Yogananda For The World 2012 06 12 PDF
Yogananda For The World 2012 06 12 PDF
Yogananda For The World 2012 06 12 PDF
The cover photograph was taken at the moment when Paramhansa Yogananda having
declared (concerning his concept of world brotherhood colonies), I am sowing my thoughts in
the ether, and my words shall not die! raised his hands and sent those vibrations out into the
world as he uttered three times the mighty mantra, AUM! (See Chapter 2.)
Contents
Preface..................................................................................................................... 2
Introduction ............................................................................................................. 3
1. My Position in Yoganandas Work and Legacy ................................................. 6
2. Two Directions.................................................................................................... 7
3. Schools ................................................................................................................ 9
4. The Timid Approach ......................................................................................... 10
5. How Were the Changes Possible? .................................................................... 12
6. Was Yogananda the Last of the Gurus? ............................................................ 14
7. Rules Are Secondary to the Spirit..................................................................... 20
8. SRFs Treatment of Others ............................................................................... 23
9. Kindness Among the Disciples .................................................................... 26
10. My Frustrations as a Man Working in SRF .................................................... 28
11. Indiaand My Dismissal from SRF .............................................................. 30
12. SRFs Lawsuit Against Ananda ...................................................................... 37
13. SEFs Second Lawsuit .................................................................................... 40
14. Character Assassination .................................................................................. 43
15. Changes in Autobiography of a Yogi .............................................................. 44
16. Further Important Changes, and SRFs Greatest Lie ...................................... 47
17. How Much Respect Did Masters Chief Editor Have for His Judgment? ...... 48
18. Re-creating Masters Image ............................................................................ 50
19. SRFs Treatment of Masters Humor ............................................................. 51
20. A Few Finishing Thoughts.............................................................................. 53
21. Practical Considerations.................................................................................. 57
22. Why? ............................................................................................................... 58
Addendum: Letter From Swami Kriyananda to Mrinalini Mata .......................... 59
Back Cover............................................................................................................ 62
Preface
Where There Is Adherence to Dharma
(Righteous Action) There Is Victory
by Nayaswami Naidhruva
This book concerns two fundamentally different,
and perhaps irreconcilable, interpretations of the
legacy that was left by the great spiritual master,
Paramhansa Yogananda, author of Autobiography of
a Yogi and other works of supreme importance to
spiritual seekers everywhere, and founder of SelfRealization Fellowship (SRF). Swami Kriyananda
has carried on that legacy as his guru told him to, and
insists that the legacy was intended for the whole
world. Others of the great gurus disciples, however,
claim that his legacy should be interpreted narrowly
as the founding of a small monastery, and the
institution of a sectarian tradition with the kind of
narrowness and rigidity that Yogananda himself
described as anathema to religion.
My direct experience of the facts presented in
this book came primarily through twelve years of
litigation, instituted by SRF against Ananda, the
spiritual organization founded by Swami Kriyananda.
Though I had been trained as a lawyer, I left the
practice of law when I moved to Ananda Village in
Nevada City, California in 1980. After SRF filed its
lawsuit against Ananda in 1990, I became involved in
law once again, working with Jon Parsons, Anandas
attorney, on the SRF case and subsequently on the
related Bertolucci lawsuit. I also worked closely with
Swami Kriyananda during this time and was in
regular, often daily, contact with him.
Many of the attitudes and actions of SRFs
leaders discussed in this book were the subject of
depositions, court testimony, and documents filed
with the court. Most of these documents are a matter
of public record; they confirm the picture of SRF
presented by Kriyananda in this book.
2
compassionate, never harsh. Even with everything he
believed in at stake, he never neglected his spiritual
responsibility to the Ananda members involved in the
defense of the lawsuits (the legal team). An
example: There came a time in the second lawsuit
when, with the trial date approaching, Anandas legal
team decided to hire a trial attorney when Kriyananda
was out of the country.
Upon returning, Kriyananda saw at once that the
attorney was the wrong choice for Ananda. But when
the legal team failed to see what was crystal clear to
him, he acquiesced in its choice. He adhered to one
of Anandas guiding principles, that people are more
important than thingsthat people be allowed to
make mistakes and learn at their own pace. He writes
in this book that it was contrary to his way of leading
Ananda to assert his will against others if they were
not receptive to his guidance. As things turned out,
the choice of trial attorney proved disastrous.
Kriyananda had known it would.
In the same spirit of non-attachment and
surrender to Gods will, Kriyananda never abandoned
his spiritual responsibility to those who formerly
looked to him for spiritual guidance. After the
lawsuits ended, he wrote a friendly caring letter to a
key witness against him and Ananda, a former
Ananda member, suggesting that in future she
consider more deeply the consequences of her
attitudes and actions. Kriyananda apparently still
believed that this woman could fulfill the spiritual
potential he had once seen in her.
Ultimately the message of this book is one of
hope. Kriyananda makes clear that a healthy spiritual
organization is based on discernible principles, not
happenstance. The final chapters include a detailed
listing of the principles he has followed in leading
Ananda. Leaders trained by Kriyananda and now
leading Ananda according to these principles have
shown them to be realistic and attainableten years
after the end of the lawsuits, Ananda continues to
thrive and grow. Seen from this vantage point,
Yogananda for the World is both a handbook on
Introduction
The purpose of this book is to clarify what I, the
author, consider to be Paramhansa Yoganandas true
life and legacy. These pages are less a protest than a
statement of what may prove to be two utterly
irreconcilable positions. My concern is less with
individuals than with the validity of the positions
themselves. Self-Realization Fellowship (hereafter
referred to by the initials, SRF) defines one of the
positions. Ananda Church of Self-Realization
(hereafter referred to as Ananda) defines the other
one. SRF has interpreted the Gurus legacy in the
narrowest way possible. (In their lawsuit, they tried
to make the words, actions, name, and every public
reference to Yogananda their own personal property.
Ananda, by contrast, claimed, and after twelve years
of bitter litigation won its point, that Yogananda
belongs to the world.)
This book will point out ways in which SRF has
claimed narrowly to possess every right concerning
Yoganandas legacy. Among those ways are the
following:
a) Paramhansa Yogananda wrote throughout his
life, and spoke often in public, of his vision for what
he called world-brotherhood colonies. To the best
of my knowledge, only four months before he left his
body he was still doing so. Self-Realization
Fellowship has rejected that vision, actually declaring
that, at the end of his life, he changed his mind on
this important point. To support their claim, they
have gone so far as to change one of the basic aims
and ideals of Yoganandas mission to the world.
I know for a fact that he not only recommended
cooperative communities: he was fervent in their
support. I was myself present on several occasions
when he spoke eloquently on the point. I both heard
and saw him. On one occasion, the power with which
he declared his belief in this ideal was enough to
shake the heavens!
4
The words are correctly pronounced gyana and
yagya, each with a slightly nasal sound that doesnt
exist in English, but j-nana and yaj-na are simply,
and laughably, wrong.
The change in Paramhansa, here, suggests a
readiness on SRFs part to correct the Master on just
about anything he ever said or didnt say, did or
didnt do, if it doesnt correspond to their own
notions of what they think he ought to have said and
done.
In countries outside of India, that middle a
usually becomes so exaggerated, as I said, that people
pause there, like hawks before making their final
swoop.
SRF actually went to the length of forging
Masters written signature. To add that fifth letter in
the middle, they copied it from another part of the
name. The change is obvious to anyone who studies
the signature as it appears in their more recent
editions of his books (which, to conceal their own
further, and innumerable, changes, they call reprints).
Two of the as are identical.
c) They have also made many changes in his
already-printed words, as the reader will see
changes that are not only stylistic but that alter his
very meaning and intent. The clear purpose for these
changes has been to change, or to redirect, his very
legacy.
1. SRFs editor-in-chief, albeit able at clarifying
ideas, was not a poet. She edited his beautiful book
of prayer-poems, Whispers from Eternity, producing
thereby a shriveled corpse: grammatically
impeccable, but dry, sterile, and lacking in poetic
feeling. After making these changes, she actually
dared to forge a message from Yogananda purporting
to thank her for the work shed done on this edition.
She herself wrote that letter to get anticipated critics
off her back. As the following pages will show,
Yogananda never even saw the work shed done on
his book. Had he read it, I am certain he would have
been appalled.
5
know Master [the name by which we all called
Yogananda] said we arent a sect. Well, we are a
sect! Her peremptory declaration permitted no
qualification; she didnt even bother to justify it.
During SRFs lawsuit against Ananda (about
which Ill write later), I said to Daya Mata (the
president of SRF), Master said Self-realization
would someday become the religion of the entire
world. He cant possibly have meant, SelfRealization, Inc.!
That, Daya replied, is your opinion.
Obviously, she believed that Self-Realization
Fellowship would evolve in time to become a sort of
super Roman Catholic Church, with a massive
hierarchy and all the trappings of orthodox
Churchianity.
This, to my mind, has constituted SRFs greatest
betrayal of Yoganandas true legacy, which he had
intended to change the way people approached
everythingschooling, family life, business,
politicsindeed, the entire structure of society!
1. My Position in Yoganandas
Work and Legacy
This book will deal with facts. It will be
important for the reader, however, to know my
credentials for writing it. He can then decide for
himself what right Ive had to make the statements in
these pages.
I came to Paramhansa Yogananda late in his life:
on September 12, 1948, and was accepted by him as
a disciple at that meeting. I was twenty-two at the
time. I lived with him for the last three and a half
years of his life, and spent many hours with him
alone, most notably at his desert retreat in
Twentynine Palms. In 1950, he placed me in charge
of the other monks. Less than a year after accepting
me as a disciple, he made me a minister. He
appointed me to give Kriya Yoga initiation only eight
months after accepting me as a disciple. He planned
to take me with him to India (a plan that was
canceled, finally, by his physical death in 1952).
Perhaps most important, he spoke to me often,
personally and at length, about his deeper teachings
and his missions future.
He said to me many times, and not only in
confidence when we were alone, You have a great
work to do. That these words were directed to me
personally, and were not meant as a general statement
concerning the work as a whole, was very clear.
Sometimes he would add statements like, Therefore
you must (or must not) do [such and such]. The first
time he said those words to meit was in the
presence of certain long-term disciples including
Daya MataI was standing outside his car with
another monk, Herbert Freed. After saying, You
have a great work to do, he added, significantly:
Its you Im talking to, Walter.
One day Master and I were standing out of doors
by the garage at his Twentynine Palms retreat. After
a silence of several moments, he suddenly spoke with
great earnestness: Apart from St. Lynn, every man
2. Two Directions
Yoganandas mission has taken two divergent
directions: the one, toward narrow institutionalism;
the other, toward universality. I represent the
expansive interpretation of his mission. SRF
represents the narrower view. Which of the two is
correct? Are they even compatible? If SRFs
interpretation is right, then is mine wrong? And if
mine is correct, then is theirs, albeit understandable,
unlikely to prevail for long?
They have seniority on their side. On mine, I
have common sense. I also have backing me Masters
own wordsnot to me only; I also have his oftreiterated public statements. I stated in the
Introduction that Yogananda spoke fervently
throughout his public life of the need for spiritually
minded people to join together in cooperative,
harmonious, self-sustaining communities.
a) In article after article, and in lecture after
lecture, he emphasized his deep conviction that such
communities were needed. On numerous occasions I
heard him express himself with great enthusiasm on
this issue. It was a basic theme of his long before I
arrived on the sceneas long ago, indeed, as the
early 1930s.
b) In 1949, a woman named Mrs. Myers gave a
garden party in Masters honor in Beverly Hills, a
wealthy section of Los Angeles. About eight hundred
guests attended, among them many famous
Hollywood figures. At the end of the party, Mrs.
Myers invited her special guest to address the
gathering.
What would have been an honored guests usual
response to such an invitation? Under the
circumstances, surely, he would have offered a few
gracious words of thanks and appreciation to his
hostess; a few pleasant words of welcome to the
guests themselves; and perhapsin Yoganandas
casea few kindly and thoughtful insights on life in
general.
8
I state categorically therefore, in absolute
contradiction to her words, that Master never
changed his mind on this issue, or indeed on any
other important oneleast of all, certainly, on this
one. He was, after all, a spiritual master! For him to
have stated with so much power, My spoken words
are registered in the ether, in the Spirit of God . . .
and they shall move the West! . . . and then, years
later, simply to change his mind would have been
completelyand laughably!unthinkable.
3. Schools
It is well known that Paramhansa Yogananda
started schools in India. He wanted to start schools,
similarly, in America. In fact, his first plan for Mt.
Washington was to make it a school. But of course he
needed first to educate parents to the need for his new
form of education. And he must have known from the
beginning that this was the case. I cannot but think he
announced this concept not as another idea to be
changed toward the end of his life, but rather as one
that he foresaw and desired for the future, whenever
the time was right.
SRF has evinced no interest in starting such
schools. Ananda, however, saw schools from the
beginning of its existence as intrinsic to Yoganandas
community idea. We have several schools in various
Ananda communities throughout the world,
following the principles outlined in my book,
Education for Life, which in turn was inspired by
Paramhansa Yoganandas educational ideals. In this
important way also, Ananda has kept alive one of the
basic aspects of our Gurus mission.
Schools are now integral parts of our
communities at Ananda Village near Nevada City,
California; in our suburban community at Mountain
View, California; in the Ananda community near
Portland, Oregon; in the Ananda community at
Seattle, Washington; in the Ananda community near
Assisi, Italy; as a part of our growing Ananda
community in Gurgaon, north India; and in our new
community near Pune, south India.
Some of our schools teach only the elementary
grades, but in some of them we offer education also
up through the university level, especially at Ananda
Villagea facility which will soon be moved to our
new community at Laurelwood, Oregon.
High praise has been given the Ananda schools
by persons respected in the field of education.
10
11
that it said complimentary things about mean
unthinkable defect, inasmuch as they know of no
record that says anything about them. (How could
they know? None of them has taken the trouble even
to investigate the phenomenon.) Taras comment to
me was, The only reason you mention that book at
all is that it says such good things about YOU!
Timidity about even quoting their own Guru in
ways that might be misunderstood by a few is one of
their basic defects. Yogananda more than once
proclaimed that he had been Arjuna in a former life.
Tara insisted, We cant say that! We have no
proof! And I couldnt help asking myself when she
said that, Isnt it proof enough that he himself told us
hed been Arjuna?
Ill be mentioning later Taras timidity in editing
out some of his bolder statements for fear of what
people might think. This fear of making the wrong
impression on others is fundamental to everything
SRF does. It has led to the gradual shrinking of his
mission, legacy, and teachings to the point where Im
afraid that his work may some day become like the
most watered-down Protestant sect, declaring
essentially, Go on just as you are, earning money
and breeding like flies. Only take the name of our
Savior occasionally, and youll be saved.
Yogananda brought to the world a work of
world-changing importance. They have treated it like
an old ladies sewing circle.
12
and
study,
the
13
Agathas posture in death may also have been less
praiseworthy, indicating as it did a rejection of her
own gurus will for her, and a failure to recognize the
true greatness of her father/guru in either life. Had
she become the queen of Spain, she might have
gained an understanding of leadership qualities
which, in this life, have been lacking. Maybe her
Guru was even then aware of todays realities. Had
she been a queen in that life, that experience might
have made her a better SRF president in this one.
She also said to me, In this life, I have had
trouble with my knees. Had she died on her knees in
accordance with Gods will, would not her knees
have been, if anything, blessed in this lifetime,
instead of giving her trouble?
Yogananda himself, in a letter to Rajarshi
Janakananda (the Masters most advanced disciple),
once lamented Poor Fayes deficiency in leadership
qualities. As he wrote: Faye through my incapacity
does not know to do things any way as I did, money
or no money she has none to guide her. As a result
the work has started going back. He concluded,
Everyone in the work is terrified about the works
future.
In her present lifetime also, Daya has repeatedly
equated Yoganandas will with her own wishes. A
case in point is her declaration that his primary
reason for coming to the West was to create a
monastery. Obviously, her indifference to his fervor
for starting world brotherhood colonies is another
case in point.
14
4. It is for this reason, above all, that the truthseeker is counseled to seek an enlightened guru.
Otherwise, even the highest knowledge will be
tainted with ego. It is the awareness of ones own
impotence to raise himself that rescues one from the
delusion of clinging to ego-guidance and, by bringing
a true guru into ones life, takes one from
discouragement to enlightenment.
15
guru? I may answer, You dont need one at all! Just
keep on being your own guru.
In The Jewel in the Lotus, a stage play I once
wrote, Romesh, a wealthy but comically materialistic
merchant, shares this piece of wisdom (as he
defines the term): God is in money, too. Therefore,
the more you have of money, the more you have of
God. Simple! I wrote that role to demonstrate the
inadequacy of reasoning if it lacks intuitive
understanding.
Those who sincerely seek enlightenment,
however, never pose such a challenge. If they ask me
sincerely, Do I need a guru? my reply to them is
very different. Can you lift yourself by your own
bootstraps? I ask. Wisdom implies a heightened
state of consciousness. A true guru will be able to lift
you to that state. In the end, it is Gods grace alone
that saves; the guru is a channel for that grace. God
never acts except through instruments, whether they
be angels, lower deities, orin this case
enlightened human beings.
These truths must be shared, however, only with
those people who are willing to listen, not with those
who love to argue.
c) When Daya Mata went to India in 1958 (I was
included in her party), she learned that followers of
the Sikh religion accept their scripture, the Guru
Granth Sahib, as their guru. Daya seized eagerly on
this fact to justify her claim that Master, too, had
declared that the lessons would, after his passing,
become the guru. The statement Master made to me
personally on this point flatly contradicts this claim.
Indeed, from his statement to me it is clear that he
could never have told Daya anything even remotely
similar. As for the Sikhs, I dont know much about
their religion, but I do know many Sikhs who also
have personal gurus. From this fact I assume that
sincereas distinct from merely orthodoxspiritual
seekers in Sikhism understand, and accept, that every
true seeker needs a Self-realized guru. Indeed, living
in India as they do, it seems to me unlikely that any
of them would not be familiar with this true teaching.
16
In short, how can any late-comer to his path even
claim Master as his guru?
Please understand that I am not saying these
claims are false or unrealistic. What I am saying is
that, since Master is no longer in the body, his way of
reaching people must be through human instruments.
Everything God does on earth is accomplished
through earthly instrumentseven if it be only bees
pollinating the flowers. Even direct visions of a great
master can only inspire: they cannot actually save.
Those who come to Yogananda now must accept that
his power can also animate certain of his living
disciples, and will continue to animate those who
continue to come to his teachings, if they are
themselves sufficiently in tune with him to guide
others truly.
It cannot mean, of course, that everyone who
follows him will be graced with the same power. We
are not discussing, here, a line of officially ordained
priests. But among his followers there will be some
more qualified than others to teach in his name. It
will be by their attunement with his particular ray of
divine grace that they will continue to be able to bless
others.
1. There is a story I was told in 1960 by a great
saint, Sri Rama Yogi, whom Master had met in India
during his 193536 visit to the ashram of Ramana
Maharshi. This man was the only fully liberated soul
my Guru ever met, apart from his own line of gurus,
and apart from two disciples of Lahiri Mahasaya:
Swami Pranabananda (the saint with two bodies as he
is described in Autobiography of a Yogi), and Ram
Gopal Muzumdar (the sleepless saint). (I dont
include here Yoganandas own disciples.) I asked
Master about many of the other saints in
Autobiography of a Yogi. In each case his answer
was the same: He had reached the stage of jivan
mukta, but was not yet fully liberated.
The only other fully liberated saint hed
encountered (though he hadnt mentioned him in his
autobiography) was Sri Rama Yogi.
17
particular ray of divine gracethis particular
mission. Our line of gurus comprise the divine
messengers sent to us, and to all mankind, in these
times.
Therefore we keep their images on our altars.
Normally, we dont place any other photograph there.
If, however, any individual feels inspired to put
someone elses image also on his own personal altar,
Master himself permitted it.
18
1. Master had already told me that to achieve
perfect freedom one must first free at least six others.
At this point, therefore, I wondered, But how could
she have achieved liberation, since she had no
disciples?
2. Master caught my thought; his reply was
important to my present argument. What he said then
was, She had disciples.
Obviously, his meaning was that Sister had been
acting as his channel for the salvation of certain
others. One can only assume that, if Sister did so,
then Rajarshi, and perhaps others, also, must have
done so too, acting as his channels.
h) Peggy Deitz was a devoted disciple of
Masters who lived for some years at Mt.
Washington. Master told her at one point in her life to
live outside the monastery, and serve a larger public.
This evidently was what she herself needed, for her
own spiritual development.
One day he requested her to start giving Kriya
initiation to others. Because she no longer lived at
Mt. Washington, she asked him in astonishment,
What will the organization say?
The Guru replied, Are you following the
organization? Or are you following me?
i) SRF claims that loyalty to the organization
itself is essential for the devotee of this path.
Obviously, Master, in the above case, was demanding
loyalty not to SRF, but to himself as the Guru.
What SRF has done is change Masters very
definition of loyalty. Yogananda didnt necessarily
include, in that word, loyalty, loyalty to his
organization. Neither, on the other hand, did he
equate loyalty to him with loyalty to SRF. He often
said, Loyalty is the first law of God, but the loyalty
of which he spoke was a feeling of heartfelt
dedication to God alone, above all. Such loyalty has
little if anything to do with signing a membership
pledge.
19
2. Man needs the company of other human
beings for his own spiritual advancement. Satsanga,
good company, is essential for spiritual advancement.
The caste system of India was created in recognition
of this truth. Members of the Shudra, or lowest, caste
can rise most certainly by keeping company with
people who belong by right to a higher caste, for
people at the lowest level of advancement feel little,
if any, incentive toward spiritual progress. Without
higher influences, they have virtually no incentive at
all.
Vaishyasthe next caste upmay feel some
such incentive, but will be spurred upward more
rapidly if they can have some contact with
Kshatriyas, the next stage above them.
Thus, in every case, the company of those whose
consciousness is higher than ones own is extremely
helpful. Yogananda condensed this thought into the
simple dictum: Environment is stronger than will
power.
3. Yogananda also said that God first sends the
seeker uplifting books; then inspiring teachers and
other spiritually beneficial human instruments; then
finally He leads one to ones true guru.
The gurus role, ordained by God, is to bring
people to God. This is not a personal choice. As
Master said to me the day I first met him, I am
seeing you only because Divine Mother told me to,
not because you have come such a distance [Id just
come all the way to Los Angeles, non-stop, from
New York]. In India there is a saying, When the
disciple is ready, the guru appears. One doesnt have
to shop the length of the counter. If he calls deeply to
God, the Lord Himself will show him where to place
his next footstep.
4. In my own case, it was God Himself, through
Autobiography of a Yogi, who led me to Yogananda.
I had never before even heard of the high teachings
of yoga. Had my parents been nearby (God took them
abroad to the distant land of Egypt), I might well not
20
21
Look with sensitive gaze at the crowds in any
public place on earth. I think you will see his
statement amply confirmed: peaceless faces;
confused faces; puzzled faces; angry or covetous
faces; grimly egoically directed faces, all of them
with their eyes fixed on goals that will eventually
bring them nothing but disillusionment.
d) Yogananda once said to SRFs center leader
in Mexico City, Seor J. M. Cuaron, I lost sight of
you for a few incarnations, but now I will never lose
touch with you again. Seor Cuaron thereafter
would sometimes remind him, Remember your
promise!
I wont forget, Master would reply. I will
never lose touch with you again.
How many stories might be told in the same
vein!
e) My own experience on the path has taught me
something very interesting: The deeper a persons
inner bliss, the more decisive he becomes in whatever
he says and does. Usually, he becomes more
considerate of other peoples feelings, but he may
also at timestoward those who depend on him for
guidancebe very firm. I dont mean he is rigidly
fixed in his ideas: I mean only that he is interested
only in what is true; he is not interested in mere
opinionsnot even his own opinions. Thus, his
decisiveness comes not from self-affirmation, but
from the mental clarity that comes with expanding
inner bliss.
f) On the subject of the higher decisiveness
which comes from living in and for God, I remember
my delight in reading a story about Therese
Neumann, the Catholic stigmatist in Konnersreuth,
Germany. When she was a young maiden, swains
from the nearby village would sometimes come acourtin. Therese rejected them firmly, sometimes
actually driving them off the land with a pitchfork!
The average Christian might ask, Was this an
example of Christian humility? No, it was an
example of Christian bliss!
22
expanding outward from it, or moving forward from
there to the point between the eyebrows.
Then notice whether the energy in his whole
body seems to be moving upward toward the brain,
or downward toward the base of the spine.
All these foci and directions of energy are
indications of a persons state of consciousness.
There are two good directions for a persons
energy to move: forward from the negative pole of
ego at the back of the head toward a point midway
between the eyebrows; and upward in the spine
toward the brain. The point between the eyebrows
(or, to be more exact, the region just behind that
point, in the frontal lobe of the brain) is the positive
pole of self-consciousness.
Notice whether a persons energy seems to be
rising in the body, and moving forward in the brain,
toward that frontal point, or backing away from that
point and moving downward in the body. With a little
sensitive awareness, you will find it relatively easy to
sense these things.
I could tell that my Gurus energy was
completely centered in superconsciousness, at the
point between the eyebrows. I could almost see his
energy there. The entire flow of his consciousness
was upward in the body, and forward in the brain.
His whole presence emanated a sense of absolute
freedom from ego.
j) I wish everyone could understand, in the
name of truth itself, how deeply grateful everyone
should be for Paramhansa Yoganandas inspiring life
of wisdom, compassion, universal love, and perfect
bliss: a life ever immersed in, and emanating, Godawareness. Perhaps what we face here, in the contrast
between the two organizations that exist in his name,
is a conflict between Kali Yuga and Dwapara Yuga
consciousness: Kali Yuga being the age weve just
left behind us, of matter-centeredness; and Dwapara
being the present age of energy-consciousness. My
reference here is to an ancient system of chronology
which the reader would do well to read about. I
23
24
b) Yoganandas younger brother, Sananda Lal
Ghosh, wrote to Daya Mata in his old age, informing
her that he had been diagnosed with cancer. The
disease seemed terminal, but he said his doctors had
informed him that in America, with its advanced
technology, his life might at least be prolonged.
Would Daya Mata (Sananda asked) pay his way to
America and assist with his medical needs?
Months passed. At last he received a replynot
from Daya Mata, but from SRFs lawyers, stating
that SRF would accede to his request on the condition
that he deed his home (which had also been
Yoganandas boyhood home) to YSS. Sananda,
heartbroken, died a few weeks later.
I know there is a story concerning Sananda and
his own treatment of Master (Master himself told it to
me), but people can change. Sananda had changed.
Master, who never held grudges, would certainly
have forgiven him. As a point worthy of further
consideration: Sananda had written a book, Mejda,
about his own recollections of Yoganandas boyhood.
SRF had published it, and was (presumably)
absorbing at least some of the income from its sales.
c) The home of Tulsi Bose, a close spiritual
friend of our Gurus during their boyhood years, was
inherited by Tulsis daughter, Hassi, who lives there
still. Hassis husband, Devi, died recently. While he
was alive, SRF/YSS offered to buy their home. This
was a natural offer to make, considering Paramhansa
Yoganandas sentimental associations with that
house. What was very unnatural, however, was
YSSs reaction to the couples decision not to sell.
Devi and Hassi were cut off from further
communication with YSS, and their free subscription
to Yogoda Magazine was canceled; their names were
removed from the YSS mailing list.
d) Kamala Silva had been a close disciple of
Masters since the mid-1920s, when she was a child.
At the time I knew her, she headed the SRF
meditation center in Oakland, California. I was then
the head of the SRF center department, and was
responsible for guiding SRFs centers and meditation
25
toward Kamalas upkeep. Others went to her house
daily to cook, clean, and attend to her personal needs.
26
27
one day, determined to force a confrontation with me.
I knew intuitively the reason for her visit, and as she
entered the room I glared at her so fiercely, inspired
by Masters power, that she began to shake all over.
She turned abruptly, then fled back downstairs again.
Since that day, she has never dared to speak to me
again! (Tara had a different version of what
happened, but of course she would need to have had.)
d) Durga Mata left her papers to a close friend
and supporter of hers, Joan Wight. After Durgas
death, SRF (presumably under Daya Matas
instructions) made a concerted effort to obtain those
papers. Dayas motive may have been simply to
ensure that only her own wishes be generally known
as the wishes of Master. Quite possibly too, however,
she was concerned lest a book on Durgas life with
Master appear in print. She wanted only her own
version of him to be knownas he really was. And
Daya herself (to the best of my knowledge) never
wrote such a book.
As I mentioned earlier, Daya had not wanted
Kamalas book, The Flawless Mirror, to be
published. It takes very little stretch of the
imagination to guess that what Daya wanted most in
getting hold of Durgas papers was to suppress her
book also. The book did finally appear, under
Durgas name. It is titled, A Paramhansa Yogananda
Trilogy of Divine Love. Joan Wight turned to
Ananda for help in protecting her against SRF. It
took considerable effort on our part to get SRF to
back off from its threatened lawsuit. This beautiful
book, filled with stories of Master and Rajarshi
Janakananda, is now available to the world.
e) Let us ask ourselves: How can deeply
spiritual people, among whom one must certainly
count Daya and Tara, possess such glaring defects? A
possible explanation comes to mind: A stained-glass
window, before sunrise, looks uniformly grey. After
dawn, and once the suns rays pour fully through the
panes, each color becomes radiant. If a pane is
smudged or muddy, or if it contains any less-than-
28
29
Halfway through the week, I telephoned
everybody to make sure everything was being done.
The big day arrived. Tables were set up;
steaming food was placed on them. Smiling ladies
stood behind them, ready to serve. The rental
company had been phoned, and the needed chairs
arrived; these were placed in convenient spots for
people to sit on comfortably. When the time came for
lectures to begin, I asked the male volunteers to carry
chairs over to the lecture area. This simple task was
carried out promptly. The whole event went like
clockwork.
Later, Sister Shraddha, a member of the
committee and also a Board member, complimented
me on how smoothly everything had gone.
And do you know, I replied, it required
almost no work! (My remark was a slight dig at the
endless discussions at our committee meetings.)
No work for you, maybe, but plenty of work for
those who organized it!
In fact, I replied, I organized the entire event
myself.
She scorned my answer, which I could see, to
her, only demonstrated my colossal egotism.
b) Most of my efforts to serve Master were
vetoed by the women. It may seem almost comical,
now, to consider so much of what I knew to be good
work scorned, set aside, then cast (figuratively) into
the dustbin. I prefer, after all these years, to see the
humor of the situation, but I cannot help wondering
whether things in future will ever improve.
30
31
Apparently, too, she considered whatever was in the
air to be of great importance. (I should perhaps
mention that both Daya and TaraLaurie Pratt
were ex-Mormons. So also is Mrinalini Mata, SRFs
fourth president. Tara was related to one of the
Mormon founders, Orson Pratt. In the Mormon
Church, the bishop is considered, in everything, the
supreme and absolute authority.)
a) The next morning, I found a long letter from
Tara shoved under my door. The letter was a
document of about thirty pages, single spaced, filled
with vitriolic accusations regarding my countless
alleged misdeeds. Its final message contained the
appalling news that I was no longer a member of
Self-Realization Fellowship, and would never again
be welcome on any SRF property.
b) Later that morning I met Daya and Tara in
person. At this meeting, Tara, who did most of the
speaking, repeated much of what shed said already
in her letter. She accused me again of unbelievable
presumption, deceitfulness, lying, treachery, and
egotism; of being a megalomaniac; of trying to set
myself up as the new guru of SRF/YSS; of plotting to
take over the leadership from Daya Mata; and of
behaving in a manner so utterly vile that I was no
longer fit to represent SRF or Master in any capacity
whatsoever.
My dismissal was absolute; there was no
hope of appeal.
c) At this meeting, Tara underscored the
message of her letter by the denunciatory tone of her
voice. So fixed was she in her opinions, and so
forceful in their expression, that there was simply
nothing I could say in reply.
These were the two persons in the world
whom I had held in the highest love and esteem. For
most of that one-and-a-half-hour tirade I knelt before
them, my arms crossed over my chest in an attitude
of unbearable anguish. Surely, I thought, this meeting
could not be happening!
But it was. I was being thrown to the wolves.
32
I was thirty-six at the time. The only people in
the world whom I could regard as my friends were
members of SRF. Now I was never again to contact
any of them! This fact did not seem to weigh on them
either lightly or heavily in any way. They told me to
keep whatever money I had with me. And then I was
free to wander the streets of New York until I found a
job. As Tara said to me, Just take any job that comes
along.
She also proclaimed, You are never again to tell
anyone that Master is your guru. We dont want
anyone to know that he had such a despicable
disciple!
The deliberate purpose of her tirade was to
reduce me forever, from that day on, to the status of a
non-personnot only in the eyes of SRF and its
members, but in my own eyes. Worse still, perhaps,
she did her utmost to obliterate my very discipleship
to Master.
h) One memorable statement Tara made to me at
that meeting was, Before I die, Ill make sure that no
one will ever admit you back into Masters
organization.
i) Was there anything else she told me at that
meeting? It is not pleasant to recall, certainly, but
here are a few things:
1. Never again will we have to deal with all the
suggestions hatched in that fertile brain of yours! As
she made this statement, she heaved an exaggerated
sigh of relief.
2. You are deceitful, dishonest, an utter liar, a
hypocrite!
In fact, there was hardly a fault possible to
human nature of which she did not find me as guilty
as if Id been caught holding the bloodstained
weapon in my hand.
I have never recognized any of these
shortcomings in myself. When I told my mother
some of what Tara had said, she exclaimed
33
little get-together. Brightly she inquired, Were
you able to get the check cashed yet?
What check? I asked.
Daya and I agreed after our meeting that we
should give you five hundred dollars for being
cooperative.
I told her Id received nothing so far. Privately,
however, I decided that when I did get the check I
would never cash it.
Later that morning I revisited Daya briefly in her
room. She gave me the check. When I told her that I
had already paid my room bill, she replied, You
shouldnt have done that. She made no offer to
reimburse me, however.
m) By seeming coincidence (but surely by divine
providence), my parents, who had been vacationing
in Europe, returned that very day to America, landing
in New York. I was able to contact them in
Scarsdalea suburb of the city, located to the north,
in Westchester Countywhere they were staying.
We had lived there as a family, years earlier.
I mentioned this fact to Tara during her
telephone call to me.
Isnt it wonderful, she exclaimed exuberantly,
how Master has worked this whole thing out!
What can I possibly say in reply?
Tara: Why wont you answer? Dont you think
its wonderful?
Kriyananda: Id rather not say anything.
She was uncomprehending.
Together, my parents and I drove across the
country to their home in Atherton, south of San
Francisco. Several days later, Daya and I spoke by
telephone. When she learned where I now lived, she
exploded in anger. Youve actually had the temerity
to land right in our back yard! Her intention, as
much so as Taras, had been to leave me stranded in
New York, nearly three thousand miles away from
SRFs headquarters, and safely out of their hair.
34
charges, an Indian friend of mine who worked in the
Indian high court discovered that the report about my
supposedly covert activities had come from someone
in YSSSRFs affiliate in that country.
35
insider, had never heard it before. Id also learned by
then that Tara was not above occasionally stating the
convenient untruth.
w) Years later, to my astonishment, I learned that
the rumor mill had exaggerated Taras statement to a
claim that Master had predicted that every future
president of SRF would be Self-realized. I am
absolutely certain he never made any such prediction.
How, indeed, could a mere organizational
appointment accomplish such a miracle? It ranks up
there, among institutional conveniences, with the
dogma of papal infallibility. Ridiculous! Indeed,
organizational prominence is something the sincere
truth-seeker usually avoids like the plague. And the
future covers a very long span of time: human nature
is notoriously fallible.
x) When I met Sri Rama Yogi, the fully liberated
saint mentioned earlier, he asked me, What are Daya
Matas responsibilities? He explained that she had
written him once or twice. I described her
responsibilities, in part.
Oof! What
sympathetically.
burden!
he
exclaimed
36
than I.) Always, SRFs reasoning has been taken
from Tara: Ask yourselves in every situation: What
is best for the work? And, to her, the work meant
not Yoganandas legacy of truth, but his SRF
organization.
Were anyone to challenge an SRF member on
this point, I think that member might answer, wideeyed, Why, whats the difference?
A good leader is more concerned with the spirit
in which people do things than with what they do.
I thank God that my experience has ended up
giving me our two basic guiding principles at
Ananda: People are more important than things;
and, Where there is right action, there lie success,
true fulfillment, happiness, and victory.
Even so one cant help asking, How has it been
possible for spiritual people to treat others so
unkindly? I have felt the incentive, certainly, in my
own life to ponder this question many times.
In 1972 I flew to the south of India to meet
Sathya Sai Baba, a well-known saint. When he
emerged from his quarters to meet the gathered
crowd, he came right over and greeted me. Shortly
afterward, he invited me indoors for a private talk. At
one point during this conversation his expression
suddenly became indignant. Very, very bad! he
exclaimed. So many people have tried to hurt you.
But dont care for them. Its just selfishness and
jealousy! He said more that was supportive of my
years of service to my Guru. I have told this story in
my book, Visits to Saints of India.
Well, it seems to be what happens when
religious faith becomes encrusted with rules and selfinterest, forgetful of love. This is a dark-age (KaliYuga) way of thinking. During that dark period form
was considered more real than its infusing energy.
Look at how St. John of the Crosss fellow
monks treated him, imprisoning, punishing, and
abusing him. The history of religion is littered with
such bleak examples.
37
38
people of Ananda I have anything against. Its
Kriyananda.
h) SRF tried also by lies, fabrications, and
exaggerations to deprive me of all honorable standing
in the world. Their effort culminated in 1994 in the
filing of another lawsuit, which was ostensibly
against an Ananda minister, but which immediately
zeroed in on me alone. Even though SRFs name was
carefully omitted as plaintiff in this case, we had
ample evidence that that organization was intimately
involved in it and was in fact behind it.
As the first case trudged its way through twelve
years to final trial, we demanded of the discovery
judge, Nowinsky, the right to take Dayas deposition.
(A deposition is an interrogation by the oppositions
lawyers, taken under oath, but out of court.) SRFs
lawyers fiercely resisted our demand. Finally the
judge remarked, The very fact that you are resisting
so intensely makes me think you have something to
hide. He ordered Daya to be deposed.
i) Daya then, desperately anxious to avoid
deposition, invited us to a meeting in Pasadena. At
that meeting she radiated sweetness, kindness, and
love. She completely disavowed any intention of
initiating more lawsuits against us. She began her
disavowal by stating that Master himself had
appeared to her in a vision and commanded her,
Settle! Every Ananda member in that room very
clearly remembers this statement of hers. We
remember also the way she smiled with great charm
while stating, No more lawsuits!!! Her expression
radiated so much sincerity that not one of us could
doubt that she was being anything but truthful. Her
later actions, however, proved her to have been not
only untruthful, but utterly duplicitous.
j) She seemed eager at that Pasadena meeting to
make friends with us, and to compensate for the
ruthless way she had treated us until now. Naively we
granted her request, and canceled her deposition.
Such depositions can, and often do, last for
hours. They are no-holds-barred events. I myself
39
looked at me with surprise and asked, Are you Mr.
Walters?
I said I was.
Boy! he exclaimed, You sure arent anything
like the way youve been represented to me!
After several hours of discussion with both
groups, he ended up saying to us, with reference to
SRFs
leadership,
Well,
we
must
be
compassionate! What an extraordinary thing for a
lawyer to say, after failing to get two spiritual groups
to find some way to peaceful coexistence!
n) As the first case proceeded, and as decision
after decision went against SRF, Daya and her team
remained adamant in their determination not only to
beat, but to demolish us. Their every appeal was, as I
said, denied. The absurdity reached a point where one
of their lawyers said in confidence to one of ours: I
would pay to get out of this case!
o) Finally, the case went to court. SRFs
lawyers, in their closing arguments, demanded an
award of 33 million dollarsa sum that SRF knew
would wipe us off the map. To the very end, they
never gave up! What they actually did get out of us,
in the end, was $29,000. And this amount I gave
them simply in order to get them off our backs.
p) I granted them this consolation prize
because Id seen how determined they were to rescue
at least one coal from the fire. The only way, I
realized, to get them finally to relent would be to
surrender on some very minor issue. The concession
would put them in a position (of which they later
took full advantage) to claim, We WON! Though I
handed them this minor victory, I have no doubt that
we could easily have won this point. The victory,
however, would have cost us more than we cared to
pay. This point concerned the copyrights of Masters
recorded words, a few tapes of which had been given
to me years earlier by a friend in Italy. The originals
had been privately gifted to that friend by Dr. Lewis.
In point of fact, I had done the world a favor in
publishing those six tapes, for SRF had until then
40
41
responding even by gesture or facial expression.
When he ended, I thanked him calmly. Inwardly I
told myself simply, I dont know whether what hes
saying is right, but at least I know this: I have always
sincerely done my best. But if hes wrong, it isnt for
me to tell him so.
The Bhagavad Gita counsels even-mindedness
under all circumstances.
Eric left. As the the door closed behind him, I
went to my piano, sat down, and composed the
melody and lyrics of a new song which was to be one
of my very best. Its lyrics are as follows:
Though green summer fade,
And winter draw near,
My Lord, in Your presence
I live without fear.
Through tempest, through snows,
Through turbulent tide,
The touch of Your hand
Is my strength, and my guide.
I ask for no riches
That death can destroy.
I crave only Thee:
Your love, and Your joy.
The dancers will pass;
The singing must end.
I welcome the darkness
With You for my Friend!
Eric remained on the outskirts of our Ananda
community in Palo Alto, prowling about like Shere
Khan (the lame tiger in Kiplings The Jungle Book),
growling and snarling with rage as he repeated, The
man cub is mine! In this case, the man cub was
my unremarkable self.
Anne-Marie, as I said, discovered Eric. Eric
promptly bore her in triumph to Los Angeles, where
he introduced her to Daya Mata. Daya Mata invited
Anne-Marie to have lunch with her and the Board of
Directors. After lunch, Daya asked her starry-eyed
guest to meditate in what had been Masters private
quarters.
Anne-Maries first choice of a lawyer was not up
to the task of defending her as she desired. Daya
42
told myself firmly and repeatedly, I havent yet
succeeded. In the end, the desire to smoke simply
disappeared from my mind as though it had never
been.
SRFs second case was a blatant attempt to
humiliate me utterlyindeed, to ruin forever my
chances of rendering any further service to my Guru.
The judge in our case may have been looking for a
promotion to the appeals court. At any rate, he did
receive that promotion soon afterward. To ensure a
clear victory, he denied our attorney the right even to
cross-examine the witnesses ranged against me. We
were not allowed to inform the jury that our normal
rights had thus been denied us; the jury members
were left with the impression that we simply had no
questions to ask.
I have often reflected on a possible explanation.
Yogananda once described God as the One
Unbribable Judge. And I have sometimes wondered,
Could our judge . . . ? Certainly, his attitudes
throughout the case seemed open to serious question.
Our attorney, on the other handa new one
hired only for this casewas a defense lawyer. He
was accustomed to having clients who were clearly in
the wrong. In fact, he had earned what reputation he
had by getting clients off with the lightest possible
sentences.
To our legal team, once Id finally met this man,
I insisted, This is not at all the right man for us! He
had addressed me from the moment of our first
meeting as though I were guilty of everything of
which Id been accused. Some defender!
But, protested our team, weve already paid
him $50,000 in advance.
I mentally prayed, Its all right, Divine Mother.
If it is Your will that I be destroyed, Ill accept that
outcome unflinchingly. Everything Ive done has
been for You. I am Yours alone! Do with me as You
will. I know You want only my ultimate good.
What else could I do? I simply would not allow
myself to be affected inwardly. Therefore, through
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44
15. Changes in
Autobiography of a Yogi
The number of changes SRF has made in
Masters autobiography since his passing is
astounding. Here are a few outstanding examples:
a) At least twenty-eight significant alterations
were made in the actual meaning of the text relating
to Yoganandas life and teachings.
b) There have also been at least the same
number of significant deletions of text.
c) Insertions have been made of SRFs name, in
ways that change the meaning of the text
significantly. Sometimes these changes have
introduced entirely new discussions, of which the
purpose was simply to promote the organization.
d) There are one hundred and nineteen mentions
of Self-Realization Fellowship, as an organization,
that were not in the original edition.
e) Over a thousand new lines have been added,
sometimes in footnotes, most of them with the clear
intention of promoting SRF as an organization, or (in
footnotes) of giving the impression that these, too,
were written by Yogananda himselfeven though
they were in fact written by others, and reflected
points of view that were not his at all.
f) Very few of the more-than-five-hundred
changes since the first edition of the autobiography
were made by the Master himself. Most of them
some appearing many years laterwere made by
SRF, not as editorial refinements, but with the very
different purpose of aligning his printed statements
with policies the organization formulated since his
passing. The following examples should suffice here:
g) In the first edition of Autobiography of a
Yogi, and also in the final edition to appear before
Master left his body, the text states, To fulfill ones
earthly responsibilities is indeed the higher path
[italics mine], provided the yogi, maintaining a
mental uninvolvement with egotistical desires, plays
45
Yukteswar had been married. Both men produced
children. (Interestingly, when Babaji made Sri
Yukteswar a swami, the younger man was still
married.)
i) Fourteen lines of Masters great poem,
Samadhivery important to the meaning of the
whole poemwere deleted from later editions of the
book. Among the excisions was this inspiring
statement (essential for attaining this high state): By
deeper, longer, thirsty, guru-given meditation comes
this celestial samadhi.
j) The first edition of Autobiography of a Yogi
states: The actual technique [of Kriya Yoga] must
be learned from a Kriyaban or Kriya Yogi. This
sentence was rewritten in later so-called reprints to
read: The actual technique [of Kriya Yoga] should
be learned from an authorized Kriyaban (Kriya Yogi)
of Self-Realization Fellowship (Yogoda Satsanga
Society of India).
One wonders whether the disciples of other lines
of descent from our gurus (Lahiri Mahasaya and Sri
Yukteswar spring to mind) were thereby deprived of
Gods former blessings on their own initiations!
k) SRF has constrained not only those who give
Kriya initiation, but those also who receive it, to be
members of Self-Realization Fellowship. Kriya
applicants must first sign a pledge renouncing any tie
with other spiritual organizations. Master himself
never imposed such a condition; nor did Lahiri
Mahasaya. On the contrary, both masters gave Kriya
initiation freely to sincere seekers of all paths. Master
did indeed, toward the end of his life, ask people to
become SRF members before receiving Kriya, but
this was only to ensure their sincerity.
Otherwise, I was myself present on one occasion
when he gave Kriya initiation to a large group that
included the leader of another spiritual organization
(Mrs. Clarence Gasque, head of the Mazdaznans).
At that event, he affirmed publicly that he was doing
so because Kriya is for everybody. At this initiation
he also told a story (recounted in my book, The
46
bare chest be covered in consideration of Western
sensibilities. I cannot but believe that this claim is
only one more lie, and that the change was due
entirely to the sensibilitiesnot of those nameless
Westernersbut of the over-sensitive nuns who
commissioned the change.
o) Sri Yukteswar was the fourth in our line of
gurus; Yogananda, the fifth. On the altar, Yogananda
gave Sri Yukteswar the more central position. Those
positions have since been reversed.
p) Originally also, Sri Yukteswar was shown
looking outward from the center of the altar. In the
new version, the same picture shows him facing
inward. This change of direction alters not only the
photograph itself, but also its vibration, for the left
side of a persons face is different from the right side.
Reversing their orientation changes the impression of
their very personalities.
q) People sometimes ask Ananda, Why have
you removed Krishna from your altars? The truth is
that SRF, since Masters passing, has introduced
Krishna onto their altars! Of course Krishna is
revered also at Anandaparticularly so because
Master stated that Krishna was a former incarnation
of Babaji. Master, once hed made this fact known,
used to lead us in prayer to Babaji-Krishna. But
Krishna was not actually in our direct lineage of
Masters, except through Babaji. The reason Master
put Jesus Christ on the altar was that it was Jesus
himself who had requested that Yogananda be sent to
the West as his spiritual representative. The noninclusion of Krishna is due simply to the fact that
Krishna is not in our direct line of gurus. He is our
guru through Babaji, as (Yogananda told us) his
present incarnation.
r) In the original Autobiography, Master ends
with a stirring appeal to the reader to take his idea for
world brotherhood colonies, or cooperative
communities, seriously. That entire appeal, and all
other references to communities, have been removed
entirely from Autobiography of a Yogi and from all
SRF literature.
47
48
49
repeated those words to her. In reply, she laughed
merrily at the absurdity of his very suggestion that
the book could come out so soon. (Masters comment
when I related her remark to him was, Delays!
Delays! Always delays!) Shed had no intention of
bringing the book out that year. In fact, it was fortyfive long years later that this book finally saw the
light of day.
g) When SRFs version of Masters Gita
commentaries finally did come out, I, who had
helped with their editing, was deeply disappointed.
Their edition lacked the clarity of Masters version,
on which I had worked. It was not always accurate in
its presentation of the truths Master had explained.
And it came out so greatly over-edited that it was
actually difficult to read. Masters own version had,
by contrast, been a pleasure to read!
Years later, I was informed by an ex-nun that she
had been commissioned to research some of the
things Master had written. I simply cannot imagine
what purpose was served by that commission. The
book needed no supportive statements, and was in
fact only weakened by extra commentaries. Of these,
however, the book held a plethora.
h) The following change, which indicated a
major policy of diluting Masters true meanings, was
made in an audio recording of Yoganandas voice.
The change was almost certainly introduced under
the influence of Tara Mata herself; she tried
constantly to diminish any statement of Masters that
might offend orthodox Christian sensibilities. Master,
in one of his recorded talks, had stated, My Master
[Swami Sri Yukteswar] was no less than Jesus Christ.
Remember that. These sentences were deleted.
50
51
52
Indeed, I am not really sure Tara even had a
sense of humorat least, of kindly humor. On the
occasions when I did hear her laugh, it seems to me,
in retrospect, that it was always at someone elses
expense.
e) Tara was in many ways a genius. However,
she gave some evidence of the madness to which
genius has often been closely related.
One time, Id heard, she had predicted that
Disneyland would be a financial failure. Tara
practiced astrology (contrary, as I wrote earlier, to
Masters advice), and was convinced that, because
Disneyland had opened on the dying moon, the whole
enterprise would end in disaster.
Some years after Disneyland had become one of
the great financial success stories in history, I asked
her whether she had actually made that prediction.
Oh, yes! she replied in her usual exclamation
marks. Just think of all the money theyve poured
into that place!
To her, Disneyland was a failure already,
because she had so decreed it.
f) Tara once said to me, as if marveling at her
own goodness: I have never said an unkind word in
my life.
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c) Gods nature is bliss. For an organization to
serve with an expansive spirit, it is important that its
members also work with bliss. In other words, be
happy in yourself. Never work with the thought of
merely achieving happiness someday: work now with
happiness. Be happy now!
d) Self-importance is the death of wisdom. It is
most easily combated by a light touch of humor.
Learn to laugh at yourself, especially. Never feel that
rejecting humor demonstrates proper spiritual
dignity. True dignity means to be centered in the
inner Self, and to act always from that center. It
doesnt mean to be stern. What it means, rather, is to
remain inwardly relaxed and natural, centered in the
inner Self. Regardless of whether lifes circumstances
sweep you left or right, up or down, forward or
backward, try always to maintain your centerpoise.
Self-importance increases inner tension, and thereby
reduces ones degree of happiness.
e) I have emphasized the importance of keeping
a sense of humor. Remember always, too, that the
underlying reality of everything is bliss. Seek bliss at
the heart of everything. Laugh with bliss!
f) A temptation on the spiritual path is to tell
oneself that ones service to God is important. Never
forget that life itself is, essentially, a dream. You will
enjoy the dream more, once you learn not to take any
of it too seriously.
g) Never consider any position of authority to
bestow power over others. See even the highest post
as an opportunity to serve others, not to be served by
them. People will be far more willing to follow you if
they know that your desire is to help them, rather
than to be helped by them. In applying Anandas
basic principle, People are more important than
things, it is important to keep referring back to this
thought always. At Ananda, we never use anyone, not
even for a worthy objective. Our first consideration,
always, is a persons spiritual needs. People will
work far more willingly if their well-being is given
top consideration. If there is a job that needs doing,
but no one can be found who might be helped in the
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always keep itself open to correction. The dharmic
individual will prefer even dismissalor, if not that,
then demotionto acquiescence, if a directive is not
dharmic.
56
remains only enough of a suggestion of doubt in my
heart to help me solve other peoples doubts.
That young man, having traveled all the way
from New York to California for the sole purpose of
sharing his vision with me, said that Tara regretted
the manner in which she had treated me in this life,
and asked me to embrace him on her behalf, to show
that Id forgiven her. Of course, I did so. My visitor
then left immediately, not even participating in a
satsang that was being held at that moment
downstairs in my living room. He returned at once to
New York.
q) Yogananda told me in 1949, when placing me
in charge of the other monks, Dont make too many
rules. It destroys the spirit. The best rule any
organization can make is, The fewer rules, the
better. It is a temptation for organizations to produce
rules, like confetti! The result, always, is a
diminished application of free will to any new
undertaking. Rules establish guidelines, but the
guidelines, from then on, require no further testing or
consideration. The problem is, they are very often
applied to new situations unthinkingly.
r) Never mistake eloquence or cleverness for
wisdom.
s) Never mistake self-assurance for Self-, or
soul-assurance. Wisdom is often self-effacing, even
diffident. Trust people according to their proven
wisdom. Dont rely too much on their selfconfidence. Self-esteem, though praised by
psychiatrists, is a dangerous ideal.
t) Take occasional breaks from serious activity.
The search for God is the most serious activity of all,
but even so, time should be set aside for fun,
laughter, and relaxation. Since God is Bliss, one can
(and indeed should) keep a sense of His presence
even while enjoying life.
u) Never make the mistake of thinking that
seniority in an organization automatically bestows
wisdom. Wisdom is of the soul, and comes from
many incarnations of experience, with its gradually
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58
22. Why?
As I contemplate the events in my life, I am
overwhelmed by a sense of their beauty and
perfection. How marvelousindeed, how blissassuringis karmic law!
I feel no need to declare with jutting jaw: I
believe Gods law is just. I accept whatever pain He
sends me as His will for me! Rather, I laugh with
sheer delight, for I know Ive deserved all the
suffering that has come to me in this lifetime. To me,
the payment has not been an affliction: It has been a
release!
Every slight, every insult, every seeming
injustice, every attempt to destroy me is something
Ive deserved! I remember in my soul the injustices
Ive committed in the past. My Guru himself told me
as many of them as I was able to absorb at the time.
Ancient prophecies about me, which I discovered in
India, told me of my past mistakes. I am only thrilled
that in this life Ive had the strength to withstand the
waves of karma created by my own past actions,
which threatened to engulf me in the present life.
This is no cause for regret: It is cause for gratitude
and rejoicing!
Everyone, equally, is a child of God. We are not
sinners, though we may sin. We are not evil, though
we have in the past performed many evils, even great
ones. In our souls we are ever perfect. Our goal is to
merge back, eventually, in Gods eternal Bliss.
Those disciples of my Guru who punished me so
harshly were acting only as instruments of Cosmic
Law. They believedand rightly so, given their own
narrow prioritiesthat they were acting on their
gurus behalf. They also believed that they were
acting in his defense. I refuse to judge their actions
against me, for I know that all of us are motivated by
forces greater than ourselves. As Master wrote in
Autobiography of a Yogi, Thoughts are universally
and not individually rooted.
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say to him with all my heart, You are all I have ever
loved.
In New York at the Penta Hotel, when Tara and
Daya called me in for their final confrontation with
me, I knelt on the floor before them with my arms
crossed over my chest, pleading with them from my
heart not to reject me. Tara sternly refused. When I
said to her, But none of these things youve been
saying against me are true! she answered
contemptuously, I dont want your opinions! Will
you answer me the same way? If that is what is in
your heart, I invite you to do so. I am completely
open to anything you say. I may not agree with you.
But I want, if possible, to clear the air of any and
every misunderstanding between us.
For I must tell you, my separation from SRF has
been the one deep, ineradicable hurt in my life. It has
never made me angry. It has never made me
resentful. It has never awakened in me the thought,
Well, Ill show you! I deeply and sincerely loved
Daya Mata, and also Tara Mata. I was hurt to my
very core by their rejection of me. I wanted to
understand whether there had been any truth in the
accusations they hurled against me. For many years I
suffered deeply on that account, and I suppose the
pain will never completely leave me though I am
grateful to say that I also feel increasing bliss in
myself. But that persecution for that is what it has
been has been heartrending, considering that it
came from the two people in this world whom I had
long considered my best friends and advisors.
Daya seems to have felt almost a compulsion to
destroy me. Why? What did I ever do to offend her? I
estimate that she spent some fifty million dollars
through those lawsuits, only to encompass my
destruction as if what theyd done to me in New
York had not been enough to shatter me utterly. I am
her brother. Ive been her brother in other lives also.
Why this need to bring about my utter ruin?
You yourself, Mrinalini, wrote in your letter
about me to the Board in 1962, Kriyananda has the
greatest ego Ive ever seen. What a strange thing for
60
me to hear! I had always thought so very highly of
you. Have I such an ego? I myself am not aware of it.
I dont consider that I even matter. Sometimes Im
not so sure Ive done anything meritorious at all. But
I can say this: One time, when Master was speaking
to us about the men teachers who had fallen due to
ego, I said to him, Thats why I dont want to be a
teacher, Sir. He answered me calmly, slowly, and
very firmly, You will never fall due to ego!
In other ways, too, you have not been square
with me. I beg you to be so now. You have tried I
wont mention the exact circumstances, though I
could do so to silence me by equivocation you,
who are an essentially truthful human being. Always,
I have understood what you were doing. But I have
remained silent. It just isnt in my nature to argue; to
do so is both foolish and undignified. But please be
straight with me. If you are not, I shall understand.
And if you try simply to silence me with a true but
irrelevant sentence, I shall understand. And if you say
nothing at all, I shall understand. I shall understand,
yes. But I shall carry the pain to my grave.
The only thing I could not accept was Taras
firm commandment to me in New York never to do
anything again to serve Master. My life was
committed wholeheartedly to his service. How could
I serve him, then, by doing nothing? She said to me,
Just take any job that comes along. I would have
died rather than work only for my own support. In
fact, for many months I prayed for exactly that: to be
allowed to die.
You wrote me once, several years later, as if to
hold up Binay Dubey as an example for me, telling
me that he had served Master up to his dying breath.
Youve no idea how deeply that wounded me when
I myself had been debarred from serving him at all.
Taras statement to me in New York was, From
now on, we want to forget that you ever lived! But I
am your brother the same to all of you! Ah! the
pains I have gone through over this rejection by my
own dearest ones on this earth!
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From then on he often said such things to me.
You have a great work to do, therefore . . . Or,
Because you have a great work to do, you mustnt . .
. Usually, when he said such things, we were alone
together.
I once mentioned to Daya Mata that he had told
me I had a great work to do. Yes, she replied, we
all have a great work to do. But that wasnt how he
had spoken those words to me.
One time we were alone outdoors at his desert
retreat. Suddenly, as if out of the blue, he said,
Apart from Saint Lynn, every man has disappointed
me. Then, with deep intensity, he said almost
fiercely, AND YOU MUSTNT DISAPPOINT
ME!
I knew his meaning couldnt have been that all
the men had disappointed him spiritually, for some of
them were deeply devout. What he had meant was
that he saw in me a deep zeal to make his message
known to the world. Masculine energy is more
outward; feminine, more inward. Masculine energy
was what his work needed, to become widely known.
Mrinalini, I dont know whether any point can be
served by my saying more. There is infinitely more I
could write, and I would love to do so. But I do want,
from my deepest heart, to resolve any
misunderstanding that exists between me and you. I
love all of you deeply, and consider you my own. I
am not interested in any organizational reconciliation
or justification. I know what I have done for Master. I
feel his satisfaction with me in my heart. I am willing
to be scolded by him for anything Ive done wrong.
Im willing to accept his judgment, should he care to
deliver it, that my whole life has been wasted. I hope
it has not, but the judgment is his to make. I would
just like to feel that these deep hurts I hold in my
heart can be resolved. I have nothing to defend. All I
feel is the desire to be open to you and, yes, to let
you stab it again and again, if that be your desire,
even as Tara and Daya did. Cut me to ribbons, if you
like. I am willing, in other words, to sustain any hurt,
if necessary, in my effort to bring about some
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Back Cover
A certain cynicism has taken root in the public
mind about organizations in general, but perhaps
even especially about spiritual organizations. So
many of them have proved corrupt. But if
organizations can be bad, it is equally possible for
them to be good. Egowhether institutional or
individualcan go one of two directions: either
toward self-interest or toward self-transcendence.
Each direction has its consequences. To study the
successes and failures of others is an important way
of learning how to be better, oneself.
Two organizations that claim guidance from the
same spiritual master have developed so differently
from one another that now they hardly seem to
represent the same teaching or teacher. SelfRealization Fellowship has followed the well-trodden
path of spiritual authority: power in the hands of a
few, obedience from all the rest; governance by rules,
the first of which is, In every situation, ask yourself
first, What is best for the organization?
Ananda has chosen the road less traveled:
cooperation; decentralization; not taking oneself too
seriously; and following two principles of which the
first is, People are more important than things, and
the second, Where there is adherence to truth, there
lie victory, happiness, and success of every kind
(Yata dharma, sthata jaya in the Sanskrit original).
This book serves two purposes: one, to restore to
people a true and much-needed understanding of the
real life and mission of Paramhansa Yogananda; and
two, to give hope to people everywhere on earth that
they need not compromise even one high ideal to
accomplish all their objectiveseven the most
worldly.
Swami Kriyananda, founder of Ananda, has been
a close, direct disciple of Paramhansa Yogananda for
more than sixty years. His life has been one of
prodigious
creativityauthor,
composer,
photographer, screenwriter, dramatist, worldwide