Personal Blogs

Concentrate Fully On The Sound

Japa Group - Fri, 11/06/2009 - 18:13

Overcoming obstacles in our Japa can be a daily battle....our mind is not fully absorbed in the sound of the Hare Krsna mantra so we allow it to wander on to other thoughts. We can get distracted by sounds and sights around us - this is the nature of the material world and Mayadevi, her service is to test us to see if we have strong determination and also if we are willing to make an effort to move towards the Lord, if we pass the test then we make great advancement, if not we continue in our illusion.There a a few simple guidelines that Srila Prabhupada has revealed to us...firstly chanting early in the morning, concentration on the sound and pronouncing the words very clearly - there is a nice quote on this subject:
"Chanting japa should be done early in the morning with full concentration preferably during the Brahma Muhurta time. Concentrate fully on the sound vibration of the mantra, pronouncing each name distinctly and gradually your speed in chanting will increase naturally. Do not worry so much about chanting fast, most important is the hearing."
Letter from Srila Prabhupada 6/1/72
Categories: Personal Blogs

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Thu, 11/05/2009 - 21:58
North Of Montreal

Mount Tremblant, Quebec

Just prior to leaving North for this famous ski resort town I was handed a gift of natural honey harvested and delivered by Surya, a bee keeper from the Upper Laurentian Mountains. The contents of the jar, a golden gel, came from the second blooming period of the summer. Surya has marketed the stock and labeled it as Madhukar honey. The gift I won’t indulge in but only after being offered to the diety of Krishna.

On a small tag attached to the jar Albert Einstein is quoted saying, “ If bees disappears from the surface of the earth, man would have no more than four years to live. No more bees, no more pollination……no more man!” It’s a quote I’ve read before and it’s good to be reminded again of our urban infiltration upon the world. There is a need to respond.

Our visit was to a couple’s home in mountain and lake country. Maharja and Marie Jose are that warm kind of French Canadian hosts provided a great curry and also provided me with an opportunity to say a few words to invited friends about the human inclination towards spirituality. We also chanted together by the fire place. I know it sounds crazy but that’s what it was until the heat intensified a spark of interest in the outside and welcome the first flakes of snow for the fall. A stroll through town was terminated by time. I was to reach the downtown temple to speak from the Bhagavad-Gita.

And so the theme from the verse 9.9 highlighted the detached nature of God. The cosmic order operates under His control and is discharged, left for us to make good or a mess of the place. And don’t we really wish we could make good? It all begins with a little respect for the natural world and the remote controller.

7 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Thu, 11/05/2009 - 21:57
Tulasi and Temperature
Montreal, Quebec

Approximately a year ago the very sacred plant, Tulasi, suffered a major setback here. Being a tropical plant she is highly sensitive to frigid weather. The entire stock of dozens of this revered member of the basil family was destroyed when hydro was shut off for a relatively short time in the neighbourhood. It doesn’t take long to shock the delicate plant before it reaches it’s demise.

It was surprising for me to walk into the temple room which was adorned with dozens of healthy potted tulasis set on tables there to receive appreciation from all. This favourite plant of Krishna sat in all her glory with small richly intense green leaves and a fragrance that was so sweet. How did she spring back into life?

Apparently some reserve plants were kept elsewhere at a congregant’s home over the winter and in this way sufficient warm temperatures gave exposure to a whole new batch. That saved the day. No temple is complete unless a good nursery of some sort is accommodated to nurse and provide for he sacred Tulasi. Merely by protecting her you not only maintain a tradition but you receive the benefit of her auspicious presence (or what some people call, “good luck”). I guess it is also a way of demonstrating a contribution to the “Green” movement . Often times we say that one’s devotion is gauged by how well Tulasi grows in one’s domain. Here she is doing very well.

Temperatures outside the building are just above freezing. In the morning my commitment to fresh air and exercise work in conjunction with chanting on beads. A walk attracted others to join me for a stretch on St. Catherine St. they wondered how it’s possible for me to dress so lightly and walk in the chilled air. I explained that fortunately the years of trekking have allowed me to climatize well.

7 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

I Got Up Close To The Mahamantra

Japa Group - Thu, 11/05/2009 - 18:45

I got up close to the mahamantra despite the impairment. I accumulated my quota and was not sleepy. But I was distracted. I count the holy names in my favor and do not consider it an aparadha that I have pain. It is just something that comes with this material body. If it is up to me, I would chant better. I have the alternative of lying down in bed with the lights out, but I prefer to keep chanting quietly. I must keep it a priority and not abandon it completely. I have chanted nine rounds. I’m hoping the headache will go down, at least in time for my late-morning writing, because it seems to be a formidable one. There is some doubt.
From Bhajan Kutir #246
Categories: Personal Blogs

Turmeric in the News Again

Kurma Dasa - Live and Travel with Kurma - Thu, 11/05/2009 - 16:22

BBC News, Wednesday, 28 October 2009

Curry spice 'kills cancer cells'

An extract found in the bright yellow curry spice turmeric can kill off cancer cells, scientists have shown. The chemical - curcumin - has long been thought to have healing powers and is already being tested as a treatment for arthritis and even dementia.

Now tests by a team at the Cork Cancer Research Centre show it can destroy gullet cancer cells in the lab. More...

Categories: Personal Blogs

Subliminal Advertising

Kurma Dasa - Live and Travel with Kurma - Thu, 11/05/2009 - 16:05
Only seven shopping weeks to Christmas!


Why not gift your loved ones a Kurma cookbook or two! Or a 20-hour Kurma DVD cooking compendium.

I can autograph them for you, and post them anywhere in Australia.

Contact Kurma now: kurma.acbsp@pamho.net

Categories: Personal Blogs

Drama - Me and My Mind - Janmastami

Rupa Madhurya Das's blog - Dallas, TX - Thu, 11/05/2009 - 12:40

Drama "Me and My Mind" presented by the Plano Bhakti Vrksa Program devotees.  We had some audio problems so please excuse the crackling/distortion.

Dallas, TX
2009-08-13 

Categories: Personal Blogs

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Thu, 11/05/2009 - 09:36
To Montreal

Montreal, Quebec

If I had my way as to which mode of travel to take to Montreal, the choice being plane, train, bus, car, horse or legs, it would be the last one. The only diffculty is that at a round figure of 600 kilometers it would take me over two weeks to reach my destination.

I settled for automobile. At $35 you can car pool and save those extra dollars on a six hour drive. That is a significant saving which is always important when you consider that these funds belong to your guru. My use of funds is public money. It's not mine. As a swami/monk I must maintain the obligation to watch spending and to be frugal (at all costs).

I took a ride with Sam, a Pakistani man, sharing the van space with two young women. One of them was Rebecca, a yoga instructor and English teacher in Gaspe Penninsula, Quebec. It's a small world. She tells me she has been reading this blog and knows people I know. Of course, we are both situated in the yoga universe or to put it more simple, we are in the same circle of people.

Being in a moving vehicle is like taking a sleeping pill for me. Due to last night's late satsang, home program, I had to doze so communication with Rebecca was limited. She stopped off at Kingston, the midway mark. Then Sam, the driver to the car pool services and I spoke, a good chunk of which time we talked the logic of the proof of God's existence. Sam was adamant.

"It's not just nature or an accident that all this is here," gesturing with his hands that he momentarily released from the steering wheel. The fiery nature of our dialogue kept us both perked up until we reached downtown Montreal. "Thanks, Sam!"

Once arriving at the Krishna Temple on Pie-IX Boulevard and attending the Sunday Open House program I could see the glistening of a vibrant community. It's some special kind of grace when you see this, which is gauged by the width of the happy faces, a reflection of the Divine, no doubt.

5 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Thu, 11/05/2009 - 09:32
Saturday Transcended

Richmond Hill, Ontario

While walking Bloor St. with two companions, both from Quebec (Canada's french side), we met a bearded fellow who made an interesting comment on this Hallowe'en Day about our devotional attire.

"You would think that the Hare Krishnas would take at least one day of the year off especially Hallowe'en, but I can see that you guys dress up 365 days a year."

Regardless of the remark he said the magic words "Hare Krishna" - a four syllable expression of sound which is highly beneficial for anyone who hears.

Every last Saturday of the month the youth of Toronto organize themselves under the mentorship of Vaisesika, a strong advocate of distribution of books from Bhaktivedanta Book Trust. At the corner of Bloor and Spadina the chanting of this pure sound of "Krishna" was being executed by the group while some of the youth set up a table of the aforementioned books on bhakti yoga.

Another feature of their monthly arrangement was the distribution of packaged cookies, nuts and suckers. The response from the public was great.

I spent a few minutes there with the group chanting and encouraging them in their various efforts to reach out to a public that is largely devoid of spiritual experience. From this location I moved on to a second group stationed at Baldwin St. by Kensington Market where a rather eclectic public is quite receptive.

A point here to consider is that in the capitalist so-called developed world spirituality has been basically shunned by the fundamental nature of our "greed culture". They were transcending.

In the evening my godbrother from Austin Texas spoke about transcending. Sankarshan came to enlighten people at a home in Richmond Hill. The message for the evening was clear - through chanting we transcend.

6 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Bhaktimarga Swami, The Walking Monk - Thu, 11/05/2009 - 09:28
A Great Friday Night

Toronto, Ontario

After a lenghty practice at our new drama production, "Lonely People", I took a breather catching the good air and the wind. Passing by homes in front I reflected on the verse from the Gita "...of purifiers I am the wind." It was past the mid-night mark but that doesn't stop nocturnal life in the city. Then the day affairs and communications came to mind. I was informed by one of our Temple actresses, Karen (spiritual name Kalpa Vriksha), that one of our temple actors, Ellesh Parunjanwala, had hit the big times. Ellesh, star of the top rating reality TV show in Mumbai, Rakhi Ka Svayamvar, came to me last November en route to the airport for India. "Maharaj, I came for your blessings," he said. "It's a TV/movie project I'm going for. It's real exciting." From that point on he shot up stardom overnight. The ratings for the TV show bypassed the popular "Ramayana" and "Mahabharat" TV series of the 90's and even tapped the cricket game between India and Pakistan.

I felt a little proud of our boy who grew up with our community and then in his youth partook in numnerous devotional plays with my direction. He has become the most popular TV celeb and I guess that's God's mercy. I have little concern about him being caught up and consumed by star stigma. He's always been a boy of integrity and morality. Anyways I'm happy for him and will pray that he will not lose his sense of dharma duty.

Most amazing about this evening's brief stroll is when walking past an indoor/outdoor bar which was ultra boisterous (mainly laughter). Silence struck as the drinkers saw my robes. Several of the chaps with beer in hand gave a nod of respect.

But to top that when the garbage truck came up one block up from the bar to a large oriental shop, one of the trash collectors in orange uniform caught glimpse of me while wheeling a bin to the truck, dropped his garbage and held hands together in pranams. He closed his eyes in reverence and stood still for a few seconds and then proceeded with his work as I did mine - walking.

To the public I am a NO NAME brand of monk. I am certainly not Ellesh. But you can say that respect goes to the tradition that I'm representing and that is very gratifying.

6 Km
Categories: Personal Blogs

Fully Give Yourself

Japa Group - Wed, 11/04/2009 - 18:06

Hare Krsna dear devotees. Nice being with you again and I hope your week has been blessed by the Lord. Today I bring to you more nectar from H.H. Sacinandana Swami - he is always so precise in his replies to devotees doubts that you can't miss this one about chanting. I hope this causes the same or even a better effect on your chanting than it has caused on mine. Maybe we haven't achieved the mood of Srila Haridas Thakur for chanting, but we need to have it as a goal.Here follows the quotes:

Question: What does it mean to fully give yourself to the Holy Name while chanting japa?

Answer: Srila Jiva Gosvami explains that there are two ways of chanting. First kevala, or just chanting, and sama sneha, or chanting with affection. When you chant with affection for Krishna, then while you chant you start giving your heart to the Holy Name (Krishna). Of course, there are varying degrees of doing so. Begin at your level and sometimes have the Haridas Thakura level in mind as a motivating example.
You can use the wonderful prayers from the Sanata Kumara Samhita to do this.
Padya-pancaka

samsara-sagaranatha putra-mitra-grhakulat
goptarau me yuvam eva prapanna-bhaya-bhanjanau

O Sri Sri Radha-Krishna, please rescue me from the ocean of births and deaths. Please rescue me from the troubles born from children, friends, and home. Please break into pieces the fears of Your surrendered devotee.

yo ‘ham mamasti yat kincid iha loke paratra ca
tat sravam bhavator adya caranesu mayarpitam

O Sri Sri Radha-Krishna, today I place myself and everything I possess both in this life and in the next at Your feet.

aham apy aparadhanam alayas tyakta-sadhanah
agatis ca tato n€thau bhavantau me bhavet gatih

I am so home of all offenses. I have abandoned all spiritual duties. I have no shelter. O Sri Sri Radha-Krishna, O my Lords, please become my shelter.

tavasti radhika-natha karmana manasa gira
krsna-kante tavaivasmi yuvam eva gatir mama

O master of Radha, I am Yours. O beloved of Lord Krishna, I am yours. I offer to both of You my thoughts, words, and deeds. You two are the goal of my life.

saranam vam prapanno ’smi karuna-nikarakarau
prasadam kurutam dasyam mayi duste ‘paradhini

O Sri Sri Radha-Krishna, You are like two great oceans of mercy. Please be merciful to me. I take shelter of You. I surrender to You. Please engage me, a sinner and an offender, in Your service.
Simply amazing! I hope you like it and may use it in your daily chanting. The mood of prayer has a great power in our lives and gives us the feeling of surrender and dependance on the Lord.

May your devotional path become even more powerful and focused on your aim to come back to Godhead.

your servant

Aruna devi
Categories: Personal Blogs

Let Them Eat Chapatis

Kurma Dasa - Live and Travel with Kurma - Wed, 11/04/2009 - 14:42

This photo has been floating around my desktop for a few weeks now. It was taken at a private cooking class in Melbourne a few weeks ago. I'm showing the host's husband how to form balls of chapati dough in preparation for rolling them into flatbreads.

If you'd like to invite your friends to a cooking class at your home, read this.

Categories: Personal Blogs

Bhajan - Geethika - Telegu Bhajan - Janmastami

Rupa Madhurya Das's blog - Dallas, TX - Wed, 11/04/2009 - 12:16

Geethika performing a Telegu bhajan at the Dallas Janmastami festival.

Dallas, TX
2009-08-13 

Categories: Personal Blogs

Flesh of Your Flesh - Should you eat meat?

Kurma Dasa - Live and Travel with Kurma - Tue, 11/03/2009 - 23:38

Flesh of Your Flesh - Should you eat meat?

by Elizabeth Kolbert for The New Yorker, November 3, 2009

"Americans love animals. Forty-six million families in the United States own at least one dog, and thirty-eight million keep cats. Thirteen million maintain freshwater aquariums in which swim a total of more than a hundred and seventy million fish.

Collectively, these creatures cost Americans some forty billion dollars annually. (Seventeen billion goes to food and another twelve billion to veterinary bills.) Despite the recession, pet-related expenditures this year are expected to increase five per cent over 2008, in part owing to outlays on luxury items like avian manicures and canine bath spritz.

“We have so many customers who say they’d eat macaroni and cheese before they’d cut back on their dogs,” a Colorado pet-store owner recently told the Denver Post. In a survey released this past August, more than half of all dog, cat, and bird owners reported having bought presents for their animals during the previous twelve months, often for no special occasion, just out of love. (Fish enthusiasts may bring home fewer gifts, but they spend more on each one, with the average fish gift coming to thirty-seven dollars.)

A majority of owners report that one of the reasons they enjoy keeping pets is that they consider them part of the family.

Americans also love to eat animals. This year, they will cook roughly twenty-seven billion pounds of beef, sliced from some thirty-five million cows.

Additionally, they will consume roughly twenty-three billion pounds of pork, or the bodies of more than a hundred and fifteen million pigs, and thirty-eight billion pounds of poultry, some nine billion birds. Most of these creatures have been raised under conditions that are, as Americans know—or, at least, by this point have no excuse not to know — barbaric."

...read the entire very confronting 4 page article

Categories: Personal Blogs

Please Join the Japa Group

Japa Group - Tue, 11/03/2009 - 22:15
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

Richard Dawkins on Hardtalk

Gauranga Kishore Dasa's Blog - Tue, 11/03/2009 - 14:35
I was feeling kinda blah this morning but these cheered me right up :)
It was nice to see someone really calling him out on his bigotry and irrational faith in science and hatred of religion, and the untenability of a lot of his positions and statements. Whenever I watch Dawkins I am amazed at how shallow his philosophical and existential views are.

Categories: Personal Blogs

Bhajan - Radhika - Bhaja Hure Mana - Janmastami

Rupa Madhurya Das's blog - Dallas, TX - Tue, 11/03/2009 - 10:22

Radhika performing the bhajan "Bhaja Hure Mana" at the Dallas Janmastami festival.

Dallas, TX
2009-08-13

Categories: Personal Blogs

Cup Runneth Over

Kurma Dasa - Live and Travel with Kurma - Mon, 11/02/2009 - 22:42

Wow! It's almost a week since I last blogged! How time flies when you're having fun.

Today in this big dry land downunder there's a full moon in the sky. It's the last day of the Holy Vedic Month of Kartik, and it's also the day when half of Australia goes completely mad with gambling and drunken reverie - Melbourne Cup Day.

My Dad has gone out to join his friends in the excitement of sitting in front of a TV in a sweaty dark room watching horses run around a field, while on the track, intoxicated socialite ladies try to poke out each others' eyes with fashion stilettos and bash each other with champagne-soaked Armani handbags; and here I am, all alone, catching up on my blog, sweet incence wafting, delightful music filling the airwaves... It's a scorching hot day, so I know where I'd rather be.

The classes are racing by. Last Thursday I spent an enjoyable night demonstrating Vegetarian World Tapas at Foodstuff in Mona Vale, an upmarket gourmet food store in the upmarket Northern Beaches suburb of Mona Vale. Always a blast.

My weekend was spent in Wauchope, at a cookery retreat in the countryside of New South Wales. The still life platter above is part of my mis-en-place for the Turkish Rice Pilaff.

The complete menu: Kurma's Spice Trail, including BBQ Asparagus served with Balsamic-infused Semi-dried Tomato & Macadamia Pesto & Shaved Grana Padano, Turkish Rice Pilaf with Thyme, Currants & Pine Nuts, Crisp & Spicy Delhi-style Eggplant, Cauliflower & Potato Fritters (Pakoras) served with Fresh Lime Wedges, Classic Fresh Panir Cheese with Spinach & Cream (Palak Panir), Tender Hot Buttered Wholewheat Flatbreads (Chapatis), Orange-infused Hot & Sweet Apple Chutney, and Pakistani-style Cardamom & Rose-scented Creamy Vermicelli Dessert (Kheer Sevian).

In a moment of sheer brilliance, I decided to try adding icy cold soda water to my dry pakora batter mix. The result was sensational! Here's our grand Pakora Platter, featuring eggplant, sweet potato, potato, red pepper and cauliflower pieces battered to perfection.

The milk for my panir cheese-making was delivered fresh from a nearby cowshed still warm from milking. Big slabs of tender cheese were pan fried and slathered in our spice-scented creamed spinach for the best country-style Palak Panir I have ever made.

Okay, I know you're wondering who that dog is above, and what she's doing. That's Tilley the sheepdog, a resident of our Wauchope event. I always tell my students how fresh whey (the residue from panir cheese-making) is adored by animals like cats and dogs. To demonstrate, I filled up Tilley's bowl with warm whey and she slurped it all up in about ten seconds, licking the bowl and licking the ground where a little bit was splashed.

And that's it for me this afternoon. It's 18 minutes to "Cup" time. All of Australia will fall silent as the horses thunder around the track, and then the two mile (3200 metre) equine scamper will be over for another year.

Categories: Personal Blogs

Japa Poem

Japa Group - Mon, 11/02/2009 - 18:29

Trusting that Krishna will accept my
effort, I chant attentively in my mind.
I pray within and dutifully count
the quota. It’s close between us, me
and the mantras, a lifelong bond
continued in illness. I tell myself
the ardor isn’t dwindling, it’s just
the outer performance. My heart is still
with Him as good as in my vigorous
youth. I chant alone and like it that way
because I don’t like to expose
my weakness to others. Alone with Him,
I privately offer my best and trust
that Krishna will accept my effort.

From Bhajan Kutir #243
Categories: Personal Blogs

Travel Journal#5.18: Ukraine and Paris

Krishna Kripa Prabhu's Blog - Mon, 11/02/2009 - 15:12

Diary of a Traveling Sadhaka, Vol. 5, No. 18
By Krishna-kripa das
(September 2009, part two)
Ukraine and Paris
(Sent from London on November 2, 2009)

Highlights

Wisdom from Dhirasanta Prabhu
Harinama in Kharkov
A Day in Dnepropotrovsk
A Day in Lviv
Warning for Travelers to South Africa
 Unexpected Paris Visit

Where I Am and What I Am Doing

After the Ukraine festival, Dhruva Prabhu and I visited Kharkov, Dnepropotrovsk, and Lviv, in Ukraine, and stopped to see Adam in Katowice, Poland, enroute to Berlin, where Dhruva would return to America, and I would then go to South Africa. I was happy we could do harinamas in Kharkov and Lviv, and a house program in Lviv as well. By the mercy of Air France, I ended up staying in Paris for four days, enroute to South Africa.

Wisdom from Dhirasanta Prabhu

The process of Krishna consciousness is easy, but we come into Krishna consciousness with all our conditioning, our various designations, and imagining a variety of things about our identity. From Krishna’s point of view, we are either a devotee or a nondevotee. It looks like a there is a lot of similarity between the devotee and the nondevotee. We eat, they eat, we drink, they drink, we drive cars, they drive cars, but actually there is a world of difference between them.

The swan is a symbol of renunciation because it does not have a home but spends some time in one part of the lake and then later in another part of the lake. Also the swan is always cleaning itself and is very peaceful. It is very white. The crow is just the opposite. It is black and always making noise. It is very much attached to its abominable place. We have decided to give up the crow-like mentality and adopt the swanlike mentality.

We read the Vedas but only accept the cream, the Bhagavad-gita and Srimad-Bhagavatam.

[Dhirasanta Prabhu has a novel program of bringing toys with him when he gives the Sunday feast lecture to keep the children engaged so they do not cause disturbance, as well as bringing props to illustrate different points.]

To illustrate the covered nature of the conditioned soul, he asked for a volunteer from the audience, who he dressed in a black poncho, handcuffs, a ball and chain, extra long nose, a golden wig [symbolizing false ego], glasses with eyeballs that spring out of them, a rope attached to the tongue, extra big ears, and a few others. At the end, as everyone chanted Hare Krishna, a young girl removed all the coverings, one by one.

Nondevotees talk about the past, which they glorify, and the future, which they hope will be better. But they do not talk about the present because nothing special is going on.

It takes a long time to break free from our conditioning. Even while chanting Hare Krishna, we are half a devotee and half a nondevotee.

Srila Prabhupada says that the first twelve years in Krishna consciousness, what we say and do does not have much effect, because we do not have much faith. Our philosophy is a little for Krishna, a little for me.

There is a secret for dealing with the mind. This is what you should do. Say to your mind, "Mind, come here. Sit down. I am going to practice Krishna consciousness for the next thirty years, and I do not care what you think. You have done nothing for me. I have just followed you around. Now I am doing something for me. Now get lost. Go away." After thirty years, call your mind back. And ask your mind, "How do you feel?" "I feel so peaceful. Remember how crazy I was. Now I even sometimes think of going back to Vrindavana and Mayapur. Sixteen rounds ki, jaya. Mangala arati ki, jaya!"

Because the Srimad-Bhagavatam deals with past history, devotees have difficulty placing their faith in it, and nondevotees have an even more difficult time.

Situations like this make us ask if I really want to be a devotee, not just once, but regularly every day. Do you have enough faith that if I become a devotee of Krishna that I will attain everything I need to be happy in this life? Actually it takes many years to develop our faith to this point.

Even if our faith is not mature but is only blind faith, still by acting with blind faith in Krishna consciousness, we will progress. We will get some get some realization by doing the right thing.

Because our friends, our relatives, and our own mind are always offering reasons with we should go back to our previous lifestyle, it is difficult to practice long enough to acquire mature faith.

We should acquire faith gradually, not too fast and not too slow. If we try to fast, we may burn out and retreat from the path. If we are too slow, we may not attain success in this life.

In 1973 a boy joined in Scotland who had problems with his mind to a much greater extent than others. When the devotees were returning from a festival, the driver fell asleep, and that one boy was killed in the accident but the other devotees were unharmed. He had received initiation one week before, and when we wrote Srila Prabhupada about the incident, rather than chastising us for driving at night or driving carelessly, he said that the boy would take a better body in the next life. There is one lady in the British yatra who is convinced she is the incarnation of that boy. She is very enthusiastic to go out on harinama and play the drum. She went to the house of the boy’s mother and could explain about every room in it and identify the boy’s own room. The timing of her birth and the death of the boy is consistent with the idea.

We get knowledge and we give knowledge, and the reward is that we get more realization of the knowledge, and then we have more conviction to continue this process and realize more and more.

There are devotees who think they do not have to come to the temple, do not have to come to class, do not have take maha-prasadam, etc. They are sitting in their homes and chanting Hare Krishna, but they are like birds that are gliding. They are going slower and slower. We do need these different devotional practices and devotional association to maintain our forward momentum.

Q: If I am ignorant, how do I know where I can get enlightment?
A: Krishna is the Supersoul. If we are sincere, Krishna will make sure the right person gives us instruction.

Harinama in Kharkov

I go to Kharkov every year. I can count on the devotees to have harinama every day I am there, and I am never disappointed. The day I got there, we chanted for three and a quarter hours at a park with a natural spring where people are steadily coming to bathe and fill up their water jugs. There are more crowded places, but the people who come there are more interested in self-improvement and less rushed. Different people were attracted, children, people who came to bathe, etc. I chanted at one point, and one young lady, who had come by the temple Sunday program before, danced with great pleasure. I later talked to her. She said her philosophy was "God is everywhere." I encouraged her to come to our programs. She obviously liked to dance, and I told her we dance every morning and evening for half an hour or an hour. "In the ancient Vedic writings it is described in the spiritual world every word is a song and every step is a dance, and we are practicing to go there. At least once a week, you should come and dance with us." One solid middle-aged man, who watched for quite a while and talked with a devotee, gave an apple as a donation before he left. One lady who was bathing and had come to the nama-hatta programs talked with one of the devotee ladies for over an hour. Just by coming out we had different positive interactions with the public.

One unique feature of Kharkov is that in addition to rolling out some carpet for the devotee musicians to sit on, the devotees also roll out some carpet for the passersby to sit down and hear the kirtana. Actually that makes a lot of sense, Lord Caitanya recommends that His holy name chanters be humble like the straw in the street, and a simple expression of humility is giving others a place to sit, in addition to oneself. The next day, on the Saturday harinama at a downtown park, at once point, I counted thirty people sitting down listening to our kirtana, many on the carpet the devotees had rolled out. At the same time another thirty stood and listened. About twenty-five devotees attended, and half the devotees danced. Once we even had nine devotee men dance at a point when there were only four women. It is rare the male dancers outnumber the females. Usually we had about six of each, the men on one side of the singers and instrumentalists, and the women on the other side. They have one really good singer and a good mrdanga player who form the core of party. In addition to the Friday and Saturday evening harinamas, they do several weekdays on the sidewalk before the university.

A Day in Dnepropotrovsk

In Kharkov we learned that one of the more prominent temples in Ukraine, the one at Dnepropotrovsk was just three hours away. Dhruva Prabhu, who was traveling with me, had a strong desire to go there. I was doubtful I could convince them to do a harinama there, while I was sure we would do harinama in Kharkov, so I was not so eager to go, but I agreed to go away. Both Dhruva and I knew many people from the Polish Festival tour who are based there, and it was nice to see them. Dhirasanta Prabhu, who was a presenter at the Ukraine festival, gave some nice classes while we were there. During my visit, I developed a desire to go to the Dnepropotrovsk Ratha-yatra next year which occurs a week before the Ukraine festival. Then after the Ratha-yatra I could go to Kharkov and do harinama for a few days before the festival. Sounds like a plan!

A Day in Lviv

Although I crossed the Polish/Ukrainian border about seven times near the Ukrainian city, Lviv (Lvov in Russian and English), I never interacted with the Hare Krishna devotees there. This year, my friend Maksim, a Lviv resident, who was once Dhanesvara Prabhu’s translator for quite awhile, invited me to do a home program there, on my way back to Poland. The Ukrainian devotees have a very good service attitude toward guests. Vijaya Prabhu, who did driving for us, even drove us an hour and a half to the Ukraine border as we were leaving.

In the afternoon about seven devotees did harinama for an hour and a half or so in a park near a university. It was a nice location with a good amount of people. One older devotee lady enthusiastically distributed prasadam the whole time. One Greek Orthodox priest who taught religion in a military academy saw us and invited the devotees to speak about their religion
in his class at a future date.

After harinama we had some kirtana in the very large temple room of one devotee in Lviv. One new disciple of Niranjana Swami, who had cancer and couldn’t come to the Ukraine festival, needed someone to give her the beads he chanted on, and accept her vows, on behalf of her guru. I did a lecture on the importance of initiation, avoiding the ten offenses (which I explained), and remembering Krishna at the end of life. Maksim translated. In the talk, I mentioned I had great faith in Niranjana Swami, as he prayed to Krishna that I might stay in the New York temple thirty years ago when I first visited and thus I had ended up doing so. Maybe ten or twelve devotees were there. We then had Gaura arati, a half-hour Gita class, and light prasadam. It was a happy occasion.

I never had programs with the Lviv devotees before, but it was such a nice experience from now on I plan to do it whenever I come through.

Warning for Travelers to South Africa

As I prepared to board my flight from Paris to Johannesburg, the staff of Air France refused to allow me on the plane, as I did not have an entire blank page in my passport for my South African visa, a regulation I had not encountered ever before. They claimed that South African immigration agents would send me back to France, and the airline did not want to risk that. I suggested agents might put the South African visa on the inside back cover of the passport or on some of the inside pages that had nonessential writing on it, but they did not want to risk it. Thus at 11:30 p.m., I was stuck in De Gaulle International Airport near Paris, and I missed the Soweto Ratha-yatra, one of my main reasons for going to South Africa. I used the Internet to find the location of our new temple in France which had opened since my May visit there, and I slept behind a counter for a couple of hours, as the trains to Paris did not run till morning. As it was Friday night flight, I had to wait until Monday to get twenty-four complimentary additional visa pages added to my passport at the American Embassy in Paris. When I returned to the airport Monday afternoon, the ticket agent said because I did not use the Friday evening flight, my unchangeable ticket was thus altered and therefore invalid and I would have to buy I new one. That day and the following day, I asked four ticket agents and two supervisors at two ticket offices to adjust my ticket, and finally one supervisor who could identify with my plight amended my ticket for later that day. I gave a maha-prasadam sandesa to her and a mantra card to her employee. It was really Krishna’s mercy as I had already given up hope of getting the flight and was just stopping by the lost and found to look for the notepad I left in the airport the previous day when I noticed the second ticket office and ultimately met with success. And so I warn you from my personal experience. Do not try to go to South Africa without an entire blank visa page in your passport, or you may find yourself in a similar jam.

Unexpected Paris Visit


New Paris Hare Krishna Temple

Although I had not planned to visit Paris, because I know the devotees there, and some of them like to do harinama, it worked out OK. Gadadhara Priya Prabhu, the main harinama leader, was experimenting with chanting on the metros in Brussels and did not return for two or three days. Somehow or other I was able to gather a seven-person party, with devotees from India, Mexico, and Italy, as well as France, and we chanted at a local park before the Sunday feast. There was playground in the park, and the kids were fascinated to see our party. The two devotees ladies danced with three of the kids for a while. The community surrounding the temple is more culturally mixed and the devotees are not viewed with as much suspicion as at their previous location. The final day, just before leaving for the airport, since Gadadhara Priya had returned we could do harinama on the metros (metroyoga) as we usually do in Paris, and it was nice as always. Omkaranatha Prabhu, visiting from Czech Republic, kindly took some pictures.


Gadadhara Priya Prabhu on harmonium, Krishna-kripa das on karatalas, and Bhakta Raul on mridanga drum chant on train from temple to downtown Paris.


Gadadhara Priya Prabhu on harmonium, Krishna-kripa das on mridanga drum, Bhakta Raul on karatalas, and Bhaktin Sara of Italy, who distributes prasadam, flyers, and books, chant in the streets of downtown Paris.

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patrapatra-vicara nahi, nahi sthanasthana
yei yanha paya, tanha kare prema-dana

In distributing love of Godhead, Caitanya Mahaprabhu and His associates did not consider who was a fit candidate and who was not, nor where such distribution should or should not take place. They made no conditions. Wherever they got the opportunity, the members of the Pañca-tattva distributed love of Godhead (Sri Caitanya-caritamrita, Adi-lila 7.23).


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