
|
NEWSLETTER No.3 |
Message from Adridharana Dasa,
Temple President ISKCON Calcutta:Welcome to issue 3 of our
newsletter, which is a special issue edition.
The following article was
sent to VNN 3 times for publication, and they have refused to answer why they
will not publish it. It is not the first time they have refused to publish an
article from us that deals with the Gaudiya Matha. We decided to write this
article since it is very clear that Srila Prabhupada's ISKCON is under
increasing attack from other institutions that wish to take advantage of the
fact that ISKCON itself currently operates an unauthorised and impotent Guru
system. In view of the fact that ISKCON's leadership has been either unable or
unwilling to fight off this challenge, we decide that we had to write the
following to protect Srila Prabhupada's ISKCON from being misled by outside
influences.
We will let the readers
decide for themselves why VNN refused to publish the following:
|
Where
H.H. Narayana Maharaja Diverges from Srila Prabhupada's Teachings |
This is a short paper
giving examples of where His Holiness Narayan Maharaja teaches differently from
Srila Prabhupada on important philosophical points. In no way is our purpose
here to make any judgements about Narayana Maharaja's spiritual stature or
devotional purity. He has our utmost respect as a senior practitioner of the
principles of bhakti yoga. We are merely presenting factual information to
adjust an impression some of his followers are promulgating, i.e., that his
teachings are identical and fully in line with Srila Prabhupada's. Thus the
purpose of this paper is not to show that Narayana Maharaja is in anyway
inferior to Srila Prabhupada - only different. Obviously those wishing to
increase their surrender and attachment to Srila Prabhupada will not be assisted
by persons who contradict him, whether it is Narayana Maharaja or anyone else.
In order to make
absolutely certain we have not misunderstood Maharaja, English not being his
first language, we have only taken quotes from an article that appeared in the
1990 ISKCON journal entitled 'Conversation with H.H.Narayana Maharaja' where he
was interviewed by H.G. Ravindra Svarupa. Prior to publication the article was
read to Maharaja in Hindi by Satya-narayan das, and he was allowed to make
whatever adjustments he wanted. Thus we know for certain that the quotes given
below fully and correctly represent his views; especially since, to this very
day, he has never retracted a single word of the article. We shall give subject
headings followed by Narayan Maharaja's statements, and then point out where he
differs from Srila Prabhupada.
|
Narayan Maharaja accepts the concept of re-initiation |
| "And in the case of a fallen guru- when one has taken diksa from a guru who falls down, and again he takes from a Bhavananda or someone, and again he falls. In that case we should watch and see see that the guru is reliable (.) And when a reliable brahmana-nistha and sabda-brahma-knowing guru is found, then he certainly should be re-initiated." (GBC 1990 ISKCON JOURNAL p.21) |
According to Srila Prabhupada, authorised members of the disciplic succession never deviate for a second, what to speak of fall into gross sinful life:
| "A
bona fide spiritual master is in the disciplic succession from time
eternal and he does not deviate at all from the instructions of the
Supreme Lord." |
He taught that if a so-called guru falls down then he was never properly authorised to initiate:
| "sometimes
a spiritual master is not properly authorised and only on his own
initiative becomes a spiritual master, he may be carried away by an
accumulation of wealth and a large number of disciples." |
Rather than preach that
such fall-downs are indicative of a lack of authorisation, Maharaja fully
accepts that such things occur, and that when it happens one must be
're-initiated'. The term 're-initiated' was never used by Srila Prabhupada, and
for good reason. If the guru was unauthorised then he was never giving diksa in
the first place, and therefore there is no question of the disciple ever having
been 'initiated'. If he has not been 'initiated' then where is the question of
're-initiation'. Remember initiation is not just a ceremony, but is defined as
the authorised transference of transcendental knowledge from guru to disciple.
The term 're-initiation' is thus meaningless and implies a deviation from the
teachings of our parampara as given to us by Srila Prabhupada. If a guru falls
down then he could not have been authorised by the predecessor acarya in the
disciplic succession, and could therefore not have initiated anyone with
transcendental knowledge. There is not one single example in all of Srila
Prabhupada's teachings of a former authorised member of the disciplic succession
falling into illusion.
|
Narayan Maharaja teaches 'living guru' philosophy |
| "And for a newcomer, it is sure that he should be initiated by a living guru." |
In answer to Ravindra Svarupa's point that the Vaisnava guru is always living, Maharaja said:
| "But not in eyesight." |
He later added
|
The Maharaja offers no scriptural support for his 'living guru' 'physical presence' philosophy. Certainly the above statements are never made by Srila Prabhupada, and hence must be rejected by anyone claiming to follow Srila Prabhupada:
| 'The
potency of transcendental sound is never minimised because the vibrator is
apparently absent'. (S.B.2.9.8, purport) 'So we should associate by the vibration, and not by the physical presence. That is real association.' (SP Lecture, 18.8.68, montreal) 'Therefore we should take advantage of the vani, not the physical presence.' (SP letter to Suci Devi dasi, 4.11.75) |
If it was a fact that in
order to be initiated the disciple must have the guru in his 'eyesight', then
many hundreds or even thousands of Srila Prabhupada's disciples were not
properly initiated, since they never saw his physical body even once. This
'physical presence' idea was rejected by Srila Prabhupada over and over again
and is never mentioned in any sastra, yet it forms a corner stone of Maharaja's
particular brand of Vaisnavism.
|
Narayana Maharaja teaches that a madhyama adhikari can give full initiation |
| "If a man is not uttama Vaisnava, even if he is madhyama adhikari stage, if he is simple and sincere, he should be treated as guru and we can take initiation from that person." (page 22) |
In a section of the C.c dealing specifically with initiation Srila Prabhupada says the exact opposite:
| "The
guru must be accepted from the topmost platform of devotional service.
There are three classes of devotees, and the guru must be accepted from
the topmost class." |
As is self-evident this directly contradicts Narayan Maharaja's assertion. Certainly a madhyama can accept disciples in an instructing sense, but such followers are warned:
| 'they
cannot advance very well towards the ultimate goal of life under his
insufficient guidance.' Therefore: (The Nectar of Instruction, text 5, purport) |
|
Narayana
Maharaja teaches that a madhyama adhikari can only give partial
initiation. |
At another point in the conversation, Narayana Maharaja seems to contradict this concession for madhyama adhikari Diksa Gurus when Ravindra Svarupa asks the following question:
|
As well as contradicting
his own previous assertion; in downgrading the madhyama adhikari's ability to
give initiation, and saying they can only do it 'to some extent', Narayana
Maharaja presents us with the novel concept of 'partial initiation'. Certainly
Srila Prabhupada never taught that some authorised diksa gurus can only transmit
a portion of the transcendental knowledge required for liberation. The diksa
guru who only initiates 'to some extent' is an entity never mentioned by Srila
Prabhupada, and therefore no ISKCON devotee can accept this idea as bona fide.
|
Narayan Maharaja teaches that a kanistha adhikari can initiate |
| "Say there is no madhyama adhikari. Suppose we are all kanishta adhikari. Then within the kanishta group, if one is on a higher level than me, he should be treated as guru. He will be vartma-pradarsaka-guru, or he can initiate." (p.24) |
Above Narayan Maharaja clearly states that a kanishta adhikari, or someone on the lowest platform of devotional service, can initiate disciples. This seriously contradicts Srila Prabhupada's teachings on guru tattva:
| "When
one has attained the topmost position of maha-bhagavata, he is to be
accepted as a guru and worshipped exactly like Hari, the Personality of
Godhead. Only such a person is eligible to occupy the post of a
guru." |
|
Narayan
Maharaja teaches that a kanistha adhikari can not initiate |
Later in the conversation the Maharaja seems to contradict himself:
| 'Uttama adhikari and kanishta adhikari cannot be guru.' We understand from Srila Prabhupada that in order to preach, an uttama adhikari will act on the madhyama platform; but he is still an uttama adhikari. Indeed he 'must' be on the topmost platform before there is any scope for occupying the post of initiating guru, on this Srila Prabhupada could not be more emphatic. |
And if kanishta adhikaris
cannot be guru we wonder why the Maharaja had just said they could initiate?
1) Uttama adhikari's
cannot initiate.
However Maharaja
simultaneously contradicts the above statements by saying that a kanistha
adhikari can not initiatiate, and also that a madhyama adhikari gives full
initiation.
|
Narayan Maharaja teaches one does not need specific authorisation to initiate. |
| "Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati has not said or given any document that Swamiji (Srila Prabhupada) will be guru. But yet he is guru. (.) Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura has not mentioned that so many others will do acarya, yet they have done. This is the system." (P.23) |
Srila Prabhupada clearly taught that one must only take initiation from someone who has been authorised by his own predecessor acarya:
| "One
should take initiation from a bona fide spiritual master coming in the
disciplic succession, who is authorised by his predecessor spiritual
master. This is called diksa-vidhana." |
One might argue that all
Srila Bhaktisiddhanta's disciples were authorised to initiate. However, there
are several problems with such a hypothesis.
| "On the whole you may know that he is not a liberated person, and therefore, he cannot initiate any person to Krishna Consciousness. It requires special spiritual benediction from higher authorities." (SP Letter to Janaradhana, 26.4.68) |
Yet according to Maharaja
the 'guru' in question (Bon Maharaja) had received such a benediction, along
with every member of the Gaudiya Matha who began initiating.
|
Narayan
Maharaja rejects the ritvik system "We don't follow any ritvik
system". (page 23) |
His main reason for rejecting the July 9th order seems to be based on the idea that he has not heard of such a system being employed previously:
| "In our Gaudiya Vaisnava line there is no ritvik". |
Of course this ignores the
fact that there was a ritvik system running within ISKCON for the last few
months of Srila Prabhupada's appearance. In rejecting the very notion, Narayan
Maharaja is rejecting a system Srila Prabhupada personally set up and allowed to
run 'in our Gaudiya Vaisnava line'. This 'precedent' argument is itself
illogical and self-defeating since there is no example of a disciple rejecting
the order of his guru purely on the basis that such an order had not been issued
previously. All acaryas set precedents, otherwise there would be nothing to look
back and compare with. So Maharaja's assertion that such a system has not
occurred before, even if it were true- (and we have no way of knowing what went
on in all the world movements in previous Kali yugas just after the appearance
of the Golden Avatar) - would still be irrelevant, since acaryas invariably set
new precedents; albeit in line with sastric injunctions.
Since Maharaja fails to
offer any injunction from Srila Prabhupada's books that might prohibit the
deployment of officiating priests to carry out initiations on behalf of a
departed acarya, we can only assume he has no real philosophical validity to his
opposition. Thus he remains conspicuously at odds with Srila Prabhupada's
explicit orders, such as the July 9th institutional directive.
|
Narayana Maharaja accepts the ritvik system but states it is not called ritvik |
| "Only in a case where a guru is very far away from someone. (.) But it is not called ritvik." (p.23) |
Yet Srila Prabhupada himself called the 11 nominated devotees "ritvik- representative of the acarya" (July 9th letter). And what happened to the idea of the disciple needing to be within the 'eyesight' of the guru. How will the disciple see the guru if he is 'very far away'?
| "If someone is in America and the guru is in India, and the guru cannot go to America and the American cannot come to India, then, at that time, a devotee in America can officiate and give hari-name, japa-mala and so on, if the guru orders." |
The disciple would
certainly need exceptional eyesight to see a guru from that distance! And where
are the previous examples of such a system? If the Maharaja feels that a system
is invalid if it has not been practised in the past, how is it that this type of
initiation is suddenly so acceptable?
|
Narayana
Maharaja accepts that ritviks were appointed for after departure. |
Srila Prabhupada also referred to the 11 ritviks as 'officiating acarya' on May 28th 1977; and in the following exchange we see Narayan Maharaja confirm that these nominees were meant to act after his departure:
|
Notice that Narayan
Maharaja admits Srila Prabhupada had mentioned the term 'officiating acarya',
and that they were meant to give diksa after his demise. Not only does Maharaja
immediately accept a term with no direct mention in sastra, once more
contradicting his earlier insistence on precedent, but he also inadvertently
helps support the ritvik position. If Srila Prabhupada had wanted diksa gurus
for after his 'demise' then why talk about something with no mention in any
sastra, namely 'officiating acaryas'? Why did he not say 'I shall be ordering
diksa gurus for after my departure' if that was what he had intended?
On the one recorded
occasion where Srila Prabhupada used the term 'officiating acarya', he equated
it with the word 'ritvik' (May 28th 1977) and according to the final July 9th
order ritviks were indeed meant to give diksa after his 'demise'. Since they
were 'officiating acaryas', not acaryas in their own right, they would give
diksa only on Srila Prabhupada's behalf. Please note that according to Maharaja,
Srila Prabhupada gave this answer specifically with regards to what was to occur
after his departure, not before. So Narayan Maharaja here accidentally supports
the ritvik position by agreeing that Srila Prabhupada wanted 'officiating
acaryas' or 'ritviks' for after his departure. Unfortunately Maharaja seems
unaware of the clearly prescribed role of these 'officiating acaryas'. Perhaps
he had not been shown the July 9th letter by the GBC.
| Narayan Maharaja applies the term 'acarya' to persons Srila Prabhupada criticised. |
| "Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Goswami Thakura- he did not mention who will be guru after his demise. But there is a system in our sampradaya. So Tirtha Maharaja, Madhav Maharaja, Sridhar Maharaja, our Gurudeva, Swamiji- Swamiji Bhaktivedanta Swami- they all became acaryas." |
Above Maharaja mentions persons such as Tirtha Maharaja as being acaryas as part of a bona fide system 'in our sampradaya'. Yet Srila Prabhupada described such persons as envious rascals. Srila Prabhupada described Tirtha Maharaja as an 'envious snake' intent on causing trouble; he said Madhava Maharaja was 'especially' in the business of 'poison'; and that Sridhara Maharaja had 'disobeyed the order of his guru maharaja'. Though Srila Prabhupada encouraged his Godbrothers to co-operate with ISKCON, and was affectionate to them, he clearly did not endorse them as being qualified acaryas:
| "But
Sridhara Maharaja is responsible for disobeying this order of Guru
Maharaja, and he and others who are already dead unnecessarily thought
that there must be one acarya. [.] So Sridhara Maharaja and his two
associate gentlemen unauthorizedly selected one acarya and later it proved
a failure. |
Obviously there is a vast
gulf in the perception of what constitutes a bona fide acarya between Maharaja
and Srila Prabhupada.
|
Narayan Maharaja rejects the very existence of the word ritvik. |
| I have not seen the word "ritvik" in our Vaisnava dictionary. (.) We have seen no such word as "ritvik". (p.23) |
In the Srimad Bhagavatam
the word "ritvik" and its derivatives are mentioned over thirty
times. Thus the Maharaja is not only at odds with Srila Prabhupada, but also
with one of the most important Vaisnava scriptures!
Conclusion:
|
Narayan Maharaja teaches the following in opposition to Srila Prabhupada: |
|
Narayana
Maharaja also contradicts himself by simultaneously stating the
following: |
| 1a) | That a
madhyama adhikari gives full diksa. |
| 1b) | That a
madhyama adhikari only gives partial diksa. |
| 2a) | That a
kanistha adhikari can initiate. |
| 2b) | That a
kanistha adhikari cannot initiate. |
| 3a) | That
he rejects a ritvik system in toto. |
| 3b) | But he
accepts the ritvik system that Srila Prabhupada set up both for his
presence and for after his departure. |
| 4a) | That
he rejects a system based on the fact that there is no precedence for such
a system. |
| 4b) | That
he accepts the ritvik system Srila Prabhupada set up in his presence even
though there is no precedence for such. |
| 5a) | He
states that the initiating guru must be 'living' in the 'eyesight' of the
disciple. |
| 5b) | He
accepts that one can be initiated even if the guru is not in the
'eyesight' of the disciple by ordering an officiator to act on his behalf
from another continent. |
| 6a) | That
the standard system of disciplic succession in our sampradaya involves
every disciple initiating on his own initiative. |
| 6b) | That a
system of only appointing 11 officiating acaryas is also bona fide. |
It should be noted that we
have only looked at one brief exchange between Narayana Maharaja and a member of
the GBC. Yet even in such a short text we have found many serious discrepancies.
It may be that Maharaja or his followers can justify his views on the basis of
teachings outside of Srila Prabhupada. But it should be clear to the reader that
no amount of justification will make Narayana Maharaja's teachings the same as
Srila Prabhupada's - and that is what is at issue here.
In light of all the above
we would humbly suggest that whatever Maharaja's spiritual credentials, and we
are sure they exceed our own many times over; as aspiring followers of Srila
Prabhupada, wishing to remain chaste to his teachings, His Holiness Narayan
Maharaja is not someone we can take guidance from. Respect from a distance has
to be the only safe policy in this instance. We hope His Holiness will forgive
any offence as none was intended.