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 1 
 on: August 25, 2010, 02:09:49 PM 
Started by Sandesh dd - Last post by jyotirmoydas
Haribol dear devotees,

one year has already passed - amazing how the time is going so fast...  Huh

Aindra Prabhu's appearance day is coming up again on the day after (Dvadasi) Papamocani Ekadasi. It will be on the 12th of March 2010.

You can post your offering here - we will print them out and give them to Prabhu on his birthday.  Smiley

In order to glorify a pure devotee, it takes another one...but we can at least try and get purified by doing so... Wink

RadheShyam,

ys



 2 
 on: August 23, 2010, 08:51:55 PM 
Started by Sandesh dd - Last post by Sandesh dd

"Without being empowered by the direct potency of Lord Kṛṣṇa to fulfill His desire and without being specifically favored by the Lord, no human being can become the spiritual master of the whole world. He certainly cannot succeed by mental concoction, which is not meant for devotees or religious people. Only an empowered personality can distribute the holy name of the Lord and enjoin all fallen souls to worship Kṛṣṇa. By distributing the holy name of the Lord, he cleanses the hearts of the most fallen people; therefore he extinguishes the blazing fire of the material world. Not only that, he broadcasts the shining brightness of Kṛṣṇa's effulgence throughout the world. Such an ācārya, or spiritual master, should be considered nondifferent from Kṛṣṇa — that is, he should be considered the incarnation of Lord Kṛṣṇa's potency. Such a personality is kṛṣṇālińgita-vigraha — that is, he is always embraced by the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Kṛṣṇa. Such a person is above the considerations of the varṇāśrama institution. He is the guru, or spiritual master, for the entire world, a devotee on the topmost platform, the mahā-bhāgavata stage, and a paramahaḿsa-ṭhākura, a spiritual form only fit to be addressed as paramahaḿsa or ṭhākura." (Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur, in purport to CC, Madhya-lila, chapter 25, verse 9 by Swami Maharaja)

 3 
 on: August 22, 2010, 04:16:34 PM 
Started by Sandesh dd - Last post by Sandesh dd
 Srila Prabhupada Disappearance Day Appeal

By Aindra dasa

Repetition of a good thing is a good thing. This is a restatement of my submission on the occasion of Srila Prabhupada’s 112th abhirbhava mahotsava with only slight modification. I pray that those present at that time who are not so inclined to generosity will anyhow find within their hearts a way to forgive my dogged determination.

On this most celebrated day of the disappearance of our beloved Srila Prabhupada I again earnestly offer my obeisances to the esteemed assembly of devotees and humbly entreat all of you to once more kindly and carefully hear a few selected straightforward and truthful words from the heart of a most lowly and insignificant Aindra Dasa.

Today is not only a day to ceremonially offer a few more patrams and puspams and to gorgeously arrange for more fasting and feasting. It is not only a day to nostalgically reminisce and extol the endearing personal character and external accomplishments of our society’s founder-acarya, but also (and perhaps even more importantly) it is a day to look within, to re-evaluate, and to refocus - to precisely identify, realign ourselves with, and sincerely rededicate ourselves to the factual primary thrust of his ongoing mission.

I don’t distrust the much-prayed-for sincerity and spiritual integrity of the major lot of our ISKCON society’s leadership. Much progress has undoubtedly been made on many fronts of the Krishna consciousness movement. Still, I sense a need to seriously address a sanguine point of concern which may help our society’s constituents avert the perils of fall down, degradation, frustration, or deceleration attributable to the consequence of niyamagraha. To this end, I, as a direct disciple of Srila Prabhupada, am obliged to again and again remind everyone of the vital need to, in Srila Prabhupada’s own words, “boil the milk.” “Now I want that we shall concentrate on making our devotees Krishna conscious and ourselves becoming Krishna conscious, and not be so much concerned with expanding ourselves widely but without any spiritual content. Just like boiling the milk, it becomes thicker and sweeter. Now do like that, boil the milk.”

Let us please gravely consider what it really means to be Krishna conscious.

Srila Prabhupada has elucidated in a 1975 Bombay lecture:

      “There are different stages of knowledge: pratyaksa, paroksa, aparoksa, adhoksaja, aprakrta. So we have to approach the aprakrta, transcendental, above the material nature. Adhoksaja is almost nearer than the lower grade of knowledge, pratyaksa, paroksaparoksa. They are in the kanistha-adhikara.

      arcayam eva haraye
      pujam yah sraddhayehate
      na tad-bhaktesu canyesu
      sa bhaktah prakrtah smrtah
      [SB 11.2.47]

      So prakrta stage is pratyaksa knowledge, direct perception, and knowledge received from parampara. Pratyaksa, paroksa, then aparoksa, self-realization, then adhoksaja, aprakrta. So Krishna consciousness is aprakrta knowledge. It is the topmost platform of knowing Krishna, aprakrta knowledge. So, so long we are up to the adhoksaja knowledge, that is regulative principles. We have to follow the regulative principles strictly. And aprakrta knowledge is for the paramahamsa . . . raga-bhakta. In these stages, pratyaksa, paroksa, they are called vidhi-bhakti. But without vidhi-bhakti, you cannot reach to the platform of raga-bhakti, although that is our aim. Raganuga, raga-bhakti is executed following the come to the stage of raga-bhakti. That is called para bhakti. That para bhakti is required. Gradually developing up to the stage of raga-bhakti or para-bhakti. Then life is successful.”

Here, Srila Prabhupada thirty-three years ago declares, “This Krishna consciousness movement;” he’s not talking about any other Krishna consciousness movement. No. This one. Gradually developing. How gradual? Gradual to the point of virtual non-development? Progress in Krishna consciousness is as gradual as we want to make it. It should not, however, be artfully dreamt up that our short human life is successful even without our developing up to the stage of raga-bhakti.

My humble analysis is as follows:

Brahma-bhutah prasannatma - The soul only becomes fully joyful upon the spiritual perfection of experiencing oneness with the madhurya moods of Vraja (purnamrtasvadanam). Na socati - lamenting for nothing but the miserable condition of those devoid of such unalloyed devotional enrichment, na kanksati - desiring nothing other than to be reinstated in an eternal intimate loving relationship with Vrajendra-nandana Krishna, samah sarvesu bhutesu - knowing confidentially all living entities to be eligible for the mood of Vraja and thereby being equally disposed to help everyone progressively realize their highest potential vraja-svarupa, mad-bhaktim labhate param - such an elevated soul becomes fully imbued with para bhakti, raga-maya devotion to the lotus feet of guru and Krishna.

yasya deve para bhaktir
yatha deve tatha gurau
tasyaite kathita hy arthah
prakasante mahatmanah

The inner meaning of this verse should be ascertained thusly. There are basically two stages of devotion as described in Bhaktivinoda Thakura’s Dasa-mula-tattva - apara bhakti or upaya-bhakti, the stage of sadhana-bhakti, components of which are both vaidhi sadhana-bhakti and raganuga-sadhana-bhakti, the means by which one in material bondage may attain perfection, and para bhakti, the liberated stage of sadhya-bhakti, commencing from the platform of bhava-siddhi.

Without having come to the perfectional stage of para bhakti, raga-mayi-bhava-bhakti, in one’s service to guru and Krishna, none can legitimately claim to have personally gained revelation of the deepest imports of the scriptures. How then would it be possible for one to esoterically guide the progressive student to his or her highest sadhya? It is not enough to on any level externally assume the position of institutional leadership or mentorship. That alone hardly establishes one as an able representative of Divine Grace nor does it under any circumstance grant one the right to humanly intrude upon, misconstrue, or censor the words of the acarya.

In a letter to Tamala Krishna Gosvami, Srila Prabhupada asserts:

      “Regarding your second question: what determines whether a devotee goes to a Vaikuntha planet or to Goloka Vrindaban? - Those devotees who are following vidhi-marga are meant for going to Vaikuntha planets and those who are following raga-marga are meant for going to Krishna-loka. It is generally that the followers of Lord Caitanya are going to Goloka Vrindaban.”

This statement of Srila Prabhupada cogently confirms that generally the followers of Lord Caitanya pursue the path of raga-bhakti. The word “generally” in this connection means “as a general rule,” indicating that the alluded to attainment of Vaikuntha by followers of Lord Caitanya who exclusively attach themselves to the vaidhi bhakti formula without transitioning to the raga-marga should be seen as a relatively atypical exception to the rule - not the rule. It is not at all supported by any scriptural evidence that the relatively atypical exception to the rule should be mulishly foisted upon the here-to-fore institutional ambiance as canonical tenet, to become a broadly established general rule, thereby impeding the disciples’ assent to the realm of Goloka. Thus, it is “generally” expected that devotees of the Krishna consciousness movement, in the progress of their devotional careers, should transition from the rudimentary vaidhika devotional engagement to the path of raga. As such, it is hardly sufficing to sophistically dumb down or stultify the devotional community by exclusively and insistently pandering to the society’s lowest common denominator in the course of our in-house preaching.

Thakura Bhaktivinoda’s Dasa-mula-tattva further explicates the issue:

      “In both forms of sadhana-bhakti (vaidhi and raga) guru is required. In vaidhi-bhakti-sadhana, according to the aspirant’s level of spiritual taste (ruci), the guru will give necessary instructions on how to vanquish anarthas by following scriptural injunctions. Then again, the guru will guide the raganuga-bhakti-sadhaka on the path of rasa, spiritual relish, according to the disciple’s intrinsic spiritual tendency.

      The guru must analyze the disciple’s natural tendency and establish his innate lobha (greed) for one of the four rasas - dasya, sakhya, vatsalya or madhurya. Having determined his innate lobha, the guru schools him with pertinent instructions. Otherwise, left to himself, the disciple will stumble along as an unauthorized intruder into the path of rasa and his lobha and bhava will never reach steadiness. It is not that everyone must be sadhakas of madhurya rasa. The guru who is unable to determine his disciple's innate lobha, should, without duplicity, express his inability and send his disciple to an eligible bona-fide guru conversant in this science of rasa. For the sadhaka disciple, it is a spiritual catastrophe if he is without the shelter of a bona-fide highly qualified guru.

      If good fortune visits a living entity and he meets a pure devotee who is a recipient of Sri Caitanya’s boundless mercy then that fortunate soul will certainly develop attraction and greed for the spiritual sentiments that adorn the eternal residents of Vraja. As long as a living entity does not meet a pure devotee of this stature, he will remain on the level of vaidhi bhakti, regulative devotional service. But, as soon as the practitioner, under superior guidance, takes shelter of Sri Caitanya’s lotus feet, he becomes elevated to the path of raga-bhakti, spontaneous devotional service.”

It is imperative, therefore, that the progressive implementation of high grade devotional illumination be fostered by the beneficent influence of truly elevated rasika-vaisnavas for the forward march of a movement intended to distribute the fruits of love of Godhead (vraja-prema). It is not that Srila Prabhupada’s sankirtana mission precludes the prospects of pursuing the path of raga, nor is it that legitimate institutional leadership is the monopolized prerogative of the religio-corporate power elites and ecclesiastically rubberstamped guru figureheads. We cannot rubberstamp paramahamsas. Indeed, as only the maha-bhagavata truly has the fitness to bestow suddha-nama upon anyone, without receiving which a disciplic candidate could hardly hope to make much tangible spiritual progress in this age of Kali, it is the paramahamsa-maha-bhagavata alone who viably stands as a comprehensive representative of all our Srila Prabhupada and the acarya-parampara have to offer. We must always remember - It is not that authority constitutes truth. Truth constitutes authority. That is guru-parampara. They who prefer to bend, water down, compromise, or obscure the truth to suit various inveigling materially conceived managerial agenda on the plea of propagating the Krishna consciousness movement are not truthful Brahmins, what then of being paramahamsa Vaishnavas. It is disgraceful to remain a fallible neophyte. It is not enough that children pretend to be adults ad nauseum on the plea of perpetuating the sampradaya. Sand-box make-believe-world half-baked mud-pie “Krishna consciousness” will not do. Vaidhi bhakti, though useful to a limit, is like licking the outside of a jar of honey. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Prabhupada says so. Our ISKCON founder-acarya, A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, echoes the same instruction. Therefore, I am compelled to press this most essential point. We have to make progress. Jiva jago! Jiva jago! We have to open the honey jar and actually taste the honey. That is raga-marga-bhajana-kirtana, that is real sadhu-sanga, and that is true para-upakara. Mere lateral expansion of the institution’s workforce, notwithstanding the society’s unspeakable membership turnover, does not in and of itself constitute progress of the Krishna consciousness movement. Movement means to scientifically and consciously move ourselves and those who depend on us for spiritual inspiration toward the very legitimate goal of vraja-prema. To that end, those who are sufficiently endowed with good brain substance (sumedhasaƒ) recognize that there is simply no other recourse, no other recourse, no other recourse in this present time and circumstance than to, from the very seedling beginning of devotional life to the absolute perfectional end (which has no end), take shelter of the process most recommended by Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, namely maha-mantra-sankirtana, the loud congregational chanting of the Holy Name.

The thirty-two-syllable maha-mantra - Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare - is affirmed by the sastras to be the approved taraka-brahma kirtana-mantra for this Age of Kali. The taraka-brahma kirtana-mantras prescribed for the previous yugas (Satya, Treta, and Dvapara) are aisvarya- or mixed aisvarya/madhurya-maya mantras bestowing the attainment of the Lord’s majestic realms as their fruit. The Hare Krishna maha-mantra, however, is a kevala-madhurya raga-maya radha-krishna-yugala mantra, which integrates both taraka and paraka potencies, granting to the lobha-maya-sraddhavan jana liberation from material existence and, beyond that, the sweetest fruit of vraja-prema and the attainment of the eternal realm of Vraja. It is not at all fortuitous that the taraka-brahma kirtana-mantra corresponding to the present age, in which the most munificent Lord Gauranga advented to broadcast the sweetest of all the madhurya mellows of Vraja (radha-dasyam), be absolutely in consonance with the very thrust of His mission. Much stress is therefore given to Hare Krishna maha-mantra sankirtana. In this age everyone can best access the course of concentrated vraja-bhakti-bhajana through the medium of Hare Krishna maha-mantra-sankirtana, which easily and very powerfully promotes vibrant, all-round nama, rupa, guna, and lila absorption in Krishna consciousness. Nevertheless, unless we progressively perform maha-mantra-sankirtana with proper depth of internal meditation, recognizing the superlative sense of sambandha-abhideya-prayojana-vicara as our participation in the sankirtana of the Holy Name will not engender the most desirable outcome. As a husband is the life and soul of his wife (vadhu), so hari-nama-sankirtana performed with greed (lobha) to taste the nectar (vraja-bhakti-rasa) for which we are always anxious is, in fact, vidya-vadhu-jivanam, the very life and soul of all transcendental knowledge found in the scriptures. What is the validity of a wife (adhyatma-vidya) without her husband (nama-sankirtana)? Sneha-samyukta-vraja-prema-nama-sankirtana. We read about it. We (armchair) philosophize about it (to the extent we’re able). We distribute millions and billions of books about it. But to what extent are we actually living it? Let us take account; how much of it do we actually do?

In truth, no external action - preaching, book publication, book distribution, nama-sankirtana, nama-japa, sadhu-sanga, vrndavana-vasa, arcana, prasada-seva, pot-washing, or whatever - can be considered an aspect of either ajata-ruci- or jata-ruci-raganuga-sadhana if it is not prompted by a greed to attain the perfection of one’s abhista-vraja-bhava (deeply desired mood of a vraja-gopa or gopi). If one does not recognize within oneself a specific attraction to any one of Krishna’s nitya-parikara vraja-bhava exemplars - if one does not have a desired bhava - then there is no question of one’s external engagements in devotional service being prompted by an innate lobha, owing to lobha’s non-appearance. Hence, one’s devotional activities can never be accepted as nija-abhista-bhava-maya, -sambandhi, -anukula, -aviruddha, or even -viruddha, for that matter, simply because there is no nija-abhista-bhava reference point involved to merit the consideration of such judgments. If one has neither the prerequisite lobha nor the inclination toward relevant internal devotional absorption, the very substance that establishes one’s eligibility to pursue the path of raga, and if one feels no urgency, on the basis of such lobha, to propagate raga-marga-bhakti in the world as per the will of the Lord, then one may preachidy-preach till one is blue in the face or distribute innumerable volumes and volumes of transcendental literatures till the cows come home and still one’s actions will never be deemed any sort of raga-marga-sadhana nor will they engender raga-marga-bhava as their direct outcome. One could hardly expect to gain the outcome of raganuga-sadhana on the strength of one’s external devotional engagements if the inward and outward features of one’s devotional performances do not assume raga-marga characteristics. If a sadhaka’s action is prompted merely by sastra-vidhi and guru’s order, then such action, however enthusiastic, is to be relegated to a status no loftier than vaidha-marga-sadhana, aropa-siddha-bhakti, or perhaps niskama- or even sakama-karma-yoga, depending on the quality of the motivation involved. Reverential vaidhika devotion (maryada bhakti) done with earnest enthusiasm (utsaha) at the stages of ruci, asakti, or even bhava, for that matter, also cannot rightly be deemed the cultivation of raga-bhakti by dint of the performer’s lack of greed for achieving the madhurya sentiments of a Vrajavasi. For the deserving lobha-maya-sadhaka, however, who unpretentiously endeavors to conscionably cultivate the moods of Vraja, differentiating between favorable and unfavorable practices while inwardly musing upon the eternal vraja-lila archetype features of all culturally transfigured varieties of external devotional engagement, practically anything done as well as any apparatus employed to internally or externally advance Lord Gauranga’s mission to flood the world with vraja-bhakti-rasa can be accepted as an influential part and parcel of the raga-marga dimension, commensurate with the individual’s measure of unalloyed devotional progress.

So, on this most holy occasion of Srila Prabhupada’s tirobhava mahotsava, I fervently beseech all, from the upper echelons of our society down to the grass roots contingency - If we have yet to come up to the level of para bhakti, the aprakrta stage of Krishna consciousness, in the course of our devotional evolvement, then, whatever our present devotional standing, let us, for the benefit of all concerned, kindly set aside all superfluous engagements and really do the needful to expedite our progress to the platform of raga-maya devotional perfection, seeing that as our foremost responsibility at the feet of our beloved Srila Prabhupada. Harer nama! Harer nama! Harer namaiva kevalam! Param vijayate sri-krishna-sankirtana! Srila Prabhupada ki jaya!

vanca-kalpa-tarubhyas ca
krpa-sindhubhya eva ca
patitanam pavanebhyo
vaisnavebhyo namo namah

Om Tat Sat - Thanks a lot!

 4 
 on: August 18, 2010, 01:27:44 PM 
Started by Sandesh dd - Last post by Kaush108
Of interest

http://vicdicara.wordpress.com/2010/08/17/the-most-fortunate-horoscope-a-tribute-to-aindra/#comments

Aindra prabhus date/time/place of birth given in this article is:
"March 12, 1953 at 4:28:45 am
In Arlington, Virginia (USA)"

 5 
 on: August 17, 2010, 03:52:17 PM 
Started by admin - Last post by admin
http://www.sivaramaswami.com/en/2010/07/17/a-great-loss/

SRS (Shivarama Swami): This was what Niranjana Maharaja wrote on his blog about Aindra Prabhu:

A Great Loss

Just minutes ago I read the shocking news that my godbrother, Aindra dasa, unexpectedly left this world last night in Sri Vrndavana Dhama. I’m too devastated to write anything long in this connection. The constant tears flowing from my eyes make it too hard to write and even as I write these few words, my thoughts of him only increase their flow. The world will suffer this tremendous loss of a great soul whose heart and soul was to expand the full glories of Sri Nama.

My only solace at this moment is the memory I have of him last year when he came to see me while I was staying in Giriraja Maharaja’s house in Vrndavana. Aindra Prabhu heard that I had injured my back but came anyway to request me to try and come to Krsna Balarama Mandir to chant during the boat festival on Gaura Purnima. Due to the intensity of his appeal, I did not want to disappoint him by telling him that it was impossible for me to attend. Rather than immediately telling him this, I simply looked at him right in the eyes and said to him, “Aindra Prabhu, from the core of my heart I wish to thank you for your complete dedication to the Holy Name. Not only myself, but I can see that the whole world is influenced by your dedication to Sri Nama.” Aindra Prabhu was completely taken aback by my interuption to his appeal. He looked back at me, also right into my eyes, but stumbled in his attempt to accept my appreciation. He thanked me for my kind words, but he looked so humble and child-like at that moment, that I sensed he was momentarily displaying another identity—possibly the one for which he constantly hankered for in the core of his heart. I have no doubt in my heart that he is now serving Radha and Krsna in this fully manifested form.

Devotees throughout the world should celebrate the life of this great soul by gathering together to chant Hare Krsna and by appreciating what Aindra Prabhu has done for anyone and everyone who has ever come in contact with him.

Hare Krsna

 6 
 on: August 16, 2010, 11:10:27 AM 
Started by Sandesh dd - Last post by Madhuradhipati das
Summer 1973. It’s 8am, and already Washington, DC is bustling with activity, as everyone hurries to work. A group of ISKCON devotees also leave their temple, crossing Q Street and heading towards Connecticut Avenue, a heavily populated business district. But their job is different: as they walk, they sing kirtan, an ancient Vedic call-and-response style of chanting God’s Holy Names.

Suddenly, a young fellow appears out of nowhere, a flute tucked under his arm and long red hair streaming out behind him as he runs as fast as he can, trying to catch up with them. The devotees are surprised and delighted.

Then, just as he’s almost reached them, the young man loses one of his flip-flops (A backless sandal held to the foot by a thong between the big toe and the second toe). The devotees indicate to him that he should go back and get it, they’ll wait for him. But he refuses. There’s no way he’ll risk losing them or miss out on even a few seconds of kirtan. He joins the kirtan party, and that very day, he moves into the temple.

The young fellow’s name is Eddie—better known to ISKCON devotees all over the world as Aindra Dasa—and from that day on, he never stopped chanting Hare Krishna.

Discovering the Music of the Spiritual World

Growing up in Haymarket, Virginia in the 1950s and ‘60s, Eddie Striker was a jack-of-all trades artist from early on, painting, drawing, and doing his own embroidery. But it was music that was closest to his heart.

His was a musical family—his father gigged with bluegrass groups, his mother played the harp, and his brother was a bassist. Eddie, for his part, loved Jimi Hendrix and was partial to the electric guitar.

So when his family broke up in 1971, and he moved to Chevy Chase, Maryland, it was the guitar that he turned to, playing with a number of bands and beginning to make a name for himself.

“But he always had a spirit that was beyond the mundane life he was living back then,” says his brother, John. “It wasn’t long before he’d seen enough of the rockstar life and what it led to—Jimi Hendrix’s death was a particular blow to him—and he knew that there was a hole that needed to be filled by the spiritual, not the material.”

Discovering the very different music of the spiritual world, Eddie moved into the ISKCON temple in Washington, D.C. And soon after, in February 1974, on the auspicious day of Sri Sri Gaura Nitai’s installation and Lord Nityananda’s Appearance, he was initiated by ISKCON founder Srila Prabhupada and became Aindra Dasa.

Although his father was angry at this drastic change in his life, Aindra’s little brother was happy for him and excited that he had found his calling.

“I was only nine or ten, but when he visisted, he’d bring me Bhagavad-gita and other writings, and these beautiful posters,” says John. “My room had Krishna stuff all over it. Several times he brought his drum and cymbals, and we would play together and chant. He was already a spiritual leader even then, because he made me aware of other things beyond the agnostic way we were raised, and opened me up to my own spiritual path.”

Back at the temple, Aindra became known as a rather erudite preacher—he joined everyone else in book distribution on the streets, loved speaking to guests at the weekly Sunday Feast, and was always looking for a way to spread Krishna consciousness.

His unique mood and love for kirtan also emerged early on. “Our neighbours used to complain about our 4am Mangal Arati kirtan,” says Jagara Dasa, who also served at the D.C. temple in the 1970s. “But when Aindra led the chanting—which he often did—he had the necessary constraint to keep the kirtan where it needed to be so that the police who sat outside would not come in and give us a big fine.”

Inaugurating the 24-Hour Kirtan

Later, Aindra became a priest for Radha-Madhan Mohan and Gaura Nitai, and would play around with the harmonium in between services, soon working out his first melody: Bhaktivinode Thakura’s short song Jaya Radha Madhava.

He continued to practice, and his skill and love for kirtan grew. Moving to New York City, he converted a truck that would open out into an ornate golden temple. He acquired sound permits and would drive to different parts of the city where he would set up his truck and perform kirtan for eight hours a day. His
performances were impactful, inspiring several people to join ISKCON.

Eventually Aindra decided he would like to try organizing a kirtan program in India. Travelling to Lord Krishna’s birthplace of Vrindavana in 1986, he learned the story of the Krishna Balarama Mandir’s 24-Hour Kirtan program. It had first been introduced in 1975 by ISKCON founder Srila Prabhupada—but without proper management, it began to fade, and by 1978, a year after Prabhupada passed on, it had ground to a halt.

Aindra decided to dedicate himself to the project. He began to soak up the atmosphere of Vrindavana, connect with other kirtaniyas, and learn Indian classical music or ragas, teaching himself the traditional melodies by ear. And eight years after the 24-Hour Kirtan had faded away, he reconstituted it as its own department, organizing a core group of kirtan enthusiasts to ensure its continuance.

Krishna Balarama Mandir’s 24-Hour Kirtan has been running non-stop, 24-hours a day, 365 days a year, ever since.

Someone Who Truly Cares

There was no denying the program’s austerity, and so Aindra chose men for his team that, like him, would stick it out through all conditions.

The temple room lay next to an open courtyard, and the “kirtaniyas”—mostly celibate students known as brahmacharis—had to endure Vrindavana’s unforgiving climate: its sweltering summers, with temperatures rising as high as 45 degrees Celsius (113 Fahrenheit), and its cold winter nights.

As the Department’s sixteen men still do now, they slept on the floor or on basic bunks in the Vrindavana International School, in rooms with walls plasted with cow dung. They kept all their personal items on one shelf. In those days, they didn’t even have air conditioning. All they had was Lord Krishna’s name.

And kirtan was their life. Full-time members did (and still do) six hours of kirtan every day, as well as chanting Hare Krishna on their japa beads for two hours.
They would each take two of the 24-Hour Kirtan’s three-hour shifts, which start at 1am and run continuously. The kirtan even ran during temple services such as arati offerings and lectures, with kirtaniyas softly chanting “japa kirtan” on their prayer beads.

Madhava Dasa, a second-generation devotee who now travels the world both solo and with his Gaura Prema bhajan band doing kirtan, was amongst the Department’s earliest members, joining when he was only eighteen years old. “Aindra Prabhu was everything to me: a father, a mother, a guru,” he says. “And he taught me so many valuable lessons. When I first started, I had a lot of energy and ego and thought I was the best mridanga drum player. He would chastise me about it constantly, for literally two or three hours a day. I thought he was being too harsh on me, and finally said, ‘Aindra Prabhu, you find another mridanga player—I’ll play kartals.’

“But he replied, ‘No, I want you to play mridanga, and so do Radhe Shyam. I’m only doing this for your own good—if you listen to what I say, you’ll go far in your kirtans.’ I agreed to try and sacrifice my ego, and after that, kirtan with Aindra Prabhu became very sweet. Some people didn’t like Aindra because he was very heavy, but I appreciated his straightforwardness and honesty, and lack of superficiality. When he was heavy with me, I thought, ‘Wow, here’s someone who truly cares for me.’”

The Kirtan Revolution

Aindra and Madhava became a tight-knit team. “Those were the best years of my life, the most beautiful kirtans,” Madhava says. “They were all about the proper mood. I learned from Aindra that kirtan is not to impress anyone—it’s our way to express our heartfelt feelings for Radha and Krishna and Srila Prabhupada, and our gratefulness at being able to do kirtan and connect with our only shelter.”

Madhava believes that this approach to kirtan was what made the albums that followed so powerful. First came the double album Chintamani Nama Parts 1 and 2. Next, came the first “Vrindavana Mellows” album.

“With the very basic technology available in Vrindavana, and the frequent power cuts, others might have gone to record in a studio in Delhi,” says Madhava. “But Aindra wanted to record Vrindavana Mellows in Vrindavana. He said that every kirtan held in Vrindavana is a thousand times more powerful than kirtan held anywhere else, and he wanted to give Vrindavana to devotees around the world.”

It took six months to record Vrindavana Mellows Part 1, but when it finally came out in 1993, it took the devotee world by storm and created what Madhava calls “a kirtan revolution.”

“Those albums changed everything,” says Madhava’s friend and fellow second-gen devotee Gopala Dasa, who has been part of the 24-Hour Kirtan since 2000.
“Before them, the old-school, 1980s, one-two-three style of kirtan pervaded. Vrindavana Mellows introduced a more classical approach in line with basic Gaudiya Vaishnava standards—one with more different varieties of rhythms, karatala playing, and raga melodies.”

Vrindavana Mellows Parts two and three followed in ’94 and ’95 , inspiring many devotees to join the 24-Hour Kirtan in Vrindavana and to take kirtan more seriously than ever before.

Possibly the most enthusiastic recipients of this gift were ISKCON’s second generation, known as gurukulis.

“We grew up doing kirtan—it’s in our blood,” says Madhava. “And we found in Aindra a kindred spirit, someone who loved kirtan as much as we did. But we also found someone we could take shelter of, a father figure. We loved him. There was always a bunch of gurukulis surrounding him, playing mridanga and kartals and chanting. He changed our lives.”

This love was also reciprocated by Aindra. After four more albums—the spontaneously recorded live album Kirtan is Our Bhajan, 1996’s Prayers to the Dust of Vraja, and 1998’s Vraja Vilasa Parts 1 and 2—and seven years with the 24-Hour Kirtan, Madhava finally went to Aindra’s room to tell him he would be leaving to get married and start a family. “There were tears in his eyes,” Madhava recalls. “He said, ‘I trained you up, and now you’re leaving me.’ I told him, ‘Aindra Prabhu, you’ll find someone else.’ He said, ‘Yes, but I’ll never find someone like you.’ Then he told me to chant Hare Krishna wherever I went, even if I had to sing to the four walls. And, because many gurukulis love kirtan but don’t like to chant their japa (meditative chanting), he added, ‘Make sure you chant your sixteen rounds a day, otherwise your kirtan won’t have any power.’”

Aindra changed millions of lives just by sitting under the pillar of Krsna Balaram Mandir and made everyone he came in contact with personally or through his kirtans chant Hare Krsna..happily. Kirtan was his life and soul. He was the Kirtan King who is gone now beyond our physical vision to be with Their Lordships Sri Sri Radha Shyamsundar.
Although the incident on 16th July 2010 may seem tragic but thats how devotees like him are completely under His divine will...and His will was done. He took Aindra Prabhu back. There is a hole now in the cloud of Kirtan as he left us so sudden. Lets us all pray for his mercy to descend upon all of us and make us chant Hare Krsna..pure Holy Name and wherever lets come together and glorify him and his contribution to the mission of Prabhupada. The easiest way to attract his causeless mercy is to perform Naam Sankirtan. So in small groups or big ones please try to perform kirtan for his divine pleasure.
Thank you Aindra Prabhu for your heart melting and soul stirring kirtans. I miss you 4ever......
With a grateful heart......
your servant,
vibhava krsna das
Courtesy - Madhava Smullen for most part of this article.


 7 
 on: August 16, 2010, 11:08:38 AM 
Started by Sandesh dd - Last post by Madhuradhipati das
http://www.iskcondesiretree.net/profiles/blogs/sripad-aindra-prabhu-a-life

 8 
 on: August 16, 2010, 02:57:13 AM 
Started by Sandesh dd - Last post by Roman-sf
Hare Krishna, devotees !
I have looked through the internet but could not find. The exact date of birth of Aindra prabhu and the place of birth.
Could you please help me in providing such information?

Sincerely yours, Raman.

 9 
 on: August 12, 2010, 07:34:20 PM 
Started by Sandesh dd - Last post by Sandesh dd
Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura on Krishna Nama Sankirtana

To make us wholly devoted to Krishna’s name, Sri Gaurangadeva, the combined form of Sri Radha-Govinda, came to this world. But if we disregard His teachings and show no interest in sri-nama-seva, we will never attain auspiciousness. Srinama-sankirtana is the best sadhana. If other sadhanas help us in Krishna-sankirtana, then they deserve to be called sadhana; otherwise they are simply impediments to sadhana. Sri-Krishna-nama-sankirtana is the emperor of sadhanas. It is the only infallible sadhana capable of bringing us to siddhi. Sriman Mahaprabhu did not speak of teaching arcana, but in Siksastaka he taught nama-bhajana. Although in Kali-yuga other limbs of bhakti should be performed, they should be accompanied by bhakti denoted by kirtana. Krishna and Krishna-nama are not two entities. Krishna is His holy name, and the holy name is Krishna. Krishna-nama is the son of Nanda, Syamasundara. Our only devotional service and duty is Sri Krishna-nama-sankirtana. This understanding is auspicious.

 10 
 on: August 07, 2010, 07:01:02 AM 
Started by admin - Last post by admin
From Jaya Bhadra Devi Dasi (ACBSP), Radhadesh:


"I remember in New York - in the Brooklynn temple (the one that was bought
after the Manhattan building was sold). Aindra prabhu was so into kirtan. I
remember that many of the ladies would make fun of him because they didn't
appreciate his singing. He put together a beautiful altar which he attached
to the back of a flatbed truck. It became known as the Harinama truck. He
used to  work on that project a lot, sometimes very late into the evening.

Once he said to me "Do you know what Romapada Maharaja told me? He told me
that instead of complaining that there is so little enthusiasm for Harinama,
I should develop the charisma to attract devotes to Harinama!" His tone was
rather exasperated and very doubtful - it seemed he doubted his capacity to
follow Maharaja's advice. But it also seems that Aindra nevertheless took
Maharaja's advice to heart. The rest is sacred history.

I remember one time he say me trying to play the harmonium 'Western style',
with chords etc. He emphatically told me that this is not the way to play
harmonium. He told me to that there is a method to play it and that anyone
who wants to play harmonium should learn to do it according to the standard
ways. He was so intense, yet it was clear that he was anxious for those
playing sacred instruments to do it in such a manner as to support the
chanting of the Holy Names.

These are some memories that pop into the mind of this tiny godsister."

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