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His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
Without meaning to sound alarmist, we believe that if the GBC do not properly implement Srila Prabhupada's final, clear and emphatic instructions on initiation, the results for ISKCON could be disastrous. Even as we write the movement is in some danger of splintering, rather as happened to the Gaudiya Matha over a similar issue. It is our prayer that by constantly drawing the GBC's attention to this central issue, they will eventually realise that implementing Srila Prabhupada's ritvik system will solve many of the 'perplexities' presently encircling the whole issue of the guru in ISKCON
a) None of the above quotes explicitly state that an acting diksa guru can be less than an uttama adhikary. Thus the assertion is not directly supported by this evidence.
Certainly by 'strictly following' we become qualified to act as a guru even though initially we may not be qualified. This is simply the process for a non-qualified person becoming qualified. Certainly nowhere does Srila Prabhupada state that a non-liberated person is fully qualified to give diksa.
a) In the above the author's simply assume that "'regular gurus' is the system Srila Prabhupada wanted". However what they assume is the very thing they have yet to prove. We first need to see their evidence supporting the termination of the ritvik system, and the subsequent construction of the M.A.S.S. (multiple acarya successor system). Let us first see this evidence, and then after that we can discuss whether or not there are any problems with the resulting system.
b) The point the authors claim as their own is the very one we make- that the only consideration must be to execute whatever Srila Prabhupada wanted. He was the person who originally issued the final order, so we assume he must have wanted the ritvik system. Where are his general instructions detailing the elaborate M.A.S.S.
b) At this stage the proposed consideration regarding "written over spoken" is not relevant. We are not even sure exactly what was spoken since the evidence shows signs 'strongly suggestive of falsification'. At least according to the GBC's own assigned expert, Mr Perle.
It does not follow that because DIKSA gurus must not operate in Srila Prabhupada's physical presence, that no-one can act as a ritvik when Srila Prabhupada is physically absent.
b) We would be very interested to see first hand all this evidence which is supposedly liberally distributed "throughout his books, letters, lectures and the May conversation". Once this phantom evidence is produced we may all be in a better position to evaluate it. Until then we must take such assertions as mental speculation.
Since the letter clearly states what happened in the May 28th conversation, the authors have to agree that the May conversation appoints ritviks only. There is no mention in the July 9th letter, that anything else occurred in the May conversation, or that it is deliberately only reporting part of what transpired in the May conversation. Thus, by their own logic, the authors have admitted that Srila Prabhupada simply appointed ritviks to continue initiations for after his departure.
We have above two totally unsubstantiated assumptions. Firstly the very thing which needs to be proven, i.e. that the July 9th letter was "meant only for the period during which Srila Prabhupada would remain on the planet", is simply stated; as if re-stating that which needs to be proven suddenly becomes proof in itself. You could prove anything if all you needed to do was simply assume that which needs to be proven. Secondly the authors talk of a "system described by Srila Prabhupada in his books, letters, and conversations". Somewhat unhelpfully the authors omit to tell us what this system is, or where exactly descriptions of it can be found in Srila Prabhupada's teachings.
b) There is no transcript of the tape where Srila Prabhupada states that he "expects his followers to be come regular gurus after his physical departure". Neither does such a statement exist in any instruction given by Srila Prabhupada. Thus it is an instruction which has emanated from the wishful minds of a GBC select committee, with absolutely no basis in reality.
If the ritvik system was set up to operate only whilst Srila Prabhupada was present, there would be nothing to "see". Srila Prabhupada had only just said he would initiate in India, so why mention Jayapataka Maharaja unless the system was meant to continue past his departure?
What the author's need to prove then, they simply re-state, in the vain hope no one will notice that their version of events is nothing more than a tiresome liturgy of speculative assumptions, with no relevant evidence whatsoever supporting it.
This so-called `catechism' constantly presents what the GBC would like to believe happened. However, we already had a fair idea about that before we read the first word of this feeble tome. What we really need now is evidence which actually supports the theories being propounded. Merely re-stating discredited beliefs is not going to convince any sensible person of anything.
In any case, even if we leave out the word `henceforward' from the July 9th letter, you are still left with a system of initiation, put in place personally by our acarya, with no direct order to terminate it. Thus if the word `henceforward' had been left out of the final order altogether, the system still should not have been dismantled.
b) To point out the fact that the post-samadhi ritvik system is not mentioned previously by Srila Prabhupada in his books means nothing. Srila Prabhupada does not mention a pre-samadhi ritvik system either, and yet the authors think there was nothing wrong with that at all. This point was in any case answered in detail in `The Final Order' (p19, 27-30).
b) The authors have displayed gross dishonesty in claiming something they must know is not true. This point was already answered in our reply to a paper called `The Timeless Order' which unwisely gained the enthusiastic backing of one of the select committee authors. We pointed out this false claim in our paper `Best Not To Accept Disciples' which was also sent to the authors long before 'ritvik catechism'. How sad that Srila Prabhupada's representative body should behave so duplicitously.
In any debate the logical thing to do when your opponent answers your argument is to try and defeat their answer. Not just keep repeating the original point ad infinitum.
We are now dealing with: officiating acarya/ritvik/ priest/latent diksa gurus who do not as yet exist, but when they do will already have been ordered to change function and be something else.
If the `order is given in his books' why not just quote them and put the matter to rest? Of course no such order exists in Srila Prabhupada's books; thus the authors are either completely incompetent, or deliberately lying.
Rather than hang everything on the currently discredited May 28th tape, we suggest the GBC stick to clear signed evidence such as the July 9th policy document.
We have never claimed that the Topanga tapes are direct evidence for a post-samadhi ritvik system. We have simply maintained that it is evidence against the theory that the `11' were given the role of diksa guru by Srila Prabhupada via an order on the `May' tape. The very theory which is now once again being propagated by the authors.
"In conclusion, this recording
exhibits strong signs suggestive of falsification. I do not believe that
these deficiencies might possibly be the product of some mechanical
process or problem within the recording or duplication process and I
believe that they exist at what is considered to be a higher degree than
that of a coincidence. I strongly recommend that an independent Forensic
Analysis be conducted the Master recording in order to determine the
authenticity and originality of the evidence. This analysis requires
what is represented as the original recording and the original tape
recorder upon which this recording was represented to be made."
If this was actually the case then it begs the question as to why such an investigation was carried out in the first place. If one has no faith in such `technical' methods then to have employed them to simply reject them later, when the results did not suit one's purpose, is just another clear example of cheating.
There is no single example of Srila Prabhupada issuing important directives simply through some casual chat with visitors, or private letters to problem disciples.
It is unbelievable that anyone would direct a massive world-wide organisation by telling a few people something, but omit to ask them to tell everyone else. Would Srila Prabhupada say something to a one time visitor (Detroit), then rely on the tape being audibly recorded; then rely on it being accurately transcribed; then count on all his disciples subscribing to the BBT tape ministry, then hope against hope they all listen to the important bit before he leaves the planet - and as a result develop the correct initiation system. To argue this is pure madness.
Even now, some 27 years later, many of Srila Prabhupada's original followers still labour under the misconception that anyone can be a diksa guru as long as he has been following his initiation vows for the preceding five years.
Please remember that as little as one year later Srila Prabhupada had to suspend the whole GBC for gross unauthorised behaviour. Thus we can hardly accept that Srila Prabhupada had such bad judgement that in 1971 he was stating that ALL of his disciples were there and then qualified to be Diksa Gurus even though one year later his leading men were not even able to behave as disciples.
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INSTITUTIONAL CATACLYSM A reply to the GBC paper `Ritvik Catechism' From the authors of 'The Final Order'. The following is a reply to a GBC paper entitled `Ritvik Catechism' which was prepared by H.G.Badrinarayan Dasa, H.H.Umapati Maharaja and H.H.Giridhari Maharaja. These three devotees are members of the special GBC sub-committee set up to specifically deal with the ritvik issue. They were also the authors of the official GBC 'reply' to the definitive ritvik position paper - `The Final Order'- which was entitled 'Disciple of my Disciple' (henceforward referred to as DD). This latest offering appears to not have been circulated widely publicly, and instead appears to only have been intended as an 'in-house' document. Somewhat disappointingly the three authors appear not to have properly studied either 'The Final Order' or our response to DD ('The Final Order Still Stands') since their arguments vacillate perpetually between irrelevancy and crass misrepresentation. This is a shame since we might well have come closer to some sort of resolution by now had the select committee dealt more honestly and straightforwardly with the issues involved. For example, the committee consistently fail to even mention modifications A & B (what to speak of provide supporting evidence) which lie at the very centre of 'The Final Order's' thesis, and are referred to constantly throughout our presentations. There really can be little excuse for this since they had promised us a full and comprehensive response to 'The Final Order' over a year ago. The result of this apparent inability to confront central, key issues, is that the GBC are rapidly losing credibility in the eyes of many free-thinking devotees. Despite what people may think, that is not a situation we relish. We want a GBC we can be proud of since it was Srila Prabhupada's desire that we all co-operate under its authority. Why do we constantly push an issue which the GBC do not appear to consider merits great importance? Without meaning to sound alarmist, we believe that if the GBC do not properly implement Srila Prabhupada's final, clear and emphatic instructions on initiation, the results for ISKCON could be disastrous. Even as we write the movement is in some danger of splintering, rather as happened to the Gaudiya Matha over a similar issue. It is our prayer that by constantly drawing the GBC's attention to this central issue, they will eventually realise that implementing Srila Prabhupada's ritvik system will solve many of the 'perplexities' presently encircling the whole issue of the guru in ISKCON A `catechism' is a method of explaining an issue which takes the form of questions and answers. In all, the authors have prepared 17 such questions and answers, and we shall deal with each one systematically. Each question and answer set shall be numbered. There are numerous arguments proposed in 'Ritvik Catechism' that we refer to as `straw man', since they are not presented in `The Final Order'- which is the definitive ritvik position paper the GBC select committee were originally supposed to answer, and which is accepted by most pro-ritviks as representative of their position. ( The term `straw-man' is used to describe an argument that is falsely ascribed to the opposing party. This is done since it is a proposition that can be easily defeated, and acts as a substitute to answering the arguments which are actually proposed by the opposition.) When referring to the paper 'Ritvik Catechism' we shall simply say the 'authors'. Any supporting evidence used by the authors shall be in italics. All our points shall be lettered: Question 1:
a) The above answer at least accepts the principle that Srila Prabhupada could have introduced a ritvik system had he wanted to. b) The phrases used to counter the continuation of the ritvik system, "grand-disciple" etc., all appear in a tape that was rendered inadmissible by the GBC's own investigative expert (please see "Tape" section in Appendix). Question 2:
a) The above question and answer both assume "Srila Prabhupada wrote and spoke about his disciples becoming regular gurus". Until this assertion is first verified, the question of Srila Prabhupada changing his mind does not even arise. b) Since Srila Prabhupada only used the term "regular guru" once, and even then only on the disputed May 28th tape (see 'Tape' Appendix), we feel it is quite misleading to state that Srila Prabhupada "wrote and spoke about his disciples becoming regular gurus". Where is all this elusive evidence? Question 3:
Evidence offered by the authors to support above assertion:
a) None of the above quotes explicitly state that an acting diksa guru can be less than an uttama adhikary. Thus the assertion is not directly supported by this evidence. b) If it is such a well-known principle that the initiating diksa guru does not have to have first attained the topmost platform of devotional service before he initiates, we would expect Srila Prabhupada to have stated it at least once in his books. As far as we can see he only states the precise opposite - C.c. Madhya 24.330 purport. c) The above quotes clearly talk about the process of becoming a guru, not the resultant level of qualification once the aspirant has become a qualified guru. Further the quote from the Srimad Bhagavatam 4.18.5 could just as easily be talking about instructing guru since neither the term diksa/initiate nor the physical departure of the guru is mentioned. Srila Prabhupada claiming he is "not perfect", and that he has "so many faults" are not evidence for anything since we know that this was not actually the case, and therefore Srila Prabhupada was merely stating that out of humility. The letter to "Janardan" obviously cannot be endorsing non-liberated initiating gurus for the simple reason that in SAME letter Srila Prabhupada had earlier said: "On the whole, you may know that he is not a liberated person, and therefore, he cannot initiate any person to Krishna Consciousness." To seriously argue that Srila Prabhupada would then contradict himself a few lines later is very offensive. Certainly by 'strictly following' we become qualified to act as a guru even though initially we may not be qualified. This is simply the process for a non-qualified person becoming qualified. Certainly nowhere does Srila Prabhupada state that a non-liberated person is fully qualified to give diksa. There are several quotes that prove that the guru must be on the topmost platform of devotional service, an uttama adhikari or mahabhagavat (see `The Final Order'). The only way the author's interpretation could be correct is if Srila Prabhupada directly contradicted himself on this most fundamental aspect of guru tattva. We suggest the author's would be far safer to withdraw their assertion since it is a serious deviation from bhagavat philosophy. Question 4:
a) We have no idea what relevance the above question has to 'The Final Order'. We constantly use the term 'physical departure' and have never considered it in any way offensive. Merely irrelevant to the process of diksa. b) Srila Prabhupada taught that spiritually there is no difference between vani and vapu. Question 5:
a) In the above the author's simply assume that "'regular gurus' is the system Srila Prabhupada wanted". However what they assume is the very thing they have yet to prove. We first need to see their evidence supporting the termination of the ritvik system, and the subsequent construction of the M.A.S.S. (multiple acarya successor system). Let us first see this evidence, and then after that we can discuss whether or not there are any problems with the resulting system. b) This is a straw man objection since it is not posed in 'The Final Order'. Question 6:
a) This is a "straw man" argument. We have never proposed the ritvik system simply on the basis that we think it is a "better" system. b) The point the authors claim as their own is the very one we make- that the only consideration must be to execute whatever Srila Prabhupada wanted. He was the person who originally issued the final order, so we assume he must have wanted the ritvik system. Where are his general instructions detailing the elaborate M.A.S.S. c) We do say that since a ritvik system may be difficult for the GBC to implement in one go, they may want to consider running both systems in parallel for a short period. In this way ease the transition, that's all. We have never proposed running both systems as any type of permanent arrangement. Question 7:
a) The above argumentation once more falls back on evidence from the disputed `May 28th tape'. (Please see `tape' section in the Appendix.) b) At this stage the proposed consideration regarding "written over spoken" is not relevant. We are not even sure exactly what was spoken since the evidence shows signs 'strongly suggestive of falsification'. At least according to the GBC's own assigned expert, Mr Perle. Question 8:
Evidence offered by the authors to support above assertion:
Our response: a) The author's once more quote from a tape (May 28) which is currently inadmissible. b) The authors claim that the July 9th letter was supposed to terminate on Srila Prabhupada's departure. There is nothing offered above which directly supports this termination. c) What is stated is that one should not be a diksa guru whilst Srila Prabhupada is still physically present. But the author's assumption that the July 9th letter was supposed to terminate does not in any way follow from this given evidence: It does not follow that because DIKSA gurus must not operate in Srila Prabhupada's physical presence, that no-one can act as a ritvik when Srila Prabhupada is physically absent. In other words we have two mutually exclusive entities, the ritvik r, and the diksa guru d; and we have two mutually exclusive time periods: before and after Srila Prabhupada's departure: (b) and (a). We need evidence that:- r cannot exist at time (a). - scenario (1) Instead we are given evidence that:- d cannot exist at time (b). - scenario (2) (1) and (2) above are two separate and distinct scenarios. In logic you could never derive scenario (1) from scenario (2). Evidence for (1) can only come from a direct statement from Srila Prabhupada to that effect, i.e. that r cannot exist at time (a); or a statement to the effect that d MUST exist at time (a). If (d) exists at time (a) then it will obviously displace r existing at time (a). One could argue that the quote from Detroit above is evidence that diksa gurus must exist after Srila Prabhupada's departure, hence displacing any possible ritvik arrangement at such a time. Objectively speaking this is the strongest piece of evidence we have seen presented by the GBC in support of the M.A.S.S., since it satisfies several of the requisite criteria. Nevertheless there are still several insurmountable problems with it in terms of modifications A & B as we shall demonstrate in the Appendix - "Evaluating the Evidence". Question 9:
a) We recommend the above answer be disregarded since it is utter nonsense. The phrases "regular gurus- grand-disciple- disciple of my disciple" only ever appear once, and even then only on a tape rendered inadmissible by the GBC's own investigation. b) We would be very interested to see first hand all this evidence which is supposedly liberally distributed "throughout his books, letters, lectures and the May conversation". Once this phantom evidence is produced we may all be in a better position to evaluate it. Until then we must take such assertions as mental speculation. c) If the July 9th instruction is actually referring back specifically to the May 28 conversation, as is asserted above by the author's, then it might be worth reading more carefully what it says about what transpired in the May 28th conversation:
In asserting that the July 9th letter refers back specifically to the May 28th conversation, the authors have made a double contradiction:
"In the present conversation, Srila Prabhupada does not refer to proxy initiations at all, not even in connection with the word `ritvik'. However they now state that the July 9th letter refers only to proxies, and that the July 9th letter refers directly to the May 28th conversation. Thus, we are now being told by the GBC that... a letter that speaks only of proxies, which are to operate solely in Srila Prabhupada's presence, is in fact a faithful summary of an earlier conversation in which proxies are not even mentioned! We might ask how the July 9th letter could arise from the May conversation, referring back to it as its very source, when according to the authors the May conversation deals only with the existence of diksa gurus for when Srila Prabhupada is not present? Question 9 cont'd:
We have above two totally unsubstantiated assumptions. Firstly the very thing which needs to be proven, i.e. that the July 9th letter was "meant only for the period during which Srila Prabhupada would remain on the planet", is simply stated; as if re-stating that which needs to be proven suddenly becomes proof in itself. You could prove anything if all you needed to do was simply assume that which needs to be proven. Secondly the authors talk of a "system described by Srila Prabhupada in his books, letters, and conversations". Somewhat unhelpfully the authors omit to tell us what this system is, or where exactly descriptions of it can be found in Srila Prabhupada's teachings. Just for the record we can assert with absolute confidence that there is one system that is never described in Srila Prabhupada teachings: This is the system whereby a powerful diksa guru suddenly becomes incapable of giving diksa simply and solely because he leaves his physical body. Unless the authors can come up with clear, universally applicable evidence for the above 'system', then they effectively have no evidence that the July letter was "meant only for the period during which Srila Prabhupada would remain on the planet." Question 10:
a) Once again this is evidence from the disputed `May tape' (please see `tape' section in the Appendix). b) There is no transcript of the tape where Srila Prabhupada states that he "expects his followers to be come regular gurus after his physical departure". Neither does such a statement exist in any instruction given by Srila Prabhupada. Thus it is an instruction which has emanated from the wishful minds of a GBC select committee, with absolutely no basis in reality. Question 10 cont'd
a) The fact that Srila Prabhupada states "India, I am here" certainly proves that the system was set up to run in his physical presence. This fact has never been in dispute. We have never argued that the ritvik system should not have been operated whilst Srila Prabhupada was still present. What the above most certainly does not prove is that the system was set up to only operate during his presence. This is demonstrated by the very next thing Srila Prabhupada says: "We shall see. In India - Jayapataka". If the ritvik system was set up to operate only whilst Srila Prabhupada was present, there would be nothing to "see". Srila Prabhupada had only just said he would initiate in India, so why mention Jayapataka Maharaja unless the system was meant to continue past his departure? b) Actually, as can be seen by reading the July 9th letter, the ritvik system was set up to run `henceforward'. For the first four months of its operation Srila Prabhupada was still present, and could thus still theoretically perform the ceremony, health willing of course. So the system was set up to run both during, and after departure. That is why Srila Prabhupada nominated someone to continue in India, so the ritvik system could carry on without being interrupted by his leaving the planet. c) We have already pointed all this out in 'The Final Order Still Stands'(page 14) and again in 'Best Not To Accept Any Disciples' (pages 24 & 25), so it really is quite hopeless for the authors to present once more an objection which has already been answered twice before. Perhaps they believe that no-one is actually following the debate, or maybe they are themselves incapable of following a simple line of argument. If the former is the case then the authors should think again; if it is the latter then they have our sympathies, and we look forward to discussing the matter with their more competent replacements. Question 10 cont'd:
a) The authors have already admitted that the July 9th letter deals with proxies only, and that the May 28th tape does not deal with proxies at all. Given this, how can the appointment of proxies for pre-samadhi only activity, be part of any "process" whereby Srila Prabhupada moves away from being the "sole initiating spiritual master" for ISKCON, to a state where his disciples are suddenly initiating their own disciples "after his physical departure"? The authors offer not one tiny grain of evidence to support this mysterious 'transition'- (which incidentally is simply a re-statement of modifications A & B from 'The Final Order' p.2). What the author's need to prove then, they simply re-state, in the vain hope no one will notice that their version of events is nothing more than a tiresome liturgy of speculative assumptions, with no relevant evidence whatsoever supporting it. Question 10 cont'd:
a) This is another splendid example of the authors merely stating that which they need to prove. All they have done is point to three documents: the May 28th transcript, the July 7th Garden conversation transcript and the July 9th letter, and then boldly assert that they are all linked in such a way as to prove that the proxies (ritviks) are supposed to transmogrify into diksa gurus on Srila Prabhupada's departure. This assertion is made in spite of the stark reality that none of the three documents mentions any such thing! Anyone with a moderate grasp of English can read these documents and see for themselves that there is no mention of the following:
This so-called `catechism' constantly presents what the GBC would like to believe happened. However, we already had a fair idea about that before we read the first word of this feeble tome. What we really need now is evidence which actually supports the theories being propounded. Merely re-stating discredited beliefs is not going to convince any sensible person of anything. Question 11:
a) This is another `straw man' argument since it does not appear in 'The Final Order' which the GBC were meant to be responding to. Disconcertingly the authors were made fully aware of this when they last tried to present the very same straw-man argument in DD. We dealt with it on page 16 of `The Final Order Still Stands' which was also sent to the authors many months before they wrote 'ritvik catechism'. The select committee were never supposed to write a paper in response to their own fabricated objections, they were supposed to respond to 'The Final Order'. For convenience we will reproduce once more our answer:
To simply keep repeating arguments that have already been exposed as being gross mis-representations is called cheating in anybody's language. Question 12:
a) This is yet another `straw man' argument. Once more it was dealt with the last time they used it in `Disciple of My Disciple'. (Page 5, `The Final Order Still Stands') Again we will reproduce the argument here for convenience: "Recently when all of the GBC members were with His Divine Grace in Vrndavana, Srila Prabhupada indicated that soon he would appoint some of His senior disciples to act as "rittik" - representative of the acarya, ..." (July 9th letter) In the above letter Srila Prabhupada clearly defines the word ritvik (rittik) as proxy. A definition accepted in DD; "The July 9th letter can only be the recommendation of proxies ..." (DD, p13) Thus everyone is agreed that in the final order Srila Prabhupada defines the word ritvik as "representative of the acarya" or "proxy". But the July 9th letter also states that this appointment of proxies (ritviks), was the very appointment that was discussed on May 28th: "Recently when all of the GBC members were with His Divine Grace in Vrndavana, Srila Prabhupada indicated that soon he would appoint ..." Further this linkage is also acknowledged by DD: "There is a link between the July 9th letter and the May 28th conversation. The July 9th letter, issued through the GBC, is a follow-up to May 28th conversation, ..." (DD, p3) Thus the July 9th letter proves that the use of the word ritvik on May 28th was solely in relation to them acting as `representative of the acarya' or proxy. Thus by accepting that the use of the word `ritvik' in the July 9th letter meant proxy, DD has unwittingly defeated its own premise. Further the general meaning of the word ritvik has never been an issue of contention. DD's use of their Holiness's Hrdayananda Dasa Goswami and Suhotra Dasa Goswami to show that `ritvik' means priest is totally redundant since in `The Final Order' the word ritvik is clearly defined as meaning "priest" (p.52 point b). References are given for every one of the 32 times the word ritvik or its derivative is used in Srila Prabhupada's books, and on every occasion it means priest. The issue is - in what capacity were the ritviks (priests) that Srila Prabhupada appointed meant to act. It is clear that Srila Prabhupada set them up specifically to act as his proxies. There is no instruction for them to act on their own behalf. For thousands of years ritviks have been used in all types of ceremonies and functions. We are only concerned with what Srila Prabhupada wanted his particular ritviks to do." [P5, `The Final Order Still Stands'] b) To point out the fact that the post-samadhi ritvik system is not mentioned previously by Srila Prabhupada in his books means nothing. Srila Prabhupada does not mention a pre-samadhi ritvik system either, and yet the authors think there was nothing wrong with that at all. This point was in any case answered in detail in `The Final Order' (p19, 27-30). c) The authors have made no attempt to answer the rebuttals we gave last time to these very same points. To simply repeat arguments that have already been dealt with is most unimpressive, and a real sign of desperation. Question 13:
a) This is a straight-forward fabrication. No such statement exists on the whole of folio. Perhaps this is why they offer no quote to support their assertion. Again they simply state what they want to be true, regardless of reality. The quote we think they may actually be alluding to is given below:
The reader will quickly see there is actually no mention of the term `initiated disciple' above. We all agree that everyone is a siksa disciple of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta, so in that sense the quote might be applicable to Srila Bhaktissidhanta's grand-disciples. But the word `initiated' precludes any such an interpretation of the will. Since when was an `initiated disciple' of a current link identical to a siksa disciple of a previous acarya? b) The authors have displayed gross dishonesty in claiming something they must know is not true. This point was already answered in our reply to a paper called `The Timeless Order' which unwisely gained the enthusiastic backing of one of the select committee authors. We pointed out this false claim in our paper `Best Not To Accept Disciples' which was also sent to the authors long before 'ritvik catechism'. How sad that Srila Prabhupada's representative body should behave so duplicitously. Question 14:
Below is the relevant section from the will:
The authors are once more re-cycling an argument that was last used in `The Timeless Order', and which was promptly rebutted in `Best Not To Accept Disciples' (P29-30). For convenience we will again repeat our original answer: "Thus we are told the line: `The system of management will continue as it is now and there is no need of any change' is only a `straightforward statement' that `refers to the way temples should be organised'. But that is precisely our point. Part of the way Temples were organised was that when candidates emerged who were suitable for initiation, their names would be sent to the respective ritvik. Thus the ritvik system was part and parcel of the way temples were organised. In one sense the primary purpose for Temples even existing in the first place was to train devotees up to the standard required for initiation, not just to be able to boast `three executive directors'. It seems the authors are making the absurd assertion that the only aspect of temple organisation that Srila Prabhupada did not want changed was the principle of having `three executive directors'. In other words you could scrap everything else, such as having a Temple President or a Treasurer, or donating proceeds of book sales to the BBT or maintaining the Deities, just as long as you proudly keep `three executive directors' somewhere in the temple building ! From a purely legal angle:
b) Simply re-hashing defeated arguments from other people's papers is not going to help the authors one iota. They must be hoping that the people who read their `ritvik catechism' paper will not have bothered to go through all the various banned `ritvik' papers, and will therefore be susceptible to the author's misrepresentations and cheating. It is significant to note that the authors have made no attempt whatsoever to answer the rebuttals to their points, but have simply re-produced the original arguments. In any debate the logical thing to do when your opponent answers your argument is to try and defeat their answer. Not just keep repeating the original point ad infinitum. Question 15:
"Be guru, but by my order" is in the present tense, with no indication about the future. The "but" does not indicate future, since "but" can be used in any tense: "I am a guru, but only by the order of Srila Prabhupada," or "I became a guru, but only by the order of Srila Prabhupada." It is unreasonable to impose an idea of future tense on a statement that is in the present. When Lord Caitanya said, "On My order, become a spiritual master," He did not have to repeat Himself and say, "Now I am giving the order." The words "on My order" themselves point to the order. Srila Prabhupada quotes "Amara ajnaya guru hana" which is found in Caitanya Caritamrta. There, Srila Prabhupada translates it as "under my order." Srila Prabhupada has used the terms interchangeably: "Under my order... by Srila Prabhupada has used the terms interchangeably: "Under my order... by my order...when I order... on my behalf." Our response: a) The above argument is again reproduced from the authors' previous paper - `Disciple of My Disciple'. And again we will reproduce our unanswered reply from `The Final Order Still Stands' :
b) If the authors believe rebuttals such as the one above are flawed in some way, then the best thing for them would be to point out the defects. It makes no sense at all for them to keep continuously repeating defeated propositions. Question 15 cont'd:
a) Above we are enticed with the promise of more spectral evidence: "the order is given in his books" we are advised. If the `order is given in his books' why not just quote them and put the matter to rest? Of course no such order exists in Srila Prabhupada's books; thus the authors are either completely incompetent, or deliberately lying. b) How can the order to be `regular gurus after his physical departure' begin to `unfold with the July letter' when:
Question 16:
Question 17:
a) This is yet another `straw man' argument. We have never claimed that the Topanga tapes are direct evidence for a post-samadhi ritvik system. We have simply maintained that it is evidence against the theory that the `11' were given the role of diksa guru by Srila Prabhupada via an order on the `May' tape. The very theory which is now once again being propagated by the authors. This ends our examination of the GBC paper 'ritvik catechism'. Conclusion: We have shown that 'ritvik catechism' is nothing but an unwholesome blend of straw-man arguments, false supposition and the recycling of previously defeated propositions. We hope the GBC will realise that they can no longer get away with this sort of repetitive inanity. The world is watching now. We strongly urge them to re-introduce Srila Prabhupada's ritvik system as soon as is practical, or risk an institutional cataclysm, or at the very least utter disapprobation. Please forgive any
offence.
The only piece of evidence offered by the GBC to justify the disbanding of the ritvik system, and the consequent replacement of Srila Prabhupada with the MASS, is a taped conversation held with Srila Prabhupada on May 28th, 1977. Leaving aside whether or not this evidence actually supports the GBC's position, the main problem with the `evidence' has always been its authenticity. Over the years there have been 5 different official transcripts of the same short (approx. 30 seconds) conversation, and 4 official interpretations. It was with a view to clearing up this issue of authenticity that the GBC passed a resolution in 1997 to have the tape investigated by a forensic examiner. This was done through a special committee set-up for this task, who engaged the services of world renowned forensic investigator, Norman Perle. On September 22nd, 1997, Mr Perle released a report of a preliminary analysis that was done on a COPY of the tape. A preliminary analysis is usually done to determine whether there are sufficient grounds for conducting a much costlier and more in-depth forensic investigation. Normally if the preliminary analysis, which only runs some basic checks, finds evidence that casts doubts on the reliability of the evidence, a full forensic examination is recommended by the investigator on the ORIGINAL version of the tape, to conclusively determine the nature and scope of any possible tampering. This is what the report concluded: "In conclusion, this recording exhibits strong signs suggestive of falsification. I do not believe that these deficiencies might possibly be the product of some mechanical process or problem within the recording or duplication process and I believe that they exist at what is considered to be a higher degree than that of a coincidence. I strongly recommend that an independent Forensic Analysis be conducted the Master recording in order to determine the authenticity and originality of the evidence. This analysis requires what is represented as the original recording and the original tape recorder upon which this recording was represented to be made." The conclusion, in the words of the GBC's own appointed examiner, is that until such a forensic analysis is done on the ORIGINAL tape, we have no grounds for assuming the reliability and authenticity of the evidence. Thus until the investigation is done the GBC effectively have no evidence on the table. Unfortunately, rather than accept the conclusions of their own expert, the GBC have ignored him. They presently have no plans to conduct a full forensic analysis. Further, in a blatant act of cheating, they have continued to present the tape as 100% bona fide evidence, even though their own investigation has concluded that there are no grounds for doing this. This they need to do, of course, since they have no other evidence to present. The above `catechism', which was produced after Mr Perle's report came out, is an example of such cheating. The authors have presented many arguments using extracts from the tape, even though there is currently no basis for doing so. They have tried to defend their actions by putting forward two justifications:
Our response: a) A preliminary analysis only runs basic checks and is not even designed to find all the instances of irregularities that can be present on a tape. It is ONLY designed to check if there are enough irregularities to cast doubt on the reliability of the evidence, so as to justify conducting a full forensic examination. b) Since a preliminary analysis is done on a copy, there are many types of tampering that can only be discovered by doing a forensic on the ORIGINAL. c) The forensic examiner concerned was asked directly if any portion of a tape can be taken as `intact' after a preliminary analysis had discovered enough irregularities to warrant the conduction of a full forensic analysis. His answer was as follows: "IF the copy contains signs suggestive of falsification, that copy could NOT be relied upon as a faithful and accurate rendition of the original." "If the preliminary analysis discovers ANY area that is significantly suggestive of falsification, then the ENTIRE recording is in question and a Forensic Analysis should be done." (N. Perle, 13/10/97 & 14/10/97, in response to query asking if ANY part of a tape can be taken as being `intact', after a preliminary analysis had discovered irregularities)
Our response:
Appendix 2: Evaluating the Evidence: In the 'ritvik catechism' paper, the GBC present a quote from Srila Prabhupada (Detroit) where he speaks of his disciples being qualified to take on the role of diksa guru once he departs. We will discuss all statements made by Srila Prabhupada in the 11 year period that ISKCON was running during his physical presence, that mention his disciples taking their own disciples once he departs. There are actually only 6 examples in all. We are only listing those where the issue of Srila Prabhupada's disciples specifically accepting their own disciples once he departs is mentioned, since only this evidence could conceivably be used to support the removal of Srila Prabhupada as the initiating guru for ISKCON, and the subsequent construction of the M.A.S.S. (We have not included two other quotes were the issue of being 'guru' and 'acarya' when Srila Prabhupada departs is mentioned, since there is no reference to taking disciples, unlike the quotes below.) We have not been able to find any other quotes, neither have the GBC ever presented any others, so we shall take the following list as complete:
General Points
With such serious unpredictable hurdles, it is unreasonable to assume that information given in private letters or lecture/morning walk/ room conversations, and which is not then repeated in his books or instructions to the whole society, is intended to be used to modify an order which was issued to the entire Movement.
To illustrate our point, the Detroit conversation, which is arguably the GBC's best evidence, was not available in either a recorded or transcript form until last year. How can anyone believe it contains information crucial to the running of ISKCON, or which was meant to somehow displace an order which was sent to the entire movement in 1977? Specific Points We will now examine each of the pieces of evidence in detail. In each case it appears that Srila Prabhupada only made these statements, according to the context, to deal with a situation. The letters to Acyutananda, Hamsaduta and Tusta Krishna were dealing with ambitious individuals whose rampant guru ambitions even whilst Srila Prabhupada was still on the planet needed to be curbed. The private letters were clearly worded in order to control these ambitious, potentially deviant disciples. By offering the guru carrot, there was at least the possibility that they would carry on in devotional service and thus in time become purified. Such letters always tell them to wait, and not to do it now. Hardly enthusiastic encouragement. In the case of Acyutananda this ambition manifested barely after he had joined and Srila Prabhupada said "do not be allured by such maya"; see letter in 1968 above. In 1972 less than 4 years later Srila Prabhupada is again having to deal with the same desire for being guru from Acyutananda. In the case of the letter to Hamsaduta in 1974 we can see that whereas at least Acyutananda asked for permission, Hamsaduta had already started to accept worship, and that Srila Prabhupada had to rebuke him that "it will create factions". These letters are clearly warnings against unauthorised behaviour, not authorising future guru-ships to those least qualified to take it up. In the case of the letter to Tusta Krishna, the following evidence will show that our judgement on Tusta Krsna is not without justification that Srila Prabhupada was continually trying to keep him under control:
Please note that Tusta Krsna was a follower of Siddhasvarupa who already had initiated disciples before he met Srila Prabhupada. Taking all the above into account it is clear that the above private letter is simply urging an ambitious deviant disciple to at least wait until the spiritual master has left the planet before taking his own disciples. That some devotees would seek to promote this letter as generally applicable beggars belief. Even in the case of John Milner and Bramahananda, just 6 months before this letter was written, which the GBC have enthusiastically presented as being evidence of Srila Prabhupada endorsing Bramahananda's 'sum total of all the demi-gods' status, Srila Prabhupada severely rebuked him for 'spreading contamination in our society', being a 'rascal', doing 'nonsense' etc. since he was one of the '4 sannyasis' that was spreading mayavadi philosophy throughout the society. Later on Srila Prabhupada did not even consider him to be fit to be a ritvik, according to His Holiness Tamala Krishna Maharaja's 'Pyramid House Talks'. We do not wish to drag up all these incidents unnecessarily, especially since currently many of the devotees in question may be in very good standing, but if the GBC seriously consider the above quotes as their strongest evidence then the full facts must be known. With regards to the Detroit room conversation, had Srila Prabhupada said in 1971 that none of his disciples would ever be diksa gurus, the neophyte devotees around him may have been discouraged and left. We have already seen from the letters above that Srila Prabhupada had to write, that some of his disciples were extremely ambitious, trying to initiate after having been in the movement for just a few years; and that Srila Prabhupada was forced to check their ambition by simply encouraging them to at least wait. At that point it is unlikely they had fully grasped just how elevated the diksa guru actually needs to be. Even now those that are left are having a hard time understanding. Even now, some 27 years later, many of Srila Prabhupada's original followers still labour under the misconception that anyone can be a diksa guru as long as he has been following his initiation vows for the preceding five years. We can also see that in the same room conversation Srila Prabhupada is also endorsing the activities of his god-brothers, even though he said that they none of them were 'qualified to be acarya' and one year later he says that they were all 'dead men' and envious. So it is clear here that Srila Prabhupada is just giving general encouragement, since he emphasises the following points:
Otherwise we have to seriously accept that Srila Prabhupada is stating that: - That anyone just by being initiated is qualified and authorised to become a diksa guru. Thus if the GBC want to take this quote literally then all of Srila Prabhupada's 10,000 disciples, men and women, should all be free regardless of their spiritual standing, to initiate without the need for the elaborate voting and 'no objection' arrangements that occur at present. Since as Srila Prabhupada states, they are 'all competent'. He does not say that they still need to be qualified. Though he does say that his disciples are being "trained to become future spiritual masters", his very next words are: "NOW, they're competent". - Please remember that as little as one year later Srila Prabhupada had to suspend the whole GBC for gross unauthorised behaviour. Thus we can hardly accept that Srila Prabhupada had such bad judgement that in 1971 he was stating that ALL of his disciples were there and then qualified to be Diksa Gurus even though one year later his leading men were not even able to behave as disciples.
Conclusion However the above explanations are not central to the argument since even if one does not accept them, the simple objective fact remains that the 'evidence' offered by the GBC, 6 instances in 11 years:
Only if ALL the three conditions above were present could we even discuss the possibility that there is some sort of evidence that may point to the ritvik system set up by Srila Prabhupada being immediately displaced by the current M.A.S.S. system on Srila Prabhupada's departure. The many other calls to become guru have been dealt with in previous papers. In essence they refer to becoming instructing spiritual masters, not diksa gurus. This is clear since they will incorporate one or more of the following elements:
Thus in summary, there is NO instruction from Srila Prabhupada that can be used to displace the ritvik system that Srila Prabhupada instituted in ISKCON just before he departed. Until such evidence is presented, the system needs to be reinstituted at once if we are to remain faithful to Srila Prabhupada's orders. |