that in their script. “But all their friends, family etc don’t have Gita. They can give it to them!” Some will actually pledge the five cases on the spot! Don’t think it’s impossible! For those who object, you then say, “I understand. I’ll put you down for four cases.” If they won’t take so many cases, keep counting down and try to get them to commit. If they still won’t pledge, then say, “O.k, one case (32 Gitas). By this time, they will be relieved that you have reduced the number in your demand! “One case, Anil” (or john, or whoever you are talking to). “I know you can handle that!” You say this smiling, with full confidence. Feeling they’re getting off easy, they may take a case of Gitas. That’s 32 books in half an hour that you might have sweated all day long on the streets to sell with great endeavor. “Dream on, you might say. This is not realistic. It can’t be done, or at least I can’t do it.” Before you reach this faulty presumption, please consider that in one evening I took pledges for 30 cases of books in one hour at a Bhakta Vriksa group! That’s 960 books in one hour! This is a true story. Not bad for starters, and the best news is that you can do it also. After all, even five cases in an evening (160 books) is a great victory! It’s very doable. How long would it take you to match that in the streets? You can also enlist the participation of so many Bhakta Vriksa members, friends, etc in getting sponsors for cases to be distributed to institutions. Many people who won’t give a penny for Krishna will happily sponsor this type of charity, because charity to schools, orphanages, etc, is within their value structure.
THE CLINCHER (THE FINAL INFORMATION NEEDED TO CLOSE SO MANY SALES OF CASES OF BOOKS):
The final word on how to convince anyone to sponsor so many cases of books is to supply them with a venue as to how they can distribute the books or cause others to distribute. They can sponsor (the key word) for hospitals, schools, colleges, libraries, jails, orphanages, etc. Many such institutions are very grateful to get the books, especially in India.
BUT WHAT ABOUT JAILS? ARE PRISONERS REALLY GOING TO BE INTERESTED IN GITA’S?
Actually, ISKCON has a long, distinguished history of jail ministries all over the world. It is therefore a fact that prisoners are very good “customers.” Please hear the following true story: Some years ago I was invited to go to a jail program in Mumbai during Gita Jayanti month. I wasn’t enthusiastic. My mind painted a picture of hands reaching through bars to get the books and maybe some prasad. Since I was asked so nicely, however, I agreed to go. I was massively shocked to see the actual situation. The devotees had set up a pandal stage in the jail plaza. There were many cases of Gitas on the stage because the thoughtful devotees had also brought Gitas in Hindi, Parsi, Tamil, Islamic, and other languages. There were about 150 prisoners in an assembly there. The devotees held kirtan. There were also Muslims and Christians there who were stiff as steel—“Why am I being forced to attend this Hindu program?” After about an hour of kirtan, even the Muslims and Christians were swaying and clapping to the beat and some were even chanting! The whole aura of the prisoners went from dark fog to light just from the power of the Holy Name! This is the future of our movement!
The head jailer, the mayor of Mumbai, as well as the Sheriff of Mumbai, the chief police officer for the entire city, all spoke, taking up the theme, “This is the greatest of all books” (the same theme brought forward by India’s prime minister, Mr. Modi, when he speaks to heads of state and gives them Bhagavad Gita, then declaring, “This is the greatest gift I could possibly give you!)” The jail program VIP’s added, “If you take this book, you will never be back to this jail again!” In the mean time, the media cameras rolled and the Bhagavad Gita was literally in the spotlight! After this, the Gita distribution began to long queues of prisoners eager to get the books! Soon, however, it became clear that the devotees had not brought enough books! As the stack of books on the stage became less and less, the prisoners became restless, and some even began to fight over getting the Gita! The guards had to chill them down. In this way, we see that jails are a great venue for Gita distribution.
Students are also eager to get the books. Once I was asked to give a pep rally for Bhagavad Gitas at a Delhi high school. A huge advantage in India is that a school principal or an educational institution deans will often happily call a school assembly for promotion of Gita. We have distributed thousands of Gitas this way, and the best news is that it is a “turn over” market because the students are always changing. In the case of my high school engagement, I was selling the Gitas, not giving them away for free. I used a secular approach, knowing that they had been polluted to some degree by the burgeoning secularization and westernization in India. “Scripture” is a buzz word that triggers negativity in many people, so I stay away from it. I stressed “This Bhagavad Gita is the most famous book in the world” (a true statement, because the bible has been around for less than 2,000 years, whereas the Gita has been on the planet for 3,000 years longer! It is widely read round the world even in addition to ISKCON’s book distribution.) So I said “This is India’s greatest classic! “ Classic” is a power word that distracts from prejudicial conceptions of scripture. This term should be utilized when presenting Gita, especially to any Indians. “It is your heritage, the root of your culture, the pride of India”—all secular talk. “It is on par with Homer’s Illiad, Socrates, Plato, and the other famous Greek authors.” So did it work? There were 400 students at the assembly. More than 100 of them bought Gitas on the spot in only half an hour, with their lunch money, pocket change—whatever, but they bought the Gita! That’s a whopping ¼ of the whole assembly! The devotees I was with were caught off guard. They didn’t think I would sell so many, so in a panic, they had to send a speeding car back to the temple to get more books! Yes, this is a true story.
So here you have it—the introduction to the “Sell Bhagavad Gita by the cases” seminar. The seminar(s) are 1.5 hours long, but I assure you they are both entertaining and enlightening.
Respectfully submitted,
Bhakti Madhurya Govinda Goswami (ACBSP), formerly Makhanlal Das
Link to the lectures:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B3n-kbzKS_QfblF4eWJpNUZ4MFE
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B3n-kbzKS_Qfbmx3MUI5SzJDbTQ
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B3n-kbzKS_QfVmR1aURmbkRsNTQ

Vrindavan Institute for Higher Education – VIHE (Album with…
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Vrindavan Institute for Higher Education - VIHE (Album with photos)
All the recordings from the Govardhan Retreat (and the Holy Name Retreat), thanks to Mahabhagavata Prabhu, Devaprastha Prabhu and other kind souls, are now available for download at
http://vihe.org/audio_lectures.html
Just open the page, scroll down to the line saying:
“HH Sacinandana Swami, HG Bhurijan Prabhu, HG Jagattarini Mataji Seminars on Holy name, Bhagavatam and Dhama”
then click on the “Retreats” to unfold the separate years, then click on 2016 and click to listen or right-click to download the recordings.
Your servants at VIHE
Find them here: https://goo.gl/NycpbZ

50 PADAYATRAS FROM GAURA PURNIMA 2014 TO THE END OF…
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50 PADAYATRAS FROM GAURA PURNIMA 2014 TO THE END OF 2016
December 13, 2016: ONLY TWO MORE PADAYATRAS TO REACH OUR GOAL OF 50 BY THE END OF 2016! We may even do more. Stay tuned, and even better, add your own to the list. One day walks are accepted.
Padayatras on the road all year long: 2
1- Padayatra India: on the road since Sept 1984; led by Acarya Dasa since September 2009
2- Andhra Pradesh/Telangana (India): on the road since the end of 2012; led by Visnuswami Dasa
Annual padayatras: 11
1- Odisha (India) : ISKCON Bhubaneswar’s annual walk since 1992

2- Tukarama Dindi from Dehu to Pandharpur via Pune (Maharashtra, India): an annual 18 day 250 km walk organised since 1996 by ISKCON Pune

3- Aravade Dindi from Aravade to Pandharpur (Maharashtra, India): an annual 7 day 110km walk organised since 2001 by ISKCON Aravade

4- Solapur Dindi from Solapur to Pandharpur (Maharashtra, India): an annual 4 day 70km walk organised since 2006 by ISKCON Solapur

5- Vraja Mandala Padayatra : Organised every year in Vrindavana by Parasurama Dasa during the month of Karttik.

6- Czech Republic : annual walk started by Rajaram Das in 1993, now led by Muni Priya Das and his son Nrsimha Caitanya Das since 2007

7- Slovenia : annual walk since 2001, led by Lalita Govinda Dasa since 2002

8- Mauritius: annual walk since 1984, now led by Ayodyanatha Dasa

9- Guyana: annual walk organised by ISKCON Georgetown

10- South Africa: annual padayatra near Durban; organised by Bhakta Vinod, his wife Sadhana Shakti Devi Dasi and team since 2012

11- Lithuania: annual Padayatra/Ratha-yatra; organised since 1995, led by Ananda Gaurangi Devi Dasi since 2013

Padayatras done since Gaura Purnima 2014: 32

1- Maharashtra Dindi (Spring 2014 ) :a 64 day dindi from Kolhapur to Nasik to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Lord Caitanya’s travels through Maharashtra, India ; organised by ISKCON temples and preaching centers in Maharashtra

2- Tamil Nadu (India): a 2 week padayatra organised in April 2014 by Prasanna Shyam Dasa and team

3- Canada: Fourth solo trek across Canada (May 24 to June 29, 2014) by Bhaktimarga Swami

4- New Zealand: Since February 2014 four short padayatras led by Yasodulal Dasa

5- Russia: June to September 2014 and summer 2015 padayatras organised by Narada Dasa

6- Suriname: July 7, 2014 padayatra organised by Govinda Madhava Syam Dasa and team

7- France: July 2015: Solo 190 km walk by Devarshi Dasa, from Angers to New Mayapur

8- New Zealand: In July 2015 Yasodadulal Dasa embarked on a one year solo padayatra with a wagon pulled by a horse. A few months ago he let the wagon behind and leads a real sadhu life, totally depending on Krsna.

9- Hungary: September 2015 (one week) by Bhakta Peter

10- Bhaktimarga Swami: September 20 to November 10, 2015, he walked 962 miles (1548 kms) from Boston to New York to Butler, Pennsylvania

11- Gujarat (Ahmedabad): the one day trial walk (November 29th) was followed by the « Week Walking Festival » (WWF) in January 2016. Organised by Murali Mohan Dasa

12- Goa: Nov 27 to Dec 3, 2015: one week walk from Dudhsagar to Miramar Beach (77 Kms)

13- Tamil Nadu, from Sri Rangam to Kumbakonaman (February 2015) . Organised by Prasanna Shyam Dasa

14- Zambia, Easter week-end March 2016; organised by Jaya Govinda Dasa

15- Detroit : May 14th2016 : 5h annual walk across the city, organised by Jambavan Dasa and ISKCON Detroit

16- England: May 30th- June 3rd, from Hastings to Brighton (South). organised by Parasurama Dasa and Dayal Mora Dasa

17– Russia : May 12 to August 15, organised by Narada Dasa. Walk in the Ural region, the Central region, and then South Russia. After Moscow there will be bullock cart padayatra through some villages.

18- USA, New York to San Francisco, by Bhaktimarga Swami : started May 11th 2016

19-Sweden: July 1 to 8; organised by Chandrabhaga Dasi

20- La Réunion (Island near Mauritius in the Indian Ocean): July 15 to 17; organised by Nrsimha Tirtha Dasa from Mauritius and the Apreva association (from St Pierre in La Réunion)

21- La Réunion: July 23; mini –padayatra ( 5 hours) organised by Rama Gopal Dasa, Doyalu Radha Dasi and team

22- Iceland: July 28 to August 5; organised by Chandrabhaga Dasi

23– France (near New Mayapur farm): August 1 to 5; organised by Sundar Gopal Dasa

24- Malaysia: August 14th mini –padayatra ( 2 hour procession , radio interviews, prasadam and book distribution) at Mayapur Baru,Iskcon Teluk Intan.

25- South Africa (around Johannesburg): September 2016 , by Nama Hatta group headed by Padmanabha Dasa

26-Slovakia: August 27 to 29. Oxcart padayatra organized by Yasomati dasi

27– Bolivia: First walk, organized by Nayana Manjari Dasi and friends

28- Bolivia: Second walk, organized by Nayana Manjari Dasi and friends

29- Fiji: Done by Yasodadulal Dasa

30- ISKCON Noida : by Krsna Bhakta Dasa and team.

October 2016: walk from Noida/Delhi to Vrindavan, with the arrival coinciding with the beginning of the Vraja-mandala Parikrama.

31- France (Dijon): mini padayatra organized by Gaurangi Dasi and Rama Gopala Dasa

32–South Africa: 18 day walk done by Narottama Dasa and another devotee from Johannesburg to Durban (700km)

33-Latur, Maharashtra (India): a group of 40 ISKCON Latur devotees walked an 8km padayatra on October 24 from Latur to Ter.

34-England: Five day bullock cart padayatra from Hastings to Brighton , organised by Parasurama Dasa and Dayal Mora Dasa

35- Gujarat (Ahmedabad): mini one day walk (November 27th), organised by Murali Mohan Dasa

Planned : 7

1– Tamil Nadu (Kanya Kumari): planned by Vikrama Govinda Dasa

2- South Africa: 2 week padayatra near Port Elizabeth, planned by Svetadvipa Dasa

3- Mayapur to Kolkata: planned by Istadeva Dasa and Mayapur devotees

4- Mangalore (Karnataka): planned by Mangalore congregational devotees

5- Manipal to Udupi (Karnataka): planned by Bhakta Kishan and local devotees

6- Vallab Vidyanagar to Dakor (Gujarat): planned by ISKCON Vallab Vidyanagar

7- Karnataka: planned by Giridhari Shyam Dasa and Dauji Balaram Dasa

Total ( December 3, 2016)

Padayatras on the road all year long (in India) 2

Annual padayatras 11

Padayatras done since Gaura Purnima 2014 35

Total done 48

Left to be done 2

Other walks planned 7