Last night at Peace Yoga in Burleigh Heads, Australia, the Mayapuris revealed once again why they are the pre-eminent Kirtaniers on the planet today. They sing, they dance, they roll and they rock. No-one within the reach of the sound the Mayapuris make is left untouched. Look around you at a Mayapuris program and you will see people having a profound, ecstatic, religious experience. In kirtan you don’t need to wrestle with some complex philosophy, you don’t need to decide what you believe and don’t believe, in kirtan your eternal self, that which you are really made of is directly revealed to yourself.
From Mayapuris Last Stand – In Australia – Peace Yoga – Burleigh Heads, posted by Antony Brennan on 10/31/2011 (115 items) Generated by Facebook Photo Fetcher
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"O Lord Damodara, I first of all offer my obeisances to the brilliantly effulgent rope which binds Your belly. I then offer my obeisances to Your belly, which is the abode of the entire universe..."
(Sri Damodarastakam) We offer our obeisances unto You, O Lord of the universe, who are so magnanimous as to revealing Your beautiful darsana everyday.
Last Saturday saw a big crowd, eagerly gathering to circumambulate the 'Sweet Hill' and to ultimately enjoy the 'Sweet Hill'. Here are some pictures of the fun that those present were experiencing.
Please note that Vaiyasaki Prabhu will lead the Damodar prayers tonight at 19:00 after which he will give a class on the Month of Kartika.
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, Melbourne, Australia, October 2011) The main thing in all our devotional service is the chanting of Hare Krishna. This is the most important devotional service of all! This chanting must be done very faithfully, and with quality, as much as we can!
4:34 A.M. Poem for October 27 Lord Caitanya met the devotees from Bengal and took them with Him to Kasi Misra's house. Lord Caitanya said to Advaitacarya, "My dear Sir, today I have become perfect because of Your arrival." Advaitacarya replied, "This is a natural characteristic of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Although [...] Poem for October 27 is a post from: EVERY DAY
From Human at Best "The fortunate devotee will soon be delivered from material existence by the Lord. 'The devotee does not desire any other achievement other than pleasing the Supreme Personality of Godhead.' (Bg. 12.6–7. purport) He works for Krishna and at the same time chants, Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare. Transferring [...] Selected Writings is a post from: EVERY DAY
This posting is totally politically incorrect, and probably offensive to some. But here goes anyway: "The Archbishop of Canterbury and The Royal Commission for Political Correctness announced today that the climate in the UK should no longer be referred to as 'English Weather'. Rather than offend a sizable portion of the UK population, it will now be referred to as: 'Muslim Weather - 'Partly Sunni, but mostly Shi'ite'."
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, Melbourne, Australia, October 2011) Srila Prabhupada was the best spiritual master. What better spiritual master could one possibly think of? The best, but still many of his disciples were not successful in following their vows! Because everyone has his own destiny in his hands, so the spiritual master can only help us. Like Prabhupada says: "When the plane is on the ground, then there is a lot of people around the plane – putting fuel, this and that; checking the tyre, and so many things are going on………..the ground staff are everywhere! But once the plane is up in the air, then you are on your own!" He says that everyone's flying on the plane. So in that way you’re flying your own plane!
Srimad Bhagavatam 1.3.37 - Krsna reciprocates to everyone - both devotees and non-devotees.
4:26 A.M. Poem for October 30 Lord Caitanya requested permission to wash the Gundica temple, and the superintendent complied. He supplied the Lord with a hundred water pots and a hundred brooms and Lord Caitanya gave them to His personal associates. They first swept the temple buildings and the Lord said, "I can see [...] Poem for October 30 is a post from: EVERY DAY
From Prabhupada Meditations, Volume III "Mission Unfulfilled "In the many attempts to remember Prabhupada by 'recall sessions,' reminiscences, daydreams, night dreams, poems, and prayers, I never seem to attain his direct association. Or rarely. When I close my eyes, listen to a 1966 kirtana or think of being with him in his room, I never [...] Selected Writings is a post from: EVERY DAY
4:27 A.M. Poem for October 29 The King of Orissa, Maharaja Prataparudra tried his best to see Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. Nityananda Prabhu and the other devotees informed the Lord about the King's devotion, but Lord Caitanya would not agree to see him. At that time Lord Nityananda devised a plan, and He sent a piece [...] Poem for October 29 is a post from: EVERY DAY
From Niti-sastras: Sayings of Canakya and Hitopadesa as Quoted by Srila Prabhupada "Translation: 'The measure of an ascetic is his ability to forgive.' "Commentary: Forgiveness is the wealth of the brahmana. As a preacher, the devotee must forgive even those who are ungrateful and reject or oppose the spreading of Krishna consciousness. Srila [...] Selected Writings is a post from: EVERY DAY
4:36 A.M. Poem for October 28 The Personality of Godhead, Lord Caitanya, took all of them to the temple of Jagannatha and began the congregational chanting of the holy name. Four parties were then distributed in four directions and in the middle of them, the Lord began to dance. In the four groups there were [...] Poem for October 28 is a post from: EVERY DAY
From My Autobiography This is a continuation of an example of free writing from Churning: "'Don't be so afraid of mice and rats and people who are demons. Really cling to the practice of devotional service and get through your remaining years in practice. Practice anta kale, to remember Krishna at the end of [...] Selected Writings is a post from: EVERY DAY
I and my wife cooked for Govardhan puja. These are some pictures.
GiriGovardhan Maharaj ki jay!!
Hare Krishna
By Indradyumna Swami Thirty four years ago today you departed from our material vision. Although the departures of pure devotees are celebrated as glorious in the vaisnava tradition, I honestly have never felt this to be a day of festivities. Instead of celebrating, I feel more comfortable spending time alone remembering your pastimes amongst us and reflecting on my service to your divine mission
by Rahul Mehta for
IT was the Taj Mahal of Appalachia, "Heaven on Earth" in "Almost Heaven West Virginia," a sprawling, opulent affair with lush gardens, a beautiful temple, a Palace of Gold, accommodations for hundreds of devotees, statues of Radha and Krishna, and even, at one point, an elephant.
New Vrindaban — named after a holy town in India — was the largest Hare Krishna commune in America, and was opened to the public in 1979. It was led by Swami Bhaktipada, one of the movement's earliest and most controversial American disciples, who died Monday. And it was less than two hours from the West Virginia town where I grew up. My family went there often in those first years, ferrying carloads of Indian friends and relatives who came to see us (and the palace) from all around the United States. My parents and their friends were part of the first wave of Indians to arrive in America after the 1965 Immigration Act loosened restrictions on South Asians. This new immigrant community, just putting down roots, had very few places to worship; there were hardly any Hindu temples in America. For them, New Vrindaban provided an opportunity to pray in a proper mandir instead of at a makeshift altar in someone's basement. And it was also breathtakingly beautiful. Situated at the very top of a hill (which some said resembled the foothills of the Himalayas), the palace was replete with stained-glass windows, crystal chandeliers, marble floors and gold-leaf decorations. Even our family members from India, who had all heard of the Palace of Gold, wanted to see it. For many, a trip there was more than a sightseeing excursion: it was a kind of pilgrimage. But not for me and my brother. We hated those trips. If New Vrindaban was a source of comfort for our parents, it was a source of shame for us. We thought the Hare Krishnas were freaks, fake Indians aping Indian ways. Not that we wanted anything to do with real Indians, either. We wanted to be home watching TV. We would only grudgingly pile into the car for the drive, then sulk as we snaked our way up the Ohio River, through the small towns of rural Appalachia, and into the panhandle. At the commune, we saw white women wearing the very saris I begged my mother not to wear to my school functions. We saw Americans chanting ecstatically in the same Sanskrit I deliberately garbled and mumbled under my breath during my family's weekly pujas at home. When my parents tried to send my brother and me to summer camp there, we refused. When they considered renting a cabin by the commune's lake, we protested. Our classmates spent summers inner tubing on the river. Why couldn't we do that? Why couldn't we be more like them? My parents must have been both proud and confused to see these white Americans modeling themselves after Indians — dressing in traditional Indian clothing, adopting Indian customs and religious practices — even as their own children were flatly rejecting Indian culture and desperately trying to assimilate. This was long before we knew anything about Swami Bhaktipada's legal troubles. By 1990, when he was indicted on federal racketeering charges stemming from the murders of two devotees, my family had stopped going to New Vrindaban. The South Asian population in our small town had grown, so perhaps my parents felt less of a need to find community elsewhere. New Vrindaban was no longer new and exciting. The sheen had worn off. The place was falling into disrepair. But a few months ago, my parents went to New Vrindaban again for the first time in many years. They went because my cousin was visiting from India and she wanted to see it. She is a Hare Krishna devotee. That my cousin, who has lived her whole life in India, belongs to a Hindu movement that started in America is amazing to me. That the Hare Krishna temple in West Virginia was on her list of sacred sites is even more so. My mom said that the commune was now approaching its former glory. The gardens are once again tended, verdant. There were no elephants, but she said she saw a peacock. As for me, I no longer feel a distinction between being Indian and being American. I travel to India frequently with my partner, Robert. We like to visit yoga ashrams in the Himalayas and, while there, follow a rigid schedule of meditation and spiritual instruction perhaps not so different from what the Hare Krishnas in New Vrindaban might follow. Of all the activities, I find myself particularly drawn to chanting. In fact, "Hare Krishna, Hare Ram" has become one of my favorites. It makes me smile now to remember how miserable my brother and I were at New Vrindaban. We might not have even gotten out of the car were it not for one thing: the gold leaf that covered the palace. We'd heard it was real gold. So we would walk around staring at the marble floors, hoping we'd glimpse a glimmer, a flake forgotten somewhere in a corner, something precious we could secret into our pockets and take back home. We weren't so different from our parents, then, after all. What the temple gave them wasn't much, a day trip, now and then. But at a time when there was so much about America to make them feel lonely and insignificant, New Vrindaban made them feel rich. Rahul Mehta is the author of the short story collection "Quarantine."
1974 October 31: "The registration cannot be applied for unless my express sanction is there. No papers should be filed without my permission. Any papers you may draw up must be submitted to me first before filing."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974
1974 October 31: "My books are the foundation stone of our movement. This should be our only motto. Whatever we are is resting on these books, so far reading them and distributing them."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974
1974 October 31: "I am very glad that the devotees are maintaining the devotional practices. This is the secret to success. Therefore I am stressing it. And, if you also stress it and show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in fullness."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974
1974 October 31: "We are not after titles and designations. Lord Caitanya made it a principle that we must teach by personal example. This is what I have tried to do. So if all of my disciples do this, then the future of our movement will be most glorious."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974
October 30
There are no recorded letters for this date.
By RAHUL MEHTA
Published: October 28, 2011 , New York Times Alfred, N.Y. IT was the Taj Mahal of Appalachia, "Heaven on Earth" in "Almost Heaven West Virginia," a sprawling, opulent affair with lush gardens, a beautiful temple, a Palace of Gold, accommodations for hundreds of devotees, statues of Radha and Krishna, and even, at one point, an elephant. New Vrindaban — named after a holy town in India — was the largest Hare Krishna commune in America, and was opened to the public in 1979. It was led by Swami Bhaktipada, one of the movement's earliest and most controversial American disciples, who died Monday. And it was less than two hours from the West Virginia town where I grew up. My family went there often in those first years, ferrying carloads of Indian friends and relatives who came to see us (and the palace) from all around the United States. My parents and their friends were part of the first wave of Indians to arrive in America after the 1965 Immigration Act loosened restrictions on South Asians. This new immigrant community, just putting down roots, had very few places to worship; there were hardly any Hindu temples in America. For them, New Vrindaban provided an opportunity to pray in a proper mandir instead of at a makeshift altar in someone's basement. And it was also breathtakingly beautiful. Situated at the very top of a hill (which some said resembled the foothills of the Himalayas), the palace was replete with stained-glass windows, crystal chandeliers, marble floors and gold-leaf decorations. Even our family members from India, who had all heard of the Palace of Gold, wanted to see it. For many, a trip there was more than a sightseeing excursion: it was a kind of pilgrimage. But not for me and my brother. We hated those trips. If New Vrindaban was a source of comfort for our parents, it was a source of shame for us. We thought the Hare Krishnas were freaks, fake Indians aping Indian ways. Not that we wanted anything to do with real Indians, either. We wanted to be home watching TV. We would only grudgingly pile into the car for the drive, then sulk as we snaked our way up the Ohio River, through the small towns of rural Appalachia, and into the panhandle. At the commune, we saw white women wearing the very saris I begged my mother not to wear to my school functions. We saw Americans chanting ecstatically in the same Sanskrit I deliberately garbled and mumbled under my breath during my family's weekly pujas at home. When my parents tried to send my brother and me to summer camp there, we refused. When they considered renting a cabin by the commune's lake, we protested. Our classmates spent summers inner tubing on the river. Why couldn't we do that? Why couldn't we be more like them? My parents must have been both proud and confused to see these white Americans modeling themselves after Indians — dressing in traditional Indian clothing, adopting Indian customs and religious practices — even as their own children were flatly rejecting Indian culture and desperately trying to assimilate. This was long before we knew anything about Swami Bhaktipada's legal troubles. By 1990, when he was indicted on federal racketeering charges stemming from the murders of two devotees, my family had stopped going to New Vrindaban. The South Asian population in our small town had grown, so perhaps my parents felt less of a need to find community elsewhere. New Vrindaban was no longer new and exciting. The sheen had worn off. The place was falling into disrepair. But a few months ago, my parents went to New Vrindaban again for the first time in many years. They went because my cousin was visiting from India and she wanted to see it. She is a Hare Krishna devotee. That my cousin, who has lived her whole life in India, belongs to a Hindu movement that started in America is amazing to me. That the Hare Krishna temple in West Virginia was on her list of sacred sites is even more so. My mom said that the commune was now approaching its former glory. The gardens are once again tended, verdant. There were no elephants, but she said she saw a peacock. As for me, I no longer feel a distinction between being Indian and being American. I travel to India frequently with my partner, Robert. We like to visit yoga ashrams in the Himalayas and, while there, follow a rigid schedule of meditation and spiritual instruction perhaps not so different from what the Hare Krishnas in New Vrindaban might follow. Of all the activities, I find myself particularly drawn to chanting. In fact, "Hare Krishna, Hare Ram" has become one of my favorites. It makes me smile now to remember how miserable my brother and I were at New Vrindaban. We might not have even gotten out of the car were it not for one thing: the gold leaf that covered the palace. We'd heard it was real gold. So we would walk around staring at the marble floors, hoping we'd glimpse a glimmer, a flake forgotten somewhere in a corner, something precious we could secret into our pockets and take back home. We weren't so different from our parents, then, after all. What the temple gave them wasn't much, a day trip, now and then. But at a time when there was so much about America to make them feel lonely and insignificant, New Vrindaban made them feel rich. Rahul Mehta is the author of the short story collection "Quarantine."
In a previous article I mentioned that ISKCON is an anomaly in the West. It is Sunday morning and I am talking to my son Madhu who is a policeman in Georgia. Every other Sunday he goes to a mega church during the blowout. The church has a capacity of 3,000 people and they all leave at once, 5-600 cars. His duty is he has a key to the stoplight box so he opens it up and manually operates the lights to maximize the efficiency of the traffic flow so it doesn’t gridlock the road and the worshipers can get out of the parking lot timely. I am sure no ISKCON temple in the US has a similar problem. There are always problems in every circumstance, the nature of them just change. This is a problem of a successful religious organization. ISKCON’s problems are different, being the anomaly in society that it is.
Filed under: News, Ramblings or Whatever
When Lord Krishna performs His transcendental activities He teaches His devotees many different lessons, and increases their affection for Him. The lifting of Govardhan Hill is no exception to that rule. One lesson the Lord offers in this pastime is the importance of not becoming proud of one's material position. read more
By Krishna-lila Dasi for ISKCON News on 30 Oct 2011 | On October 29th, 2011, Odyssey Networks has released the first three minute ISKCON-produced cell phone film The God Above The Quicksand featuring Radhanath Swami. It is available for the viewers on the Call on Faith app.
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Everyone is in ignorance because the evolution is coming from the lower species of life, and in Western countries the Darwin's theory of evolution is very prominent, and they believe that man is coming from monkey. Of course, the Vedic sastra also says the birth of human being are from three sources: one from the cow, the other from the lion, and the other from the monkey. The "monkey" word is there. Those who are coming in the sattva-guna, modes of goodness, their last birth is as cow. And those who are coming through the rajo-guna, their last birth is lion. And those who are coming through the tamo-guna, their last birth is monkey.
Srila Prabhupada, Lecture: Bhagavad-gita 9.3 -- Melbourne, April 21, 1976
Circumambulating Govardhana Lal in the temple room and then the Giriraja Hill outside in Krsna Valley.
Govardhana puja evening kirtan’s and bhajans.
Separation increases our attachment to His Divine Grace. How can we judge whether our attachment is increasing or not?
By Bhakti-lata Dasi The year is coming to a close, but the activities of ISKCON Prison Ministry are not slowing down in the least. As always, inmate letters keep pouring in, some from newcomers to Krsna consciousness, asking for help and guidance; others from regulars, or even veteran of devotional service, seeking continued support and association.
Tonight (Sunday, October 30, 2011), Toronto's Hare Krishna Temple will celebrate Diwali in grand, kirtan fashion. Festivities during tonight's Sunday Feast will feature a special "kirtan-themed" presentation. It will be a spectacular festival that will provide a feast for the eyes, body, mind and soul!
The program will begin at 6pm and be an extended program (vegetarian feast served at 8:30pm). We hope you can join us for these special festivities! The schedule will be as follows (subject to change):
6:00pm to 6:25pm - Kirtan (Arati)
6:25pm to 6:35pm - Singing of Damodarastakam
6:35pm to 6:40pm - Welcome & Announcements
6:40pm to 7:20pm - Class by HH Bhakti Vasudeva Swami
7:20pm to 8:00pm - Special Nama-Yajna Kirtan
8:00pm to 8:30pm - Kirtan (Arati)
8:30pm to 9:00pm - Vegetarian Feast (Prasadam)
THE FOLLOWING LECTURE ON SRIMAD-BHAGAVATAM CANTO 3 CHAPTER 38, THE RENUNCIATION OF KARDAMA MUNI,TEXT 38 WAS GIVEN BY HIS HOLINESS BHAKTI CARU SWAMI ON 20TH SEPTEMBER 2010 IN ISKCON UJJAIN, INDIA. Transcription : Her Grace Ranga Radhika Mataji Editing : Ramananda Raya Dasa Audio reference: click here gachha kamam mayaprsto mayi sannyasta-karmana jitva sudurjayam mrtyum [...]
Dear Srila Prabhupada, Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to you. It has come to pass that it is again the yearly remembrance of your disappearance. Appearance days are often experienced to be more joyful externally than disappearance days and the very word "disappearance" which we use to describe these occasions seems to indicate a sense of loss. We lost personal vision of you, although personally, I was never really there to experience your physical presence in the first place. Because I never had the opportunity to see you Srila Prabhupada, in the flesh per se, how can I know the meaning of your passing? Whether I have the insight or not I must draw something from this day, blessed by the words of departed Vaisnavas, that inspires me in my endeavours of Krsna consciousness. I have drawn this conclusion: when a saint falls from our sight then it forces us to take shelter of their instruction more than ever before. I see actually that devotees are never lost, as Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura says, they live forever in sound. Srila Prabhupada, I have only ever known you in sound and this is how I relate to you. Surely I have seen your photos and films, but I only truly know you through your books and through the words of your disciples. You conclude the Caitanya Caritamrta with treatise to the vani of your spiritual master, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura. Thus you decided, in the postgraduate study of Krsna consciousness, to end your works with a description of the potency of your spiritual master's instructions, beyond his physical presence. I see this disappearance day as yet another treatise to vani. Why would we observe a day exclusively dedicated to sorrow? There is a sense of separation invested in this day but surely we are not just attempting to feel glum. What would we be without your instructions? I would surely not have had the privilege of being born from Vaisnava parents because without your mercy such Vaisnavas would not exist around the world. My parents are not your direct disciples either, which means that they also only had your vani also. Your instruction, when it reached them, was still so strong that it made them decide to dedicate their lives to Krsna consciousness, and in turn, due to their association, this brought me to accept this as my own path as well. So I will see this day as a time to feel sorry for myself that I never even had your physical association but I will focus more that this day is a day to recognize that your message was beyond material elements, that it's eternal and that it is completely divine. Srila Prabhupada, your vani is my Deity, my gateway from this material world and my ever present guide. Your instruction is my true friend and the torch in dark places. I'm alive and kicking today simply due to your exalted instructions, and I am reassured that death is no obstacle if I simply weave these instructions into the core of my heart. Today is not a celebration of death for me but a tribute to immortal life. Your aspiring servant, Madhavendra Puri dasa. Read original post: [http://maddmonk.wordpress.com] Subscribe: [http://maddmonk.wordpress.com/subscribe]
Tamohara Prabhu:
It is certain that Srila Prabhupada will be known as one of the great acaryas [holy teachers] of all times.
A disciple asked Srila Prabhupada how to follow that instruction to follow a resident of Vrndavana. Srila Prabhupada said I am that resident of Vrndavana.
Srila Prabhupada asked us in Potomac, "What is that red light on the transformer?" We did not know. He said we should know everything. Turns out next Janmastami at the celebration that transformer burned out. Perhaps we should have learned about it.
After I heard Srila Prabhupada speaking for the first time, I knew he was my spiritual master.
Godruma Prabhu:
Thanks so much to New Raman Reti residents for their association since my visits to the community began in 1985.
Mother Nartaka Gopal:
Everything Srila Prabhupada did or said endeared us to him and increased our love for him.
He explained that humility is to act boldly for Krishna.
A man said, "Sai Baba is the Lord Himself. What do you say about this?" Srila Prabhupada replied saying that he did not know so much. His only realization was the Krishna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and the others are all bogus.
Prabhupada once said he had ten thousand dedicated followers with admirers numbering into the millions.
There was one Mayavadi in the area, and Srila Prabhupada said we should debate him. Devotees asked the topic of the debate. Srila Prabhupada said, "The debate shall be whether he can lift Govardhan Hill. God did it."
Prabhupada told us the Vrndavana jasmine fragrance regulates your life airs.
He told people with hard-to-take-off shoes that they could keep their shoes on and sit at the extreme back of the temple.
Srila Prabhupada said, "If you distribute my books till your dying day, Lord Caitanya will personally take you back to Godhead."
Mother Kanti:
By acting according to Srila Prabhupada's instructions throughout our lives we realize how much he has made us what we are and made us able to deal practically with so many situations.
Dealing with my mother's impending death, I could see Srila Prabhupada had equipped us to handle it while my other siblings were confused and tended to act in denial.
Acyutananda Prabhu:
Srila Prabhupada told us many things:
Study my books very carefully because after I go so many people will say "Prabhupada said . . ."
It is the business of maya [the deluding energy of the Supreme Lord] to make this Krishna consciousness movement look ridiculous.
You may be Rockefeller or any feller, but death will come.
He answered many questions:
Q: Why did not Lord Caitanya spread Krishna consciousness all over the world?
A: He saved it for me.
Q: Why do we need a guru?
A: The book cannot do this [he gestured by pulling his ear].
Q: What is the difference between the mind and the intelligence?
A: Your mind says to jump off the roof, but your intelligence says not to.
Q: I have so many doubts what should I do?
A: Doubt is a symptom of intelligence. We are not blind followers. Read my books and answer your doubts.
His disciples asked him to write a BTG [Back to Godhead magaine] article. He asked if the authors of the articles were writing what they had heard from him. When they said yes, he replied, "I am already writing all the articles."
I saw the priest had placed Krishna's flute in backwards, and I told Srila Prabhupada, who replied, "Krishna is all powerful. He can play the flute from either end."
Caturatma Prabhu:
I had a successful prasadam business with Prahlada Priya Prabhu, but two very highly placed temple leaders who were friends of mine were so critical of my business it was painful. The night after a very heavy Srimad-Bhagavatam class on that issue, Srila Prabhupada appeared to me in a dream. We were sitting in the back of a car. He said, "So…?" indicating he wanted me to speak. I said I was thinking that if we could have many prasadam businesses like this, Krishna consciousness would spread and Krishna would be pleased. He smiled in agreement and embraced me. After that I had no doubts about what I was doing. And I learned if I am following Srila Prabhupada's instructions to the best of my abilities, even if others do not appreciate that, I will be protected by Srila Prabhupada.
Lilananda Prabhu:
I secured a ten-minute meeting with an important businessman. I went in and admitted that I had no business to discuss. I just wanted to give him a deluxe Bhagavad-gita. He said, "This is what we should be reading, not having these meetings."
Mother Madana Mohan Mohini:
I saw Srila Prabhupada rubbing some cream in Radha's face. Later I understood there had some been some problem with the painting. Observing Srila Prabhupada, I understood Srila Prabhupada wanted everything to be first-class for the deities.
In one temple, they were not prepared for Srila Prabhupada's arrival. They threw one devotee's possessions out of her room, cleaned it, and put pictures from BTG over the holes in the walls. They built a vyasasana [sitting place for a guru] out of the devotees sleeping bags, but Srila Prabhupada accepted it all so regally.
Prabhupada once said, "You must have peanuts and raisins on Ekadasi." [This was funny for me because on the very last Ekadasi I was expressing to a devotee that it would be better if we had peanuts and raisins.—kkd]
Prabhupada told us, "Do not pick all the flowers. Save some for beauty."
Yasomatinandana Prabhu:
Ramananda Raya Prabhu said, "There is no greater suffering than separation from a pure devotee."
What Srila Prabhupada gave us no one has given to the world.
The subtle point which Srila Prabhupada taught—that love of Krishna is attained by preaching the message of Lord Caitanya for His pleasure was not understood, even by many of his godbrothers.
"Where are you from?" Prabhupada asked, and I replied, "Surat." He smiled and said, "A very nice place. I spent three weeks there. What do you do?" I told him, "I am an engineer." He answered, "Very good, when you get sufficient money then build a temple in Surat."
Prabhupada asked Kesava Prabhu, "Are you thinking of getting married?" When Kesava replied, "No." Srila Prabhupada smiled and said, "That is very nice. Marriage is like taking a 10-ton burden and putting it on your head. It makes it so difficult to preach."
When I got married, Srila Prabhupada encouraged me saying, "Husband and wife, double strength." In this way, he saw what we could do and encouraged us.
When serving Srila Prabhupada, I slept in Prabhupada's room. Once Srila Prabhupada kicked me gently with his feet, and said, "You are snoring too much." I said, "I can sleep on the terrace." He said, "No, usually it is not so bad. Just tonight it was too much."
I would stop massaging him only when he told me. Once he did not say for some time. Then at 12:30 a.m. he asked the time, and when he heard it was so late, he said, "OK, you can go now." Five minutes later he rose, and began translating at 12:45.
Although Srila Prabhupada was guru of the world, he would act like a respectful gentleman and treat everyone nicely.
One time Srila Prabhupada was blasting the philosophy of "yata mata, tata patha" which says you will attain the same destination regardless of the path you take. Mr. Shah protested, "You criticize Gandhi. You criticize Ramakrishna. You criticize Vivekananda. . . ." Srila Prabhupada explained, "We are not against any person just the bogus teachings." Krishna says those who do not surrender unto Him are fools. So we are teacher. We must tell what Krishna has said. Later at the temple, Mr. Shah bowed at Srila Prabhupada's feet with tears in his eyes and apologized for his critical remarks.
Prabhupada was very excited to go to new places.
On the vyasasana [speaker's dais] he was very bold, but when he came off he was very friendly.
He showed the power of one who is faithful to guru, saints, and the scripture, and he encouraged that we could also do like him. By preaching in this way, we can please Prabhupada.
Mother Mukhya:
Keep it simple. Our main practice is harinama [chanting the holy name]. By chanting for the deity, we invoke His mercy.
As far as the children. They should be trained in such a nice way that whatever they do they will not forget Krishna.
Ganga Narayana Prabhu:
I would always give Srila Prabhupada a rose in the morning. Once I was late and his Rolls Royle (which Karadhara had leased) was pulling out. Prabhupada could see me following the car, and he had the driver back up to get the rose I had in my hand.
One disciple eagerly said he was going to distribute BTGs to spread Srila Prabhupada's movement. Srila Prabhupada responded gravely, "This is not my movement. It is Lord Caitanya's movement.
Mother Samapriya:
Love for the guru is the foundation of our love for Krishna.
Trying to maintain loving relationships with ordinary people who have left their bodies increases our material bondage. They are already in new bodies enjoying loving affairs with a new set of people. [The guru can reciprocate our love after he has left this world.]
Puskar Prabhu:
In Henry Street, Srila Prabhupada said, "You will be surprised to know self-realization comes through tongue. By chanting and hearing about the Lord, we remember Him."
For the last five months of his stay, Srila Prabhupada had not eaten practically anything. If he ate a grape, we were all excited.
Big bags of salt arrived for the samadhi [memorial], while Prabhupada was lying in bed inside the building, and it suddenly hit me about Prabhupada's leaving. It was so disturbing I did not eat the rest of the day.
When Krishnadasa Babaji Maharaja would come, the atmosphere became enlightened. Prabhupada enjoyed his company.
Mother Aditi:
We all have a treasure box that is so deep.
Abhirama Prabhu tells how near the end of his life, Prabhupada regretted being so heavy with his wife.
Once in Paris, Srila Prabhupada sat on the vyasasana and began by saying that Krishna is feeling hot. Then he lectured on the importance of care in deity worship.
In 1977 when he came to London after the lecture, he looked at each and every devotee as if to say thank you and we looked back at him as if to say thank you. That was the last time I saw him. I am glad Krishna made that arrangement to say good-bye to him in that way.
Mother Mahatama:
I spoke in Atlanta to a Christian vegeatarian group. The leader loved the prasadam and inquired about it, saying he thought he had tasted it before. I asked how he became vegetarian as many Christians are not. He explained he was disenchanted with Chrisitanity and visited other groups. He visited a Hare Krishna temple and heard Srila Prabhupada speak and was attracted and attended many lectures. Once, however, a devotee giving a lecture dealt with a Christian lady in a disrespectful way and he was turned off and never returned. All the while he was telling the story, I did not tell him I was a Hare Krishna. Srila Prabhupada's association was such that although the man did not become a devotee, he gained the conviction to start a society of Christian vegetarians.
Sankha Prabhu:
I was Prabhupada's flower boy. I would give him a flower in Bombay whenever I saw him.
Once I gave him a flower from another devotees garden, and he noticed it and chastised me for taking a flower from someone else's garden. He called all the gardening devotees to his office, and showing us a map of the temple grounds, pointed out the locations of gardens for each of us and told us not to take from another's garden.
I brought a whole branch of a banana tree to the airport to show Srila Prabhupada. "These are our own bananas?" he asked. "Yes," I replied and he cut them up and distributed pieces to all the devotees.
I made samosas, but he did not take any. Later an Indian man made delicate small Indian samosas. Prabhupada asked if I made them. I said no but some Indian man did, and he replied, "You do not know how to make samosas, you only know how to make footballs."
I explained to Srila Prabhupada that aphids and spider mites were attacking tulasi [Krishna's favorite plant], and I asked how to kill them. Srila Prabhupada said angrily, "Who are you to kill the insects? Leave them alone."
A devotee asked the benefit of offering flowers to Krishna and the guru, and Srila Prabhupada replied, "For every flower you offer to Krishna or guru, the plant producing it becomes a human in the next life."
Ranjit Prabhu:
Once at the end of "Jaya Om" prayers, I said directly to Srila Prabhupada, "Jaya Srila Prabhupada!" And Srila Prabhupada responded, "Jaya Srila Prabhupada." Then I remembered he also had a Srila Prabhupada—Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Prabhupada!
Kalakantha Prabhu and Mother Sukhada wrote beautiful poems, and I hope to post them in their totality in the future.
Krishna-kripa Das: [I signed up to speak in Alachua but was never called on as there were so many devotees. I also missed speaking on Vyasa Puja, so I decided to write an offering now.]
I like the Prabhupada appearance and disappearance festivals in Alachua so much. So many disciples of Srila Prabhupada tell of his amazing activities and qualities.
When Lord Caitanya visited South India, everyone who saw Him would attain symptoms of love of God. These fortunate people would return to their villages and everyone who saw them would attain love of God. This would continue, and in this way, all of South India became Vaishnavas. Similarly Srila Prabhupada gave many disciples great conviction about the path of Krishna consciousness, when others saw those people they also become convinced. And when this new generation of convinced people would share Krishna consciousness, they would create conviction in the hearts of others, and thus by Srila Prabhupada's grace, this sankirtana movement is spreading all over the world.
Srila Prabhupada, it is your expertise to create an institution that would expand Krishna consciousness even in your physical absence.Each year I see a gradual increase in ISKCON's activiies:
New Ratha-yatra festivals are always appearing. In 2007 devotees started Ratha-yatra in Brno, Czech Republic, the next year they added Prague (Praha), and in the third year, Trutnov, the home of the Czech Woodstock festival. In 2009 Ratha-yatra also started up in Wroclaw, Poland. In 2011 Ratha-yatra came to Hamburg, Germany, and Fredrikstad, Norway, for the first time.
Last year 4,000 devotees registered for the Ukraine festival, and the total participants numbered 5,000 devotees. This year 5,000 devotees registered for the same festival, and about 6,000 devotees were there.
Bhagavad-gita (18.68-69) states, "For one who explains this supreme secret to the devotees, pure devotional service is guaranteed, and at the end he will come back to Me. There is no servant in this world more dear to Me than he, nor will there ever be one more dear." How can we understand how dear Srila Prabhupada is to Krishna? He had his Bhagavad-gita As It Is translated into dozens of important languages and had them distributed all over the world. He gave over a thousand lectures, interviews, and conversations, to give Krishna's message to the people. Thus it is impossible to calculate how dear Srila Prabhupada is to Lord Krishna.
Oh Srila Prabhupada. I bow down before you again and again. I pray that I may be faithful to you and to your mission, and that I might attain Krishna by this process.
Srila Prabhupada ki, jaya!
By Giriraj Swami When we were with His Divine Grace in Surat on his guru maharaja's disappearance day, he remarked that on the absolute platform there is no difference between the appearance and disappearance of the spiritual master—just like the sunrise and sunset, both are beautiful
Today we had a very moving celebration to commemorate the disappearance of Srila Prabhupada from this world. On this memorable day we remember that if it wasn't for our founder-Acharya how far away from the goal of life we would be. We thank him unlimitedly for granting us the darsana of Sri Sri Radha Ballabha.
Holy India – Tirupati HH Jayapataka Maharaja
A daily broadcast of the Ultimate Self Realization Course Sunday 30 October 2011 The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Lord Sri Krishna, and His eternal consort, Srimati Radharani are enjoying transcendental pastimes in the topmost planet of the spiritual world, Sri Goloka Vrindavan. They are beckoning us to rejoin them. (Click on photo to see a larger image.) Our Mission: To help everyone awaken their original Krishna consciousness, which is eternal, full of knowledge and full of bliss. Such a global awakening will, in one stroke, solve all the problems of the world society bringing in a new era of unprecedented peace and prosperity for all. May that day, which the world so desperately needs, come very soon. We request you to participate in this mission by reviving your dormant Krishna consciousness and assisting us in spreading this science all over the world. Dedicated with love to ISKCON Founder-Acharya: His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, our beloved spiritual master, and to you, our dear readers. For Transcendental Association Connect With Other Members of this Course. Join this Conference: http://groups.google.com/group/sda_students Help Popularize Our Message By Liking Today's Thought on Facebook: Today's Thought: Srila Prabhupada's Disappearance Day uploaded from Sri Vrindavan Dhama, India Today is the day that Srila Prabhupada disappeared from this world in 1977 here in Vrindavan. To experience this day in Vrindavan is especially potent because here you can enter Srila Prabhupada's room and see and touch the very bed in which he was lying when he departed from this world on that fateful historic day in the most holy month of Kartik. His disappearance was an unthinkable devastating tragedy for us, his disciples. We were so much dependent on his personal guidance on how we can advance in Krishna consciousness and spread this sublime movement all over the world. We were thinking and hoping that Srila Prabhupada would recover and continue blessing us with his divine association here on the physical plane for many more years to come. But this was not to be because Krishna had a different plan for Srila Prabhupada and for us also. Just as when Lord Sri Krishna appeared to depart from Vrindavan but actually could never leave because of being bound hand and foot by the gopi's intense love, now in Srila Prabhupada's separation we can capture him fully within our hearts by our complete total loving surrender to his divine commands that we should become pure devotees and make the entire world Krishna conscious. In this way Srila Prabhupada can never leave us. Just as it said that Krishna never steps even one foot outside of Vrindavan, it can also be said that Srila Prabhupada never steps even one foot outside the hearts of those devotees who have given their lives to him. Sankarshan Das Adhikari Srila Prabhupada's Bed in Vrindavan Decorated with Flowers for His Disappearance Day http://www.backtohome.com/images/Prabhupada/SP_Bed.jpg Answers by Citing the Vedic Version: Question: Can I Chant While Cooking and Walking? Can chanting be done while cooking and walking? Suba Answer: Chanting Can Be Done 24 Hours Daily Chanting can be done 24 hours a day in all varieties of situations. However 16 daily rounds of Hare Krishna mantra japa bead chanting should be done when you are doing nothing else except chanting on your japa beads. Sankarshan Das Adhikari Transcendental Resources: Receive the Special Blessings of Krishna Now you too can render the greatest service to the suffering humanity and attract the all-auspicious blessings of Lord Sri Krishna upon yourself and your family by assisting our mission. Lectures and Kirtans in Audio and Video: Link to High Definition Videos Link to Over 1,000 Lecture Audios Lecture-Travel Schedule for 2011 http://www.ultimateselfrealization.com/schedule Have Questions or Need Further Guidance? Check out the resources at: http://www.ultimateselfrealization.com or write Sankarshan Das Adhikari at: sda@backtohome.com Get your copy today of the world's greatest self-realization guide book, Bhagavad-gita As It Is available at:http://www.ultimateselfrealization.com/store Know someone who could benefit from this? Forward it to them. Searchable archives of all of course material: http://www.sda-archives.com Receive Thought for the Day as an RSS feed: http://www.backtohome.com/rss.htm Unsubscribe or change your email address Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Daily_Thought Thought for the Day on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Ultimate.Self.Realization Copyright 2005-2011 by Ultimate Self Realization.Com Distribution of this material is encouraged. Simply we request you to acknowledge where it is coming from with a link to our sign up page: http://www.backtohome.com Our records indicate that at requested to be enrolled to receive e-mails from the Ultimate Self Realization Course at: This request was made on: From the following IP address: 21
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