Personal Blogs

Tips For Concentration

Japa Group - Thu, 11/19/2009 - 21:25

Reading it:
  • If the maha-mantra is written on the wall somewhere, try reading it while you are chanting it.
  • With each word of the mantra that you are chanting, follow it on the wall with your eyes.
  • This way, you are engaging one additional sense in helping you to concentrate.
Taken from Iskcon.com
Categories: Personal Blogs

Travel Journal#5.19: South Africa

Krishna Kripa Prabhu's Blog - Thu, 11/19/2009 - 14:41

Diary of a Traveling Sadhaka, Vol. 5, No. 19
By Krishna-kripa das 
(October 2009, part one)
 South Africa

(Sent from London on November 19, 2009)


Highlights


Pretoria
Durban
Bhakti Yoga Societies
Soweto
Harinama Story
Insights from Partha Sarathi Goswami, Kadamba Kanana Swami,
and Bhakti Nrsimha Swami

Where I Am and What I Am Doing

On my fiftieth birthday, September 30, I arrived in Johannesburg, South Africa, a new city, a new country and a new continent for me. Srila Prabhupada so much stresses using the end of life to absorb oneself in devotional service and sharing it with others, I considered doing harinama in such an exotic new venue as Pretoria to be Krishna’s special birthday present to me.


South Africa was a mixture of reassuring and disturbing elements. At the airport, all the signs were in English only, a refreshing difference from the last five months I was in Europe. Yet doing harinama in downtown Pretoria, I realized I was a member of a very small racial minority. It was like going to parts of Philadelphia or Atlanta. Also, all the properties were surrounded by walls that were topped with barbed wire, an eerie reminder that there was a criminal element one must protect oneself from. Although I’d never been to far off South Africa, in Pretoria I met a devotee who remembered me from Mayapur, and in Durban I met Laksminatha Prabhu, an Indradyumna Swami disciple who I knew as a cook on the Polish tour.


I visited our Pretoria temple, the two temples in the Durban area, Chatsworth and Phoenix, and two temples near Johannesburg, one in Soweto and one in Lenasia.


I have more details about the outreach programs in South Africa, especially to the natives of that land, and the lives of many sincere devotees there, which I am saving for a Back to Godhead article I am writing on the subject.


Pretoria

Vraja Vallabha Dasa, Pretoria temple president, leads a lively harinama party.

The devotees in Pretoria are mostly in their twenties and are like a family. They go out on harinama at least three days a week, and often do book distribution. Demographically the temple residents are mostly blacks and the congregational members mostly Indians, but it does not seem to present too much of a problem. Both groups love kirtana and the young black Africans especially engage their youthful energy in it, prompting Bhakti Nrsimha Swami to say, “Pretoria is the best temple in South Africa, not the biggest but the best.”

I enjoyed going on harinama with them. You would see employees behind the counters of their fast food places swaying in time to the music, or a hairdresser, styling tools in hand, moving to the sound. Occasionally some people would dance like they do to contemporary music.


The man in the striped shirt, decided he would dance with the devotees. The young lady devotee dancing nearby, Manu Kanya Devi Dasi, is the organizer of the harinama party.

The authorities are not restrictive. Only if we stayed in front of a store too long, were we considered a problem, as in many places.


Durban


The Chatsworth temple in Durban is truly beautiful, and it can be seen from a good distance. Traveling to and from Durban, and even changing money in Johannesburg, I met people who knew about our famous Durban temple. I learned of the four-day Ratha-yatra festival they have in April and developed a desire to go. One year they had thirteen sannyasis attend. It is said to be the biggest Ratha-yatra festival outside of India.


Kadamba Kanana Swami did many home programs at the homes of Indian devotees and members, who were very respectful, hospitable, and well organized.


Bhakti Yoga Societies


While in Durban I went to a couple college programs. They have a very active Bhakti Yoga Society in all the major cities in South Africa and in Durban they do six college programs a week, four during the day and two in the evenings. I attended one at an almost exclusively black school. I was surprised that 95% of the attendees were ladies. In explanation, devotees told me in that part of South Africa, the natives are Zulus, who do not like to bow down to anyone, and thus there were few males interested in attending. My friend, Dhruva, who traveled with me this summer, demonstrated one technique at the Czech Woodstock, which I tried in this class. You ask for a volunteer to come up to the front of the room. You ask the name of the person. Then you tell the audience to call out the person’s name with great affection, and you ask the person how it feels. The people always like it. Then you explain that God is also a person and has a similar psychology. He likes it when we chant His name, and we can easily please Him in this simple way. You give a gift to the volunteer to thank them for being brave enough to come up before the class. In this case, I gave the girl a garland.


We did lots of kirtana as the devotees who did that program before said the students had very short attention span. I alternated between speaking and chanting several times. In the final kirtana, a group of three young ladies sitting together near the back were swaying to the music. I spoke to them afterwards, telling them that we do this singing and dancing in our temple on Sunday, and giving them an invitation. One of them said she would come. Later Kadamba Kanana Swami told me that there are people in the schools that are seriously interested in the philosophy, and it would have been better to have a longer class, so I decided to do so at the next program.


The other school was one that Srila Prabhupada visited on his one and only trip to South Africa in autumn of 1975. The devotees say that room we have the weekly program in is the same room that Srila Prabhupada spoke in. When I arrived just about on time, three Indian students involved in the organization of the program had a lively kirtana going, accompanied by harmonium, mridanga, and karatalas. I chanted a little more and then began to speak on the day’s topic, “Unlocking Your True Potential.” In the course of my talk, I explained how spiritual pleasure is actually the highest pleasure, and our true potential. I gave different examples of empiric evidence that support the Vedic conception of the soul, like Ian Stevenson’s studies on past life memories and Michael Sabom’s study on out-of-body experiences. I also mentioned evidence showing our practice of bhakti has positive results. I told about the University of Florida student who found he never got angry in the afternoon on the days he ate the Hare Krishna lunch. And then there was the story of the Tirupati public schools, where the daily problem of two or three cases of injuries by one student to another disappeared, when the devotees served the students Krishna prasadam for lunch. I told of Dhira Govinda Prabhu’s thesis for a Ph.D. in social work, where he showed that chanting Hare Krishna reduces stress, depression, and anxiety. The people found it sufficiently interesting that eight competed to get the five sponsored copies we had of The Science of Self-Realization. Another ten or so took Life Comes from Life. The leaders told me that usually the students do not take so many books. This reminded me that Hanumat Presaka Swami once told me he distributes books by giving informative and entertaining lectures at colleges then encouraging people to take books at the end. Perhaps I should adopt that strategy. We had a short kirtana  to complete the program, while prasadam was being distributed. Three enthusiastic young black girls sang, smiled, and moved their heads and hands in time with the music. They looked so happy! One of them did not even take her prasadam until the kirtana was over! Now that is rare for a such a new devotee!


Haladhara Prabhu, a black devotee, who joined from a Bhakti Yoga Society program in Capetown and who plays a leadership in the Durban society, says that roughly 70% of the student attendees are Indian, 20% black, and 10% white. This year two of the students showed a serious interest in Krishna consciousness, one Indian and one black. While in South Africa, I talked to devotees of all three racial backgrounds who had developed an interest in Krishna consciousness as a result of such college outreach programs, and thus they play a key role in outreach that country.


Soweto


Mahaprabhu Prabhu has been doing Food for Life practically since he met the devotees in the mid 1980s, serving thousands of school students prasadam each day. He is a very liberal person who makes arrangements to benefit others. His home in Soweto has a temple room which he fills up on Sunday at his feast program. I was surprised to see half the attendees were children, probably many who eat the prasadam he prepares for school lunches. We decided to do a harinama after the kirtana and before offering candles to Damodara, and everyone was very enthusiastic, especially the kids. We just went around the temple, down one street before it and up one street after. One man who had never come before joined the program from the harinama. It was a very nice experience.


Harinama Story


Nrsimhananda Prabhu, of the Bhaktivedanta College of Education and Culture, told me a harinama story from the early 1990s in Johannesburg. The devotees would go chanting twice a day, for half an hour before breakfast and then at 4:00 p.m. There was one man who every time would stand at the window of his apartment, a couple floors up, and curse at the devotees. For years he went on with his offensive yelling and screaming. But the amazingly result of that contact was that the man later became a devotee himself. Such is the power of the holy name and the association of devotees!


Insights from Lectures


Partha Sarathi Goswami:

[Partha Sarathi Goswami came to South Africa in 1975. He played a leading role in outreach to the Indian community with an ambitious tent program campaign in many of the Indian townships, especially in the Durban area. He was also instrumental in fund raising for the Durban temple and developing their elaborate Ratha-yatra festival. I attended his Vyasa-puja, which filled the entire Phoenix temple with devotees, many from an Indian background. He honored the disciples of his godbrothers on that occasion, giving them all garlands. I got the first one, as I was in front. He engaged a senior female disciple in garlanding the ladies.]


We should always follow the Vaishnava etiquette because it is pleasing to Lord Caitanya.


The legacy of Srila Prabhupada, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura, and Bhaktivinoda Thakura is one of love, giving without considering return. Their hearts are overflowing with prema (love of God). The nature of love is selfless. The letter of the law (sadhana regulations) is needed to attain the spirit of the law (prema).


“If you feel at all indebted to me, preach vigorously like me,” said Srila Prabhupada in a 1975 letter.


Please appreciate how fortunate you are and consider how you can reciprocate by doing some service to Srila Prabhupada’s mission and by doing your personal sadhana. By taking some role in the preaching mission, you will attain the legacy of love (prema).


Kadamba Kanana Swami:


On Kartika: When Krishna awoke He was hungry and his mother, Yasoda, forgot everything while breastfeeding Him. Then the pot of milk boiled over. Yasoda had seven or eight cows which she fed special grasses to make sweet milk, the yogurt from which she would churn into butter, because she was concerned that Krishna was stealing butter.


Although Yasoda had pure devotion for Krishna, she could not bind Him without special endeavor. Kartika means making a special endeavor to capture Krishna, not just to stay out of maya. It is practicing to be a pure devotee for a month so that we ultimately attain that stage. Each year we can take great leaps ahead in advancement during Kartika.


Q: How do we maintain our vows over time?

A: If our desire for Krishna is strong enough, then our determination is strong. If we have no faith in material desires then it is possible. Wherever we think we will find happiness, there we place our faith. If we have material desires, we are in maya (illusion), but if we have faith in our material desires then we are in even more maya.


The pastime of Ambarisa forgiving Durvasa Muni exhibits a mood rarely seen in this world. If we forgive we do so with great difficulty, and we do not forget the offense. Ambarisa treated Durvasa so nicely, he was completely satisfied.


Once on a japa walk, I passed a cemetery and saw that every grave had an American flag on it. I smiled—American from cradle to grave—an American corpse.


Srila Prabhupada did not have to think of a strategy to give Krishna consciousness to people. He knew if they contact the name of Krishna and the words of Krishna they would be purified. If there is any strategizing, it is how to bring them in contact with the name and words of Krishna.


Purity was the cause of Srila Prabhupada’s success, and indeed, only cause of success anywhere in the world. The purifying potency comes from the Bhagavatam and the holy name. The packaging may change but the contents of the package does not change. It we make the packaging too indirect, people may not take the time to unwrap the package.


The Kali play that devotees have performed for years in ISKCON is based on a play by Kavi-karnapura, an associate of Lord Caitanya, called Caitanya-candrodaya-nataka. Srila Prabhupada gave instructions to the early devotees to do a play based on ideas from this historical drama. Hindus know some of their culture, but not the real Hindu culture. Similarly the Africans only know traces of their African culture. The Muslims and the Christians have also lost their culture. We are trying to revive the original spiritual culture that was lost.


When Krishna appears, He does not come alone. He brings the spiritual world with Him. We also like to bring our paraphernalia when we travel. Krishna brings the spiritual world within the material world to show the maximum mercy. It is said that pastimes of Krishna in the material world are even more brilliant than in the spiritual world. When a jewel is on a black background, it appears more brilliant.


Material life is just like an elephant. Sometimes you are on top of the elephant, and sometimes the elephant is on top of you. The art is to climb back on top of the elephant again.


Chanting is like meeting with Krishna. When we are chanting, we can put a sign on our door, “Meeting with Krishna.” When we meet with Krishna we can set aside our preoccupation with the reactions of the material energy—the friction of our contact with the material.


Lord Brahma prayed to the dust of the lotus feet of the gopis for 60,000 years to understand their selfless love for Krishna.


Pray to Krishna, “I do not deserve to be before You, but somehow or other I am here. Please accept me.”


In this Kartika time we are trying to attain one-pointed focus on Krishna. We are talking about Vrindavana, and by this talking, we are going to Vrindavana. The question is, “What are we bringing with us?” The trouble is that we are in Vrindavana, but we are still thinking of South Africa. But we are only in transit in South Africa. Our activities are in relation with Krishna.


When I traveled overland to India, at the border I saw the customs office sitting at a desk under a tree, because of the hot sun. He asked why I came to India. I said I heard India was a very spiritual place. He smiled, and said, “Very good. You should go to Benares. You will go tonight. I will buy you a ticket.” And so he did.


The demigods see the Lord in relationship with this world because they are concerned with improving their condition in this life in this world. Lord Caitanya’s movement is different, and we are not concerned with improving our condition in this life but rather engaging Krishna’s property in His service and blessing the fallen conditioned souls. Even in mundane life, welfare workers are glorified.


Because everything is controlled by the Lord, He can give us factual protection. Now we live in a palatial temple. During festival time it is very easy to remember Krishna. But sometime, everything will be taken away, and we will see how much we remember Krishna.


When we are suffering, we are OK. When we are enjoying, we are in trouble. This is because our enjoying spirit causes us to forget Krishna, but when we are suffering, we call out to Krishna.


In the material world, we are all being cooked. Some are cooked faster, and some slower, some at a high temperature, and some at a lower temperature.


Birthdays: You are one year closer to death, and you get gifts to make you feel better about it.


Q: What about celebrating birthdays?

A: The appearance day of a Vaishnava is glorious. If we see a birthday as a hidden Vyasa-puja, that is good. I am all for placing a Vaishnava on a vyasasana and glorifying him.


[More from Kadamba Kanana Swami’s programs in South Africa in the next issue.]


Bhakti Nrsimha Swami:


When we understand that Krishna is unlimitedly powerful, we can take full shelter of Him. Ambarisa Maharaja had this realization and was not disturbed by the demon sent by Durvasa Muni.


Because we only believe in tangible things, it is difficult to have faith in God or even in the soul. 


By his surrender, Ambarisa became protected by Krishna. Similarly, the cowherd boys in Vraja were fearless of demons because they knew Krishna could kill any demon who appeared there.


Fear is a manifestation of the modes of nature nature. Srimad-Bhagavatam 1.7.7 states, “Simply by giving aural reception to this Vedic literature, the feeling for loving devotional service to Lord Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, sprouts up at once to extinguish the fire of lamentation, illusion and fearfulness.”


On the Damodara pastime: Krishna’s mischief does not affect just one house but the whole universe, so it is appropriate that Yasoda bind Him. But we should not bind our kids.


Krishna’s pastimes of stealing butter are eternal, but the demon killing pastimes are only occasional.


Krishna does not have to come to the gym to work out. He is the gym Himself.


-----


atah sri krishna namadi

na bhaved grahyam indriyaih

sevonmukhe hi jihvadau

svayam eva sphuraty adah


“Therefore material senses cannot appreciate Krishna’s  holy name, form, qualities and pastimes. When a conditioned soul is awakened to Krishna consciousness and renders service by using his tongue to chant the Lord’s holy name and taste the remnants of the Lord’s food, the tongue is purified, and one gradually comes to understand who Krishna really is.” (Bhakti-rasamrita-sindhu 1.2.234)

Categories: Personal Blogs

Speaking of Pumpkins...

Kirtans in Oxford blog - Thu, 11/19/2009 - 07:49


Look at these beautifully carved ones, by Jahnavi! She carved them for a Mantralogy Kirtan in Australia at the end of October. Vastly superior to our humble efforts - she can come and carve ours next year!

The top one is a lotus flower, and the bottom is 'Om' in Sanskrit character.

Jahnavi - a favourite amongst Oxford kirtaniyas - has been touring for many months now, with Gaura Vani and As Kindred Spirits, holding great kirtans in many far-flung parts of the world. I know that, although it has been a wonderful time for her, it has had it's difficulties, being apart from home and family for so long. So Jahnavi, we're routing for you!
Categories: Personal Blogs

Japa Poem

Japa Group - Wed, 11/18/2009 - 18:26

You’re chanting on cruise with no
impediments in sight. You’re happy and
content for a decent performance.
You try to catch up on your delayed
quota and don’t go very deep into
contemplation. But you’re satisfied,
not guilty, to be cruising down the road
of bhakti marga in japa high gear.
May the Lord accept me without
giving me a speeding ticket and
help me improve the balance of the quota

Taken from Bhajan Kutir #258
Categories: Personal Blogs

The Wheel of Time

Kurma Dasa - Live and Travel with Kurma - Wed, 11/18/2009 - 17:05
The seasons come and go, and with every rising and setting, the sun decreases the duration of our life. It's been almost two years now since I've been living with my father, and the passage of time is marked by the comings and goings of the various birds, insects and plants in their brief appearance and disappearance.

You may recall last year's chili pastimes. Here's an unripe, new-season offspring of one of the original Yellow Habanero chili bushes that was pruned and lived over into this season.

Pretty soon these will ripen and look like this:

I diced with death earlier this year with the very same variety of chili. They are exceedingly hot. but very flavoursome.

And I have 50 grandchildren chili plants (my favourite Red Savina and Yellow Habanero) newly sprouted from seeds of the second generation chilies, and on the cusp of their 15 minutes of botanical fame.

Those seeds were dried and saved until 2 months ago when I planted them according to the lunar cycles. And here they are, in their baby pots.

It's also Gardenia season in Sydney. Our large potted plant is at the perfectional stage of its life, giving generously of it's large creamy, sweet fragrant flowers.

It is the Sun that makes all this possible, season after season. It's not hard for the broadminded person to appreciate that the Sun is the natural representative of God, operating under His order. This is described in this ancient Brahma-samhita verse that I chant everyday as I see the sunrise.

yac-chaksur esa savita sakala-grahanam
raja samasta-sura-murtir asesa-teja
yasyajnaya bhramati sambhrita-kala-cakro
govindam adi-purusam tam aham bhajami

"The sun, who is the king of all the planets, full of infinite effulgence, the image of the good soul, is the eye of this world. I adore the primeval Lord, Govinda, in pursuance of whose order the sun performs his journey, mounting the wheel of time."

Categories: Personal Blogs

Kartika Series: The Hesitation

I'd like to dedicate this second piece of writing to my dear friend Tanya. Thank you for your continued encouragement and extinguishing any doubts I had.

The Hesitation-

I was on cloud five trillion. Who wouldn't be? I had been handed the opportunity of a lifetime- dressing Sri Sri Radha Manohara.

The more I thought about it, the more excited I became. But maya is sneaky because along with the excitement came hints of doubts. As I sat in the car, I reflected on my answer. After my initial outburst of "YES!" reality had set in and I realized that I couldn't commit without seriously thinking about this. It wasn't just an opportunity; it was also a huge responsibility. I wanted to make sure that I was 100% certain that I could do this, and so I had told Tulasi Seva devi that I would get back to her within a few days.

The time had come to tell my parents. As I excitedly and somewhat incoherently rattled off what had happened on the car drive home, I caught my dad's eye in the rear-view mirror. He didn't say much. All he said was, "What a wonderful opportunity. You must do this, after all Sri Sri Radha Manohara have done for you." And that was it. My mother, was equally thrilled but wanted to hear more details which I provided.

After reaching home, I started coming down from the initial high, and my rascal mind started entertaining more doubts. But what if I got a job during that time? What if I couldn't handle ashrama life in Montreal? What if I committed tons of offences and would have to suffer reactions? What if, what if, what if...the list continued.

This is the way the mind works. One can be given the greatest fortune, and even then the mind can come up with excuses. The longer one entertains these doubts/excuses, the more powerful it can become.

My main two doubts were that I would be offered a job during that time and secondly if I could handle ashrama life in Montreal. I spoke to my dad. He is one of the first people I always go to for spiritual advice being very sane and grounded.

I told him about my fear about getting a job during that time. He leveled me with a look, "Well what would you do?" He asked. I spoke honestly, "Well, I really feel that I should do this service for the whole month of Kartika....so....if anyone asked me to start during that time I would say I couldn't." He nodded his head in agreement. "Yes, I think so too. Radha Manohara will take care of you. Don't worry."

Well that took care of that. Although I didn't have complete faith, I knew it was the right thing to do. Besides, HG Laxmimoni prabhu's words were ringing in my ears. The last time I spoke to her she had said, "Why don't you just dedicate one year to temple life?" Well here was my chance...it wasn't one year, but at least I could try to dedicate one month of my life to temple service.

Now, the big one. Could I handle ashrama life in Montreal? Krsna has been very merciful to me. I had the opportunity to live in the ashrama in Radhadesh when doing Bhakti Sastri and it had been a wonderful experience. But that was just it- I had never really served in a temple in North America. Europe and India yes, but not yet North America.

But who could I ask. Tanya. The first person who came to mind. Tanya is extraordinary. Working full time at Concordia University she spends six days a week at the ladies ashram here in Montreal and does a whole gamut of services. Hesitatingly, I approached her. "What's it like in the ashrama? How's the morning program? Is there heating?" Yes, I actually asked that. Is there heating? LOL. She very patiently answered all my questions, despite how preposterous they were.

Yet still, I was hesitating. It was Krsna working through Tanya who really pushed me, and for that I will always be indebted to her. She would not give up on me. Using whatever leverage she could find she would send text messages asking when I was coming, telling me that Radha Manohara were personally inviting me to come, going as far as to say I was crazy to not be calling Tulasi devi back to inform her I was coming.

There is only so much sweetness a person can take. Soon I hit my limit and said, "Alright Radha Manohara, I'm yours for the month." Calling Tulasi Seva devi I informed her I would be coming, but I told her I could only commit for two weeks but would try to be there for the whole of Kartika. Why? I wanted to make sure that I could handle it because with incredible mercy comes great responsibility. Working out the details, we decided it would be best for me to come a few days before she left for India so I could become familiar with everything.

The invitation had come and it had now been formally accepted.
Categories: Personal Blogs

Please Join the Japa Group

Japa Group - Tue, 11/17/2009 - 20:22
Please share your realisations with other devotees from around the world...simply send me an introduction email and I will be happy to make you a member:

rasa108@gmail.com

ys

Rasa Rasika dasa
Categories: Personal Blogs

Le Carnaval Spirituel

Kurma Dasa - Live and Travel with Kurma - Tue, 11/17/2009 - 17:06
Le Carnaval Spirituel is coming to town! I spent a happy 12 days with this travelling concert/circus/carnival back in 2006 on Poland's Baltic Sea Coast.

You can read all about my tour with Le Carnaval Spirituel here (scroll down to Polish 'Festival of India' Baltic Tour, July 2006).

Summer 2009/10 Australian Tour

"Following on from the success of their 2007 and 2008 concert tours, Le Carnaval returns to Australia this summer to entertain us with their colourful “joie de vivre” performances.

With spectacular flair they bring the stage to life with a rich tapestry of music, dance, tribal drum acts, yoga, martial arts and surreal theatre evoking the timeless wisdom of India's ancient spiritual culture.

Street performances will precede each of the stage shows, so the whole community will get the chance to glimpse a vibrant world – a world that has enriched and deepened the lives of millions of people for more than 50 centuries.

Established in 1979 in France, the troupe has toured extensively throughout the world enthralling audiences with their "out of this world" production."

Le Carnaval Spirituel commences its tour in NSW as follows:

Newcastle: Sat 21 November, Conservatorium of Music, Harold Lobb Concert Hall, Laman St.
Bondi: Wednesday 16 & Thursday 17 December, Bondi Pavilion Theatre.
Randwick: Friday 18 & Sat 19 December, Town Hall, Cnr Avoca & Frances Sts.

I'll be attending the Bondi event. For a full listing of over 35 Australia-wide dates and places to see this (free) stage show at a venue near you, click here...

Categories: Personal Blogs

Kartika Series: The Invitation

For the month of Kartika I barely wrote. Not because I didn't want to, but because I was consumed. Consumed and utterly engrossed in service. Now that Kartika has come and gone, I am left with the deep impressions it has ingrained in my heart. Following in the footsteps of my dear friend Bhakti, I thought that the best way to share some of these experiences would be to write a series. The Kartika series.

The Invitation-

It seems almost a life-time ago, but this year's mystical Kartika journey began to manifest in early September. Jobless and slightly frustrated, I didn't have any hopes of going to India this year, but little did I know that Krsna had other plans for me.

Early September marked the Prabhupada Festival that the devotees in Montreal hold every year. Having never attended one, I had the great fortune of being allowed to go. Four days of intense Srila Prabhupada katha by HG Sruta Kirti prabhu. It was pure nectar. While being there, I hesitatingly asked if I could do any pujari service for the deities and Krsna being all merciful allowed me the opportunity to dress Sri Sri Gaura Nitai twice during my four day visit.

It was Saturday evening and I was standing on the altar, astonished that someone as undeserving as myself had been granted this special service. Having assisted Gaura Nitai get into their evening dress, I was standing spellbound in front of Sri Sri Radha Manohara.

Radha Manohara have an extremely special place in my heart. Not only are they mind-numbingly beautiful Deities, but they are the Deities that I grew up with. Before I was born, my parents lived across the street from the temple in Montreal and when I was 10 days old they brought me to the temple on Janmastami. They are not just Deities for me, but a part of my family. As I was flooded with memories, I was praying, "Oh my dear Radha Manohara, please allow me to dress you one day." As I continued to steal a few extra minutes on the altar to absorb this extremely rare and close-up darshan, I kept praying, "Please let me dress you one day."

The next morning I just happened to be in the kitchen, watching in awe as the devotees expertly and speedily were preparing prasadam for both the breakfast offering and the boat ride later in the day. As I was hanging around, the head pujari HG Tulasi Seva devi suddenly asked me, "So are you working these days?" I told her no, at the moment I wasn't. She fell quiet and something inside me prompted me to ask, "Why?" Looking up from the pot she was stirring she said, "Well, I'll be going to India for about a month and we need a pujari to help out here. Would you be able to come and help out for sometime?" I stood there stunned and distinctly remember asking, "You mean helping to dress Radha Manohara." Cheerfully she laughed and said, "Yes, it would mean dressing Radha Manohara everyday during the week, morning and evening."

There it was. The answer to my prayers. Not even twelve hours before I had been standing in front of Radha Manohara asking them if they would allow me to dress them and here was their dear and long-standing devotee asking me if I could come and dress them, not just at any time, but for the auspicious month of Kartika. The time when I am longing to be in Vrndavana.

This was it. The invitation I had been longing for.

Categories: Personal Blogs

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Mon, 11/16/2009 - 20:43
Trails on Sunday

Halifax, Nova Scotia

Eryn is my kind of person. She conducts these walks called 'Wander in the Yonder' each Sunday at a designated spot. The starting place is specific. The route to follow is just let your whim carry you. She refers to herself as a pilgrim and makes reflections walking with volunteer foot enthusiasts a weekly event.

Through Nitai Ram, our head brahmacari in the Halifax ashram, Eryn had come to know of my passion for pilgrimage and so I became her guest for the afternoon. Along with us were local hikers who all bonded together practically at the snap of a finger. Anthony, a young computer consultant, also blazed a trail with us in Point Pleasant Park, a confined area of naturalness where you hit multiple trails through this sea-coast brush. "Take your pick," was the mood. On Wednesday Anthony will be the Olympic torch bearer for a meaningful but meager 300 meter run through Halifax. The lucky guy made it on the national poster for promoting the world winter Olympics in Vancouver.

Eryn spoke about her nomadic life for the summer in Prince Edward Island and her anticipated future walks. We both agreed that the way of the pedestrian is a cleansing and a shedding of bad karma program. We also both have the same experience that very few people have, even the closest friends, understand the extent of healing that walking entails. You have to do it to know it.

It was a walking/talking afternoon. The evening, however, consumed our boys, four monks, and their growing community in the fire of chanting. Their home, apartment up above a Greek restaurant on Quinpool, became almost claustrophobic during kirtan sessions. It was an experience of high energy at its best.

9 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Mon, 11/16/2009 - 20:42
Deathly Ways

Halifax, Nova Scotia

It had been all over the news. A tragic occurrence along a wilderness trail of northern Nova Scotia at Cape Breton. A young woman at 19 was attacked by two coyotes in an unprecedented scene. She was left with a series of vicious bites and left to lie with loss of blood before she was discovered by walkers nearby. She lost her life before reaching the hospital. Little is known why the wild dogs became so aggressive.

It makes you stop to wonder how very precarious life is even in what appears as a peaceful environment. You can never be too sure. The book Bhagavatam states padam padam yad vipadam na tesam, "In this world there is danger at every step."
When flying off to Nova Scotia to see our brahmacaris (monks) in their new location on Quinpool Road I had contemplated on this mishap. I was compelled to reflect on death when the woman from Halifax next to me in the plane asked, "Is this Hare Krishna?"

I said, "Yes it is!"

"I'll tell you my Hare Krishna story," she said. "Just before my Dad's passing in the hospital he was wearing orange. I asked what the color was all about and he responded by saying 'Hare Krishna Hare Krishna...' ."

I was rather flabbergasted by her brief story. I thought that here was the perfect story- a story of a remarkable way to depart from the world. We spoke little after that. She got wrapped up in the flight cinema. I was content to know that the man's parting was rather favourable. According to Vedic culture hearing mantras is the greatest omen when leaving the body.

I wish that the young woman attacked by the coyotes had at least good thoughts and is on her way to a better existence.

6 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

Emphasizing Individual Words

Japa Group - Mon, 11/16/2009 - 18:05

Emphasizing individual words – gradually build up:
  • At the beginning of each round, decide on a particular word or words in your mantra to emphasise, e.g. the first "Hare" of the first half, or every "Krishna", or the two "Ramas" in the last line.
  • You will see how the words you emphasise start to stand out more.
  • With each round, add to it: the double "Krishna" and the double "Rama".
  • Again, these words in the mantra will stand out more.
  • Keep adding to it, never take a step backwards, or allow an emphasis you have already established slip away, until finally you are emphasising every word of the mantra.
Taken from Iskcon.com
Categories: Personal Blogs

Ecuador Extends Rights to Ecosystems

By Kate Wilson, The New York Times A few months after Lloyd reported on the Swiss government’s conclusion that plants have rights, the Ecuadorian population went one step further and voted to change their constitution to proclaim that nature has “the right to the maintenance and regeneration of its vital cycles, structure, functions and evolutionary processes.” The [...]

Hot Town, Summer in the City: My KGB Weekend

Kurma Dasa - Live and Travel with Kurma - Sun, 11/15/2009 - 19:55
I've returned to my Sydney home base after a back-to-back, double-header cooking class extravaganza in Melbourne.

Saturday was spent at the beautiful kitchen of Kellie (below, top row, second from the left) in Vermont, the heartland of Melbourne's 'Burbs'. A couple of latecomers missed their fifteen minutes of photographic fame.

Kellie and Jenny (above, top right) spent many months arranging the day, which was a great deal of fun for all. Number's swelled for lunch (a common occurence), with husbands and an abundance of good-looking babies completing the family gathering.

It was a big day for Jenny, who completed her full-set of Kurma cookbooks and DVD's, making her now a full card-carrying member of the KGB (Kurma Groupie Brotherhood). Welcome, Jenny!

Alu vadas were the star of the lunch. Crispy batter, tender soft potato inside, slathered with creamy coconut chutney...my best ever.

Weekend temperatures soared. At Gopal's Restaurant in the heart of Melbourne's downtown, an ultra-enthusiastic group of 26 partook of a day-long cookery workshop. Many a KGB member was present, including a lady who had last attended a cookery class with me in 1983.

Our youngest attendee was Kieren, aged 14. Did we have fun? The photo says it all.

Categories: Personal Blogs

A Call Out For Krsna

Japa Group - Sun, 11/15/2009 - 18:22

Hare Krsna my dear devotees, I hope you have had a nice week and you can chant nicely this week. I brought something nice from H.H.Sacinandana Swami maharaja today, he mentions about how important is to have Krsna as our best friend and address Him while chanting, this also means being attentive and concentrated in japa because by doing that we will be developing a real relationship with the Lord.
Question: Why is it so difficult to call out for Krishna?

H.H. Sacinandana Swami: One can best call out for Krishna when not calling out for so many other things as well. Go to one address. Krishna wishes to see how we make ourselves more and more dependent on Him. We should try to become exclusively His devotee.
Srila Prabhupada writes: “The beginning of ecstatic love of Godhead is basically faith....” (NOD 19)

“Never expect any good from the so called society, friendship and love. Only Krishna is the genuine friend of all living beings and it is He only who can give us all benediction. The more you advance in Krishna Consciousness chanting Hare Krishna Hare Krishna the more you become spiritually advanced and happy in all respects.” (Letter to Balabhi, April 22, 1967)

“We should learn to depend on Krishna more and more. Actually, Krishna is always guiding us as Supersoul, but due to our forgetfulness, we do not understand that Krishna is friend everlasting. With advance of Krishna Consciousness one is able to realize that Krishna is always with His devotees—not only with His devotees, also with the non-devotees, but the devotees can recognize His Presence and the non-devotees cannot. The more you make advancement in Krishna Consciousness you will see Krishna everywhere. Not only on the bank of the river, but also on streets, trees, lampposts, and so on. The more you see like that you know you are making tangible advancement in Krishna Consciousness. Actually, there is nothing but Krishna all around us. This is explained in the Gita. He is the taste of water, light of the moon, the fragrance of the flower, light of the sun, sound of the sky, the power of the strong and so on. So one who is actually making progress in Krishna Consciousness, he can see Krishna everywhere. At every stage of life, who can avoid the sunlight, the moonlight, the fragrance of the flower, the taste of the water, the sound of the sky, and so on; but one has to learn it, that there is Krishna in all these varieties of existence. Without Krishna there is nothing. It is simply by the influence of Maya that we forget the relationship of Krishna with everything that be.” (Letter to Krsna devi, December 21, 1967)

“Anyone can understand that behind the beauty of nature, behind the succulent fruits and vegetables, and behind the wonderful heat and light of the sun, there is a friend. So we should contact that dearmost friend, Krsna. Any reasonable man will accept this argument. That is rational thinking.” (Letter to Vyasa, August 6, 1970)
In our everyday life of chanting we need to try to develop this individual relationship with the Lord through chanting and also become his best and exclusive servant in this way all our lives will be blessed in every area and we will feel Him closer to our heart

May you have a wonderful chanting and you be able to concentrate and feel the deep sound of the Lords names.

your servant,

Aruna devi
Categories: Personal Blogs

Japa Concentration Exercises

Japa Group - Sat, 11/14/2009 - 22:21

Each-mantra-of-each-round:
  • You have to chant and hear each mantra. Right here and now.
  • Focus on this bead you are now holding between your fingers, this mantra that is now being uttered from your lips and now entering into the ear.
  • And then move onto the next mantra, which you must focus on in the same way… and the next… and the next.
  • This may work for 10 or 15 mantras, maybe even 30, and the mind will become diverted again. Then you have to pull the mind back and set to it again.
  • Continue to do this and you will succeed.
  • At the end of each round, take stock of how well you did, and resolve to make the next round even better: "This time I am going to concentrate fully on each and every mantra of this round – all 108."
  • The attitude is, “Right now, this is the only round that counts.”
  • And so it goes on for each and every mantra of each and every round… You will see steady improvement… And if you practice this each and every day, your rounds in general will steadily improve.

Taken from Iskcon.com
Categories: Personal Blogs

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Sat, 11/14/2009 - 11:57
The Gardener and the Ghosts

Toronto, Ontario

Practically each morning that I’m here I walk with either one of two devotees, Serge or Shyam. We head off to Yonge St. then west on Bloor, past the ROM museum, the old Rochdale building to the Jewish community centre and then north on Spadina back to the temple/ashram. It is then approaching 7:00am. We have darshan (viewing the Krishna deity’s) and conduct guru-puja, a ceremony for the guru. On Thursdays we read along with other monks the instructive and endearing pastimes of our guru, Srila Prabhupada.
We really liked today’s excerpt which is from Gurudas’ book, “By His Example.” With subtitle.

Ghost Story

On the morning walks, Prabhupada would often greet Tittenhurst’s gardener, Frank. He and Frank had respect for each other, as they were about the same age. Frank was living in a small, cozy Tudor cottage, and he had reported to John Lennon that strange sounds kept him up in the night. He thought the cottage was occupied by ghosts. John consulted with Srila Prabhupada and asked him if he could do something to remedy this situation. Prabhupada replied that he could.

He gathered us together, and we marched in a great procession across the low, grassy hills down to the cottage. Prabhupada led a dynamic kirtan and told us to blow the conch shell very often and very loudly, and ghosts don’t like that sound. After a while he said, “They have gone.”

Frank later confirmed that the strange sounds he heard in the night were indeed gone.

5 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Sat, 11/14/2009 - 11:50
Jai Ho!

Toronto, Ontario

Meeting dear friend, Devamrita Swami, was a pleasure once again. Just what did he and I mill over? Well, we discussed the need for outreach to local people and not to remain content to please people indigenous to the culture of Krishna. The fact of the matter is that the teachings of Krishna are presentations of universal truths. They are a message for all people regardless of background. We now live in a multi-cultural society. Toronto, being like a mini-New York, has the whole world operating in some type of synergy. Montreal too, is cross-cultural, and draws immigrants from all over the world. We have at our disposal a global climate for spirituality.

Our packaging of the Krishna culture doesn’t need to appeal to one particular ethnic group. Krishna, the name means all attractive. What attractive aspect of Him are we speaking of here-His form, His activities? Or is it His words that shine through with greater strength breaking the barriers of prejudice and the walls of bodily identity?

I have thought that in regards to improving the packaging of the Krishna culture artists could portray Him as less-feminine. After all he is male. That’s something I would like to throw out there for artists to consider. I get tired of people asking me,” is Krishna a she?”

Devamrtia Swami is to be commended for his very realistic approach to the public. He does not compromise the philosophy of Krishna but tells as is with carefully chosen words. His presentation is thoughtful. While in the city he is slotted to speak about mantra meditation, the relevance of spirituality to the environment and identity crisis.

I managed to catch the tail end of this evening’s presentation at the Multi-faith Centre at the UofT campus. People were in good spirits after hearing the Swami speak from a spiritual perspective.

In the afternoon I had lunch with him and then trekked back to the temple meditating on his slick presentation. As we sometimes say in our tradition, “Jai Maharaja…..Jai ho!”

7 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Sat, 11/14/2009 - 11:50
Swim, Don’t sink!

Toronto, Ontario

“We are swimmers,” said one of the students, a spokesperson for the group of young people who are also studying philosophy. A class of students came to visit our temple and ashram before checking in with the Daoists. They came for our philosophical perspective on things.

I had to ask myself what the two careers-swimming and philosophy have in common? Here’s what my tiny brain and training in Krishna Consciousness conjured up. It’s rather simple.

With philosophy you try to make sense of this life and once you decide it’s worth exploring every inch of it you try to swim and stay afloat. Someone even in the weakest of times, when swim strokes and dog paddling get trying, there exists an urge inside edging us on. I had an experience once when swimming across the Ganges at Rsikesh in India. The glacial frigidness of the water and strong current exhausted me when I was 2/3 rods across. I thought I was going to go and give myself to Mother Ganga. Physically I was gone but another side of me didn’t want to be gone. Something within me gave reason and need to forge ahead. Perhaps it was the workings of the brain combined with inspiration that kept me alive. After a great struggle I came to shore dragging myself out of danger while panting like crazy.

I came to the conclusion that it was the eternal nature of the soul that wants continuity. It does not want to cease to be.

Flash back over…..

To the students I explained the analogy of the precariousness of trying to swim after being dropped in the middle of the ocean which is compared to this world. You are quite helpless. The only chance of rescue is a boat that miraculously shows up with people who know how to steer that ship even in the most stormy conditions. A good captain is like the guru. The favourable breezes are like the good directions given by the Vedas, the great books of wisdom. And our human body which is prone to swim has all the mechanics for making devotion a way to play itself out even though we live in a very materialistic world.

With follow up questions by the students I thought we had a good session which was topped off with a great veggie prasadam meal.

The only person who was not a swimmer but was a devout walker was the student teacher. So we had lots to talk about afterwards.

6 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

The Shield of the Holy Name

Japa Group - Sat, 11/14/2009 - 07:21

I was reading Radha-Damodara Vilasa by Vaiyasaki Prabhu last night and came across this wonderful recollection of Vishnujana Maharaj that mother Manmohini shares:

"If you don't chant your sixteen rounds, it's like you've left the door open to your place. So when it's your turn for Maya to attack, when it's your turn to get bombarded by the modes of material nature, if you haven't closed your door properly, Maya will just walk right in and you'll be finished. And if you do chant your sixteen rounds, you have that protection, you have that shield. It's like you locked your door against Maya. So when it's your turn to get hit up by Maya, she'll say, ‘Forget this one; it's too much trouble,' and she'll move on to somebody weaker."

That made me chant all my rounds all these years. That lecture made me realize how important chanting sixteen rounds is. You have that shield that wards off Maya.
Categories: Personal Blogs
Syndicate content