ISKCON Desire Tree's Posts (19818)

Sort by

Silent Victory by Loka Saranga dasa

31000269080?profile=RESIZE_584x
31000269258?profile=RESIZE_584x

I often ask myself what victory is for us, whether on a societal scale or in our personal lives. Surely, as society shapes or evolves, there is a certain predictable concept of success, given the direction and preferences chosen. As Srila Prabhupada so brilliantly taught us, given the place, time and circumstances. Since we are a society founded by Srila Prabhupada, so long as his written and spoken word remains, we have a wide range of victories that we can clearly classify as victories that have their value yesterday, today and tomorrow, here and there. For the whole society and for the individual. Distributing thousands and millions of books, opening new temples, starting farms and gurukulas, bringing in new devotees, organizing festivals, Ratha-yatras, opening preaching centers and restaurants, and other successes. These are successes, victories for us. In many places, victory is maintaining the temple, preeaching programmes and distributing books. And also keeping the devotees in devotional service. Just to keep fighting against Maya, that is a great victory that is not celebrated much anywhere, and it is a pity.

Here in the Czech Republic we are not very used to huge victories, we do not open or build large temples, preaching centers do not grow like mushrooms after rain, and crowds of devotees do not even fill a small temple outside Prague.

But books are still being distributed, we have the most beautiful Ratha-yatra in the world, we have an incredible number of restaurants that employ dozens of devotees, and one farm that has recently expanded by buying fields, a cowshed, and a barn.

31000269100?profile=RESIZE_584x

And I, who have been working in one of the restaurants for a few years, have noticed one quiet victory that will not be announced anywhere at large gatherings or world meetings in Mayapur.

In a small town with 20 thousand inhabitants near the ecological farm Krishna’s Court, the devotees even have two restaurants, Govinda and Madhava (Madhava is also a bakery), they are about a kilometer apart and both are thriving. I cook at Madhava, where about 200 breads, 300 buns and other pastries are baked every day, and we also cook over 100 lunches and other snacks. And I quietly observe that the flour, plain, coarse, wheat, rye, spelt, from which we bake, comes from the Krishna’s Court farm. And we are not the only ones. I know that several other bakeries in Prague purchase flour from grain grown and ground on our farm. I silently observe that most of the vegetables in season are from Krishna’s Court farm, cabbage, carrots, peppers, spinach, beetroot, potatoes, it is a joy to cook and of course to receive. I also silently observe that the milk, delicious paneer, yoghurt is freshly delivered from Krishna’s Court farm. And the ahimsa milk delivered to restaurants? I can clearly state that ahimsa milk is a turning point, it brings joy and satisfaction without compromise.

Moreover, both restaurants employ about 14 householders and sell products grown on our farm. After all, that is what Srila Prabhupada wanted so much. It is a huge victory, a step forward with a firm foot.

A fairly large community of householders has grown up around the Krishna`s Court farm over the years, over twenty houses of devotees in close proximity to the farm and another 15 in a slightly larger area. The education of children and various projects keep the community growing well, of course there are also the necessary needs, the main thing is to buy arable land near the farm so that the farm can secure a large herd of cows and agricultural production. With this, I turn to you, dear reader, please become part of our silent victory, open your heart and contribute to the purchase of arable land and pasture for cows for Krishna`s Court farm.

your servant Loka Saranga dasa

31000269464?profile=RESIZE_584x

https://surabhifarm.com/

  Source : 

Read more…

31000263478?profile=RESIZE_584x
By Kulavati Krishnapriya Devi Dasi,

In a ceremony that blended tradition with compassion, ISKCON Kharghar inaugurated Gajendra, a life-sized mechanical elephant, on November 9, 2025. The occasion marked a milestone for Sri Sri Radha Madan Mohanji Mandir as it became the first ISKCON temple and the pioneering religious institution in Maharashtra to embrace this innovative approach to temple rituals.

The grand opening ceremony, held at Hare Krishna Land in Sector 23, Kharghar, featured several eminent dignitaries. Smt. Hema Malini, a renowned actor, Padma Shri awardee, and Member of Parliament from Mathura, joined PETA India in presenting this remarkable gift to the temple. The event was further graced by Smt. Manda Vijay Mhatre, MLA from Belapur, and Sri Prashant Thakur, MLA from Panvel, alongside ISKCON Kharghar Temple President Dr. Sura Das and hundreds of devotees.

The ceremony opened with kirtan and Maṅgalacarana, after which Smt. Hema Malini and Dr. Sura Das jointly unveiled Gajendra. The event culminated with the inaugural arati offered to Their Lordships Sri Sri Radha Madan Mohanji. Devotees then participated in Gajarohan Seva and parikrama, experiencing for the first time how the elephant integrates into traditional worship practices.

Standing three meters tall and weighing 800 kilograms, Gajendra represents a remarkable fusion of engineering and spirituality. Constructed using rubber, fiber, metal, mesh, foam, and steel, it operates on five motors and runs on electricity. The elephant can perform lifelike movements – shaking its head, flapping its ears, moving its eyes, swishing its tail, lifting its trunk, and even spraying water. Most importantly, devotees can climb upon it and it can be taken in processions, fulfilling all traditional ceremonial requirements.

Read more: https://iskconnews.org/tradition-meets-compassion-as-iskcon-kharghar-unveils-mechanical-elephant/

Read more…

31000263068?profile=RESIZE_584xBy Atma Tattva Das, 

Recently, the Bhakti Recovery Group (BRG) celebrated the five-year anniversary of its support network for devotees seeking healing through bhakti and the Twelve Steps. To commemorate the milestone, members from across the world gathered online for a heartfelt celebration. On a softly lit Zoom call, faces from Berlin to Bengaluru filled the screen. Some smiled, some cried, and others simply listened. Founder and guiding force Jiva G. watched from her home altar, overwhelmed with gratitude. “I started to cry,” she said. “To hear devotees say this helped them rebuild their relationship with Krishna, that was everything.”

Since its humble beginnings during the pandemic, BRG has grown into a worldwide fellowship where faith and recovery meet in shared vulnerability and service. Under Jiva’s leadership and with the guidance of Radhanath Swami, the group has built a spiritual bridge between the Twelve Step process and the path of bhakti. Five years on, Jiva reflected on what she’s learned, how far the movement has come, and what she envisions for the future.

Read more: https://iskconnews.org/bhakti-recovery-group-marks-five-years-of-healing-service/

Read more…

31000262673?profile=RESIZE_584x

By Kulavati Krishnapriya Devi Dasi

Ashta-Sakhis: The Closest Friends of Srimati Radharani offers a rare and intimate glimpse into the lives and personalities of the eight principal gopi associates of Srimati Radharani. Published by ISKCON’s Congregation Development Ministry (CDM), the book is authored by Gourangi Gandharvika Devi Dasi and represents years of heartfelt service, in-depth research, and devotional celebration in Sridham Mayapur.

Raised in the spiritual atmosphere of Mayapur since the age of seven, Gourangi Gandharvika Devi Dasi has spent the last two decades taking daily darshan of Sri Sri Radha-Madhava. Her deep connection with the Deities and inspiration from Jananivas Das led her to explore the unique personalities of the Ashta-Sakhis—Lalita, Visakha, Chitra, Champakalata, Tungavidya, Indulekha, Rangadevi, and Sudevi.

“I used to stand in front of Radha-Madhava and think, ‘I don’t know enough about Their closest associates,'” she shared in a recent interview. That longing to understand and serve more personally eventually manifested into active participation in Mayapur’s annual celebration of the Sakhis’ appearance days. Each sakhi’s day was marked with themed altar decorations and community engagement—Indulekha’s day featured a sewing workshop scene, and Chitra’s celebration invited artists to offer their drawings directly to the Deities.

Her involvement in these celebrations inspired her to delve deeper into the lives of the Ashta-Sakhis. “Our movement is personal. Krishna is a person, Radharani is a person, and so are the Sakhis. They all have their unique personalities and talents. The more we know them, the more we can learn how to love and serve Radha-Madhava,” she said.

The book is designed to be accessible to all age groups, not just children. It is divided into two parts: a main volume for adults and a combined set for children and families that includes an activity book. The main volume describes each Sakhis’ qualities, talents, services, and pastimes. At the same time, the activity book offers over 125 crafts, puzzles, and games to help families and children engage with the Sakhis in a practical and personal way.

Read more: https://iskconnews.org/book-review-ashta-sakhis-the-closest-friends-of-srimati-radharani/

Read more…

A First Snow by Bhaktimarga Swami

31000262068?profile=RESIZE_584x

A first snow
With a mix of rain
Twas months ago
No cause to complain

I’m not the only one
To make the sound
The crunch is fun
On a crisp/soggy ground

Footprints reveal more
Have tread the trail
There before
In an inhale exhale

Pumping out breathe
In excellent air
That contradicts death
On this night half fair

A man walked by
With a hoodie on
He cast no eye
What could he have done?

Trees are ice cycled
Creating a fantasy
Tiny drops trickled
Forming a glazed canopy

 It is slightly cold
There’s power in that
As I strolled
Feeling as a small sprat

These are god elements
That keep me in line
Thoughts and continents
Are perceptions in time

 

Read more…



Lord Caitana brings our attention to the fact that Krishna has invested His full potencies into each single individual holy name. What are these types of potencies? In the Hari Bhakti Vilas these potencies and activities are mentioned. The verse speaks of activities like charity, performing fasts, doing austerities, going on pilgrimage and so on. All this is invested with potencies by the gods and the saints and it can uplift a soul in a tremendous way. Just imagine people doing charity, giving golden chariots away, um fasting and performing austerities for prolonged amounts of time, going for months to various sacred pilgrims, majes and becoming socharged by all these powerful uh results. what to speak of performing ashwamed and raja uh yakyas or studying the scriptures all this has tremendous potencies to free one from bondage and conditioning and to attract one to Krishna it’s the paraka and taraka shaktis which are invested in that those activities.

Source: https://www.dandavats.com/?p=116613

Read more…

  



This video offers a glimpse into the ongoing work on the original windows of Srila Prabhupada’s private quarters at New Mayapur, including his room and sleeping area. The project aims to preserve the authentic look and sacred atmosphere of these historic spaces while ensuring long-term durability.

Current progress includes:
Woodwork completed, honoring the original design
Painting and hardware carefully restored
Hand-built oak windows crafted to match the originals
Custom made glass panels
Modern thermal seals added for better insulation, without altering the traditional aesthetic
Traditional hinges restored with durable materials
Cremone bolts installed for secure, classic locking

This is an evolving project carried out with care, respect, and a desire to keep Srila Prabhupada’s quarters true to their heritage.

Source: https://www.dandavats.com/?p=116610

Read more…


Dramas are a true meditation on the leelas of the Lord. They give us a wonderful opportunity to enter these divine pastimes and, in some way, relive them. It is truly a magical experience to witness these performances as part of the IBC community. We are deeply grateful to have this chance to serve the community for the pleasure of our dear Srila Prabhupāda and our Lords.
We warmly welcome you to join our programs and become part of this beautiful experience. Hare Krishna.

It has been a great opportunity to serve. We mainly do seva and also offer volunteer support to the IBC team. Everyone becomes enthusiastic whenever they get a chance to serve. I would like to thank you for involving us, keeping us united, and always encouraging us to participate with a cooperative spirit. Serving together helps us grow in our devotion and remain steady and consistent.

As Srila Prabhupāda always emphasized, dramas are among the most powerful tools of preaching. They can attract thousands of innocent people—including children, the illiterate, and even the most learned scholars and sannyāsīs—because they present the deepest truths of Krishna consciousness in a captivating and accessible way, just as Srila Prabhupāda has conveyed in his books.

We invite all devotees across the globe to come, witness, enjoy, and relish the amazing dramatic presentations of the Lord’s pastimes performed by the ISKCON IBC community of devotees.

Hare Krishna.

Source: https://www.dandavats.com/?p=116624

Read more…

HH Niranjana Swami – Health Update

30998256276?profile=RESIZE_584xThe procedure is expected to take approximately 2-2.5 hours. This will not be open-heart surgery. Therefore, no general anesthesia will be given to Guru Maharaja. He will be given local anesthesia, will be able to watch and speak to the doctors, and will be hearing Srila Prabhupada chanting throughout the whole time. Angioplasty is less invasive and, in Guru Maharaja’s case, the doctors performing the procedure have assured us it will yield the same results as bypass surgery, with less recovery and rehabilitation time.

Source: https://www.dandavats.com/?p=116627

 

Read more…

30998159092?profile=RESIZE_710xBy Atma Tattva Das

When the Sri Sri Radha Radhanath Temple (SSRRT) community marked its 40th anniversary in October 2025, one of the most meaningful offerings wasn’t a ceremony or performance, but a living archive. The Memory Vault, compiled by Priya Kishori Devi Dasi, gathered decades of service and shared devotion through interviews with devotees who helped shape ISKCON Durban from its earliest years.

What began as a small idea to collect written memories grew into a multimedia project that preserved the voices of those who built and sustained the community over four decades.

Read more: https://iskconnews.org/preserving-devotional-heritage-the-memory-vault-at-iskcon-durban/

Read more…

30997803266?profile=RESIZE_584x
“Yes, I am still brave (laughter). Otherwise, how could I come alone to preach Kṛṣṇa consciousness?”

Srila Prabhupada spoke these words after revealing that at the age of 12, he had climbed the scaffolding of the 300-foot-tall Victoria Memorial. Srila Prabhupada’s bravery in coming to spread Krishna Consciousness was exemplary, and it’s time for US to follow in his footsteps. This year, let’s BE BRAVE and unite as a One World Team to better the world by participating in the Live to Give Campaign. 

This year, the One World Team aims to distribute 4.6 million Bhagavad-gitas by January 7th, 2026. Participating in sankirtan service requires bravery, but bravery comes from our Parampara and results in an unending ocean of bliss by working for the welfare of others. The Global Book Distribution Ministry encourages all devotees to join together and participate in this year’s Live to Give campaign to please His Divine Grace and follow in His footsteps. 

The ministry will be posting regular inspirational content and information on its channels and has some basic training resources on distributebooks.com to assist devotees in fulfilling Srila Prabhupada’s desire.

Let’s save the world! Be Brave!

Who – everyone

What – Distribute Bhagavad-gitas, 4.6 million Goal

Why – Because Srila Prabhupada was brave

When – Until Jan 7 2026

Where – One World Team

How – following BBT Channels for inspiration and learning from distributebooks.com and other devotees.

30997812473?profile=RESIZE_584x

Source: https://iskconnews.org/live-to-give-campaign-aims-to-distribute-4-6-million-bhagavad-gitas/

Read more…

Reinforcement by Bhaktimarga Swami

30997759699?profile=RESIZE_400x30997763464?profile=RESIZE_400x

What a beautiful reinforcement!  There we were in the Banquet Hall of the Radison Hotel, 8 AM, singing our hearts out with fellow country men and women, all Hare Krishnas, some mature (been around) and others, newer kids on the block. 

This was the start of a beautiful day, the start of an entire weekend when leaders of ISKCON from Zone 1 of North America came together to discuss what is important to them culturally and socially.

One of our priorities is succession planning.  The room was occupied with a mix of devotees of varying backgrounds – born Canadians and American, too, and immigrants from India, Russia, and Ukraine.  The topics involved child protection, financial protection, deity standards, and maintenance. 

A favourite in terms of presentations was the various centres being represented.  We now have some locations which we call Bhakti Yoga Circles.  These locations are not full-fledged temples, but they concentrate on engaging in kirtan, wisdom, and food.  Two examples would be in Angus and Hamilton, both in Ontario.

The sessions over the course of the day were excellent.  In the evening there was a special treat.  The bulk of attendees shuttled our way to the big tourist attraction.  It is Canada’s tallest church, a significant landmark.  It was nice getting off our chairs for meeting.  Sain Joseph’s Oratory is a handsome structure with its large dome, and having a connection to saint, Brother Andre.  When you visit this destination, you do feel a strong sense of awe and reverence.  It is a beautiful reinforcement.

 

 

Read more…

First Among Kings By Drutakarma Dasa

2515192638?profile=RESIZE_400x

From Back to Godhead

From the Vedic literature: the history of King Prthu,
the incarnation of the ruling potency of the Supreme Lord.

Long ago, the normally peaceful wise men of a Vedic kingdom forcibly deposed an intolerably corrupt ruler. But instead of replacing him with another unprincipled politician (as has so often happened in the history of the world), they selected a perfect chief executive to command the state. The story of this ancient coup d’etat holds many lessons for the people of nations victimized by unworthy leaders.

Once, King Anga, unsuccessful in his attempt to perform a great religious sacrifice, addressed the brahmana priests, “Kindly tell me what offense I have committed. The demigods are neither taking part in the sacrifice nor accepting their shares.” In those days demigods, such as Indra, the god of heaven, would descend from higher planets to take part in rituals performed by saintly monarchs.

The head priests said, “O king, in this life we do not find any sinful activity, but we can see that in your previous life you performed sins due to which you have no son.” They then advised King Anga to pray to the Supreme Lord, who is superior to the demigods. They said that when Lord Visnu would come to fulfill the king’s desire for a son, the demigods would accompany Him.

King Anga accepted this proposal; so the priests offered oblations to Lord Visnu, who is seated in the hearts of all living entities as the Supersoul. Lord Visnu is a direct expansion of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Lord Krsna.

While King Anga was offering oblations into the sacred fire, a person wearing white robes and a golden garland appeared suddenly from the flames. He was carrying a golden pot filled with rice boiled in milk. Taking permission from the priests. King Anga offered a portion of the rice preparation to his wife, Sunitha.

The queen, who was the daughter of death personified, soon became pregnant by her husband and gave birth to a son. From the Vedic literature we learn that generally a daughter inherits the qualities other father, and a son inherits those of his mother. Accordingly, the son born to the good king Anga acquired the undesirable traits of his maternal grandfather.

The child’s name was Vena. As a youth he used to take his bow and arrows to the forest and kill innocent deer. He was so cruel that he would sometimes kill his playmates, as if they were animals. King Anga punished Vena to reform him, but he was unable to bring his son to the path of gentleness.

The king thought “Persons who have no son are certainly fortunate. They don’t have to suffer the unbearable unhappiness caused by a bad son.”

But then he considered, “A bad son is better than a good one. A bad son creates a hellish home from which an intelligent man becomes very easily detached.” According to Vedic civilization, the true purpose of life is to realize one’s eternal relationship with the Supreme Lord, Krsna. But if one becomes overly occupied with family duties, one can lose sight of this ultimate goal. Therefore the Vedas advise married persons to detach themselves from the burdensome duties of family life when they reach the age of fifty, so they can devote their remaining years to self-realization.

Thinking over all this. King Anga could not sleep, and in the dead of night he got up from bed and left the palace. He gave up all attraction for his opulent kingdom and, unseen by anyone, silently left for the forest.

When the citizens found out that King Anga had departed, they began to search for him. They could find no trace of him, however, and returned to the city, where all the sages of the country had assembled. With tears in their eyes, the citizens told the sages that they were unable to find the king anywhere.

With no one to maintain law and order, criminals began to disturb society. So the sages called for Queen Sunitha. and with her permission they installed her son, Vena, on the throne. All the ministers, however, disagreed with the decision of the sages. They knew that Vena was too severe and cruel to be a good ruler. And sure enough, as soon as Vena ascended the throne he became overwhelmed with pride. He mounted his chariot and, like an uncontrolled elephant, began to travel throughout the kingdom, causing the sky and earth to tremble wherever he went.

But even though Vena had many bad qualities, there was one thing to his credit out of fear of him the thieves and rogues ceased their predatory acts.

At one point, however, King Vena forbade the brahmana priests to perform any more sacrifices. He stopped all kinds of religious rituals. Today this same policy is being carried out by atheistic governments all over the world. Even in America, where there is technically freedom of religion, the government has banned prayer from the public schools, outlawed the teaching of God-centered explanations of science, and legalized the killing of unborn children within the wombs of their mothers.

After observing King Vena’s atrocities, the sages concluded that the people of the world were in great danger. Although sages did not generally become involved in politics, the crisis was now too severe for them to ignore. Therefore they consulted among themselves about what to do.

The sages said. “We appointed this Vena king of the state to give protection to the citizens, but now he has become their enemy. But before we take action against him. let us first try to pacify him.”

Concealing their anger, the sages said. “Dear king, we have come to give you good advice. You should not be the cause of spoiling the spiritual life of the general populace. If you do so, you will certainly fall down from your royal position.”

King Vena proudly replied. “Those who out of gross ignorance do not worship the king, who is actually the Supreme Personality of Godhead, experience happiness neither in this world nor in the world after death. For this reason, O sages, you should abandon your envy of me and worship me.”

“This impious and impudent man does not deserve to sit on the throne at all.” declared the sages. “He is so shameless that he has dared to insult the Supreme Personality of Godhead.” Then, without using any weapon other than sound, the sages killed King Vena.

Queen Sunitha became very much aggrieved at the sight of her dead son’s body and decided to preserve it by applying certain ingredients and chanting mantras.

Some time later the sages noticed that society was again in a state of chaos. Talking among themselves they said, “Since the king is dead, rogues and thieves have become active.” Although the sages could have immediately intervened to punish the criminals as when they had killed King Vena they decided not to use their special powers. They arrived at another solution.

The sages decided to produce another king from the body of Vena, who despite his own bad qualities, was from a line of good kings. To do this they first generated an unsightly being called Bahuka from the lower part of Vena’s body. His complexion was dark, his eyes reddish. He immediately absorbed all the results of King Vena’s sinful activities.

From the upper part of Vena’s body the sages generated a male and a female empowered with potencies of the Supreme Lord. The male was an incarnation of the ruling potency of Lord Krsna, and the female an expansion of the goddess of fortune.

The sages said, “The male will be able to spread his reputation throughout the world. His name will be Prthu, and he will be the first among kings. The female has such beautiful qualities that she will beautify the ornaments she wears. Her name will be Arci, and she will accept King Prthu as her husband.”

Sages and demigods came to earth from all over the universe to witness Prthu’s coronation. King Prthu and Queen Arci, who were both exquisitely dressed, appeared as brilliant as fire. The demigods offered the new king many wonderful gifts.

Then professional reciters began to praise the king. But Prthu said. “O gentle reciters, offer such prayers in due course of time, when the qualities of which you have spoken actually manifest themselves in me.”

But instructed by the sages, the reciters continued to praise the king. They could understand his identity as an empowered representative of the Supreme Lord. In considering their descriptions of King Prthu’s qualities, we can gain insight into the character of a perfect ruler.

First the sages said that the king would himself follow religious principles and take steps to insure that the citizens would also follow them. He would punish the irreligious and the atheists. In the present age, we sometimes see that a government, in the name of a secular state, will allow people to freely engage in irreligious behavior. By committing sinful activities, such as eating meat gambling, taking intoxicants, and engaging in illicit sex aided by contraceptives and abortion, the population becomes implicated in the laws of karma and undergoes suffering in the form of wars, epidemics, famines, and so forth. In this way people suffer many miseries in this life and remain entrapped in the cycle of birth and death.

The reciters said the king would engage the population in performing sacrifice to the Supreme Lord and thus insure a plentiful supply of natural food and other resources. The modern industrial civilization does not actually provide the necessities of life. Food is produced in the Fields, by God’s arrangement and not in factories. The raw materials used in manufacturing such as air, water, minerals, and oil are all supplied by the Supreme Lord. When these natural gifts are taken without acknowledging their source and used simply for sense gratification, the Lord restricts the supply. We can acknowledge the source of these resources by sacrifice, and the sacrifice recommended in the Vedic scriptures for this age is the chanting of the Hare Krsna mantra: Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare. By performing this sacrifice, the population will enjoy adequate supplies of natural gifts for a simple life dedicated to the cultivation of spiritual knowledge.

The reciters then said that the king would fairly collect taxes and disburse them to the public in times of need, just as the sun-god evaporates water from the ocean and returns it to the earth in the form of rain. In the present age, however, burdensome taxes are always increasing and are spent on lavish salaries for government administrators. This unfair taxation makes people dishonest and they try to hide their income. Eventually the state will not be able to collect enough taxes to meet its huge military and administrative expenses. At that time. the whole economic system and governing apparatus will collapse. This is already beginning to occur.

The sages said the king would consider all living beings as dear to him as his own self. Today most heads of state are meat-eaters, as are their citizens. They advertise their concern for the welfare of others while allowing the slaughter of hundreds of millions of innocent creatures.

The sages then declared that King Prthu would be compared to a lion. Unless rogues and thieves are afraid of the chief executive, there cannot be peace and prosperity in the state. The sages also stated that the king would consider himself the servant of the devotees of the Lord and would rule his kingdom according to their good advice. He would also accept private spiritual instruction from them.

Upon accepting the throne. King Prthu had to confront many problems, including a scarcity of food grains. Many of the citizens had become skinny from starvation. Therefore they came before the king and said. “You are not only a king. but the incarnation of God as well. Therefore, O king of all kings, please arrange to satisfy our hunger.”

King Prthu determined that the people were not at fault; rather, for some reason the earth was withholding her bounty. He therefore threatened the earth deity, who, after worshiping King Prthu as an incarnation of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, explained that she had been withholding her bounty because of the sinful activities of some of the population. Then, because of King Prthu’s intervention, she began to supply every living entity with its proper food.

The king then initiated a series of one hundred sacrifices. Lord Visnu was pleased to appear at these sacrifices along with demigods and sages. In response the earth produced abundant supplies of all natural resources. When the heavenly king Indra saw the sacrifices, however, he feared that King Prthu would surpass him in fame and opulence. He therefore began to interfere with the sacrifices, and King Prthu prepared to take strong action against him. But on the advice of Lord Brahma, the chief of the demigods, he desisted.

Then Lord Visnu appeared in the arena of sacrifice along with Indra and said, “My dear King Prthu, Indra, the king of heaven, has disturbed your execution of one hundred sacrifices. Now he has come with Me to be forgiven by you. Therefore excuse him.” King Prthu did as the Lord requested.

Lord Visnu then said, “My dear King Prthu, if you continue to protect the citizens according to the instructions of the learned brahmana authorities, as they are received by disciplic succession by hearing from master to disciple, and if you follow the religious principles laid down by them, without attachment to ideas manufactured by mental concoction, then every one of your citizens will be happy and will love you, and very soon you will be able to see such already liberated personalities as the four Kumaras: Sanaka, Sanatana, Sananda, and Sanat-kumara.” King Prthu sincerely accepted the instructions of the Lord and offered Him devotional prayers. The Lord then departed for His own abode.

The king then entered the gates of his capital city, where he was welcomed by his joyous citizens. King Prthu advised his citizens to worship the Supreme Lord by engaging their minds, words, and bodies in His service along with the results of their occupational duties. He also advised them to obey and worship the pure devotees of the Lord, saying, “By regular service to the brahmanas and Vaisnavas, one can clear the dirt from his heart and thus enjoy supreme peace and liberation from material attachment.”

After hearing King Prthu speak so nicely, the sages, demigods, and citizens declared that sinful King Vena had been delivered from the darkest region of hellish life by the action of his son, King Prthu. The four Kumaras, who were as brilliant as the sun, then arrived there. Seeing the four sages descend from the sky, the king received them with proper respect and worship. The king asked the Kumaras how those in this material world could achieve the ultimate goal of life. Sanat-kumara replied:

It has been conclusively decided in the scriptures, after due consideration, that the ultimate goal for the welfare of human society is detachment from the bodily concept of life and increased and steadfast attachment for the Supreme Lord, who is transcendental and beyond the modes of material nature. One has to make progress in spiritual life by not associating with persons who are simply interested in making money and in sense gratification. One should mold his life in such a way that he cannot live in peace without drinking the nectar of the glorification of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. One can be thus elevated by losing the taste for sense enjoyment.

Sanat-kumara requested the king to always engage in devotional service to the Supreme Lord. King Prthu obeyed this instruction, and thus even though surrounded by royal opulence, he was able to lead a life of detachment and spiritual advancement.

By his wife Arci, Prthu begot five sons. He pleased the citizens by his rule and became famous all over the universe for his good qualities. At the end of his life, he transferred power to his sons and left with his wife for the forest, where he strictly followed the regulations of retired life. He underwent severe austerities just as seriously as he had governed the state. He ate only leaves and fruit and eventually subsisted only upon air. Queen Arci assisted him in his practice of austerities. Because other pleasure in serving her exalted husband, she felt no difficulty in the forest.

By performing austerities Prthu became steadfast in spiritual life, worshiping the Supreme Personality of Godhead twenty-four hours a day. In due course of time, Prthu Maharaja was able to fix his mind firmly upon the lotus feet of Krsna. Practicing the mystic yoga system, he raised his soul to the top of his skull. After merging the various elements of his body with the totality of the natural elements, he gave up his body.

Queen Arci took the body of her husband and placed it on a fiery pyre on the top of a hill. Srila Prabhupada comments, “The queen was aware that her husband was not dead…. When a living entity transfers from one body to another, a process generally known as death, a sane man does not lament, for he knows that the living entity is not dead but is simply transferred from one body to another.”

After placing her husband’s body in the fire, she herself entered the flames. Observing the devoted queen’s brave act, the demigods and their wives showered flowers and offered prayers. The wives of the demigods said, “All glories to Queen Arci. Just see how this chaste lady, Arci, by dint of her inconceivable pious activities, is still following her husband upwards, as far as we can see.”

King Prthu and Queen Arci ascended to the spiritual world, Vaikuntha, in spiritual airplanes. They ascended in spiritual bodies, their material bodies having been consumed by the fire of the funeral pyre.

The sage Maitreya, narrating this history in the Srimad-Bhagavatam, said, “Any person who describes the great characteristics of King Prthu with faith and determination whether he reads of them himself or helps others to hear of them is certain to attain the very planet Maharaja Prthu attained. In other words, such a person also returns home to the Vaikuntha planets, back to Godhead.”

Source: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=85608

Read more…

2515168292?profile=RESIZE_584x

When His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada frst arrived in America in the midst ol the cultural turmoil of the sixties, he quickly captured the hearts and minds of the New York hippies and the San Francisco flower children with the chanting of the Hare Krsna mantra.
Within three years, he journeyed to London, and by 1971, Hare Krsna had been recorded on hit records by former Beatles John Lennon and George Harrison. By then the mantra had been heard by hundreds of millions of people, and the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, formed in New York in 1966, had spread to six continents. How could an elderly Indian swami in a strange, foreign land, with no money, no support, no friends, and no followers, achieve such phenomenal success? The story that follows includes eyewitness accounts and excerpts from Srila Prabhupada-lilamrta, the authorized biography of this extraordinary saint, written by one of his intimate disciples, His Holiness Satsvarupa dasa Goswami.

The arduous sea voyage from Calcutta to Boston was finally over. The lone passenger aboard the cargo ship Jaladuta, a seventy-year-old Indian holy man, had been given free passage by the owner of the Scindia Steamship Company. His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada arrived at Commonwealth Pier on September 17, 1965.

For thousands of years krsna-bhakti, love of Krsna, had been known only in India, but now, on the order of his spiritual master, Srila Prabhupada had come to awaken the natural, dormant Krsna consciousness of the American people.

On his arrival day onboard the Jaladuta, he wrote in his diary the following words:

Absorbed in material life, they [Americans] think themselves very happy and satisfied, and therefore they have no taste for the transcendental message of Vasudeva [Krsna]…. But I know that Your causeless mercy can make everything possible, because You are the most expert mystic … How will I make them understand this message of Krsna consciousness? … O Lord, I am simply praying for Your mercy so that I will be able to convince them about Your message…. I am seeking Your benediction … I have no devotion, nor do I have any knowledge, but I have strong faith in the holy name of Krsna….

In 1922, Sri1a Prabhupada’s spiritual master, His Divine Grace Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura, had requested him to spread the teachings of Lord Krsna, including the Hare Krsna mantra, to the West, and now, after a lifetime in preparation, Srila Prabhupada was ready to begin.

After landing in America with the Indian rupee equivalent of eight dollars, he spent his first year in the United States with a family in Butler, Pennsylvania; an Indian yoga teacher in Manhattan; and later, with the help of friends, rented a small room in upper Manhattan.

By the summer of 1966, he had found a larger location more suited to propagating the Hare Krsna maha-mantra and the ancient science of Krsna consciousness. That summer Prabhupada had met a young man named Harvey Cohen, who offered him an old artist-in-residence loft in lower Manhattan’s Bowery.

Here, a small group of young Bohemian types would join Srila Prabhupada every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday evening for chanting Hare Krsna and classes on the Bhagavad-gita. Although not yet incorporated or known by its present name, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness had been born.

Few of Srila Prabhupada’s guests, whose interests included music, drugs, macrobiotics, pacifism, and spiritual meditation, knew very much about what they were chanting or exactly why they were chanting it. They just enjoyed it and liked being in the presence of the man they affectionately called “Swamiji.” These musicians, artists, poets, and intellectuals, most of whom had chosen to live outside of mainstream society, felt that by chanting Hare Krsna they were taking part in something mystical and unique.

Srila Prabhupada led the solo chanting: Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare. The melody was always the same-a simple four-note phrase, the first four notes of the major scale. Prabhupada led the kirtana with small three-inch-diameter hand cymbals he had brought with him from lndia. He would ring them in a one-two-three, one-two-three fashion Some of his followers clapped along with him, and some joined in with small fingercymbals of their own. Others sat in yoga postures, hands outstretched, chanting and meditating on this novel transcendental vibration. Guests would sometimes bring other instruments, including guitars, tambouras,An Indian stringed instrument.* flutes, tambourines, and a wide variety of drums.

After a few months some of Srila Prabhupada’s followers secured for him a better place to live and spread the chanting of the holy name. The new Second Avenue location on the hippie-filled Lower East Side included an apartment for Srila Prabhupada one floor up and a ground-floor storefront, which he would use as a temple. Within a few weeks, the small sixty-by-twenty-five-foot storefront was packed with young people three nights a week. Gradually the storefront took on the appearance of a temple as visitors began to bring tapestries and paintings for the walls, carpets for the floors, and amplification equipment for Srila Prabhupada’s lectures and kirtanas (congregational chanting).

Prabhupada’s kirtanas were lively and captivating, with numerous guests spontaneously rising to their feet, clapping and dancing. Srila Prabhupada, always conducting the kirtana in call-and-response fashion and playing a small African bongolike drum, would accelerate the chant faster and faster, until after about half an hour it would reach a climax and suddenly end. Chanting along with Srila Prabhupada in this small room on Second Avenue, guests found themselves transported into another dimension, a spiritual dimension, in which the anxieties and pressures of everyday life in New York City simply did not exist. Many soon caught on that chanting Hare Krsna was an intense and effective form of meditation, a direct means of communion with something greater than themselves, no matter what their conception of the Absolute.

Srila Prabhupada initiated his first disciples in September of ’66, at which time about a dozen students vowed to chant a minimum of sixteen rounds a day on their beads. This meant reciting the sixteen-word mantra 1,728 times a day, a meditation that would take them between one and a half to two hours to complete.

Prabhupada’s flock soon began to print and distribute invitations and leaflets such as this one:

Practice the transcendental sound vibration,
Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare
Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare.
This chanting will cleanse the dust from the
mirror of the mind.

Another invited America’s youth to

STAY HIGH FOREVER!
No More Coming Down

Practice Krishna Consciousness
Expand your consciousness by practicing the
*TRANSCENDENTAL SOUND VIBRATION*
HARE KRISHNA, HARE KRISHNA
KRISHNA KRISHNA, HARE HARE
HARE RAMA, HARE RAMA
RAMA RAMA, HARE HARE

In the mornings Srila Prabhupada would lead the devotees in one round of japa (chanting on beads). After chanting with Prabhupada, the devotees would chant their remaining sixteen rounds on their own.

The celebrated American poet Allen Ginsberg, accompanying the kirtana on his harmonium, had by now become a regular at the evening chanting sessions at the temple and in nearby Tompkins Square Park. In a 1980 interview published in Srila Prabhupada’s biography, he recalled his experiences.

Allen: I liked immediately the idea that Swami Bhaktivedanta had chosen the Lower East Side of New York for his practice…. I was astounded that he’d come with the chanting, because it seemed like a reinforcement from India. I had been running around singing Hare Krsna but had never understood exactly why or what it meant…. I thought it was great now that he was here to expound on the Hare Krsna mantra-that would sort of justify my singing. I knew what I was doing but I didn’t have any theological background to satisfy further inquiry, and here was someone who did. So I thought that was absolutely great…. If anyone wanted to know the technical intricacies and the ultimate history, I could send them to him…. he had a personal, selfless sweetness like total devotion. And that was what always conquered me … a kind of personal charm, coming from dedication … I always liked to be with him.

The chanting of Hare Krsna seemed to spread in an almost magical way, and as time went on, the number of people attracted to it increased geometrically. Even in this unlikely New York setting, the mantra seemed to have a life of its own. Whether it was the melody, the beat, the sound of the words, the look of the devotees, or Prabhupada’s humility or serenity, nearly everyone who then came in touch with the chanting of Hare Krsna responded favorably.

In December 1966, Srila Prabhupada would explain on his first record album, the LP that introduced two of the Beatles, John Lennon and George Harrison, to Hare Krsna, that “the chanting Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare is not a material sound vibration, but comes directly from the spiritual world.”

Prabhupada’s Tompkins Square Park kirtanas were spiritual happenings that are now legendary. Hundreds of people from all walks of life took part; some as observers and some as eager participants, chanting, clapping their hands, dancing, and playing musical instruments. Irving Halpern, one of many local musicians who regularly participated, remembers the scene.

Irving: The park resounded. The musicians were very careful in listening to the mantras…. I have talked to a couple of musicians about it, and we agreed that in his head this Swami must have had hundreds and hundreds of melodies that had been brought back from the real learning from the other side of the world. So many people came there just to tune in to the musical gift, the transmission of the dharma. “Hey,” they would say, “listen to this holy monk.” People were really sure there were going to be unusual feats, grandstanding, flashy levitations, or whatever people expected was going to happen. But when the simplicity of what the Swami was really saying, when you began to sense it-whether you were motivated to actually make a lifetime commitment and go this way of life, or whether you merely wanted to place it in a place and give certain due respect to it-it turned you around.

And that was interesting, too, the different ways in which people regarded the kirtana. Some people thought it was a prelude. Some people thought it was a main event. Some people liked the music. Some people liked the poetic sound of it.

After the kirtanas Srila Prabhupada usually spoke for a few minutes about Krsna consciousness, inviting everyone back to the temple for a Sunday afternoon “love festival” of chanting and feasting, a weekly event that soon became a tradition that continues today. The October 9 edition of the New York Times described the Tompkins Square Park kirtana with the following headline: “SWAMI’S FLOCK CHANTS IN PARK TO FIND ECSTASY.”

Sitting under a tree in a Lower East Side park and occasionally dancing, fifty followers of a Hindu swami repeated a sixteen-word chant for two hours yesterday afternoon to the accompaniment of cymbals, tambourines, sticks, drums, bells, and a small reed organ…. Repetition of the chant, Swami A.C. Bhaktivedanta says, is the best way to achieve self-realization in this age of destruction.
… many in the crowd of about a hundred persons standing around the chanters found themselves swaying to or clapping hands in time to the hypnotic rythmic music. “It brings a state of ecstasy,” said Allen Ginsberg the poet…. The ecstasy of the chant or mantra Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare has replaced LSD and other drugs for many of the Swami’s followers.”

At the same time, New York’s avant-garde newspaper The East Village Other ran a front page story with a full-page photograph of Srila Prabhupada standing and speaking to a large group of people in the park. The banner headline read “SAVE EARTH NOW!!” and in large type just below the picture, the maha-mantra was printed: “HARE KRISHNA HARE KRISHNA KRISHNA KRISHNA HARE HARE HARE RAMA HARE RAMA RAMA RAMA HARE HARE.” The article admired the chanting and described how Srila Prabhupada “had succeeded in convincing the world’s toughest audience-Bohemians, acidheads, potheads, and hippies-that he knew the way to God.”

Turn Off, Sing Out, and Fall In. This new brand of holy man, with all due deference to Dr. Leary, has come forth with a brand of “Consciousness Expansion” that’s sweeter than acid, cheaper than pot, and nonbustible by fuzz.

The newspaper story described how a visit to the temple at 26 Second Avenue would bring “living, visible, tangible proof” that God is alive and well. The story quoted one of Srila Prabhupada’s new disciples:

I started chanting to myself, like the Swami said, when I was walking down the street-Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare-over and over, and suddenly everything started looking so beautiful, the kids, the old men and women … even the creeps looked beautiful … to say nothing of the trees and flowers.

Finding it superior to the euphoria from any kind of drug, he said,

There’s no coming down from this. I can always do this any time, anywhere. It is always with you.

CABH 3.1: To San Francisco and Beyond

To San Francisco and Beyond

Early in 1967, several of Srila Prabhupada’s disciples left New York and opened a temple in the heart of San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district, home for thousands of hippies and “flower children” from all over the country. Within a short time, Srila Prabhupada’s temple there had become a spiritual haven for troubled, searching, and sometimes desperate young people. Drug overdoses were common, and hundreds of confused, dazed, and disenchanted young Americans roamed the streets.

Haridasa, the first president of the San Francisco temple, remembers what it was like.

Haridasa: The hippies needed all the help they could get, and they knew it. And the Radha-Krsna temple was certainly a kind of spiritual haven. Kids sensed it. They were running, living on the streets, no place where they could go, where they could rest, where people weren’t going to hurt them.

I think it saved a lot of lives; there might have been a lot more casualties if it hadn’t been for Hare Krsna. It was like opening a temple in a battlefield. It was the hardest place to do it, but it was the place where it was most needed. Although the Swami had no precedents for dealing with any of this, he applied the chanting with miraculous results. The chanting was wonderful. It worked.

Michael Bowen, an artist and one of the leading figures of the Haight-Ashbury scene, recalled that Srila Prabhupada had “an amazing ability to get people off drugs, especially speed, heroin, burnt-out LSD cases-all of that.

Every day at the temple devotees cooked and served to over two hundred young people a free, sumptuous multi-course lunch of vegetarian food offered to Krsna. Many local merchants helped to make this possible by donating to the cause. An early San Francisco devotee recalls those days.

Harsarani: People who were plain lost or needed comforting … sort of wandered or staggered into the temple. Some of them stayed and became devotees, and some just took prasadam [spiritual food] and left. Just from a medical standpoint, doctors didn’t know what to do with people on LSD. The police and the free clinics in the area couldn’t handle the overload of people taking LSD. The police saw Swamiji [Srila Prabhupada] as a certain refuge.

Throughout lunch, devotees played the New York recording of Srila Prabhupada chanting the Hare Krsna mantra. The sacred sound reinforced the spiritual mood of the temple and helped to ease the tensions and frustrations of its young guests.

Sunday, January 29, 1967 marked the major spiritual event of the San Francisco hippy era, and Srila Prabhupada, who was ready to go anywhere to spread Krsna consciousness, was there. The Grateful Dead, Moby Grape, Janis Joplin and Big Brother and the Holding Company, Jefferson Airplane, Quicksilver Messenger Service-all the new-wave San Francisco bands-had agreed to appear with Srila Prabhupada at the Avalon Ballroom’s Mantra-Rock Dance, proceeds from which would go to the local Hare Krsna temple.

Thousands of hippies, anticipating an exciting evening, packed the hall. LSD pioneer Timothy Leary dutifully paid the standard $2.50 admission fee and entered the ballroom, followed by Augustus Owsley Stanley II, known for his own brand of LSD.

At about 10:00 P.M., Srila Prabhupada and a small entourage of devotees arrived amid uproarious applause and cheering by a crowd that had waited weeks in great anticipation for this moment. Srila Prabhupada was given a seat of honor onstage and was introduced by Allen Ginsberg, who explained his own realizations about the Hare Krsna maha-mantra and how it had spread from the small storefront in New York to San Francisco. The well-known poet told the crowd that the chanting of the Hare Krsna mantra in the early morning at the Radha-Krsna temple was an important community service to those who were “coming down from LSD,” because the chanting would “stabilize their consciousness on reentry.”

The chanting started slowly but rythmically, and little by little it spread throughout the ballroom, enveloping everyone. Hippies got to their feet, held hands, and began to dance as enormous, pulsing pictures of Krsna were projected around the walls of the ballroom in perfect sync with the beat of the mantra. By the time Srila Prabhupada stood and began to dance with his arms raised, the crowd was completely absorbed in chanting, dancing, and playing small musical instruments they had brought for the occasion.

Ginsberg later recalled, “We sang Hare Krsna all evening. It was absolutely great-an open thing. It was the height of the Haight-Ashbury spiritual enthusiasm.”

As the tempo speeded up, the chanting and dancing became more and more intense, spurred on by a stageful of top rock musicians, who were as charmed by the magic of the maha-mantra as the amateur musicians had been at the Tompkins Square kirtanas only a few weeks before. The chant rose; it seemed to surge and swell without limit. When it seemed it could go no further, the chanting stopped. Srila Prabhupada offered prayers to his spiritual master into the microphone and ended-by saying three times, “All glories to the assembled devotees!” The Haight-Ashbury neighborhood buzzed with talk af the Mantra-Rock Dance for weeks afterward.

Within a few months of the Mantra-Rock event, devotees in San Francisco, New York, and Montreal began to take to the streets with their mrdangas (clay drums) and karatalas (hand cymbals) to chant the maha-mantra on a daily basis. In just a few years, temples were opening all over North America and Europe, and people everywhere were hearing the chanting of Hare Krsna.

On May 31, 1969, when the Vietnam war protest movement was reaching its climax, six devotees joined John Lennon and Yoko Ono in their Montreal hotel room to play instruments and sing on John and Yoko’s famous recording “Give Peace a Chance.” This song, which included the mantra, and a hit single, “The Hare Krishna Mantra,” produced in September of the same year by Beatle George Harrison and featuring the devotees, introduced millions to the chanting. Even Broadway’s long-running musical hit Hair included exuberant choruses of the Hare Krsna mantra.

At the now historic mass antiwar demonstration in Washington, D.C., on November 15, 1969, devotees from all over the United States and Canada chanted the Hare Krsna mantra throughout the day and distributed “The Peace Formula,” a small leaflet based on Srila Prabhupada’s teachings from the Vedic scriptures. “The Peace Formula,” which proposed a spiritual solution to the problem of war, was distributed en masse for many months and influenced thousands of lives.

By 1970, when George Harrison’s “My Sweet Lord”- with its beautiful recurring Iyrics of Hare Krsna and Hare Rama-was the international number-one hit song of the day, devotees in dhotis and saris, chanting the maha-mantra with musical instruments, were now a familiar sight in almost every major city throughout the world. Because of Srila Prabhupada’s deep love for Lord Krsna and his own spiritual master, his amazing determination, and his sincere compassion, “Hare Krsna” had become a household word.

Source: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=86256

Read more…

30991429678?profile=RESIZE_584x
By Radha Mohan Das

National Interfaith Week provided a wonderful opportunity for the children of Gurukula – The Hare Krishna Primary School to deepen their appreciation of other faith traditions while grounding their learning in Vaishnava values of respect, empathy, and unity. Across the school, students took part in meaningful visits, thoughtful discussions, and inspiring encounters that broadened their perspectives and strengthened their commitment to harmonious living.

The Borehamwood Baptist Church

The Jagannatha Class enjoyed an enlightening trip to Borehamwood Baptist Church, where the children showed exemplary respect and inquisitiveness. Building on their prior research into Christianity, they explored the key principles of the Baptist tradition and reflected on the similarities and differences with their own Vaishnava practice.

Guided by the priest, the students then performed a lively dramatisation of the parable of the  Good Samaritan, complete with Biblical-style costumes and even a model horse.

 30991429683?profile=RESIZE_584x

Jain Centre in Bushey

The Baladeva Class travelled to the SRMD Spiritual Centre in Bushey, where they were warmly welcomed into a vibrant and peaceful spiritual space. The children listened to inspiring stories about their Jain guru, took part in yoga and meditation, made delicious vegetarian sweets, and observed a beautifully performed arati ceremony.

Throughout the visit, the children reflected carefully on the connections between Jainism and Vaishnavism, discovering shared values such as non-violence, compassion, and simplicity.

Core principles in common

The Baladeva Class also examined how major religious observances share core principles. Although each tradition has unique practices, the students saw clearly that there are far more similarities than differences.

Special visitors

Just before Interfaith Week, the Gurukula warmly welcomed Mr Barry Shooter, a practicing member of the local Jewish community and a leading member of the Bushey Interfaith Forum.

Later they also welcomed an Imam, Mr Zafar Ahmad, who shared insights into Ramadan and answered the children’s many thoughtful questions.

 30991429853?profile=RESIZE_584x

For both guests, respectful and sincere curiosity demonstrated Gurukula’s commitment to nurturing open-minded, spiritually grounded learners.

Finally, Radha Mohan Das led a special session on the true purpose of Interfaith Week. He emphasised that understanding other faiths is not only informative but essential for cultivating peace—both within the school community and in the wider world. His message beautifully reinforced the Vaishnava principle of seeing unity within diversity.

Gurukula Recognised for Its Global Outlook During the most recent Ofsted inspection, Gurukula’s dedication to interfaith respect and global understanding was clearly acknowledged. The

HMI reported:

“Pupils use their deep-rooted religious beliefs to develop perseverance, empathy and respect. The school successfully ensures that pupils have a global outlook. They have many opportunities to study other religions, lifestyles and beliefs that are different to their own.”

Source: https://www.dandavats.com/?p=116589

 

Read more…

30991429057?profile=RESIZE_584x

Not long ago I was giving a lecture to a general audience of Indians, with many Krishna devotees in the crowd. In the lecture, I raised the principle of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, or how “the whole world is one family.” Yet many devotees had not heard of this phrase before, which surprised me because I had heard this for years in the circles of my association. So, this is how I went on to describe it in my lecture, after which I received a standing ovation.

While studying Vedic culture, one thing I learned was how it had been adopted by other cultures around the world which appreciated or was influenced by it. I wrote a few books on this, which anyone can read. But an example of this connection is the similarity of the Vedic and Mayan fire ceremonies. This was especially illustrated at a conference I attended many years ago in Jaipur, which was called “Spirituality Beyond Religion.” There were delegates from over 30 different cultures and nations from around the planet, and it was very enlightening to share the many similarities that we all had in common within the traditions that we represented.

What happened was that the Mayan delegates from Central America performed their morning fire ritual next to a group of Indian Brahmins who were performing their Vedic fire ritual or havan. The Mayans had a small fire surrounded by flower petals and offered prayers into the fire, while the Brahmins were also offering prayers, mantras, and grains into their fire, which was held in a small fire pit or container.

While this was going on, the similarities between the two were obvious. There had to have been some common roots between the two traditions. But how could there be such a connection between two cultures that were a half a world apart?

Certainly, such cultural or religious similarities around the world are a testament to the glory of God. They are a bridge of connection with each other and between us. Any differences should not be a reason for divisiveness or for hating another religion.

If a religion, a process that is supposed to help you become closer to God, teaches to hate your fellow man, then how does that help anyone? How is that really of God? This feeling of superiority is what leads to the desire to conquer and convert. It is childishness. It is a sign of great immaturity. What must God be thinking when He sees this, that over the course of many centuries, people have displayed the utmost cruelty, torture, war, and the infliction of death on each other, simply because of the difference in the way we worship Him? This is insanity.

The point to consider is that the spiritual world is filled with love. God is filled with love. How do you think anyone will enter the spiritual world with a heart filled with hate? That is not possible. To think you can reach God with a heart filled with hate is simply an illusion. In fact, one of the reasons for the material creation is to keep all the haters in their place, away from the spiritual domain.

Then how do we make peace? Many people are still puzzled by this dilemma. But the means for that is what I call the 11th Commandment. We already have the Ten Commandments, but they are mostly simple moralistic principles. They are not higher principles of spiritual realization. Of course, without good morals to follow, this world would be completely crazy. But this next code for a new level of social spiritual development is based on a higher principle of spiritual consciousness, which is “Thou shalt recognize that all beings are a part of God, and that God is within all beings.”

Of course, a child of eight may understand this, but hardly a man of 80 can apply it in a practical manner. That is because it must be more than mere cultivated or memorized knowledge. It must be practically realized. You must raise your consciousness to be able to see this on a continual basis. Of course, this is why Lord Krishna in Bhagavad-gita (9.2) explains that this Vedic spiritual knowledge, along with the practice of bhakti-yoga and the chanting of the Hare Krishna Mahamantra, is the most secret of all secrets, the king of education, because it gives direct knowledge of the Self, the soul, by realization. That is what is needed. Then you will see how we are all spiritually of the same nature.

This is explained in the Vedic principle of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, which means “the whole world is one family.” We are all parts of God, the Supreme Father, so then we are all related, having come from the same spiritual source. But if you actually realize this, this would change so many aspects of your conduct. It would change the way you act toward others, the way you treat other beings, what you eat, the way you do business, how you treat nature and the environment, the way in which governments relate to each other, the way of international relations, and so on. It would also change the way we develop ourselves spiritually.

The development of civilization, which is the upliftment of consciousness, should not be a fight or even a competition between parties, but it should be a united endeavor for the improvement and continued means to reach our fullest potential for one and all, both materially and spiritually. This has always been the goal and motivation and purpose of Vedic Culture or Vedic Dharma.

The essence of religion is Truth, light, or Dharma. Hinduism or Vedic Dharma recognizes that Truth, or whatever portions there are of it, in all religions. That is why we, as followers of Vedic culture, can get along with most anyone. We are all on the path of seeking and ultimately attaining that Truth. Some are more serious about it than others. And Vedic culture holds multiple ways of reaching that Truth and recognizing God and His energies everywhere. We are all parts of God, but can be swayed by confusion or ego, and the desire for superiority over others, which leads us away from God.

Vedic culture believes in coexistence, that everyone should have the freedom to pursue their own course to Truth and self-realization. And if we can follow this principle of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, then we can all live peacefully together while engaged in our spiritual upliftment.

So, in this way, may we all move forward in harmony and help each other in mutual cooperation and respect, in the mood of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, and live like the family we are. Out of so many Vedic principles we could present, this one Vedic principle alone, if followed properly, would change the course of the world.

Thank you very much and Jai Sri Krishna.

Source: https://www.dandavats.com/?p=116606

Read more…

30991427893?profile=RESIZE_584x30991428468?profile=RESIZE_584x
Stephen Knapp, also known by his spiritual name Sri Nandanandana Dasa (Śrī Nandanandana Dāsa), is an American author, spiritual practitioner, researcher, and lecturer on Vedic culture (Sanātana Dharma) and philosophy. He is associated with the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) and is a disciple of A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.

Knapp has authored numerous books and articles focused on Vedic traditions, philosophy, and Indian spirituality. His works include The Secret Teachings of the Vedas, Proof of Vedic Culture’s Global Existence, and The Heart of Hinduism. He is the founder of the Vedic Friends Association (VFA) and heads the ISKCON temple in Detroit, Michigan.

In January 2025, the Government of India announced that Knapp would be awarded the Padma Shri, the country’s fourth-highest civilian honor, for his contributions in the field of Literature and Education. The award recognized his efforts in promoting Indian traditions and spiritual heritage globally. He received the award from President Droupadi Murmu at the Rashtrapati Bhavan on April 28, 2025.

This article is based on writer Pranjal Joshi’s interview of Stephen Knapp.

1.How would you define yourself?

I was a seeker of spiritual truths who became a full participant in the Vedic traditions. When I first read the Bhagavad-gita, I realized that this is what I was looking for, which had the deeper answers to the questions I had. Thereafter I read many other texts of the Vedic library, which gave me even more insights.

2.Tell us something about your childhood and early life.

I was born and raised a Christian, but I still had questions that were not answered. I remember when I was about 7 years old laying in bed wondering how I got the body I was in. How did I get here? Why was I not born in my neighbor’s, Jack’s body? But that would mean I would also have to have his parents, which may not be such a good thing. But why was this physical body so vulnerable, like if you can’t breathe for five minutes you die? And you have to feed it and then take it to the bathroom. Is this normal? It just did not seem normal to me. Obviously, these were all carry-overs from a previous existence and knowing that I was not this body but the soul within. But I did not have any deep spiritual knowledge at the time, but only later did I find the answers to these questions.

3.When was it that you met your spiritual Master for the first time?

I met my spiritual master, Srila A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami first through his books, first being the Bhagavad-gita, in 1971. Then I personally met him in 1972 in San Diego where I was able to personally listen to his classes.

4.What difference do you find in India of 1970’s and now?

The first time I went to India was in 1987. One example of the difference is in the town of Vrindavana. Back then it was very simple, even the parikrama path was just a sandy path for pedestrians. It was easy to go to the temples and get darshan, not so crowded. And the monkeys left you alone without stealing your glasses. Now the parikrama path is a paved road with all kinds of vehicles traveling on it, from tractors, trucks, even buses. And the temples are often packed with people, shoulder to shoulder. And now you cannot even go to the Krishna Balarama temple without being warry of the monkeys who steal everything, from glasses, bags, phones, shoes, etc. And the traffic through town is horrendous, and they sometimes now block roads so you cannot enter. Yet they are continuing to build more apartment buildings and newer and bigger roads. So, things have changed drastically, and I’ve been told that this is happening in villages all across India.

5.Tell us about your visits to India

As I have been visiting India over the years, there have been great improvements with the infrastructure, like the highways and roads, and the metros in the cities. So this is a great improvement. However, there has been a decline in some ways in the interest in the Vedic traditions, especially as the country seems to becoming more westernized. In some ways the youth is taking an interest in the spirituality within India, and in other ways there is a section that seems less interested. In much of India, it is very rare to see any of the younger women wear traditional clothes, like saris. They need to make sure they do not lose their own heritage that has been given to them by the great sages and rishis of India.

6.What fascinated you most about Indian culture and Vedic scriptures?

The depth of spiritual knowledge and insight that they provide, and the many tools for anyone to reach their highest potential, both spiritually and materially, with the use of such things as the science of Ayurveda, Vastu Shastri, Jyotish, and so on, but especially the spiritual knowledge that anyone can find in the various levels of its spiritual texts.

7.How did you become a writer?

I was always interested in sharing what I learned with others. So, back in 1984 I wanted to start a temple newsletter, which did not exist at the time, even though we had one previously. So I made a prototype, with an interview with the temple president and other information about the temple. I showed it to the devotees and everyone liked it. But at the time, the head treasurer simply said that he was not going to give any money for my project and then laughed at me and said “Good luck, Sri Nandanandana.” So then I realized that if I was going to do something, I would have to do it on my own and not depend on the temple. So, the next Idea I had was to write a home study course. So, I put together a book, with some cassette tapes, and additional information, and then they would take a test, after which they would get a certificate. Or they could simply buy the book by itself. A few people bought the course, but most people just bought the book, which helped guide me toward what works best. So, then in 1987, I formed my own publishing company, printed my book more professionally, and published my book “The Secret Teachings of the Vedas.” Then as that began to sell, especially to bookstores, which was my main goal at the time, I started to write additional books. Then in the mid 90s I got a call from a company who wanted my book, and they were called Amazon. I could not figure out what they were, but sure, if they want my book I can sell it to them. And gradually my book writing and publishing became a cottage industry, which later opened doors of opportunity that I never knew existed.

So, today I’m thankful to Krishna that years ago that treasurer laughed at me and refused to give any money for a temple newsletter because that started me down the avenue which changed everything for me, up to and including winning a few lifetime achievement awards from Indian organizations, and now the Padma Shri award from the government of India for distinguished service to Mother India.

8.Tell us something about your books

My books are like fishing lines, about various topics to try to attract those who are not yet devotees into the Vedic spiritual path. Once some becomes a devotee, they should read Srila Prabhupada’s books. But for preaching purposes, I write books about Krishna consciousness, or various aspects of Vedic teachings, like the Vedic prophecies, etc. or about the history of India, or about recognizing Vedic culture in the various traditions around the world, or about issues that focus on the protection, preservation, promotion for the perpetuation of the Vedic traditions.

9.Which is your favourite book of yours?

That depends on what topic you are discussing. After having written and assembled over 50 books, there are many from which to choose.

10.How was the Padma Shri experience?

That was one of the greatest highlights of my life. The grandeur of the Rashtrapati Bhavan, accepting the award from the president of India, meeting the Prime Minister Narendra Modi, meeting so many qualified people at the event, I was truly impressed. I was very surprised, even shocked when I was told by the Indian Embassy that I had won, but am truly grateful for this recognition after decades of service for India and its Vedic tradition, and in my service to Srila Prabhupada and Lord Krishna, and the whole Gaudiya sampradaya.

11.What keeps you busy the whole day?

I’m still engaged in various projects, such as writing this interview, or other books and articles, though I am getting older and slower, and not as active as I used to be. But I’m also still engaged in serving at the temple in various managerial ways. So, there is still not enough time in the day to do everything I would like.

12.Anything you would like to add from your end.

As I have said, we all need to work in ways to help protect, preserve, promote and perpetuate the Vedic tradition, which is my main mantra in how I focus on what I do. But it is not a one-man job, nor is it something only one organization can do. There is a great need for more unity among various groups to work together in building a deeper foundation for preserving the Vedic tradition and making sure India remains the homeland of a thriving and dynamic Vedic culture so that we always have the freedom to continue our participation in it, and can keep deepening our Krishna consciousness for ourselves and others. It is not enough to simply be Krishna conscious for ourselves, but we must pave the way so that everyone can benefit. This was one of the goals of Srila Prabhupada and it is our mission to continue in that way. That is how we please Srila Prabhupada and our whole sampradaya. And there are many ways and many services that will help do that. All we need to do is to find a niche where we fit in, and then never stop. We fine tune our service along the way, but then as we continue, doors of opportunity will open. Krishna will open those doors for you to make your service more effective.

People call me a scholar, a Swmaiji, a doctor, but all I ever did was simply never give up, and find a way around whatever obstacle came along. That’s the only qualification I have. But somehow it worked. And the same thing can work for anyone. And now I have been given the Padma Shri award from the government of India. The first Prabhupada disciple to have accepted this award. And this was just when I was beginning to think that as I am getting older, I no longer have so much to offer. My preaching is drying up. But now there is a greater level of interest and greater level of outreach in what I do, just by having won this award. So it shows how Krishna can open doors of opportunity for you when you least expect it. But then you have to use it. You cannot take it lightly. That is our duty. Hare Krishna.

Sri Nandanandana dasa (Stephen Knapp)

For more information about Stephen Knapp’s books, articles, photographs and projects, you can visit his website at: http://www.stephen-knapp.com

This article has been written by Premanjana Das (Pranjal Joshi). Feedback can be given to him at pranjal280@gmail.com

Sri Nandanandana dasa (Stephen Knapp) can be contacted at srinandan@aol.com

Source: https://www.dandavats.com/?p=116596

Read more…

Health Update for HH Niranjana Swami

30989135291?profile=RESIZE_584x
Dear Godbrothers, Godsisters, and well-wishers of HH Niranjana Swami,
Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to Srila Prabhupada.
Two days ago, Maharaja had an angiography performed in Kolkata to determine the extent of blockage in his arteries. The result of the procedure showed that there is significant blockage in three of his arteries.
To date, symptoms have been very rare. Guru Maharaja has had no cardiovascular events. He is not in any pain.
Still, the cardiologist who performed the angiography strongly recommended bypass surgery as soon as possible to prevent any serious complications in the future. Maharaja wished to get a second opinion before proceeding with the surgery at the Kolkata Hospital. He has since consulted doctors in Mumbai, and they have consulted several cardiologists who have reviewed his angiography report.
These doctors recommended that Maharaja go to Mumbai as soon as possible. They felt it best to convene a meeting at Bhaktivedanta Hospital to determine the best way forward so that Guru Maharaja would receive the best treatment available in Mumbai. Moreover, if surgery is performed, rehabilitation would be required; again, the devotees in Bhaktivedanta Hospital would see to all of Guru Maharaja’s needs.
At their request, Maharaja decided to fly to Mumbai tomorrow, Sunday morning. I will be accompanying him and will keep everyone updated as soon as decisions are made regarding his treatment.
Your servant,
Savyasaci dasa

Read more…

30989130495?profile=RESIZE_584xBy Fergus Quinn

Govardhan Eco Farm CIC, a small hillside initiative in the Wye Valley near Symonds Yat, is bringing Srila Prabhupada’s call for “simple living and high thinking” to life under the guidance of Radha Krishna Das (Richard Higgins), Director of Good Gardeners International (GGI). Through practical demonstrations of composting, ecological design, and devotional service, the farm offers visitors a living example of how soil regeneration and spiritual practice can coexist in harmony.

Founded in 2022, the land was jointly purchased by Fergus Quinn, Srikama Devi Dasi (a disciple of Srila Prabhupada), and Ram Nrsimha, who together envisioned a place dedicated to ecological stewardship and Krishna-conscious values. Over time, the three-acre site has gradually evolved into a demonstration and teaching centre focused on organic waste management, biodiversity, and low-impact living. Its founders and volunteers have transformed what was once neglected land into a thriving landscape of ponds, no-dig beds, and native plantings that support local wildlife. The project operates as a community interest company, so any surplus is reinvested in education and conservation work.

As Radha Krishna Das often explains, at the heart of Vedic agriculture lies the purifying nature of cow dung, which has been used for millennia to cleanse, nourish, and sanctify the earth. The name “Govardhan” itself means “hill of cow dung,” symbolizing protection of the sacred cow and the bull, considered the mother and father of human society. This principle is central to the work of Good Gardeners International, where the fertility of the soil and the care of the cow are understood as inseparable aspects of spiritual ecology.

Read more: https://iskconnews.org/uk-eco-farm-inspires-change-through-soil-and-spirit/

Read more…

30989130869?profile=RESIZE_584x
By Sunanda Das,

The A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada Legacy Museum in the TOVP will eventually expand in size to 21,000 sq. ft., one of the largest museums of its kind for any single person in history. The paraphernalia within its rooms will include his personal effects, clothing, tape recorders, books, recordings, and many more items of historical value to the early ISKCON days.

Regarding the spiritual nature of the acharya’s paraphernalia, Srutakirti prabhu related a story at the museum grand opening in February, 2025, from something Srila Prabhupada said to him in Atlanta, Georgia in 1975:

Seeing that Srutakirti didn’t have any socks, Srila Prabhupada told him to get a pair of socks from his own dresser drawer. He even told him to take extra pairs for other devotees. Srutakirti was shocked to hear this and told him that he didn’t feel this was proper etiquette. He replied:

“If I say you can use anything, you can use them. But once I leave, they become worshipable.”

The paraphernalia of the spiritual master is always as worshipable as him. It is his maha prasad, in as much as Deity paraphernalia is as good as the Deity. It can be referred to as ‘tadiyanam’: of persons or things related to Lord Visnu.

Read more: https://iskconnews.org/prabhupada-legacy-museum-invites-devotees-to-share-tadiyanam/

Read more…