Friday, July 1, 2011

Krishna Consiciousness: The Spirit of ’76!

During the American Bicentennial celebration this summer, there
will be another cause for celebration: in the Western world, the chanting
of Hare Krsna has now been going on for ten years.



You see them in almost every big city in the United States: devotees of Krsna singing the holy names of God (Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare). In India, the chanting of Hare Krsna has been going on for thousands upon thousands of years. During the American Bicentennial celebration this summer, there will be another cause for celebration: in the Western world, the chanting of Hare Krsna has now been going on for ten years. And, two days after the two hundredth anniversary of the United States of America on the Fourth of July, the devotees will commemorate the tenth anniversary of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness: “One nation under God”; yes, and one world under God.


In ten years of service, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness has seen the chanting of Hare Krsna spread all over the earth. In harmony with the teachings found in every faith throughout the world, these dedicated chanters feel that the spiritual sound of God’s names will purify the atmosphere and refresh all the world’s people. Students, workers, and businessmen talk with devotees and hear the devotees talk about Krsna consciousness. Like the other communities within the city, the devotional community has an important task to perform.




“Krsna means ‘the all-attractive one’; He is the most beloved friend of everyone,” say the devotees. “We’d like to introduce you to Krsna.” Most people take a keen interest in hearing about the beautiful Lord and about our unbreakable link with Him. The devotees’ spiritual master, His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, has helped them to see that all people are devotees of the Lord; the only difference is that some are not remembering their identity and some are remembering their identity. That simple difference, in turn, means the difference between hatred and harmony, between distress and delight, throughout the world. Just as the whole tree enjoys health when we water its root, so the whole world will flourish when we all serve the Lord.


By introducing (actually, reintroducing) people to Krsna (in airports, classrooms, business districts — almost anywhere) the devotees help to ease the pangs of material life and to bring their countrymen lasting happiness. Nor is the devotees’ task a matter of sentimentality or wishful thinking. Srila Prabhupada emphasizes that “books are the basis” of this nonsectarian movement to spread God consciousness. Bhagavad-gita, Srimad-Bhagavatam, and Caitanya-caritamrta come to us from the Vedic literatures, the most time-honored books in the human heritage. The subject matter: the science of linking ourselves with the original self, Krsna. In thirty-two cities within the United States and in forty-two other cities around the world, devotional communities flourish.

Friendship, the arts, and spiritual growth contribute to the appeal of Krsna conscious life for the thousands who’ve taken it up. Of course, the special joy of this life is to be conscious of Krsna, to feel the Lord’s presence at every moment, in every activity. “Before my disciples took to Krsna consciousness,” Srila Prabhupada recalls, “the pangs of material life made them gloomy. But now people say that they are bright-faced. Therefore, chant Hare Krsna. You’ll be happy, and you’ll make everyone happy.”
Guests are welcome at any time during the week. Yet the best time for visiting an ISKCON community is Sunday afternoon. Every Sunday the devotees have their traditional Love Feast, with vegetarian food, plays, movies, and good company (and, of course, chanting Hare Krsna).
ISKCON country villages have sprung up at eleven farm sites worldwide. One of these self-sufficient communities, the Society’s world headquarters in Mayapur, India, is slated to grow into a mini-city of sixty thousand residents, with its own airport. The local government sees it as a big help to that area’s economy. Elsewhere, as at these farms in West Virginia, Mississippi, and British Columbia, prize herds and fertile gardens yield food for both farm-working and city-dwelling devotees. Whether they live in the city, in the country, or in traveling buses, devotees of Krsna look forward to a world filled with God consciousness.

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