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Although Srila Prabhupada is no longer physically with us, on the spiritual platform he is very much present. He is present in his deity form, in his books and through his instructions. His mercy is available to all those who seek it.
Srila Prabhupada departed from this world on November 14, 1977 in Vrindavan, India. One would not usually celebrate the disappearance day of a person, especially one so loved and revered as Srila Prabhupada. However, the departure of a pure Vaishnava gives cause for jubilation because he returns to his eternal service at Krishna's lotus feet in Goloka Vrindavan, the spiritual world.
As Srila Prabhupada explains, the appearance and disappearance of the Lord and his pure representatives from this world is a cause for celebration. While there is no need to lament the disappearance of the Lord's pure nitya-siddha representative, at the same time the devotees feel great pangs of separation due to the manifest physical absence of His Divine Grace.
Join us on this auspicious occasion of the disappearance of our Founder Acarya.
 Bhagavad Gita As It Is (18.66)
sarva-dharman parityajya
mam ekam saranam vraja
aham tvam sarva-papebhyo
moksayisyami ma sucah 

Translation
Abandon all varieties of religion and just surrender unto Me. I shall deliver you from all sinful reaction. Do not fear.

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RECEIVING THE BLESSING

Each morning in ISKCON temples we pay homage to our Founder-Ācārya Śrīla Prabhupāda by singing Śrī Guru-vandanā together while offering him guru-pūjā.

Śrī Guru-vandanā is a Bengali song composed by Śrīla Narottama dāsa Ṭhākura. In the hymn’s second stanza, that great ācārya directs our attention to the words or speech (vākya) issuing from the guru’s lotus-like mouth (guru-mukha-padma).Śrīla Narottama dāsa Ṭhākura

says we should make those words one (aikya) with our hearts and minds (citta). And, he goes on to say, we should allow no other desire or longing (āśā) to reside there.

In the next stanza, Śrīla Narottama dāsa Ṭhākura spells out some consequences of our thus assimilating the words of the spiritual master. Those potent words then confer upon us the gift of spiritual sight (cakhu-dān). Thereupon transcendent knowledge (divya-jñān) illuminates our hearts, and this knowledge obliterates all avidyā and bestows prema-bhakti. 

Śrīla Prabhupāda took especial pains to bestow his vākya through the medium of written English and to publish those writings in book form. Prior to embarking from India in 1965 on his solo expedition to the West, Śrīla Prabhupāda, working virtually alone, had composed and published, in three hardback volumes, his English-language translation and commentary on the First Canto of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam. He brought boxes of these books with him aboard the Jaladuta, and they accompanied him on the voyage of over 9,000 nautical miles from Calcutta to New York. There he began to gather, organize, and deploy the necessary and spiritual resources—material, human, and spiritual— for their eventual distribution and reception worldwide.

In this way, his guru-vākya itself gave proof to its empowerment to spread over space and time.

In the pages of the very first of these volumes we find one place that Śrīla Prabhupāda most brilliantly elucidates for us the full process of the transmission of that divya-jñān which Śrīla Narottama dāsa Ṭhākura referred to in his song. In Śrīla Prabhupāda’s presentation of the final verse of the third chapter of Canto One, he spells out the conditions necessary for the transmission to take place—namely, the qualifications required in the speaker and in the hearer.

Since our very reading of this particular text and purport is, in itself, an occasion of such transmission, the text is implicitly self-referential, and all the more powerful for that. Still, if the reader is not paying close attention, he or she may be insufficiently present to receive the full benefit.

The speaker of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam 1.3.44 is Sūta Gosvāmī, and it is uttered at the second public recital of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam. The hearers on this occasion are the sages gathered at Naimiṣāraṇya forest. The time is the onset of Kali-yuga. They knew that Sūta Gosvāmī had been present at the very first narration of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, which Śukadeva had delivered to the emperor Parīkṣit and others auditors. Now the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya wanted to hear that same narration from Sūta.

Here is Śrīla Prabhupāda’s English rendering of what Sūta had replied to their request:

O learned brāhmaṇas, when Śukadeva Gosvāmī recited Bhāgavatam there (in the presence of Emperor Parīkṣit), I heard him with rapt attention, and thus, by his mercy, I learned the Bhāgavatam from that great and powerful sage. Now I shall try to make you hear the very same thing as I learned it from him and as I have realized it.

Śrīla Prabhupāda opens his commentary on this verse with a sentence that is remarkably terse, highly provocative, and profoundly illuminating:

One can certainly see directly the presence of Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa in the pages of Bhāgavatam if one has heard it from a self-realized great soul like Śukadeva Gosvāmī.

In a similar way, Kṛṣṇa is directly present in His pictures, or His statues, or in the descriptions or narratives about Him. When it comes to Absolute Truth, the signifier and the signified are one. Accordingly, our reception of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam is completed or fully accomplished when we see Kṛṣṇa directly “in the pages.” The mediation of words, of symbols and signs, dissolves.

Now go back and look at the purport’s first sentence, quoted above. You should notice how Śrīla Prabhupāda has pulled off something that is simultaneously bold and almost subliminal. Like a magician, he has artfully transferred the mode of mediation from the spoken to the printed word. Long ago, Sūta’s audience had been hearing Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam; Śrīla Prabhupāda’s audience now is reading it. In this way, our own immediate reading of Prabhupāda’s presentation of Bhāgavatam is made contiguous and congruent with the hearing of it by Śaunaka from Sūta and by Sūta’s from Śuka.

Thus in one sentence, the paramparā idea of an unbroken lineage of sages, both illuminated and illuminating, is invoked implicitly—thereby linking Śrīla Prabhupāda and his audience together with Sūta and his own. This is melded into the explicit proclamation that successful reception of Bhāgavatam bestows direct perception of Kṛṣṇa.

Here, Śrīla Prabhupāda proclaims what Sūta Gosvāmī meant by his reference to his presenting Bhāgavatam “as I have realized it” (yathā-mati); “realization” means seeing “directly the presence of Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa in the pages of Bhāgavatam.”

As Śrīla Prabhupāda has repeatedly stressed: Because Kṛṣṇa is absolute, without duality, He is therefore fully present in His name. We find this impressively spelled out in a text from the Padma Purāṇa, quoted in Cc. Madhya 17.133:

nāma cintāmaṇiḥ kṛṣṇaś caitanya-rasa-vigrahaḥ
pūrṇaḥ śuddho nitya-mukto   ’bhinnatvān nāma-nāminoḥ

Here it is stated that the name “Kṛṣṇa,” in and of itself, is like a transcendent cintāmaṇi, the celestial gem that fulfills all wishes. The name “Kṛṣṇa” is the very embodiment (vigraha) of all spiritual ecstasies (caitanya-rasa). The name “Kṛṣṇa” is perfect and complete (pūrṇa), free of all contamination (śuddha), and fixed perpetually in transcendence (nitya-mukta).

The final line of the text replies to the readers’ obvious question: “But how can a mere name possess such extraordinary properties?” The answer: Because of the presence of the spiritual condition of non-difference (abhinnatva) between the name (nāma) and the named (nāmin).

In the rest of his purport, Śrīla Prabhupāda goes on to elucidate the conditions necessary for successful transmission—whether a single instance or a sequence—to occur: the speaker and the hearer must each be properly qualified or, as he puts it, “bona fide.”

He deals first with the speaker:

One cannot, however, learn Bhāgavatam from a bogus hired reciter whose aim of life is to earn some money out of such recitation and employ the earning in sex indulgence.

A speaker whose abilities are only those of a dazzling stage actor or performer, and nothing more—“a bogus hired reciter”—is not qualified, no matter how skillfully the audience has become enraptured. That kind of talent is a counterfeit qualification.

The appearance of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam in this way is spurious, a fake, because the motives and aims of such popular entertainers are impure: they narrate kṛṣṇa-līlā only to “earn some money out of such recitation and employ the earning in sex indulgence.”

With this, Śrīla Prabhupāda interjects a stipulation he will return to and develop:

No one can learn Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam who is associated with persons engaged in sex life. That is the secret of learning Bhāgavatam.

There is a requirement of purity for transmission of the knowledge contained in Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, and this requirement constitutes a “secret,” that is, a necessary condition that not everyone will be willing or able to recognize, comply with, or appreciate.

At this point, Śrīla Prabhupāda alerts his readers to another class of unqualified persons who sometimes indulge in writing or speaking about Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam:

Nor can one learn Bhāgavatam from one who interprets the text by his mundane scholarship.

Persons whose proficiencies are only those of a “mundane”—that is, merely academic—scholar may naturally impress us. Yet even though such scholars may have read deeply and skillfully with great attention and retention in many languages, their qualifications to grasp Bhāgavatam remain inadequate. Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam remains a closed book to them as well.

In both cases—the entertainer and the intellectual—the conditions for the manifestation of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam are not fulfilled. It eludes them, still a “secret” veiled from them both.

What is this “secret?” How can we gain access? What does it disclose? The answers proceed:

One has to learn Bhāgavatam from the representative of Śukadeva Gosvāmī, and no one else, if one at all wants to see the presence of Śrī Kṛṣṇa directly in the pages. That is the process, and there is no alternative.

Here, we discover that the “secret” has two aspects: one concerns the form of transmission—the qualified speakers and hearers; the other, the content of transmission: not just the words or signifiers, but that which is named or signified.

We may recollect now that this hidden, esoteric feature of Bhāgavatam had in fact already been announced by Śrīla Prabhupāda in the very first sentence of his purport: to hear from a self-realized great soul, and to see Lord Kṛṣṇa directly in the pages of Bhāgavatam. The bold, prominent placement of this proclamation in the purport is significant: although there is a secret, Śrīla Prabhupāda is disclosing it as an open secret. In the passage here, he is stressing this salient point by repetition.

We have been informed that this secret will remain sealed if we hear Bhāgavatam from the skillful entertainer or academic. Now here we are given the positive injunction: we have to receive Bhāgavatam exclusively from “the representative of Śukadeva Gosvāmī.” Only under this condition will Bhāgavatam actually take place. “That is the process, and there is no alternative.”

Now Śrīla Prabhupāda elaborates on “the process:”

Sūta Gosvāmī is a bona fide representative of Śukadeva Gosvāmī because he wants to present the message which he received from the great learned brāhmaṇa. Śukadeva Gosvāmī presented Bhāgavatam as he heard it from his great father, and so also Sūta Gosvāmī is presenting Bhāgavatam as he had heard it from Śukadeva Gosvāmī.

Here the idea of paramparā—implicit (as we’ve already noted) in the first sentence of this purport—receives explicit elaboration with this recounting of the exemplary, valid transmission of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam from Vyāsadeva to Śukadeva to Sūta, in which each successor is able to deliver the texts “as he had heard it.” This idea is stressed here by repetition, and, by means of both form and content, the passage evokes the idea of consummate fidelity in reception and transmission. To “represent” is to faithfully re-present, present over again.

The remainder of the purport will be dedicated to explicating such flawless hearing— or, in our case, reading—and the method for attaining it. Thus:

Simple hearing is not all; one must realize the text with proper attention.

Not only do we have to hear from the right person, but we also must hear in the right way. A special kind of hearing is required in order for us to “realize the text,” that is, to hear in the same way that Sūta has heard it. That requirement for hearing, Prabhupāda says, is an especially heightened, concentrated attention.

Śrīla Prabhupāda elucidates this kind of attention by referring to the word niviṣṭas in the text, translated in the word-for-word-breakdown as “being perfectly attentive” and in the running translation as “rapt attention.” These renderings are in line with the word’s literal sense of being profoundly intent upon something or deeply absorbed in it. However, in the purport Śrīla Prabhupāda comments:

The word niviṣṭa means that Sūta Gosvāmī drank the juice of Bhāgavatam through his ears.

Here, Śrīla Prabhupāda specifically explicates this condition of eager attention by using a metaphor that likens the optimal hearing of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam with the avid, thirsty drinking of a deliciously sweet and refreshing nectar or juice.

The Sanskrit word for juice is rasa, and Śrīla Prabhupāda’s use of “drank the juice” directs the attentive reader’s memory back to the third text of Bhāgavatam (1.1.3), where the metaphor is explicitly employed in the text to characterize the hearing of Bhāgavatam. There the words pibata bhāgavataṃ rasam enjoins the audience to “drink the juice of Bhāgavatam.” In his commentary to that verse, Prabhupāda explains how the word rasa, as employed here, indicates the special transcendent flavors of variegated spiritual bliss relished by devotees through a fully developed relationship with Kṛṣṇa —bliss directly evoked and intensified by Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam when properly enacted.

Next, Śrīla Prabhupāda gives a concise restatement of the conditions and the result of such proper enactment, having made “rapt attention” explicit in this iteration:

That is the real process of receiving Bhāgavatam. One should hear with rapt attention from the real person, and then he can at once realize the presence of Lord Kṛṣṇa in every page.

(We should notice here how Śrīla Prabhupāda has once again conflated hearing and reading, just as he did in the purport’s opening sentence.)

Now Śrīla Prabhupāda proceeds to unveil to us even further the “secret” for the authentic realization of Bhāgavatam: He carefully elucidates the preconditions for the requisite “rapt attention”:

The secret of knowing Bhāgavatam is mentioned here. No one can give rapt attention who is not pure in mind. No one can be pure in mind who is not pure in action. No one can be pure in action who is not pure in eating, sleeping, fearing and mating. But somehow or other if someone hears with rapt attention from the right person, at the very beginning one can assuredly see Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa in person in the pages of Bhāgavatam.

Here Prabhupāda divulges that the “rapt attention” necessary for proper assimilation of Bhāgavatam depends upon a prerequisite: purity of mind. And that condition, in turn, requires purity in one’s actions. And such purity in action must be so deep and pervasive that even the most basic biological necessities of animal existence—“eating, sleeping, fearing [i.e., defending], and mating”—are accommodated in a regulated, refined, and wholesome manner.

Here, ISKCON devotees can recognize an implicit reference to the way of life we commit ourselves to by the formal vows Prabhupāda requires of us for initiation: To chant at least sixteen rounds of the Hare Kṛṣṇa mahā-mantra daily on japa beads with care and attention, and to follow the “four regulative principles” of no meat eating, no intoxication, no illicit sex, and no gambling.

Śrīla Prabhupāda had published the first volume of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam in India three years before he

embarked for the United States; even so, we can discern in this purport the seed, the potential existence, of the temple-ashram that was to become manifest at 26 2nd Avenue in the lower East side of New York City, and indeed of the entire International Society for Krishna Consciousness that expanded from there.

This seed describes the conditions under which Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam can be manifest and transmitted. Only with a qualified speaker and qualified hearers—then and only then does Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam actually take place, and then only can one “assuredly see Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa in person in the pages.”

Śrīla Prabhupāda brought forth his English rendering of the First Canto, in the sixth decade of his life, for a qualified audience of hearers that did not yet exist. His indefatigable labor in composition and publication of these three volumes—solitary, unassisted labor, underfunded, under appreciated—show the strength of his desire to give Kṛṣṇa consciousness to the entire world. But this desire is but the outer expression of his deep and fervent prayer to Kṛṣṇa to make such an audience available. And, quite remarkably, such an audience began to manifest and grow.

How, then, should we who have so benefited from Śrīla Prabhupāda’s prayer, who have joined that audience, demonstrate our gratitude? How can we repay him?

Śrīla Prabhupāda demonstrated the truth of Lord Caitanya’s characterization of His saṇkīrtana movement: ānandāmbudhi-vardhanaṁ, it increases the ocean of transcendental bliss. The prime reason for this increase is that Kṛṣṇa Himself is ever-increasing—in beauty, in opulence, in knowledge, in joy. There is no upper level, and we have been recruited, by Śrīla Prabhupāda’s mercy, to add to this everlasting expansion.

Let us therefore increase. We should all know the formula: As Kṛṣṇa consciousness increase, to that same degree, māyā, sense gratification, decreases. The two are inversely proportional. However, we can do even better that the formula allows. To the degree that we commit ourselves in action to that effort, to the same degree Kṛṣṇa and Śrīla Prabhupāda help us; so our sincere effort will produce an effect much greater than the cause. There is a divine thumb on the scale.

Engaging in this effort, we discover that Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam reveals itself to us more and more. By following the “four regulative principles” we discover that they are not merely principles of morality; they are, even more so, principles of knowledge—of knowledge unavailable to those who have little interest in the process of becoming “pure in mind.” So long as our established institutions of “higher learning” find this irrelevant to their core mission, their scientists and intellectuals will be unable to give true and proper guidance for the advancement of human society.

The knowledge contained in Bhāgavatam is not restricted to transcendence. It discloses Kṛṣṇa, and Kṛṣṇa means Kṛṣṇa and all of His energies, including his material energies.

Śrīla Prabhupāda put it like this in a 1971 London Bhagavad-gītā class:

Every one of us acquiring knowledge. That is called experience, one after another. So Kṛṣṇa says that ``If you understand this science,`` sa-vijñānam, ``then your knowledge will be complete. You have nothing to hanker after any further knowledge. Knowledge is complete.`` That is also Vedic injunction (Muṇḍaka Upaniṣad 1.3). Yasmin vijñāte sarvam evaṁ vijñātaṁ bhavati. Yasmin vijñāte, if you can understand the supreme knowledge, the Supreme, then sarvam idaṁ vijñātaṁ bhavati, everything becomes known to you.

In his Preface to his first volume of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Śrīla Prabhupāda described his work as “a cultural presentation for the respiritualization of the entire human society.”

He made that mission his own, and now let us make it ours.

Source:http://rsdasa.com/blog/writings/receiving-the-blessing/

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Please find below a few phone snaps of the Vyasana and bhoga offerings
from Srila Prabhupada's Disappearance Day 2016 at Bhaktivedanta Manor.

A small murti of Srila Prabhupada was given abhishek earlier in the
day, pushpanjali was performed after the 12:30 arati, and many
devotees read out heart-felt offerings.

http://davidc.zenfolio.com/srila_prabhupada_disappearance_day_2016


If you are in the UK and can come to London please join our maha
harianama sankirtan party THIS SATURDAY EVENING (5th November).  It
will leave the ISKCON-London Soho Street temple after Gaura Arati -
please also come for that and offer a candle to Sri Damodara for
Kartik.

Photos from last year to insire you:
http://davidc.zenfolio.com/maha_harinama_sankirtan_14112015


Srila Prabhupada Ki Jaya!

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His Final Instructions

Today we honor the disappearance day of His Dive Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada with a half day fast and are celebrating your disappearance with remembrances and prayers.

The Disappearance of a Vaisnava was explained very nicely by Srila Prabhupada is a lecture given on the disappearance day lecture of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Goswami Maharaja Prabhupada on Dec. 13, 1973 in Los Angeles:

“So spiritually, appearance and disappearance, there is no difference. Just like in material point of view, if a person takes birth… Suppose you get a son born, you become very happy. The same son, when passes away, you become very unhappy. This is material. But spiritually, there is no such difference, appearance or disappearance. So although this is the disappearance day of Oṁ Viṣṇupāda Śrī Śrīmad Bhaktisiddhānta Sarasvatī Ṭhākura, so there is nothing to be lamented. Although we feel separation, that feeling is there, but spiritually, there is no difference between appearance and disappearance.”

For today’s post we are going back in time…to the first issue of Back to Godhead Magazine after Srila Prabhu’s departure.

Srila Prabhupada Speaks Out
text excerpted from; Back to Godhead Magazine

His Final Instructions

During his last months, Srila Prabhupada was not very active physically, and he spoke relatively little. Yet when he did speak, his words were full of spiritual strength. These excerpts from Srila Prabhupada’s last statements reveal the mind of the pure devotee and universal teacher. And they show that Srila Prabhupada is indeed a transcendental personality, whose devotion to Lord Krsna and to the mission of spreading love of Krsna is undying.

“I cannot speak. I am feeling weak. I wanted to travel to Chandigarh and other places, but I changed my program because my health is deteriorating. I decided to come here to Vrndavana (the land of Lord Krsna). If death takes place, let it take place here.”

“There is nothing new to be said. Whatever I had to say, I have already said in my books. Now you must all try to understand it and continue with your endeavors. Whether I am present or not present doesn’t matter. Just as Krsna is living eternally, the living being also lives eternally. But especially… kirtir yasya sa jivati: ‘One who has done service to the Lord lives forever.’ You have been taught to serve Krsna, and with Krsna we’ll live eternally. Our life is eternal. Na hanyate hanyamane sarire: the disappearance of this temporary body doesn’t matter. The body is meant for disappearance. So, live forever by serving Krsna. Thank you very much.”

“There are two things—life and death. So if I die, where is the wrong in that? If I die, that is natural.”

“Our money is only spent for Krsna—Krsna’s palace, Krsna’s temple, Krsna’s worship, ‘Krsna’s glorification. It is not for our personal enjoyment. This is human life.”

“And I also want you to organize varnasrama society [the Vedic social structure]. Divide society: brahmana [intellectual class], ksatriya [administrators], and so on. There should be social division, just as there is a division of the different parts of our body. This will help people. Don’t waste the human form of life by sinful living. I have already given the ideas in my books, so you should all read them. You are intelligent, all of you. Caitanya Mahaprabhu said para-upakara—do good to others, do not exploit them. Any human being has the ability to chant Hare Krsna. Give them chanting. And also make the situation favorable. Is that clear?

“This is our mission: whatever we have, teach others. The whole world is filled with distress. Therefore our Gurukula school is meant for this purpose: to teach the students, and let them go all over the world to teach others. Durlabha manava janma sat-sange/ taraha e bhava-sindhu re [‘Human life, especially in the association of devotees, is very rarely obtained. So please take advantage of this opportunity to cross over the ocean of material existence’].”

“My Guru Maharaja [spiritual master] said, ‘Whatever money there is, use it to print books.’ He was so happy to print books. So, do it all very nicely. My Guru Maharaja used to say, ‘Go on printing, go on printing.’ I printed my books, now you do the same ‘

“Printing of spiritual books is our life-force. Print more books. This material body is only bones. But go on printing—this is life. We are not concerned with bones and stones. Our concern is the living force: apareyam itas tv anyam prakrtim viddhi me param. The living force is sustaining these bones. In the material world, people are all simply protecting bones and flesh; they have no [spiritual] idea.

“Take matter—you mix earth, water, put it into fire, and then make a building. But matter cannot act automatically. Matter cannot have mind or consciousness or impetus. It is nonsense to say that matter gives rise to life. Matter has no sense. Life is the superior energy; matter is useless. Bhumir apo ‘nalo vayuh [the material elements] are useless. But there is another, superior nature. Yayedam dharyate jagat And that nature is actually governing the whole, universe.

“You [disciples] are all intelligent and experienced men; you can go on managing this movement. If I depart, there is no cause for lamentation. I will always be with you through my books and my orders. I will always remain with you in that way.”

“I didn’t waste a single moment. I tried my best, and it has been successful ,to some, extent”

“Have sankirtana [congregational chanting of God’s holy names]. All Europeans, Americans, Africans-United Nations under Caitanya Mahaprabhu’s flag. Do everything just as I have shown you. It is possible. This is the real United Nations. You try, under the protection of Caitanya Mahaprabhu, and things will be successful. Others will simply waste their time and be disappointed. They will change from one body to another and suffer.”

“As soon as one forgets Krsna and wants to enjoy life independently, he falls down.”

“Material motives should be given up, and everything favorable should be engaged in Krsna’s service. Then there will be success.”

When asked who would succeed him as the leader of the Krsna consciousness movement, Srila Prabhupada replied: “All of my disciples will take the legacy. If you want, you can also take it. Sacrifice everything. I—one—may soon pass away. But they are hundreds, and this movement will increase. It’s not that I’ll give an order: ‘Here is the next leader.’ Anyone who follows the previous leadership is a leader. I don’t make any distinction between Indian and European. All my disciples are leaders… as much as they follow purely. If you want to follow, then you can also lead. But you dont want to follow. ‘Leader’ means (one who is a first-class disciple. Evam parampara-praptam. One who is perfectly following. Our instruction is, guru mukha-padma-vakya. Do you know this? Ara na kariha mane asa. [My only desire is to have my consciousness purified by the words emanating from the lotus mouth of my spiritual master’]. To become a leader is not very difficult, provided one is prepared to follow the instructions of the bonafide guru.

Text excerpted from: The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust International, Inc., Rights and Permissions, copyrights@bbti.orghttp://www.bbti.org

Source:https://theharekrishnamovement.org/2016/11/03/his-final-instructions/

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Avatar Art: A Book Review

Avatar Art: Neo-Vedic Paintings Celebrating Life by Steven J. Rosen (Satyaraja Dasa) and co-author Kaisori Bellachoffers a beautiful artistic smorgasbord of the most popular figures in India's array of avatars, gods, sages, and demons. The alluring paintings of which this volume is comprised, portrayed by contemporary artists, mostly ISKCON devotees, focus on stories from the Srimad Bhagavatam (Bhagavata Purana), the Mahabharata, and the Caitanya-caritamrta. The text illuminates the art.

Here, at last, is a BBT art book that reads like an art book. More than just another volume of “painting, lila-explanation, painting, lila-explanation,” this work not only elaborates on the content of the paintings but also explains the art in terms of actually being works of art. Why was one particular color used as opposed to another? How does this compare to a similar painting in the Western tradition? These sorts of questions often lead to thought-provoking answers. 

Overall, this book insightfully brings to bear the spiritual in art both from Eastern and Western theological perspectives, finally explaining Vaishnava art in some accessible context. Satyaraja Prabhu was a student at the High School of Art and Design and then majored in fine art and painting at New York Community College before joining the Hare Krishna Movement. This informs his writing in this particular book, his latest among his 30-some-odd titles. 

The book opens with a lengthy Introduction explaining the basic principles of bhakti (devotion) and rasa(relationship) and how these two deeply spiritual ideas impact art in general. From there we learn about “spiritual art in the West,” briefly exploring the work of everyone from Kandinsky to Rothko. The authors show how most spiritual art is dominated by abstraction and seeing God in nature, largely because specific information about God and His personal form are lacking.

This leads to a discussion of spiritual art in India, ultimately exploring the form of Krishna and His incarnations. We then follow this more specific aspect of spiritual art as it makes its way to the Western world, complete with the founding of the ISKCON art department and the beautiful, award-winning pieces found throughout ISKCON temples and peppered throughout Srila Prabhupada’s books. 

After setting up the book in this way, key personalities and stories from the Srimad Bhagavatam, the Mahabharata, and the Caitanya-caritamrta are highlighted with traditional art and, more specifically, with ISKCON art, both from the early days of the movement until the present day. 

Since this is a follow-up to Satyaraja’s first BBT book, “The Hidden Glory of India,” it is designed as part of a series, sporting the same size and style of that initial volume.  

With 102 paintings by 27 artists, this full color book, in 224 pages, clearly depicts the entire tradition of Krishna Consciousness, at least in nutshell form. And it does so with considerable style and visual delight. The book is a must for artists and lovers of art and, well, for all who want to fully appreciate the visual beauty of Krishna Consciousness.

* * * 

The book is available at krishna.com (http://store.krishna.com/avatar-art-neo-vedic-paintings-celebrating-life/). Wholesale and retail orders can be made from NA BBT by phone: 1-800-927-4152. 

Source:http://iskconnews.org/avatar-art-a-book-review,5903/

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By Namhatta ISKCON Vrindavan:

The Transcendental Pastimes Of Lord Jaganatha's 2nd Rathayatra in Mathura Vrindavana.

17th Oct 2016, During the auspicious month of Damodar, ISKCON Vrindavana Namhatta Department organized the 2nd grand Rath Yatra festival in Mathura to celebrate the 50th anniversary of ISKCON. The event co-ordinated with the 2016 Braja Mandal Parikrama with the parikrama devotees gathered in Mathura that very day to attend the festival on Oct 17, 2016. Due to the overwhelming support of the residents of Mathura and the enthusiastic participation of local and visiting devotees, the celebration is now marked to be an annual event on ISKCON Vrindavana's calendar.

For photos please go to the link:

https://www.facebook.com/587926797996015/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1025091094279581

Celebrations began at 9:00 am with a Pandal Program at Kedar Dham Mathura.. Festivities began with a devotional welcoming of Sri Sri Jagannatha , Subhdra and Baladeva with a showering of floweres and kirtan. A marvelous feast of numerous preparations and arati was offered to the Lord of the Universe. Sweet kirtan and discourse was given by HG Panca Gauda Prabhu, HG Deena Bandhu Prabhu, HG Dadhi Bhaksa Prabhu, HH BA Janardan Swami, HH Gaurnarayan Swami, HH Prabodhananda Swami, HH Radha Raman Swami.

Numerous Prabhupada disciples were present and many countries of the world were represented through the attendance of devotees from abroad. Also the Vrajamandal Parikrama devotees numbering about 1500 had their schedule coordinated to join in the event and many Mathura-vasis , naturally bound in affection to the Lord by birth, also participated. Prasadam was distributed to about 2500 devotees in the morning.

Ratha Yatra Started at 1:00 pm, with Jagannatha Astakam by HH Prabhodhananda Swami and Maha Aratik by HG Pancagauda Prabhu.

After about half an hour, Sri Sri Jagannatha , Subhdra and Baladeva were seated on the Ratha, Many thousands of devotees came forward to pull the Cart of the Lord in ecstasy sending the wheels of the Lord's Rath in motion at 2:30 pm. In a scene reminiscent of Jaganatha Puri, the Ratha got stuck in the middle of Chowraha for over 90 minutes. By the Lords mercy, this transcendental advertisement attracted even more of the residents of Mathura who were about their daily affairs. In the evening, many thousands more than expected Mathuravasis attended the post-Rathayatra evening celebration. If the Ratha had happened to get stuck in any other part of the route it would have caused very severe traffic problems in an already congested urban network.

“ Just like in Jagannatha Puri, Ratha-yatra festival, sometimes the ratha, chariot, will be stuck up, will not move. People draw it, but does not move. Even King Prataparudra engaged some elephants, and the ratha is not moving. And Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu would say, "All right, let Me try." So He would go back side of the car and with His head push it, and very easily it will go.” (*Lecture on SB 1.16.11 -- Los Angeles, January 8, 1974* )

Many Coconuts were broken and, in the tradition of the Gajapati King, a golden broom was used to clear the path for the Lord. It seemed that all business owners, ashrams and other locals were sprouting from every corner to offer arati, flowers and many types of preparations and refreshments which were then distributed to the assembled devotees in the form of Lord Jaganatha's transcendental Remnants.

And very melodious and enthusiastic kirtans drowned all the participants in the ocean of transcendental bliss. Everyone was jubilant on this occasion as the atmosphere was surcharged with Hare Krishna Mahamantra. Local residents were captivated by the dancing foreign devotees and the next day all the local news papers published pictures of foreign matajis in colorful saris dancing before the Lord's cart.

To an onlooker of the procession, the first thing to see was a large banner announcing ISKCON's 50 Year Celebration. Next was a larger than life poster of Prabhupada followed by an 8 ft high replica of his Bhagavada-Gita As It Is. After this there was a well organized skillful team of matajis quickly applying beautiful rangoli decorations to the roadside. Finally one could then bear witness to the transcendental form of the Lord Who's beauty is comparable to the ocean of devotees joyfully pulling the cart while chanting His Name.

Ratha Yatra finally concluded at Hirakunja Residency at 6:30 pm with a wonderful feast Prasadam for a devotee crowd swelling to more than 3000 strong followed by Sandhya Arati, lamps in offering to Lord Damodara. A cultural program of dance and drama went into the late hours of the evening.

If you are planning to come to Vrindavan during the month of Kartik in the years to come, please take note and participate in ISKCON's Mathura Rathayatra. The event is only *30* minutes from ISKCON's Krsna Balarama Temple in Vrindavana. Arrangement is made for the free travel of devotees to and from the event by bus however the journey can easily be negotiated by auto rickshaw.

By Srila Prabhupada's mercy the event is proving to be a very sweet celebration that harnesses the devotional enthusiasm of the residents of Mathura and ISKCON devotees both local and abroad.

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Intensive Care

Time is ticking and I’m reflecting on what I’ve actually contributed to the world. Though trying to avoid the egotistical desire to ‘make a mark,’ we are impelled to share the ‘fruits’ we have received. Spiritually, morally, and even legally, knowledge brings a certain responsibility. In certain circumstances, to withhold information that can greatly assist others would be considered violent and unethical. Thus, I often consider how to develop myself into a better instrument to proliferate spiritual understanding. Projects have come and gone, ideas have worked and then fallen apart, some initiatives were thriving and then slowed own… and then I sometimes think – what will I really have to show after all is said and done? Everything I’m trying is a ‘work-in-progress’, and slow progress at that!

I was contemplating these thoughts yesterday, attempting to hone in on what is actually required to build strong, sustainable, successful, spiritual projects. My conclusion: intensive care. If we don’t intensively care for projects, in no time you’ll find those projects will end up in the ICU, nearing death. How much do I deeply, genuinely, actually care about what I’m trying to achieve? To care means:

To never give up
To be ready and willing to do whatever it takes
To give your quality time and undiverted attention
To be constantly meditating on your goal
To maintain your enthusiasm, despite an absence of results and reciprocation
To engage all your physical and mental capacities
To harbor no hidden agendas or personal motivations
To go that ‘extra mile’ that nobody else would consider
To be so immersed in the goal, that ‘getting the credit’ pales into insignificance

Now I’m wondering how many of my ‘dreams’ and ‘aspirations’ I genuinely care about. Achievements demand blood, sweat and tears. The classic syndrome of a lazy mind is to wishfully desire to emulate something or someone, oblivious to the endless hours of painstaking effort that’s been invested. The easier they make it look, the harder they’ve been working. Today I’m remembering the incredible sacrifices, unending compassion and resolute determination of Srila Prabhupada. He tried everything, went everywhere, and approached everyone, leaving no stone unturned. No amount of social commentary, historical analysis or academic reasoning can account for the miracle of his life. He genuinely cared, and that touched hearts and moved mountains.

Throughout life, people always reminded me to “put my heart into it.” Now I’m beginning to appreciate the profundity of that simple wisdom.

Source:http://iskconnews.org/intensive-care,5904/

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Equality? by Kadamba Kanana Swami

In his list for society at large, Bhismadev mentions, “To equally distribute wealth.” So, are we speaking here about communism? It sounds like Bhismadev is the pre-runner of Karl Marx! No, to equally distribute wealth means that there should be no excessive poverty, that no-one should be deprived of their basic needs of life. It is not that everyone should be equally wealthy. This is not appropriate. Reward should be there relating to endeavour and there is also the influence of karma – some are born more wealthy and some are born more poor. So these differences in society are fine but not to the exploitation of others. Those who have wealth have to take responsibility for the well-being of others.

Source:https://www.kksblog.com/2016/11/equality/

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750+ Ahmedabad youngsters participated in youth fest ‘UMANG’ - ISKCON Youth Forum Ahmedabad.
Umang, festival of Joy, was an enlivening experience for all the 750+ participants whose level of enthusiasm soared as the festival changed gears, bringing new twists and turns for the young blood.

​Thought provoking and intellectual talk was presented by HG Sundar Gopal Pr, graduate from IIT Delhi, who explained scientifically the dynamics of ‘Pleasure Hunt’.
Through his scientific and logical presentation, videos he proved that everyone is hunting for false pleasure. The session was very interactive and gave a food for thought to every reasonable person.
Youth present was intrigued by simple yet effective presentation and also participated in it positively.

​It was followed by Funny yet leasson giving drama 'Me & My Mind’ that gave a message that how our mind is so restless and always make disturbances in our life by presenting various type of sense objects in front of us like Movies, Alcohol, Pub & Hub, and how we can control it by chanting Hare Krishna maha-mantra, and reading Bhagavad Gita.

​A ten-minute guest lecture was delivered by HG Jashomati Nandan Prabhuji, who urged students to live a life based on the scriptures, while continuing with their studies and work.

The Rock Kirtan led by Sanatana Gauranga Das made every participants jump up and down for a half an hour.

The festival ended with the distribution of sanctified food, or prasadam, which everyone relished as they shared their exhilarating experience with devotees.

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33043

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Bhakta David: Please find below a few phone snaps of the Vyasana and bhoga offerings from Srila Prabhupada’s Disappearance Day 2016 at Bhaktivedanta Manor.
A small murti of Srila Prabhupada was given abhishek earlier in the day, pushpanjali was performed after the 12:30 arati, and many devotees read out heart-felt offerings.
Find them here: https://goo.gl/obkvXD
If you are in the UK and can come to London please join our maha harinama sankirtan party THIS SATURDAY EVENING (5th November). It will leave the ISKCON-London Soho Street temple after Gaura Arati please also come for that and offer a candle to Sri Damodara for Kartik.

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33048

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ISKCON Youth Forum (IYF) is the youth wing of Sri Sri Radha Govind Temple, a branch of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON). IYF is aimed towards nourishing the hearts of today’s youth with the sublime message of the scriptures and helping them flourish in their lives in a wholesome manner.

Happiness and the true fulfillment of the soul and unending success have been the goals of humanity from eternity. The purpose of life is a life of purpose and what makes a life valuable is the perfect blend of knowledge, skills and values. Most of us simply go through life but in the pursuit of going through life, we forget to grow through life. Therefore the reality is” one cannot upload love, one can’t download time, one can’t google all of the life’s answers therefore one must actually live some of his life.

Spirit of ISKCON Youth Forum
For a sincere human being to live a life of pure principles is a great challenge. ISKCON youth Forum is serving as an oasis in the sense that it is ‘life-giving and transforming’ society in a stress –ridden fast-paced rat race society’ that is like a desert. Thus ISKCON Youth Forum is committed to provide a facility like an Oasis in the middle of a desert to keep oneself surcharged in remembrance of the Supreme Lord, Sri Krishna always. The inspiration is the spiritual inspiration to practice devotion to God with full enthusiasm and developing the spiritual knowledge which acts like a beacon in the sea like unending mysteries of life. IYF is striving towards rekindling the wisdom and reviving their loving and serving propensities.

Mission
Change is an inevitable part of the life and history has witnessed numerous revolutions as part of the change. Most of these revolutions were spearheaded and lead by the youths only. As India makes rapid advancements in the field of technology and is recognized the world over for its vast and untapped resources, especially the ‘human’ resource, with 55% of the population in the age group of 18-25, the future seems bright. But along with this euphoria, there is also a darker side to the reality; one that finds today’s youth battling with drug and alcoholic addictions, pre and post marital infidelities and mental depressions. Therefore ISKCON Youth Forum has ventured into wisdom literatures with the desire to bring about positive revolutions in the misguided life of modern youths. Now ISKCON Youth Forum has taken a good shape in many prestigious cities of India.

The goals of IYF are as follow:

Training in soft skills like Public Speaking, Stress management, Leadership and Management by the application of the timeless wisdom in the modern scenario.
Bringing out the potential in the individual like Concentration, Motivation, Self Confidence etc.
Blending the character with competence in bringing about A Long Enduring Success.
Dealing With Sensitivity And self-awareness In Thought, Words And Action
Organizing Outing For Experiencing Closer Touch With The Nature And The Marvelous Gift Of The Supreme Divine

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33052

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Indian lady: How does one contact the spiritual master? Through a book can you contact the spiritual master? 
Prabhupada: No, you have to associate. 
Syamasundara: “Can you associate through a book?” she asked. Prabhupada: Yes, through books, and also personal. Because when you make a spiritual master you have got personal touch. Not that in air you make a spiritual master. You make a spiritual master concrete. 
>>> Ref. VedaBase => His Divine Grace Srila Sac-cid-ananda Bhaktivinoda Thakura’s Appearance Day, Lecture – London, September 3, 1971
Find them here: https://goo.gl/EyDjDM

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33057

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On the 4th of November 2010, 22:25 PM Moscow time Purnacandra Goswami passed away. It is a great loss for the entire ISKCON community.

On September 15th Maharaja was hospitalized with internal bleeding, and from October 19th he was in coma. Despite deep coma he manifested some signs of consciousness every time when devotees would come to him to chant the holy name.

Purnacandra Maharaja joined Srila Prabhupada’s movement when he was 17 years old. For more than 38 years he served ISKCON with great dedication. His knowledge of the Vedic scriptures was vast and profound. For many years he was teaching Bhakti-sastri course and many other courses to the devotees.

He had very deep attachment to Sri Vrindavana-dhama. He divided his preaching time between Russia and Balkans, but Karttik he would always spend in Vrindavan. Over the last few years he was writing a book dedicated to Lord Krishna’s pastimes in Vrindavana. He was always deeply absorbed in the holy names. The concentration and intensity with which he would chant the holy name every day was incomparable.

By Niranjana Swami

The following is a partially-edited transcript of a short talk I gave during the memorial service for Purnacandra Goswami in Moscow on November, 9, 2010.

We are gathered here to pay our respects to His Holiness Purnacandra Goswami. For those of you who know him, you know that he is a person of substance. I often speak about this topic –substance versus form. If there is substance then everything else will eventually follow.

For the life of a Vaisnava this substance is his Krsna Consciousness, the activities which are performed by him in Krsna Consciousness, and the ability to share that Krsna Consciousness with others. That is the essence of our Krsna Consciousness Movement. And that substance is the heart of a Vaisnava. A Vaisnava is one who fully dedicates his life in service to the Supreme Lord. He feels compassion for the suffering of others.

Purnacandra Maharaja was such a Vaisnava. He was not interested in the external affairs of this world. I know that because of my personal association with him. I’m sure that we’ll hear more confirmation of this from others today– that Maharaja was more interested in sharing substance and less concerned about structure or form. That is one quality of Purnacandra Maharaja I’ve always appreciated.

Purnacandra Maharaja would oftentimes keep his firm commitment to substance even at the risk of being unpopular. He was not at all interested in winning some popularity contest. He was interested in preserving that which was passed on to him by his spiritual master.

Many times I would be with him and I would observe how meticulous he was in his simple, basic activities of sadhana. Sometimes I would come to see him and he would be sitting and chanting his japa alone, very much absorbed in chanting the holy name. His meditation was on his relationship with his spiritual master, and his service to his spiritual master, while aspiring for eternal devotional service to the Supreme Lord.

Because he always preserved this substance in his life, I am confident that it will continue to maintain his life as he continues serving his spiritual master and his worshipful Lord.

In many respects Purnacandra Maharaja was more of a teacher by his example. And though he taught this way, through this firm dedication to the simple, basic practices of Krsna Consciousness, we also know that he was very learned in sastra. He was very meticulous about his study of Srila Prabhupada’s books and the books of our previous acaryas. He was always eager to share his realizations and knowledge obtained from his studies.

Purnacandra Maharaja didn’t need large crowds to be satisfied sharing what he had learned and what he attained in his Krsna Consciousness. He would share his Krsna Consciousness even with a small group of devotees, or even with one devotee. I personally experienced this when we would sit and talk as he would share his realizations with me. This is another one of his qualities I will always remember. I’m sure that many of you who know Purnacandra Maharaja will also remember this quality of his too.

There is more that I could say about my remembrances of Maharaja but I’d like to just focus on this feature of him as a person of substance. So I’ll stop here and maybe I’ll have an opportunity some other time to speak about other remembrances of him.

I am also very eager to hear from those devotees with whom this substance was shared. I’m quite sure that their words will be a testimony to my words. I consider these Vaisnavas very fortunate to have an intimate, close relationship with him.

Thank you very much.


Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33060

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In order to understand Shri Nityananda Prabhu’s image in the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition, we have to know the Avatara doctrine, which describes the way the Lord appears in this world in behalf of His spiritual energies. Shri Nityananda  Prabhu is a manifestation of compassion, of mercy and of divine love. He is the supreme Person, God himself who stepped into history and made His appearance in this world in the second half of the sixteenth century, according to the Western calendar. Like in the Shrimad Bhagavatam literature, which narrates Shri Krishna-Balarama’s adventures, in the Caitanya Caritamrita and the Caitanya Bhagavata, respectively written by Krishnadas Kaviraja Gosvami and Vrindavana das Thakur, they narrate Shri Krishna Caitanya Mahaprabhu’s and Shri Nityananda Prabhu’s divine adventures.

Krishna Caitanya Mahaprabhu is Krishna himself, who is manifested with a special rasa, that of Shrimati Radharani. Shrimati Radharani’s love for Krishna is experienced and manifested in full by Shri Caitanya Mahaprabhu who lives in Shrimati Radharani’s rasa and that ontologically  represents the divine union between Radha and Krishna. Shrimati Radharani is endlessly and for ever in love with Krishna, the same as Shri Caitanya Mahaprabhu’s love is everlasting and infinite.

Like Shri Krishna, whose brother and inseparable friend is Shri Balarama, Shri Caitanya has an inseparable friend too, whose name is Shri Nityananda. They are inseparable in the feelings of love that join them together. Shri Nityananda Prabhu would have shared Shri Caitanya Deva’s company all time long, however he had to fulfill his mission in behalf of His beloved associate: to travel from city to city in order to spread the holy name of the Lord. Therefore Nityananda, together with one of his best friends, Shrila Haridas Thakur, engaged himself completely in the diffusion of the sacred science, practising Harinama Kirtana and Harinama Sankirtana. In this way, by sharing this responsibility with other dear devotees, in this supreme mission that is the diffusion of love for God, Shri Nityananda Prabhu became one of the most dear Shri Krishna Caitanya Mahaprabhu’s spiritual associates.

Like Balarama, enterprising, strong, outgoing, generous, always compassionate towards the devotees, whose manifestation was considered as one of the original spiritual Master, the same Shri Nityananda Prabhu preached the sacred science and  spread his teachings to all the people of good will, in the practice of Bhakti.

Source:http://matsyavatara.blogspot.in/2013/05/in-order-to-understand-shri-nityananda.html

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Historical Timeline

1896: (September 01) Srila Prabhupada was born in Calcutta.

1901: Srila Prabhupada conducted a Ratha Yatra festival in a suburb of Calcutta.
1902: Srila Prabhupada began worshiping Radha-Krishna.
1916: Srila Prabhupada joined as Student of Philosophy at Scottish Churches’ College.
1918: Entered married life (grihastha ashrama)
1921: Appointed as assistant manager of Bose Laboratory. Joined Mahatma Gandhi’s movement.
1922: Met his spiritual master, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura.
1925: Visited Vrindavana for the first time.
1928: Assisted in establishing Allahabad center of Gaudiya Matha.
1932: Initiated by Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura.
1934: Helped establish Gowalia Tank center of Gaudiya Matha.
1935: Instructed by his spiritual master on publishing books and constructing temples.
1936: Final order from his spiritual master to preach in the West.
1939: Honored with the title “Bhaktivedanta” by society of Gaudiya Vaishnavas.
1944: Started the Back to Godhead Magazine.
1953: Started League of Devotees in Jhansi. Initiated his first disciple, Acharya Prabhakar.
1954: Retired from family life, adopting vanaprastha (retired) order of life.
1959: Accepted renounced order of life (sannyasa).
1960: Published first book, Easy Journey to Other Planets.
1962: Published Volume 1 of First Canto of Srimad Bhagavatam.
1965: Journeyed to USA in order to fulfill the order of his spiritual master.
1966: Established the International Society for Krishna Consciousness.
1967: Completed translation and commentary of Bhagavad-gita As It Is.
1968: Bhagavad-gita As It Is published by Macmillan Company.
1972: Established the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust (BBT) for publishing his books.
1975: Completed translation of and published Sri Chaitanya Charitamrita in 17 volumes.
1976: Established the Bhaktivedanta Institute for Scientific Preaching.
1977: Disappearance from this mortal world.

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Where Has my Krishna Consciousness Gone?

Lately I’ve been wrapped up in the non-essentials of spiritual life: work, family, money, car problems, entertainment, sense gratification, etc. The only glimmer of devotional activity in my life right now is listening to Srila Prabhupada lectures on my commute to work. Even that has become sketchy lately, as I’m usually only half paying attention or zoning out.

I feel no enthusiasm for the devotional process right now. I don’t feel eager or excited to chant. I don’t have much desire to make the effort to attend the Sunday programs. Sure, circumstances play a huge part in those choices, because when I think about taking our difficult 3-year old daughter out late at night to the temple, I don’t feel that enthused about the prospect. Or even getting up early on Sunday and trekking into New York City. It’s a serious endeavor; one that I simply can’t justify or see the reason for.

But that’s totally the wrong consciousness, isn’t it? Isn’t that the point of tapasya? Voluntarily doing something inconvenient and difficult or troublesome for some higher benefit and purpose? Well right there is where I get hung up. What is the “higher benefit and purpose?” How will my life improve if I go crazy trying to daily rise at 4am, worship my Deities, chant 16-rounds a day, attend all the devotee programs, eat only prasadam, stop watching TV and listening to mundane music, etc? The answer I say to myself is, “Well, you’d be preparing yourself for your next body. You’d be breaking the identification with this current physical body and subtle mind.” Sounds good, but it seems so…extreme, maybe?

I recently heard a quote from Srila Prabhupada that we can’t “dance with God and dog at the same time”. The point being that you can’t dabble with maya and sense gratification and be any kind of serious devotee or Vaishnava. Being a Vaishnava means being devoid of desire for personal sense gratification. That just seems impossible to attain. This is why true Vaishnavas are so rare, special and worshipable in this world.

I just don’t know what to think anymore. I’m certain there’s a deeper, more profound experience of bhakti, but I don’t seem to be willing or have the desire to do what’s necessary to experience it first hand.

I know one day I will have to face my death. It may come unexpectedly. It may come with warning and preparation. Either way it’s a reality that I can’t shake from my mind. The uncertainties that go along with death drive most people towards religion and spirituality. They drive us to find peace and comfort within those constructs. So much of that world beyond this physical body and subtle mind are foreign to us. We think of it as fantasy, yet ironically it’s more real than this present world we’re experiencing with our material senses.

I want that inner world to become completely manifest, yet I’m not willing to do anything to attain it. I want it to be effortless, painless and easy. “But really, in kali yuga, why would Krishna make it so hard?” is what my mind says. Then I hear, “Is it? Is it really that difficult to just chant the Holy Name?” Hmm. I suppose not, but to chant it with FAITH sure is.

Source:http://nitaiprema.blogspot.in/2013/05/where-has-my-krishna-consciousness-gone.html

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From: Bhakti Vikasa Swami 

nama om visnu-padaya krsna-presthaya
bhutale srimate bhaktivedanta-svamin iti namine.

I offer my humble obeisances unto His Divine Grace Prabhupada A.C.
Bhaktivedanta Swami, who is very dear to Lord Krsna on this earth, having
taken shelter of the lotus feet of that ever-youthful, beautiful,
transcendental Lord,

who, alone, in his seventieth year, threw family, society, friendship, love
to the wind, left mother India and set sail around the earth to foreign,
unknown shores because his spiritual master spoke to him in a dream,

who carried the glorious message of the munificent Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu
to a nation plagued with the leprosy of voidism and impersonalism, who
brought an ageless message of love of Godhead,

who landed in Manhattan with saffron robes, a suitcase and seven dollars and
wondered at maya's skyscrapers and empty, noisy dreams,

who, with white, pointed holyman shoes, walked through the snow to Times
Square and laughed at Kali's cinema ads,

who accepted residence with hashish-yogis who believed they were moving the
sun and moon,

who played cymbals and chanted Govindam adi-purusam tam aham bhajami, "I
worship Govinda the Primeval Lord," explaining to void-meditators that
Krsna's transcendental body is unlimited, that He can extend His hand to all
parts of His creation, that any one part of His body can perform all the
actions of all the other parts, and that simply by glancing at nature He
impregnated her with countless living entities and set the cosmic systems
spinning and struck up the song of the universe,

who journeyed downtown, out of compassion, and set up quarters in Lower East
Side narrow mice-ridden storefront and trusted Krsna to bring next month's
rent,

who opened the storefront doors even to Bowery derelicts and clashed cymbals
and chanted Sanskrit hymns to God, whose vibrations caught the ears of young
psychedelic middle class renegades searching for alternatives to their
legacy of lies and materialism,

who had and everlastingly has infinite mercy, delivering it free of charge,
a matchless gift, to whomever stops to hear,

who never, to my knowledge, turned one soul away, who effused them all with
kindness, affection, truth,

who had mercy on my soul one bright July morning amidst the roaring
Manhattan traffic of Houston and Bowery (Most holy spot! Transformed to
Vaikuntha by his feet! Bowery transformed to Vaikuntha!),

who lectured every morning on Second Avenue and as the gold of dawn lit his
face played cymbals and chanted softly, careful not to awake the neighbors
lest they pour hot water through the floorboards,

who opened Bhagavad-gita and explained Sri Krsna's message verse by verse
and set His names -- Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare, Hare
Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama Hare Hare -- on the lips of the young,

who, by contact only, warmed their hearts and lit the fires of love of God
in their souls and smeared their eyes with the ointment of devotion,

who defied cheap popular adoration by truthfully telling the youth of
America that to have Krsna the soul must be pure, free of everything,

who supplanted the old white-bearded Judaic-Christian God with a beautiful,
blue adolescent Boy and evoked gopi tears from the eyes of men,

who led his flock to Washington Square to chant, was invited off the grass
by the cops, sat complacently anyway on the asphalt and Hare Krsna'd as
nervous sailors flicked their cigarets,

who initiated his first dozen disciples with a fire sacrifice in his
apartment, told them their real, spiritual names, chanted their beads, threw
rice and ghee in the flames (Svaha!) and sat smiling amidst the smoke as
they coughed and ran to open the windows,

who listened, tolerant, to the threats of Jewish, Catholic and Protestant
mothers accusing him of stealing their sons, and offered them bananas,
apples, dates and tangerines and charmed them with his smile,

who every Sunday afternoon for a month sat down on the ground in Tompkins
Square Park, pounded a bongo and chanted Hare Krsna three hours straight
while dancing angels dropped exhausted and Lower East Side Ukranians and
Poles stared uncomprehendingly and grumbled,

who delivered a beautiful lecture on the spiritualization of energy to a
thousand empty seats in midtown's Judson Hall while across the street
hundreds flocked to hear the Boston Pops at Carnegie,

who patiently endured the red tape visa harassment of immigration offices
and allayed the fears of his children as they swore to follow him to India,

who, on a sudden invitation, jumped a jet to Frisco, telling his New York
disciples he'd return in a fortnight, and after four months' absence
laughed, "You have not reckoned a day of Brahma."

who lectured a thousand Hell's Angels, hippies and teenieboppers in the
strobe-flashing Avalon ballroom on the glories of Lord Caitanya's sankirtan
movement and, hands upraised, danced with poet Ginsberg, Moby Grape,
Grateful Dead and Big Brother to Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna as Tim
Leary looked on benevolently,

who chanted and danced in a ring with longhair boys, girls, beads, beards
and headbands below the shadow of Hippie Hill in Golden Gate Park on bright
March and April afternoons,

who lectured at Frisco Christian Yoga societies, to hippies in the
Panhandle, to pacifists at Berkeley, to yellow, red, white and black
nationalists, to anyone, everyone and no one in the streets and parks of
Saint Francis,

who taught the students of Palo Alto a new dance -- the "swami" -- which in
fervor surpassed the frug and watusi,

who led a nighttime firelit kirtan at Frisco beach, roasted potatoes and
sang starlit hymns to Narada Muni,

who sauntered through Muir woods contemplating the redwoods and reflecting
how tired their souls must be for having to stand so long without Krsna,

who, back in Manhattan, wore his body down chanting and glorifying the
transcendental blue body of Krsna, cooking and writing for Krsna, and
suffered a stroke that would have killed a mere man, left his body and then
returned with the names of his love on his lips,

who sang to Yamaraj, Death, as he stood before him, sang songs of love to
the lotus-eyed Boy with pink bottom'd feet,

who, in Beth-Israel Hospital, sat like a helpless child as demonic needles
came at him, tolerated them and listened to the Western diagnosis: "Tell him
to take it easy. The old man prays too much,"

who, after five days, baffled obscene doctors by walking out the sickward's
pea-green walls to recuperate across country in the dazzling Pacific sands
of Stinson beach,

who sat amidst a labyrinth of kelp horns and sea shells proclaiming that
there are only devotees and demons, naught between,

who composed Sanskrit odes to the Primeval Spirit whose eternal teenage lips
play a flute,

who wept in a Frisco storefront -- "Take to this process. I may be with you
or not, but it is eternal." -- and bade farewell to his students who thought
he was going to India to die,

who bathed in the sun wearing a turban and flying on a carpet as the Pacific
crashed in his ears -- "All glories to the assembled devotees! All glories
to the Pacific Ocean!" -- and finally, following the sun, whizzed to Delhi,
Vrndavana and Calcutta to Ayur-Vedic physicians,

who bathed in the Yamuna, where Lord Krsna played His water games, and lived
in Radha-Damodar Temple, where repose the samadhis of Rupa and Jiva Gosvami,

who traveled through India, defying pneumonia, looking for a house for his
American children,

who returned to the U.S. via Japan, trying to see the mayor of Tokyo to
institute the International Society for Krishna Consciousness in a glass
American-made skyscraper,

who finally proclaimed the Japanese "not ready," and returned to a deluge of
tears and flowers in Frisco airport,

who, surpassing the Chinese, instituted a yearly festival of Jagannatha love
down Haight Street through Golden Gate to the beach, nine miles, and led
twenty thousand before the cart of Krsna, Subhadra and Balarama,

who bowed to Radha and Krsna in Seattle and sat in new glory on the New York
Vyasasana, the floating dais of praise, as his children fell at his feet,

who forgave his renegade disciples in Montreal with a garland of roses and a
shower of tears,

who told golden beachboys in Honolulu and Kaaawa, Oahu that sun, beach and
palm worship is all maya, that golden flesh, after all, is just a bag
covering blood, bone, stool, puss, bile, urine and guts, all rotting moment
by moment,

who danced to Krsna beneath the sun in L.A. and beneath the red, white and
blue flashing neon illusions of Hollywood Blvd., Kali-yuga plastic America,
and beneath the moon danced to Govinda and Radharani in a Manhattan alley,
searching for a possible temple,

who proclaimed natural vegetarian prasadamism to the nation's hamburger
stands, the cow-eaters of America, the pig-eaters, bird-eaters, fish-eaters,
lamb-eaters, threatening them with endless rebirths as tigers,

who declared that Colonel Sanders of the Fried Chickens of Kentucky would
have to undergo a chicken-birth-life-and-death for every chicken smeared
with his recipe making its saucy way into the all-devouring mouths of the
American karmavores,

who burst two thousand Ohio State students out their skins and jumped for
joy on his dais in the All-American City,

who, lauding the "big mrdangam," bought a press, said, "This is my heart,"
and printed his own books in Boston,

who, having chanted six years in temples of Vrndavana, India, where Lord
Krsna's lotus feet danced, walked two miles up a West Virginia dirt road,
stopping only once briefly for breath, and founded New Vrndavana in the
locust-flower'd hills,

who lived there in a shack, sauntered on morning walks through the locusts
and maples and blessed the dandelions, blackberries and pokeweed with his
gaze,

who sat quietly beneath a persimmon tree reading Srimad-Bhagavatam and
musing over the Appalachians,

who boarded the jet age from New York to Hamburg, carrying over the Atlantic
real Aryan Vedic civilization in his head and magic mantras on his lips, the
Paramhansa on Lufthansa, descending on Europe on his silver swan, singing
songs of Krsna-love for fractured Germany,

who, not knowing one word of German, lectured on ecstasy in a little
storefront temple on Eppendorfer Weg, chanting Hare Krsna uber alles,

who defined real Aryanism -- life according to spirit, not to flesh -- to
rapt disciples following him on a vigorous morning walk amidst cold,
implacable North German beer consciousness, sausages and Volkswagens,

who sat before an Elbe sunset, holding up a picture of Radha-Krsna dancing
on the lotus shaped Vaikuntha planet, and who smiled and transformed the
Elbe into the Yamuna,

who descended on London reporters like a thundercloud and deluged them with
the Absolute Truth -- "I have come to teach what you have forgot." "Which
is?" "God."

who sang "Bhaja Govindam" to this century's British bards, the Beatles --
"What are you doing? Your philosophical speculation and grammatical word
jugglery will not save you at the moment of death, so bhaja Govinda, just
worship Krsna," and struck up a new song in George's heart,

who shouted down the new crows in London's Conway Hall and continued playing
cymbals as their wings fluttered,

who founded a six-story Radha-Krsna temple a block away from a storehouse of
ravaged Indian treasures, the British Museum, and despite a Gandhi
exhibition began the Vaisnava colonization of England,

who buried his head in flowers and danced in ecstasy before the Lord,

who saw Arjuna throw down his bow at Kuruksetra and Lord Krsna and Balarama
pass through Mathura with Their cows and boy friends as the city girls
showered Them with flowers from their balconies,

and who at this moment deluges the blazing fire of the soul trapped in
materials and drowns the conflagration of even the most obdurant (my own!)
soul entangled in the great chain fire of action and reaction,

who even now insists on wishing me well despite my pigheaded gnawing at
o'erchewed stool,

who knows the innate sweetness of the soul in love with Krsna and who
delivers that love with truth, who draws it out the timid soul with truth
and who demands its flourishing and wishes it well,

who resides at the lotus feet of Krsna eternally, who is His ambassador on
earth, transmitting His message infallibly,

who views this universe to be no more significant than water in a calf's
hoofprint,

who floats upon the tossing ocean of material and looks with compassion upon
the countless dynasties of suffering souls struggling below,

who hears the discordant sounds of Kali's millennia and blends them in
harmony to one song that anyone can sing,

who must play in the starry sandbox of the universe like a child with his
toys,

who must laugh at the maya karmaval, the vast play of illusion, of America,
of the world,

who must talk to Krsna alone at night, sitting on his bed, conferring,
listening carefully to His advice,

who perpetually receives the waters of benediction from the ocean of mercy
and who pours them forth in torrents to extinguish the flames of
materialism,

who, always engaged in chanting and celebrating the message of Lord
Caitanya, sometimes dances in ecstasy and trembles and quivers in his
trance,

who, with his disciples, untiringly worships Sri Sri Radha and Krsna in
Their temple,

who is always offering food to Krsna and who derives great satisfaction in
seeing his disciples eat bhagavat-prasadam, the delicious mercy of the Lord,

who is eternally eager to chant and preach the glories of the loving
exchanges between Lord Krsna and Radharani and who aspires to relish these
pastimes at every moment,

who expertly assists the gopis, Lord Krsna's transcendental cowherd girl
friends engaged in the perfection of Radha-Krsna conjugal love affairs, who
makes various tasteful arrangements for Them,

who, as all scriptures reveal, should be honored as highly as the Supreme
and Almighty Lord, for he is the Great God's most confidential servitor,

whose mercy enables me to receive the benediction of the mercy of Krsna and
without whose mercy I cannot advance on the spiritual path, and who is
therefore worthy of my perpetual obeisances and my worship.

---------------------------------
by Hayagriva Prabhu, From BTG #36

Source:http://dinesh-krsna.blogspot.in/2016/11/glorification-of-srila-prabhupada-from.html

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In acquiring knowledge, it is said that what we can know depends on what we know. On seeing pale fingernails, a layperson sees just the discoloration of the nails, but a doctor sees signs of anemia. As the doctor knows more about the body’s functioning than a layperson, the doctor can come to know more about its possible malfunctioning on seeing symptoms that mean nothing to the uninformed.

Similarly, the more we come to know about bhakti and especially about the challenges of sharing bhakti with others, the more we can appreciate the sacrifice of those who have dedicated their lives for sharing bhakti. And the greatest among the modern sharers of bhakti is our exalted founder-acharya, His Divine Grace A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada, whose thirty-ninth disappearance day we are observing today. What he has achieved in terms of attracting millions of people to Krishna’s lotus feet is unparalleled in the history of the world. His contribution was not just what he himself did but also the legacy he created by which his contribution would endure and benedict people generation after generation, for many, many generations to come. His books, his followers, his temples and his movement are all his gifts to us. It is through these gifts of his that we all have the opportunity to relish krishna-bhakti.

Srila Prabhupada’s greatness is oceanic, and I would like to discuss just two small drops in that ocean. Though small, these drops have increased my appreciation of His Divine Grace because I have, by his mercy, got some small realizations by trying to serve Krishna in those areas.

During the last few years, since I started traveling in various parts of the world for sharing bhakti, I have gained increased appreciation of Srila Prabhupada’s capacity to transcend jet-lag and his capacity to transcend his body’s need of sleep for the sake of writing.

Transcending bodily limitations for spiritual purpose

I had heard from Srila Prabhupada’s close associates, especially his personal servants, how Srila Prabhupada was never affected by jet-lag. But the significance of this point didn’t register in me till I found jet-lag afflicting me. When we travel across time zones, the body’s biological clock remains in the time zone we were in earlier, even if the body is now in another time zone. Getting the body’s clock to adjust to the new time zone often takes several days. And during that interim period, our sleep cycles, digestion patterns and other bodily functions get disturbed, even disrupted, thereby adversely affecting our capacity to function effectively. That is the way with most normal human beings.

Srila Prabhupada traveled extensively and tirelessly, his functioning never impeded by jet-lag. Such uninterrupted service is testimony to his absorption in Krishna and in his capacity to transcend a bodily limitation that affects most human beings.

Another way in which Srila Prabhupada transcended his body’s normal limitations has been far more consequential for all of us: his sleeping for just a few hours so that he could write books for us. How difficult such writing can be, I would like to share from an author’s perspective.

As I have many writing commitments – and keep getting many more – many times I have resolved to cut down on my night sleep so that I can wake early and write. Even if I do manage to wake early, I have found that my brain is in no condition to write. On most such occasions, I simply struggle against sleep without doing any constructive writing. And the experience of most authors is similar. Whatever books on writing I have read, therein I have found that writers are unanimous in saying that one needs to sleep adequately to write effectively.

It could be said that any bodily activity requires the body to be sufficiently rested. That’s true, but that requirement of rest is all the more so for an activity like writing because writing is both sedentary and solitary. If while being inadequately rested, we have to do some activity that involves some moving about, that motion helps in fighting off sleep. Similarly, while insufficiently rested, if we need to do some work that involves talking with others, then that conversation too helps in warding off sleep. But when we are doing an activity such as writing that involves neither motion nor conversation, sleep attacks with full force – all the more so when we haven’t given the body its due quota of sleep.

That Srila Prabhupada could reduce his bodily quota of sleep to so little and still write his books – and write books that contain some of the most profound wisdom the world has ever seen – is simply astonishing. It demonstrates that he is in a class of his own, far above even the best of writers.

Beyond artistic expression to spiritual compassion

Another distinctive feature of Srila Prabhupada is his inspiration for writing. All creative artists, including writers, labor to bring their creations to fruition for many reasons. One reason that strongly drives many writers is the thought that that particular work of art will never be produced if they don’t produce it.

Srila Prabhupada’s motivation went far beyond artistic expression to spiritual compassion. He couldn’t tolerate living in a world where Krishna’s glories were not widely available for everyone in the world’s principal language of mainstream communication: English. And he couldn’t tolerate this absence because he could see, through the eyes of scriptural knowledge, that people, by the millions and billions, were suffering because of a lack of spiritual knowledge. So, he strove tirelessly to share spiritual knowledge, specifically the summit of spiritual knowledge in the form of the glories of the highest spiritual reality, Krishna.

Thus, it was Srila Prabhupada’s intolerance towards people’s suffering that enabled him to tolerate and transcend his own body’s needs.

Each day, when after getting adequate rest, I sit down to write, I hope and pray that remembrance of Srila Prabhupada’s sacrifice may fill me with gratitude. He gave me the content to write and he gave up his own comfort so as to lay the foundation of a global movement that provides me the facilities to write comfortably.

Offering my eternally prostrated obeisances to Srila Prabhupada, I beg for his mercy so that I can do my small part in practicing and sharing the bhakti wisdom with which he has enriched the world.


Source:http://www.thespiritualscientist.com/2016/11/appreciating-srila-prabhupadas-transcendence-sharing-krishna-bhakti-prabhupada-disappearance-day-meditation/

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4 lessons from the Tortoise

There are lessons to be learned from all sources. In the Bhagavad-gita Krishna uses the humble tortoise to illustrate sense control: “One who is able to withdraw his senses from sense objects, as the tortoise draws its limbs within the shell, is firmly fixed in perfect consciousness.”

Here are some other lessons we can learn from a tortoise:

1. Slow and steady

Yesterday is gone and we yet don’t have tomorrow. We only have today and really only this moment. I like to call this “everyday eternal.” As the mind pulls us to the past of what was, or the future of what could be, our daily practice of focused Krishna meditation brings us to the now. If we do that steadily every day, with the patience and determination of a slow and steady tortoise, then as our external life moves along it’s destined path towards old age and death, our transcendental life will move towards it’s destination – experiencing the complete and ultimate expression of love.

2. Withdraw

When life gets too much – withdraw. As the tortoise pulls in it’s limbs when in danger, pull yourself back into a quiet space when you feel overwhelmed.  Even better, practice retreating everyday to that most precious internal space of connecting with Krishna – whether through chanting, or singing, or reading about Him. Don’t wait until life is too stressful to do it – treat yourself to the benefits of withdrawing daily, and you will feel the difference.

3. Carry our Home

A turtle carries his home on his back. As the saying goes, “home is where the heart is.” What are you carrying in your heart?  Welcome Krishna into your heart space –  with Him there you will find it easy to keep a happy, open, generous, forgiving, and letting go heart.

4. Be Lean-able

In the Srimad-Bhagavatam story of Krishna’s incarnation as Kurma, the tortoise’s back provided the support needed to hold up a mountain. Be strong for others. Let them lean on you when they need to. To be strong in body and mind is a gift. Share it willingly and be a supporting part in another’s success. We truly become our best when we are helping others serve Krishna – and that’s the secret of pleasing Krishna as well.


Source:http://iskconofdc.org/4-lessons-from-the-tortoise/

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Dipavali (Diwali)

Today marks the festival of Dipavali. Dipavali [Diwali} Sunday, October 30, 2016 [Mayapura, West Bengal, India time]. The Dīpāvalī festival takes place on the dark-moon night in the month of Kārttika (October-November).

Diwali or Deepavali is the Hindu festival of lights celebrated every year in autumn in the northern hemisphere (spring in southern hemisphere) is one of the major festivals of Hinduism. It spiritually signifies the victory of light over darkness, good over evil, knowledge over ignorance, and hope over despair. Its celebration includes millions of lights shining on housetops, outside doors and windows, around temples and other buildings in the communities and countries where it is observed. The festival preparations and rituals typically extend over a five-day period, but the main festival night of Diwali coincides with the darkest, new moon night of the Hindu Lunisolar month Kartika in Bikram Sambat calendar. (excerpted from Wikipedia)

Although we do not celebrate in typical Hindu fashion, we do honor Dipavli as Srila Prabhupada has explained that the actual meaning of Dipavali celebration is Lord Krsna breaking the pot of yogurt and being bound by Yasodamayi.

Srila Prabhupada Explains Dipavali (Diwali)

…Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī Ṭhākura, quoting from the Vaiṣṇava-toṣaṇī of Śrīla Sanātana Gosvāmī, says that the incident of Kṛṣṇa’s breaking the pot of yogurt and being bound by mother Yaśodā took place on the Dipavali Day, or Dīpa-mālikā. Even today in India, this festival is generally celebrated very gorgeously in the month of Kārtika by fireworks and lights, especially in Bombay. It is to be understood that among all the cows of Nanda Mahārāja, several of mother Yaśodā’s cows ate only grasses so flavorful that the grasses would automatically flavor the milk. Mother Yaśodā wanted to collect the milk from these cows, make it into yogurt and churn it into butter personally, since she thought that this child Kṛṣṇa was going to the houses of neighborhood gopas and gopīs to steal butter because He did not like the milk and yogurt ordinarily prepared. (from purport to SB 10.9.1-2)

Full text and Purport

Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam: Canto
by His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda
Canto Ten, Chapter 9, Text 1-2

śrī-śuka uvāca
ekadā gṛha-dāsīṣu
yaśodā nanda-gehinī
karmāntara-niyuktāsu
nirmamantha svayaṁ dadhi
yāni yānīha gītāni
tad-bāla-caritāni ca
dadhi-nirmanthane kāle
smarantī tāny agāyata

śrī-śukaḥ uvāca—Śrī Śukadeva Gosvāmī said; ekadā—one day; gṛha-dāsīṣu—when all the maidservants of the household were otherwise engaged; yaśodā—mother Yaśodā; nanda-gehinī—the queen of Nanda Mahārāja; karma-antara—in other household affairs; niyuktāsu—being engaged; nirmamantha—churned; svayam—personally; dadhi—the yogurt; yāni—all such; yāni—such; iha—in this connection; gītāni—songs; tat-bāla-caritāni—in which the activities of her own child were enacted; ca—and; dadhi-nirmanthane—while churning the yogurt; kāle—at that time; smarantī—remembering; tāni—all of them (in the form of songs); agāyata—chanted.

TRANSLATION

Śrī Śukadeva Gosvāmī continued: One day when mother Yaśodā saw that all the maidservants were engaged in other household affairs, she personally began to churn the yogurt. While churning, she remembered the childish activities of Kṛṣṇa, and in her own way she composed songs and enjoyed singing to herself about all those activities.

PURPORT

Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī Ṭhākura, quoting from the Vaiṣṇava-toṣaṇī of Śrīla Sanātana Gosvāmī, says that the incident of Kṛṣṇa’s breaking the pot of yogurt and being bound by mother Yaśodā took place on the Dipavali Day, or Dīpa-mālikā. Even today in India, this festival is generally celebrated very gorgeously in the month of Kārtika by fireworks and lights, especially in Bombay. It is to be understood that among all the cows of Nanda Mahārāja, several of mother Yaśodā’s cows ate only grasses so flavorful that the grasses would automatically flavor the milk. Mother Yaśodā wanted to collect the milk from these cows, make it into yogurt and churn it into butter personally, since she thought that this child Kṛṣṇa was going to the houses of neighborhood gopas and gopīs to steal butter because He did not like the milk and yogurt ordinarily prepared.

While churning the butter, mother Yaśodā was singing about the childhood activities of Kṛṣṇa. It was formerly a custom that if one wanted to remember something constantly, he would transform it into poetry or have this done by a professional poet. It appears that mother Yaśodā did not want to forget Kṛṣṇa’s activities at any time. Therefore she poeticized all of Kṛṣṇa’s childhood activities, such as the killing of Pūtanā, Aghāsura, Śakaṭāsura and Tṛṇāvarta, and while churning the butter, she sang about these activities in poetical form. This should be the practice of persons eager to remain Kṛṣṇa conscious twenty-four hours a day. This incident shows how Kṛṣṇa conscious mother Yaśodā was. To stay in Kṛṣṇa consciousness, we should follow such persons.

Source:https://theharekrishnamovement.org/2016/10/30/dipavali-diwali/

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