Deviation of The Disciplic Succession: Apasampradayas
Deviation of The Disciplic Succession: Apasampradayas
Deviation of The Disciplic Succession: Apasampradayas
The scriptures give clear warnings to those who would accept the post of guru without
qualification:
na ca mantra upajivi syannacapya arco upajirikahna aniredita bhogas cana ca nirdyah niredika
"Never accept the post of an initiating spiritual master or temple priest as a profession. Never eat what is not
offered, and never offer what is not recommended in the scriptures." (Narada Pancaratra)
svalpa api handi bhuyamsam svadharma nirdita kriyadrstim kudrstir bhaktis tudevatantapo samsraya
"Even the slightest disreputable activity destroys a great quantity of virtue. Vast learning is destroyed by just
the slightest wrong understanding. Bhakti is destroyed by the slightest dependence upon the demigods."
(Narada Pancaratra)
guru nasa syat sva jana nasa syatpita nasa syat janani na sa syatdaivam na tat syan na patis ca sa syanna
mocayea yah samupaiti matyum
"One who cannot deliver his dependents from the path of repeated birth and death should never become a
spiritual master, a father, a husband, a mother or a worshipable demigod." (Srimad-Bhagavatam 5.5.18)
The jata-gosani are a hereditary caste of so-called spiritual masters. Their qualification to give
initiation is too often limited to the boast of family connections to associates of Sri Caitanya
Mahaprabhu or to disciples of these associates. A famous example of such a family is the so-
called Nityanandavamsa. They claim seminal descent from Lord Nityananda through persons
who were actually disciples, not sons, of Lord Nityananda's only and childless son Sri
Virabhadra Gosvami.
The jata-gosani use of "gosvami" as a family name is a deviation peculiar to this
apasampradaya. Though sunken in mundane family affairs, they think themselves as important
as the renounced gosvamis of the Gaudiya Sampradaya.
"One who is still in family life should not misuse the title gosvami. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta
Sarasvati Thakur did not recognize the caste gosvamis because they were not in the line of the six
Gosvamis in the renounced order who were direct disciples of Lord Caitanya -- namely, Srila
Rupa Gosvami, Srila Sanatana Gosvami, Srila Bhatta Raghunatha Gosvami, Sri Gopala Bhatta
Gosvami, Sri Jiva Gosvami and Srila Raghunatha das Gosvami. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati
Thakur said that the grhastha-ashrama, or the status of family life, is a sort of concession for
sense gratification. Therefore a grhastha should not falsely adopt the title gosvami. The ISKCON
movement has never conferred the title gosvami upon a householder. Although all the sannyasis
we have initiated in ISKCON are young, we have awarded them the titles of the renounced order
of life, svami and gosvami, because they have completely dedicated their lives to preach the cult
of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi 12.27, purport)
A popular superstition in Bengal, alluded to in the purport of Caitanya-caritamrta,
Madhya 10.23, is that persons born in caste gosvami families are automatically uttama-adhikaris.
Thus the title Prabhupada is theirs by birthright. The Gaudiya Vaishnava Sampradaya rejects this.
"It is said, phalena pariciyate: one is recognized by the result of his actions. In vaishnava
society, there are many types of vaishnavas. Some of them are called gosvamis, some are called
svamis, some are prabhus, and some are prabhupada. One is not recognized, however, simply by
such a name. A spiritual master is recognized as an actual guru when it is seen he has changed
the character of his disciples." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Antya 3.143, purport)
In Vrindavan, many of the important temples are managed by caste gosvamis. The history of two
such prominent families illustrates how the jata-gosani contamination can divert even highly-
qualified persons from the path of the great acaryas. To avoid the unpleasantries of controversy,
some names are omitted.
One clan has temples in Mathura, Jatipur, Gokul and Kaman. They descend from a brahmana
who is a famous contemporary of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu who, as described in Sri Caitanya-
caritamrta, became formally linked with Gaudiya Vaishnava Sampradaya when he received
initiation from Sri Gadadhara Pandita. Srila Prabhupada remarked that Lord Caitanya accepted
him as a great scholar, but not necessarily as a great devotee. At Govardhana, he took over the
management of a temple that had been established by a great Gaudiya Vaishnava acarya. During
this time, the learned brahmana associated with the six Gosvamis, especially Rupa and Sanatana.
Because his own men lacked training, Gaudiya Vaishnavas were appointed to do the puja under
his supervision.
The brahmana had two sons; after he left the world in the year 1530, Srila Raghunatha das
Gosvami requested one son to take over the temple management. The temple duties continued to
be shared between Gaudiya Vaishnavas and the learned brahmana's disciples until around the
year 1550, when an intrigue was begun against the Gaudiya devotees. Once, while they were
worshiping the Deity, an envious disciple of the brahmana set fire to the homes of the Gaudiya
pujaris and drove them out. Thereafter, the Deity was claimed as the sole property of the
brahmana's clan. (In 1699, due to threat of Muslim attack, the Deity vacated Vrindavan and
eventually came to Rajasthan.)
Though the brahmana's son was not part of the intrigue, he took no steps to heal the rupture with
the Gaudiya Sampradaya. To block a challenge to his authority from among his father's disciples,
he appointed his seven sons as acaryas and willed that only they and their descendants could use
the title "Gosvami Maharaja" and give initiation. Later on, the family propagated a myth that the
great brahmana's son was an incarnation of Krishna; the same pseudo-divinity was appropriated
by succeeding generations and used as means of explaining away the "amorous pastimes" of
some of the clan.
The second line of Vrindavan caste gosvamis under discussion was started by someone who took
sannyasa from Gopala Bhatta Gosvami. As if in imitation of Lord Nityananda, he later married
two sisters and claimed that he had been ordered to do so by Sri Krishna personally. The Gaudiya
Vaishnava community disapproved both his deed and defense. In the year 1585, he established a
mandira near Kaliya Ghat. The caste gosvamis who manage this mandira today are descendants
of his first son. Descendents of his second son manage another famous Vrindavan temple.
This clan takes a dim view of what they think are the unnecessary austerities of the gosvamis of
the Gaudiya Vaishnava Sampradaya. Krishna loves his devotees, they argue, and He becomes
pleased when He sees them living a life of material comfort and sense gratification. They uphold
their founder's example as superior to that of the Six Gosvamis. One Priyadas of this clan
composed a work called Suslokamanimala in which he asserts that the founder was the spiritual
master of Sanatana Gosvami and Jiva Gosvami. With this and other fabrications, they defend
their apasampradaya as the genuine sampradaya.
Several historical accounts, including the biography of Srinivasa Acarya entitled Prema-vilasa,
relate that the founder met his death by having his head chopped off, either by robbers or by a
disgruntled pujari.
In 1932, the caste gosvamis of Vrindavan opposed the Vraja Mandala Parikrama of Srila
Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur and his Gaudiya Matha disciples on the grounds that he had
deviated from the Vedic system by offering the sacred thread to persons not of brahminical
parentage. Srila Prabhupada explained the fallacy of the jata-gosani in this regard in a letter to
Acyutananda Swami: "Regarding the validity of the brahminical status as we accept it, because
in the present age there is no observance of the garbhadhana ceremony, even a person born in a
brahmana family is not considered a brahmana, he is called dvijabandhu or unqualified son of a
brahmana. Under the circumstances, the conclusion is that the whole population is now sudra, as
it is stated kalau sudra sambhava. So for sudras there is no initiation according to the Vedic
system, but according to the pancaratrika system initiation is offered to a person who is inclined
to take Krishna consciousness."
In Bengal, besides caste gosvamis who at least have a valid genealogical link to some vaishnava
of the past, there are even pretenders whose claim to the name "gosvami" lacks any foundation
whatsoever. Many of the important temples and holy places connected with Lord Caitanya's
pastimes remain under jata-gosani control. Up until the early part of this century, they held the
lower-caste vaishnavas in an iron grip of ignorance and exploitation.
Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur challenged the jati-gosani in such works as Jaiva Dharma and Hari
Nama Cintamani by proclaiming that it is not enough to accept a spiritual master merely on the
basis of his caste. Before initiation, the candidate must be completely satisfied that the initiator is
fully conversant with the scriptures and can lift his disciples out of ignorance. The guru must be
of spotless character: if he is addicted to sinful acts, even those he may have already initiated
must reject him. Bhaktivinoda's books unleashed a wave of reform in Bengal that pushed the
jata-gosani into a defensive stance. But the confrontation came to open war when his son, Srila
Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati, took over the Gaudiya mission.
In 1912, he was invited to attend a samminlani (assembly) of vaishnavas sponsored by the
Maharaja of Kossimbazar. But some jata-gosani and their sahajiya supporters prevented him
from giving a public lecture; in protest, he fasted for four days straight. According to the account
of his disciple Sambidananda das, Acarya Siddhanta Sarasvati refuted all the arguments placed
before him by the caste's proponents in a discussion separate from the main program. The jata-
gosani thus learned to fear Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati as the singlemost threat to their
privileged existence.
After taking sannyasa in 1918, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati mounted a concerted effort to
smash the influence of the jata-gosani even in their strongholds. He fearlessly toured Jessore and
Khulna (now in Bangladesh), the home turf of Priyanath Nandi, who was the leading spokesman
of the caste gosvamis. Priyanatha met defeat in a public debate held at the village of Toothpada.
Things came to a head in February-March 1925, just as the Gaudiya Matha began nine days of a
Navadvipa parikrama leading up to that year's Gaura Purnima festivities. The party of devotees,
numbering several thousand and personally lead by Srila Bhaktisiddhanta, was viciously attacked
by goonda hirelings of the jata-gosani when it entered the city of Navadvip without paying a tax
for maintenance of caste gosvami temples. Armed with brickbats and other weapons, the
goondas charged the elephant procession, injuring many pilgrims. The shocked public sided with
the Gaudiya Matha devotees and the pilgrimage continued under police protection. This incident
permanently tarnished the reputation and influence of the jata-gosani. Overnight, their stubborn
opposition to Srila Bhaktisiddhanta's preaching lost all force.
The Caste Gosvami Mentality and ISKCON
By Srila Prabhupada's mercy, the grossest jata-gosani deviation - hereditary guruship - seems
unlikely to take root in the ISKCON he constituted. Yet the author recalls a period in the 1970's
when the devotees of the New York temple were addressing their GBC man as "Gosvami
Maharaja" even though he'd abandoned his sannyasa ashrama and taken a wife (ed. note: Bali
Mardan). After various indelicacies about his marriage came to light, this person was forced to
relinquish his position. So here is at least one example of how an aberration of the jata-gosani
type found its way, albeit briefly, into ISKCON.
In this connection, there are other characteristics of the caste gosvami apasampradaya that are
worth noting. The jata-gosani are the priestly class of a mundane religion that superficially
resembles vaishnava-dharma. As Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati used to say, they use the
saligram-sila and arca-vigraha as "stones for cracking nuts" (i.e. as a means of income for sense
enjoyment). They give siddha-pranali initiation (in which they "reveal" the disciple's rasa with
Krishna) as a ritual means of garnering a follower's lifetime financial support. They neglect their
disciples' factual spiritual advancement by not teaching them the regulative principles of
sadhana-bhakti; indeed, such "gosvamis" are worshiped by bidi-seva (ceremonial presentations
of cigarettes) and offerings of fish.
How do such deviations begin? Here are a few indications:
"Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur explains that even though one may become free from
the desire for fruitive activity, sometimes the subtle desire for fruitive activity comes into being
within the heart. One often thinks of conducting business to improve devotional activity.
However, the contamination is so strong that it may later develop into misunderstanding,
described as kuti-nati (faultfinding) and pratisthasa (the desire for name and fame and for high
position), jiva-himsa (envy of other living entities), nisiddhacara (accepting things forbidden in
the sastra), kama (desire for material gain) and puja (hankering for popularity)." (Caitanya-
caritamrta, Madhya 12.135, purport)
"If a person overly addicted to family life takes to Srimad-Bhagavatam or Krishna consciousness
to earn a livelihood, his activity is certainly offensive. One should not become a caste guru and
sell mantras for the benefit of mundane customers, nor should one make disciples for a
livelihood. All these activities are offensive. One should not make a livelihood by forming a
professional band to carry out congregational chanting, nor should one perform devotional
service when one is attached to mundane society, friendship and love. Nor should one be
dependent on so-called social etiquette. All this is mental speculation. None of these things can
be compared to unalloyed devotional service." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 8.83, purport)
"Everyone gets a mother and father at the time of birth, but the real father and mother are they
who can release their offspring from the clutches of immiment death. This is possible only for
parents advanced in Krishna consciousness. Therefore any parents who cannot enlighten their
offspring in Krishna consciousness cannot be accepted as a real father and mother." (Caitanya-
caritamrta, Antya 13.113, purport)
"One should not proudly think that one can understand the transcendental loving service of the
Lord simply by reading books. One must become a servant of a vaishnava. As Narottama das
Thakur has confirmed, chadiya vaisnava-seva nistara payeche keba: "One cannot be in a
transcendental position unless one very faithfully serves a pure vaishnava. One must accept a
vaishnava guru (adau gurv-asrayam), and then by questions and answers one should gradually
learn what pure devotional service to Krishna is. That is called the parampara system."
(Caitanya-caritamrta, Antya 7.53, purport)
"In purified consciousness, or Krishna consciousness, one sees the presence of Krishna
everywhere. If, therefore, one only engages in Deity worship in the temple and does not consider
other living entities, then he is in the lowest grade of devotional service. One who worships the
Deity in the temple and does not show respect to others is a devotee on the material platform, in
the lowest stage of devotional service." (Srimad-Bhagavatam 3.29.21, purport)
"A real brahmana is never envious of a vaishnava. If he is, he is considered an imperfect
neophyte." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 15.277, purport)
"'My dear King, if one derides an exalted devotee, he loses the results of his pious activities, his
opulence, his reputation and his sons. Vaishnavas are all great souls. Whoever blasphemes them
falls down to the hell known as Maharaurava. He is also accompanied by his forefathers.
Whoever kills or blasphemes a vaishnava and whoever is envious of a vaishnava or angry with
him, or whoever does not offer him obeisances or feel joy upon seeing a vaishnava, certainly
falls into a hellish condition.'" (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 15.261, purport)
"Although posing as great scholars, ascetics, householders and svamis, the so-called followers of
the Hindu religion are all useless, dried up branches of the Vedic religion. They are impotent.
They cannot do anything to spread the Vedic culture for the benefit of human society. The
essence of the Vedic culture is the message of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. Lord Caitanya
instructed:
yare dekha, tare kaha 'krsna'-upadesaamar ajnaya guru hana tara ei desa (Caitanya-caritamrta,
Madhya 7.128)
One should simply instruct everyone he meets regarding the principles of krishna katha, as
expressed in Bhagavad Gita As It Is and Srimad-Bhagavatam. One who has no interest in
krishna katha or the cult of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu is like dry, useless wood with no living
force. The ISKCON branch, being directly watered by Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, is becoming
undoubtedly successful, whereas the disconnected branches of the so-called Hindu religion that
are envious of ISKCON are drying up and dying." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi 12.73, purport)
And, as Srila Prabhupada explains in his purport to Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi 12.8, when the
inheritors of the spiritual master's assets fight bitterly over property rights to land and temples
and thus lay waste to the whole mission by their endless litigation, they simply emulate the
feuding spirit long seen among the jata-gosani. The congregations of such quarrelsome Kali-
yuga vaishnavas lose faith and look elsewhere for spiritual guidance -- perhaps, unfortunately, to
something far worse.
History shows that the questionable activities of the caste gosvamis drove untold numbers of
simple Bengali folk into the arms of charlatan avatars espousing reform. In other words, the
secret behind the charisma of many of the other apampradayas lay in their independence from
the jata-gosani's ossified and uninspiring "establishment Vaishnavism." These bogus alternative
movements became prominent within two centuries of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu's departure and
grew unchecked until Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur reestablished the sankirtan mission with his
Visva Vaishnava Raja Sabha.
We should note in closing this chapter that the jata-gosani tradition was originally bona fide:
"According to the pancaratra injunction, only a householder brahmana can initiate. Others
cannot." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 4.111, purport) But the caste pride, greed, jealousy and
moral decadence of some unworthy descendants of great vaishnava-brahmana householders
spoiled this system. "Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu gave us His opinion in the verse kiba vipra kiba
nyasi, etc. This indicates that the Lord understood the weakness of society in its maintaining that
only a grhastha brahmana should be a spiritual master." (ibid.)
Here the word saha-jam means "born of material nature." This refers to human sense activities,
which are said to be sa-dosa, faulty. Despite this, Lord Krishna says we should not renounce
activities.
But this does not mean that we should engage in material sense activities. Two verses earlier, Sri
Krishna declares, "By worship of the Lord, who is the source of all beings and who is all-
pervading, a man can attain perfection through performing his own work." In the purport, Srila
Prabhupada stresses the following points: "the Supreme Lord is the beginning of all living
entities"; "as part and parcel of the Supreme Lord one has his duty to render service unto the
Supreme"; and "Everyone should think that he is engaged in a particular type of occupation by
Hrsikesa, the master of the senses."
So sahaja, or "natural", used in this connection, indicates the imperfect human nature. A man's
sense activities are faulty due to his birth in matter. But he should learn that his real origin is
Krishna, and he should engage his senses in the Lord's service. Then he can transcend the faults
of his material conditioning and attain perfection. "Liberation is never inaction, but service
without human mistakes." (Srimad-Bhagavatam 2.2.1, purport)
The other sense of the word is found in Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 8.215:
sahaja gopira prema - nahe prakrtakama kama-krida-samya tara kama-nama
"It is to be noted that the natural characteristic of the gopis is to love the Supreme Lord. Their lusty desire is
not to be compared to material lust. Nonetheless, because their desire sometimes appears to resemble material
lust, their transcendental love for Krishna is sometimes described as lust."
The context is clear: sahaja refers to the spiritual nature. Another point of interest in this verse is
the word prakrta ("material"), which is used to distinguish kama or lust from the gopis' love for
Krishna. We can conclude that when prakrta is combined with sahaja, transcendental sensual
affairs are not indicated. We can also conclude that a person subject to material lust has no
chance to comprehend the gopi's spiritual emotions. He must first follow Lord Krishna's
prescription and rise above his imperfect condition.
This is what hits at the heart of the prakrta-sahajiya contamination: they refuse to follow the
reformatory process. Thus their perceptions of Krishna, Krishna's devotees, Krishna's service and
love of Krishna are faulty creations of their lower nature.
"Without serving Krishna according to vidhi-marga regulative principles of the pancaratrika-
vidhi, unscrupulous persons want to jump immediately to the raga-marga principles. Such
persons are called sahajiyas." (Srimad-Bhagavatam 4.24.45-46, purport) They sometimes say
that one enters raga-marga only by the causeless grace of Bhaktidevi and not by a vain attempt
to conquer sensual disturbances, but Srila Prabhupada says, "When a devotee strictly follows the
rules and regulations, Bhaktidevi becomes very much satisfied with him, and at that time he is
never disturbed by anything external." (Srimad-Bhagavatam 4.24.59, purport) "Such an
advanced devotee has nothing to do with the sahajiyas, who manufacture their own whimsical
way and commit sins by indulging in illicit sex, intoxication and gambling if not meat-eating."
(Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 22.153, purport)
According to Dr. S.B. Das Gupta, the history of the Bengali sahajiya movement can be traced
back long before Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu's appearance, to the reign of the Buddhist Pala royal
dynasty (ca. 700-1100 A.D.), when a secret cult of the name Sahajayana arose within the so-
called Diamond Vehicle (Vajrayana) school of Buddhism. Vajrayana, still prominent today in
Nepal and Tibet, is a blend of ritualistic tantric yoga and sunyavada. Some scholars think that
Vajrayana was created in Bengal, a stronghold of the tantric Kapalika religion when the first
Buddhist missionaries arrived. From Bengal, so this theory goes, Vajrayana spread to the
Himalayan regions. Anyway, wherever the birthplace of Vajrayana was, it is certain that the
fermentation of Vajrayana into Sahajayana (the Easy Vehicle) was according to an original
Bengali recipe.
Sahajayana Buddhists abandoned ritualism and study of scriptures as useless. They practised a
"yoga of sex" in which they visualized consciousness as being composed of the unity of the male
and female principles, sometimes called upaya and prajna or karuna and sunyata. The
Sahajayana Buddhists wrote many songs known as the Caryapadas that express their philosophy
in mysterious language.
Later on, under the Sena kings, Vaishnavism became ascendent in Bengal, royal patronage
having been won for it by the great acarya Srila Jayadeva Gosvami. Now the Buddhist sahajiyas
absorbed and perverted aspects of vaishnava philosophy. They renamed their upaya and prajna
principles "Krishna" and "Radha", imagining Radha-Krishna to represent the highest state of
bliss attained by men and women on the sahajiya path.
After the Muslim invasion, the sahajiyas were influenced by the Sufis. The word Sufi comes
from the Arabian word saf, which means sacred. The Sufis were a mystical Islamic order of
mendicants whose goal was a state of inspiration they called fana, or oneness in love with Allah,
which they sought to attain through song and dance. In the Arabic countries, the Sufis faced
condemnation as heretics because some preached that through fana they had become Allah. But
in India the Sufis flourished, not in the least because their ideas had much in common with
Mayavadi philosophy.
In the 16th century, the sankirtan movement of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu flooded the world with
the sublime, perfect and transcendental religion of pure love of Godhead. The sahajiyas, who
celebrated their mundane sex-mysticism with song and dance, were nothing more than a
perverted reflection of the sankirtan movement. They were not accepted as genuine vaishnavas
by Mahaprabhu and His followers, as is evident in Sri Caitanya-caritamrta. For instance, in
Caitanya-caritamrta, Antya 12.114, Lord Caitanya refuses a gift of scented oil, explaining that
those who might smell it on His head would think Him a dari sannyasi, a tantric sannyasi who
keeps women for sense gratification. In Antya 2.120, the Lord calls such men markata-vairagis
("monkey sannyasis"). And as Srila Prabhupada relates in his purport to Antya 2.143, Sri
Caitanya Mahaprabhu banished Chota Haridas for the slight mistake of begging rice from
Srimati Madhavi-devi "as an example to future sahajiyas who might adopt the dress of the
renounced order to imitate Rupa Gosvami and other bona fide sannyasis but secretly have illicit
connections with women."
In the 18th century, the great movement begun by Lord Caitanya appeared to have become
corrupted by the influence of the jata-gosani and the smartas. This sad state of affairs presented
an opportunity for the sahajiyas to expand their influence among the common people. Deviant
sects like the gauranga-nagari and kartabhaja are mutations of the prakrta-sahajiya movement
that became popular at this time. In the 19th century, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur took great pains
to distinguish the pure teachings of Lord Caitanya from prakrta-sahajiya perverions; on this
basis, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati openly denounced all who deviated even an inch from the
Caitanya Sampradaya: "No compromise -- Rama Krishna, avatars, yogis, everyone was enemy
to Guru Maharaja -- he never compromised." (Srila Prabhupada in a letter of 20.7.73)
The Prakrta-Sahajiya Doctrine: The Call of Maya
Srila Prabhupada said, "Sahajiya means taking things very easily." It is a generic term that
applies not so much to any specific sect or apasampradaya but indeed to all forms of deviation.
From the characteristics of the sahajiya mentality shown below, it may be readily concluded that
there is only one apasampradaya -- the prakrta-sahajiya -- with twelve sub-branches going
under different names: "Such sahajiyas are called sakhi-bheki, and sometimes they are called
gaura-nagari." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 8.204-205, purport)
Sahajiyas betray their historical affinity to Buddhism by not distinguishing matter from spirit,
which is the first step in bona fide spiritual life. As Srila Prabhupada mentioned in a letter, they
take "spiritual advancement as something materially manifest" by intensifying their mundane
emotions until a maddened state of sentimental ecstasy is reached.
The sahajiya misconception of spirit is nourished by doubts about the transcendental nature of
God's personal form. That Lord Krishna's foot was pierced by an arrow, and that Lord
Nityananda bled when struck on the head by Madhai, is evidence enough for the sahajiya that his
own physical body has exactly the same quality as the forms of the Supreme that appear in the
material world. If the bodies of avatars are material, their divine essence flows in the blood of
their descendents. It follows, therefore, that anyone connected to the families of Nityananda
Prabhu or Advaita Acarya are as godly as their great forefathers.
"When the Lord descends, he displays affection for his family members (Nanda, Yasoda,
Jagannatha Misra, Sacidevi). Moreover, Lord Krishna showed great fondness for young girls.
This is all divine behaviour, worthy of being emulated. It is maya for someone claiming to be a
vaishnava to renounce family life and lusty affairs, because that goes against the Lord's own way
of life."
Preaching is not very important to the prakrta-sahajiya. One can best make new devotees by
impregnating a female "vaishnava." In this way that woman is also blessed by the good
association of an advanced soul. This was the real mission of Lord Caitanya, as carried out in
Bengal by Nityananda Prabhu.
As an answer to all the above notions, Srila Prabhupada writes: "Whoever thinks in this way is a
candidate for the darkest regions of hell. Those who hanker after women and money, who are
self-interested and have the mentality of merchants, can certainly discover many things with their
fertile brains and speak against the authorized revealed scriptures. They also engage in some
moneymaking businesses to cheat innocent people, and they try to support their business
programs by making such offensive statements. Actually Nityananda Prabhu, being the
expansion of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, is the most munificent incarnation. No one should
consider Him an ordinary human being or an entity like the prajapatis, who were ordered by
Brahma to increase generation. Nityananda Prabhu should not be considered instrumental for
sense gratification. Although professional so-called preachers support this, such statements are
not found in any authorized revealed scriptures. Actually there is no support for these statements
made by sahajiyas or other professional distributors of krsna-bhakti." (Caitanya-caritamrta,
Madhya 15.143)
Sahajiyas say that it is great offense to find fault with one's guru and abandon him, even if he
drinks liquor and consorts with prostitutes. Garuda, Lord Vishnu's carrier and eternal associate,
eats fish and meat, so this may be done by anyone in the mood of service to the Lord. No matter
what nonsense a person wearing neck beads and tilak may have done, if he shows symptoms of
ecstasy in kirtan (trembling, crying and falling on the ground) he is a faultless and pure devotee.
Srila Prabhupada replies: "Sometimes [the] eight symptoms of ecstasy [the asta-sattvika-vikara:
inertness, perspiration, standing of hairs on end, failing in the voice, trembling, paleness of the
body, tears in the eyes, and trance] are imitated by the mundane devotees (prakrta-sahajiyas),
but the pseudo symptoms are at once detected when one sees the pseudodevotee addicted to so
many forbidden things. Even though decorated with the signs of a devotee, a person addicted to
smoking, drinking or illigitimate sex with women cannot have all the above-mentioned ecstatic
symptoms. But it is seen that sometimes these symptoms are willfully imitated, and for this
reason Srila Visvanatha Cakravarti accuses the imitators of being stone-hearted men. They are
sometimes even affected by the reflection of such transcendental symptoms, yet if they still do
not give up the forbidden habits, then they are hopeless cases for transcendental realization."
[Note: A fuller understanding of what Srila Prabhupada means by "they are sometimes even
affected by the reflection of such transcendental symptoms" can be had by reading Nectar of
Devotion, Chapter 18, pages 139-141.]
A very significant feature of the sahajiya attitude is its perverse "humility", which is really just
enviousness: "Sometimes a sahajiya presents himself as being void of desires for reputation
(pratistha) in order to become famous as a humble man. Such people cannot attain the platform
of a celebrated vaishnava." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 4.147) For example, sahajiyas think
that a devotee who becomes recognised for his preaching accomplishments is fallen into the grip
of name and fame. If a preacher refutes atheists and materialists, he is simply too proud. Harer-
nama-sankirtan is too showy: it's best to remember the Lord in the core of one's heart. Only caste
brahmanas should worship saligram-sila: if others do it, they'll fall down by becoming too
puffed up. Vaishnavas who are fussy about sadhana, insisting that illicit sex, smoking and other
harmless enjoyments be given up, are actually attached to these pleasures themselves.
In this connection, sahajiyas abhor preachers who accept disciples: "...Narottama das Thakur and
other great acaryas like Madhvacarya, Ramanujacarya and others accepted many thousands of
disciples to induce them to render devotional service. However, there is a class of sahajiyas who
think that these activities are opposed to the principles of devotional service. Indeed, the consider
such activities simply another phase of materialism." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 7.130)
The holy name is all-powerful, so the sahajiyas say; therefore there is no difference between
namaparadha, nama-abhasa, and suddha-nama. The spiritual state of a guru and disciple at the
time of initiation doesn't matter, because the holy name works by its own power. If Bilvamangala
Thakur became Krishna conscious by hearing a prostitute, then what can be wrong in receiving
the holy name from a prostitute or immoral man? There is no need to instruct anyone to follow
rules and regulations -- let them chant Hare Krishna while smoking, drinking, gambling and
having sex. The holy name will cleanse them of sinful reaction.
Though it is too lengthy to reproduce here, the purport to Srimad-Bhagavatam 2.2.30 very
exactingly explains why it is that one can realize the full glories of the holy name only by
offenseless chanting. One may refer to the purport to Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 4.113 for the
warning from Padma Purana that hearing from avaishnavas is like drinking milk touched by the
lips of a serpent. As for those who would argue otherwise, the following quote exposes their real
motivation:
"Srila Bhaktisiddhanta comments that saralata, or simplicity, is the first qualification of a
vaishnava, whereas duplicity or cunning behavior is a great offense against the principles of
devotional service. As once advances in Krishna consciousness, one must gradually become
disgusted with material attachment and thus become more and more attached to the service of the
Lord. If one is not factually detached from material activities but still proclaims himself
advanced in devotional service, he is cheating. No one will be happy to see such behavior."
(Caitanya-caritamrta, Antya 2.117, purport)
The sahajiyas believe there is no harm at all in hearing devotional songs sung by professional
singers and musicians, and there is no harm in propagating these songs through modern media
like records, tapes and radio. The consciousness of the singer and hearer plays no part in the
transmission of devotion. In the same way, there is no harm in employing professional actors and
prostitutes to enact Krishna's pastimes in dramas. If these actors can bring tears to our eyes by
their performance, that proves they are spiritually empowered.
But Srila Prabhupada writes: "Professional players and dramatic actors have no sense of
devotional service, and therefore although they can perform very artistically, there is no life in
such performances. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur used to refer to such an actor as
yatra-dale narada, which means "farcial Narada." Sometimes an actor in a drama plays the part
of Narada, although in his private life he is not at all like Narada because he is not a devotee.
Such actors are not needed in dramatic performances about the lives of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu
and Lord Krishna." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi 10.13, purport)
Sahajiyas argue that although someone is degraded in his personal life, if he has material writing
power, he may freely compose books on Caitanya Mahaprabhu, Krishna, the lives of great
devotees, and devotional service. Similarly, the most confidential pastimes of Krishna (for
instance, his stealing of the clothes of the gopis) may be recited to the general public on the
condition that the speaker is sufficiently paid. Furthermore, a disciple can be instructed on the
confidential mellows of madhurya rasa even though he is not free of material lust, because this
will help him engage his lust in Krishna consciousness. The main point is to engage the emotion
somehow or other in Krishna. Even demons like Kamsa and Sisupala were liberated by hating
Krishna, so what is the harm of becoming lusty while hearing about the Lord's pastimes of love
with the gopis?
In his purport to Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 8.193, Srila Prabhupada compares the attempt of
mundane persons to understand the confidential affairs of Sri Sri Radha and Krishna to the
attempt of keeping an elephant in a dish. And: "Material lust cannot be engaged in the service of
the Lord, for it is applicable to materialists, not to Krishna. Only prema, or love of Godhead, is
applicable for the satisfaction of Krishna. Prema is full service rendered unto the Lord."
(Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 8.215, purport)
"But the main thing is to be natural," the stubborn sahajiya retorts. "Lord Caitanya and His
associates used to overeat, so we need not endeavour to control our tongues. Some of the Lord's
greatest associates had more than one wife, so we can enjoy in this way too. Even when a so-
called advanced vaishnava chastises a sahajiya, calling him a dog, fool, demon, sinner and
saying, 'I kick on your face', this shows he is no different from the rest of humanity, for he gives
free vent to feelings of pride, anger and enviousness. Why does he then pretend to be free of
lust? He should just relax and be natural."
This attitude qualifies the sahajiya for receiving the kind of vaishnava-krpa described in the
purport to Srimad-Bhagavatam 11.2.46: "Srila Bhaktisiddhanta has stated, 'When childish people
think themselves maha-bhagavatas and act in defiance of the vaishnava spiritual master, such
behavior simply holds them back from receiving the mercy of the vaishnava guru. Bewildered
by false ego, these self-proclaimed devotees gradually become fit to be ignored by pure devotees
on the intermediate platform and are cheated of the mercy that comes from the devotees'
satisfaction. Thus they become asadhu by constantly committing offenses against the devotees
who preach the holy name of Krishna. Pure devotees, therefore, in all circumstances display
indifference to those who falsely imagine themselves to be visuddha-bhaktas, or pure devotees of
the Lord. This indifference is an excellent manifestation of their mercy.'"
The sahajiyas entertain all sorts of mundane ideas about Lord Caitanya and His associates which
they try to support with offensive interpretations and outright lies about the pastimes described in
Sri Caitanya-caritamrta and Sri Caitanya Bhagavata. Sometimes they present their own bogus
scriptures to prove their false assertations. The sahajiyas want us to understand that we poor
fanatics should be realistic about the great acaryas, who, being only human, also had their faults.
We should take these faults into account before accepting their teachings blindly or idealistically.
Srila Prabhupada deals with this feature of sahajiya rascaldom at length in his purport to
Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi 10.85, where he describes three bogus stories about Srila Jiva Gosvami
circulated by the sahajiyas. And in his purport to Madhya 1.220 he writes: "A jealous person in
the dress of a vaishnava is not at all happy to see the success of another vaishnava in receiving
the Lord's mercy. Unfortunately in this age of Kali there are many mundane persons in the dress
of vaishnavas, and Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur has described them as disciples of Kali. He says,
kali-cela. He indicates that there is another vaishnava, a pseudo-vaishnava with tilak on his nose
and kanthi beads around his neck. Such a pseudo-vaishnava associates with money and women
and is jealous of successful vaishnavas."
In summary, a sahajiya is a dog-stubborn sense enjoyer who may have some talent for singing,
dancing, acting, speaking, joking and seducing women. He dresses himself as a vaishnava but is
unable to distinguish between worldly fame and spiritual fame, incomplete renunciation and
perfect renunciation, false devotion and pure devotion, offensive chanting, unclear chanting and
pure chanting of the holy name, worldly service and devotional service, lust and love, maha-
maya and yoga-maya, jiva and Vishnu, the cheater and the bona fide spiritual master, the godasa
and the gosvami, the neophyte and advanced devotee, what is authorized and what is not
authorized, the spiritual master and the disciple, proper conclusion and wrong conclusion, rasa
and rasabhasa, idol worship and Deity worship, devotees and demons, and so on.
In their persistant materialism, the sahajiyas can only be compared to Hiranyakasipu, who
thought Prahlada, a pure devotee, was just his son; or to Ravana, who thought Laksmi-devi was a
woman he could enjoy; or Sisupala, who thought Krishna was subject to His criticism.
How can such offensive fools be delivered? It is very, very difficult, because they hold the bona
fide conclusions of sastra in great disdain. "In Vrindavan, there are prakrta-sahajiyas who say
that writing books or even touching books is taboo. For them, devotional service means being
relieved from these activities. Whenever they are asked to hear a recitation of Vedic literatures,
they refuse, saying, 'What business do we have reading or hearing transcendental literatures?
They are meant for neophytes.' They pose themselves to be too elevated to exert energy for
reading, writing, and hearing." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 19.132, purport)
Therefore, in dealing with the sahajiya class, one should simply stick to the proper behavior of a
devotee (vaishnava-acara), asat-sanga-tyaga, - ei vaishnava acara: "The rejection of the
association of nondevotees -- this is the acara of the vaishnavas." (Caitanya-caritamrta,
Madhya 22.87)
The gauranga-nagaris are not interested in Lord Caitanya as a devotee, or in His five features as
the Sri Panca-Tattva. They desire to relate to Lord Caitanya as Krishna Himself, particularly as
lampat (yatha-tathava vidhadhatu-lampato: "He is a debauchee, so it is His nature to do as He
likes"). They style Him as nagara, and themselves as nagari.
The gauranga-nagari doctrine is very briefly and yet very completely explained by Srila
Prabhupada in several purports of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta. A few relevant quotes are as follows.
"...the gaura-nagaris, who place Lord Caitanya in the position of enjoyer and themselves as His
enjoyed, are not approved by Lord Caitanya or by Lord Caitanya's followers. Instead of being
blessed, the foolish imitators are left completely apart. Their concoctions are against the
principles of Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu. The doctrine of transcendental enjoyment by Krishna
cannot be mixed up with the doctrine of transcendental feeling of separation from Krishna in the
role of Radharani." (Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi 4.41, purport)
"Doctrines like those of the nadiya-nagaris, a class of so-called devotees, are never presented by
authorized persons like Svarupa Damodara or the six Gosvamis. The ideas of the nadiya-nagaris
are simply mental concoction, and they are completely on the mental platform." (Caitanya-
caritamrta, Adi 4.107, purport)
"...a so-called party of devotees named nadiya-nagari has sprung up and introduced the worship
of Vishnupriya. This certainly indicates ignorance of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu's pastimes. In the
opinion of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur, such worship is a product of the imagination."
(Caitanya-caritamrta, Antya 14.7, purport)
Refuting the Gauranga-nagari Doctrine
In Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi 1.5, Lord Caitanya is described as radha-bhava-dyuti-suvalita,
"adorned with the mood and luster of Srimati Radharani." Nowhere in any revealed scripture is
He said to be krsna-bhava-dyuti-suvalita, "adorned with the mood and luster of Sri Krishna,"
which would support the gauranga-nagari conception. Spokesmen of this apasampradaya not
only say that Lord Caitanya exhibited Krishna's enjoying mood, they claim further that
Vishnupriya-devi, the Lord's second wife, is Srimati Radharani, and that her close female friends
are gopis. But as Srila Vrindavan das Thakur makes clear in Sri Caitanya-bhagavata,
Vishnupriya-devi is actually Bhu-sakti, a form of Laksmi. The wives, mothers and daughters of
Lord Gauranga's associates in Nadia attend Vishnupriya in her bathing and dressing exactly as
the maidservants of Lakmiji serve Her in Vaikuntha-dhama. Their mood is different from the
mood of the damsels of Vrindavan.
Sri Caitanya Bhagavata is also very clear about Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu's extreme gravity in
His dealings with women -- even with His own wives, what to speak of other women. He never
so much as looked at the village girls of Nadia, let alone smile or talk to them. But in the
tradition of the sahajiyas, the gauranga-nagaris have invented offensive myths about Lord
Caitanya's supposed love affairs with a mistress named Kancana and other fictional consorts.
These stories should never be heard.
Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur appreciated the manifestation of Krishna's mood in Lord Caitanya in
His dealings with Sri Gadadhara Prabhu. Sri Gadadhara was so meek and submissive that the
Lord sometimes remarked to His confidential associates, "Gadadhara is My consort in the
spiritual world." Indeed, Gadadhara Prabhu's spiritual emotions for Lord Caitanya are described
as suddha gadha bhava rukmini-devira ("pure, deep ecstatic love in the mood of Rukmini-devi")
in Antya 7.144 of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta. Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur thus worshiped Sri Sri
Gaura-Gadadhara Deities in his bhajana. Here is an example of an internal flavor of attraction in
an advanced devotee for a confidential feature of Lord Caitanya's pastimes. But this is not a
subject matter for preaching. Lord Caitanya's preaching pastimes are relished in Sri Sri Gaura-
Nitai worship, as seen in ISKCON temples around the world. This mode of Deity worship is
performed to inspire the public at large to engage in harer-nama-sankirtan. But in any case, the
worship of Sri Gaura-Gadadhara by the pure devotee has nothing to do with the rasabhasa of the
gauranga-nagaris.
As Srila Prabhupada states above, the gauranga-nagaris are on the mental platform. Their so-
called mood of devotion is really just eroticism, a creation of their impure minds. Their wrong
meditation upon Lord Caitanya simply arouses their lust, and they foolishly take that lust to be
spiritual ecstacy.
The word baula comes from the Sanskrit word vatula, or mad. In the previous verse, the word
bauli was used in this sense. It may also be related to the word vyakula, which means
"impatiently eager". The bauls are wandering minstrels who play instruments like the ektar, dugi
(a drum like the larger drum in a tabla set) and bamboo flute. They do hari-nama-kirtan and sing
enchanting songs to express their philosophy, the words of which are very enigmatic (like Bob
Dylan songs, but in Bengali). Some bauls are world famous, like Purna Das Baul, who has done
concerts in Albert Hall in London.
The word sani comes from svami. This group is more commonly known as the sain. They are
mendicants who wander about without following any rigid path, having supposedly renounced
all external designations. Shirdi Sai Baba is a rather well-known example of this type; followers
of the famous Satya Sai Baba of Puttaparthi in Andra Pradesh claim that he is the same Shirdi Sai
reincarnated.
The daravesa (Darbesh) are the gurus of the auls, bauls and sains. They are supposed to have
reached the highest realization through the tantric sadhana that is practiced by these cults. In
Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 20.70, Srila Prabhupada translates the word daravesa as "hippie,"
which gives some idea of how the vaishnavas view these exalted personalities. Darbesh is a Sufi
term; it comes from the Persian dar (door) and bhitan (to beg), meaning "one who begs from
door to door."
The auls, bauls, sains and darbesh share the same philosophy, which directly descends from the
Sahajayana tradition. They view all existence as being formed from the combination of the
mundane male and female principles (purusa and prakrti). They believe they can harmonize
these two principles within themselves through so-called love, which is generated by a kind of
bodily union between man and woman according to tantric yoga. When purusa and prakrti are
perfectly harmonized, then one realizes the inner ecstacy they call jiyante mara or "death while
living", which is signified by complete stoppage of all physical and mental activity. They identify
this state with the mahabhava ecstasy of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. When this state of "death
while living" is attained, one can know the maner manush -- the "man in the heart", who is also
known as sahaja manush -- "natural man"; bhaber manush -- "man of devotion"; raser manush --
"man of rasa"; and sonar manush -- "man of gold." Though this maner manush is never
specifically identified with Gauranga Mahaprabhu, obviously the concept is stolen from the
Gaudiya Vaishnavas.
Typical symptoms of the four cults
There are certain practices of these apasampradayas (like the caricandrabhed or "ritual of the
four moons") that are too disgusting to be described here. It is enough to say that they are
absorbed in the darkest regions of ignorance. They believe that all exalted states of
transcendence, like the realization of Vaikuntha and Krishnaloka, rest in the gross physical body.
Their motto is "what cannot be found in the body cannot be found anywhere." Their philosophy
encourages a person to engage in all sorts of degraded acts of lust and depravity in order that the
inner bliss (svarup) stored in the material form (rupa) may be released.
These apasampradayas share the same syncretism (the artificial combination of aspects of
different religions, i.e. tantric, mayavada and Islamic mysticism with some vaishnava overtones)
and iconoclasm (they all reject Deity worship).
The auls, who are said to be on the beginning stage of sadhana, practice what is termed "bodily
meditation." This means that the men of this sect take themselves to be purusa and the women
are called prakrti. Their sadhana is illicit sex. Husbands and wives of this community freely
switch partners. Their idea is to excite lust to a fever pitch so that they can attain divine love.
They claim that Lord Caitanya, Lord Nityananda and the six Goswamis were all "auliya", and
use citations from Sri Caitanya-caritamrta in which the word aula appears to try to substantiate
their claim sastrically.
The influence of mayavada philosophy on the aul sect is very marked. They claim to be purusa,
though Krishna is actually the only purusa. They base their claim solely on the body -- if one
happens to have a male form, he is purusa, and may imitate Krishna's activities with impunity.
Lord Caitanya's teachings clearly distinguish between love and lust -- atmendriya-priti-vanca
tare bali kama (Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi 4.165). The practices of the auls are simply lust, and
have no connection with authorized scriptures.
The bauls, being folk musicians, exert an extraordinary influence upon Bengali culture. They
were patronized by no less than Rabindranath Tagore, Bengal's nobel-prize-winning poet.
Bengali intellectuals are fascinated with them and have written many books to their glory. In
recent years, interest in the bauls has spread to the West.
They often keep long hair in a bun on top of their heads and wear the gown of a Muslim fakir
with Shaivite rudraksa beads, the glass worry-beads of a Muslim, and the tilak and japa-mala of
a vaishnava, all simultaneously. They are usually bearded, and carry a shoulder bag, a bamboo
walking cane and a fisti (pot made from a big coconut). They use hashish liberally for "self-
control."
The bauls typically flock to festivals they call mahotsavas, many of which coincide with
important Gaudiya Vaishnava functions. The Jayadeva-Kenduli Mela during winter is the largest
such mahotsava; the bauls have an akhra (their word for ashrama) there, and thousands of them
converge at that spot for the three-day festival. At other places across Bengal and Bangladesh
they hold are mahotsavas throughout the year. The bauls move from one to the next, perform
music, smoke hemp and look for women. Often a baul picks up a woman (or sadhika) at one
mahotsava and drops her at the next to take on a new one. His former sadhika will be picked up
by another baul.
Some bauls are literate, and use their talents to write books presenting perverted accounts of the
lives of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu and His associates. These need not be mentioned here, as they
are too offensive. Because of their talents, the bauls cast an extremely inauspicious spell over the
minds of the innocent but foolish populace.
The sains are the freebooters of this tradition. They are supposedly liberated from all material
conceptions, and thus may appear in any kind of dress (Hindu sannyasi or Muslim fakir) or no
dress at all. They are so much beyond the grip of illusion that they may drink wine or eat human
flesh as expressions of their high awareness. The common people superstitiously think sains to
be powerful healers, for many Sains maintain themselves by distributing mysterious medicines
and cures. Some sain "saints" of the past were Nanak Sain, Alek Sain, Ksirodha Sain and Garbha
Sain. One Tapan Das Sain supervises the yearly baul three-day mahotsava at the Darbesh
Ashrama at Dubrajpur. Now over 80 years old, he and his young female consort are highly
honored in baul society.
The Darbesh Ashrama was founded by Atal Behari Darbesh, known as Darbeshji. By mystic
influence he brought a king under his control; that king gave him the land on which the ashrama
is situated. Darbeshji is thus venerated by the auls, bauls and sains as a spiritual giant. The
followers of Darbeshji dress as Sanatana Gosvami was dressed when he escaped the jail of
Nawab Hussain Shah to join Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu in Prayaga. Sanatana told the jailer whom
he'd bribed, daravesa hana ami makkake yaiba: "I shall go to Mecca as a Darbesh." The darbesh
cult take this as Srila Sanatana Gosvami's most profound instruction. The daravesa-
apasampradaya is degraded in every way, for its adherents fully embrace Muslim habits (meat-
eating, smoking, etc). They are feared by the common folk for their mysterious powers. Once
some workers tried to cut down a tree on the Darbesh Ashrama land, a tree that Darbeshji himself
used to rest under. But when they struck that tree, so the legend goes, they all fell down to the
ground, vomiting blood.
Individually, every member of ISKCON must be prepared to meet the challenge of surrendering
fully to Krishna. "Therefore faith is the first thing. Adau sraddha. If he has got intelligence, he'll
see: 'So many big, big... Lord Brahma accepts. Lord Shiva accepts. Vyasadeva accepts. Narada
accepts. The acaryas accept. So am I more than them? No. I will accept." (SP conversation, May
2, 1976)
Faith is defined by Lord Caitanya (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 22.62) as the conviction that all
needs are fulfilled and all desires satisfied simply by serving Krishna. This conviction is born
from the full acceptance of Krishna's supremacy. Material lust attacks one who thinks that there
is something desirable outside of Krishna consciousness. But desire arises from the soul; because
it is originally spiritual, desire can only be satisfied on the spiritual platform in service to
Krishna. Devotional service is compared to watering the root of a tree: since we are Krishna's
spiritual parts and parcels, if we satisfy Him we are naturally likewise satisfied, just as the leaves
of a tree are satisfied when the root is watered. Pouring water on the leaves is just like sense
gratification -- though in illusion we may think, "Now the leaves will also enjoy," they suffer for
want of nourishment, which comes only from the root. Acceptance of Krishna alone as the root
of happiness in all affairs is the proof of real faith.
Sensual, mental, intellectual and even spiritual affairs that have no connection to Krishna are
called anartha, "valueless." At every moment, each devotee is faced with the challenge of
discriminating between things favorable for Krishna consciousness and things that are illusion.
Srimad-Bhagavatam 1.7.6 informs us that most people lack this power of discrimination
(lokasyajanato). Therefore we must take help of the satvata-samhitam, the Vedic literature. "If
you go to school and if you don't read books," Srila Prabhupada once said, "you'll fail in the
examination."
The challenge of pride
As the Kathopanisad declares, "Like a sharpened razor, the path of spiritual life is difficult to
traverse, for it is said to be strewn with thorns." And of all difficulties on the path, pratisthasa
(pride associated with spiritual life) is one of the most formidable. For instance, one who
considers himself spiritually advanced may think that a simple devotee's unquestioning
dependence upon Krishna for everything is impractical. But Srila Prabhupada said, "Practical
means it will be done by Krishna. Your only business is to surrender to Krishna. You cannot do
anything. And as soon as you think that 'I shall be able to do it,' then you are a rascal.
Immediately you are a rascal."
Observing the defects of the sahajiyas, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur has sung:
ami ta vaisnava e-buddhi ha-ileamani na haba ami pratisthasa asi,hrdaya dusibe, hai-ba niraya-gamia
"If I think 'I am a vaishnava,' I shall look forward to receiving respect from others. And if the desire for fame
and reputation pollute my heart, certainly I shall go to hell."
What amounts to a purport by Srila Prabhupada to these lines is found in a letter of 31 December
1972. "You have got some desire to become a famous preacher and famous vaishnava singer and
also jagad-guru. This is a spiritual desire, so it is not like any material desire and it is all right for
Krishna in this way, but great vaishnava or famous vaishnava means that you have no sex desire.
Whether you can be like that? First of all you be like that, without any sex desire, then you think
famous vaishnava. Vaishnava means he has no material desire, what to speak of sex desire. All
material desires become zero, even he has no desire for jnana, karma, like that."
And from where does one get the strength to rise above material desire? "That is not your
business, that is Krishna's business. You follow Krishna. If you cheat Krishna, then you'll be
cheated. That's all. Krishna does not cheat you, but you create a situation to cheat yourself, and
maya will make an arrangment so that you are cheated. This is maya's business." (SP
conversation, June 3, 1976)
The challenge of vaidhi-sadhana bhakti
One who is subject to material desire must surrender to Krishna as a vaidhi-sadhana-bhakta and
not presume to enter the confidential moods of the perfect devotees.
"Regarding the songs by Jayadeva, 'Srita Kamala' is not approved. Sometimes our Krishnadas
Babaji sings, but it is not approved by Prabhupad. Those songs are for siddha-bhaktas, not for us
who are sadha-bhaktas or learning bhaktas. Lord Caitanya never divulged in public, he enjoyed
them in the company of his selected three or four devotees. There is one song by Jayadeva,
'Worshipping the Ten Incarnations', that song is all right." (Letter of 15 July 1972)
Similarly, vaidhi-bhakti-sadhakas should avoid literatures not approved by the spiritual master.
"...regarding the students there reading other books. I request you to stop this practice. Our
students have no time to read our own books, but they have time to read other's books, and the
money to purchase them? Why this mentality is there? You are a serious student, therefore you
have correctly found out the defect in these books. We don't want babaji class. We want active
preachers." (Letter of 13 October 1973)
Those who transgress the above directives and pry into subject matters not meant for them court
certain spiritual disaster.
"So far your question about the gopis, in the beginning there is no such question. In the
beginning we have to follow the principles of devotional service rigidly, like chanting 16 rounds,
regularly following the instructions of the Spiritual Master, which includes study, temple
worship, sankirtan, like that. ...Going to girls and making them pregnant, then talking of gopis,
that is going on, that is nonsense. Without coming to the perfectional stage, if anyone tries to
understand the gopis he becomes a sahajiya." (Letter of 14 December 1972)
To meet all these challenges successfully and traverse the path back home, back to Godhead, one
must ultimately have love for the spiritual master; honoring the principles he has laid down is the
proof of the disciple's love.
"I have built the skyscraper skeleton, now you all intelligent American and European boys and
girls fill in the spaces nicely in good taste. Do not deviate from our high standard. That will mean
great dishonor to me." (Letter of 22 December 1971)
The greatest offense a devotee can commit against the spiritual master is the hati mata or "mad
elephant" vaishnava-aparadha; whether one is in danger of committing this offense is essentially
a question of association, as explained by Srila Prabhupada in his purport to Caitanya-
caritamrta, Madhya 19.157.
"The first business of a vaishnava is to give up the company of nondevotees. A so-called mature
devotee, however, commits a great offense by giving up the company of pure devotees. The
living entity is a social animal, and if one gives up the society of pure devotees, he must
associate with nondevotees (asat-sanga). By contacting nondevotees and engaging in
nondevotional activities, a so-called mature devotee will fall victim to the mad elephant offense.
Whatever growth has taken place is quickly uprooted by such an offense. One should therefore
be very careful to defend the creeper by fencing it in -- that is, by following the regulative
principles and associating with pure devotees."
But what about an older initiated householder who lives outside of the temple, maintains himself
with a 'karmi job', and therefore can't fully commit himself to temple service and association?
Isn't the standard different for him? What if he has had bad experience with certain ISKCON
leaders, and finds it impossible to associate with them?
Srila Prabhupada gave answers to all these doubts; one may refer to his letter of 29 January 1973
to Ksirodakasayi das and to the second paragraph of the same purport quoted above (Caitanya-
caritamrta, Madhya 19.157). In summary, there is no difference between the grhastha-ashrama
and other ashramas in terms of responsibility to the spiritual master, except that the grhastha
may live outside of the temple with his wife. The grhastha must follow the four regulative
principles like any initiated disciple. About the theory that a grhastha may engage in a kind of
"karma-yoga" that has a different spiritual standard than that of the temple devotees, Srila
Prabhupada wrote, "this is all nonsense." He expected his householder disciples to "remain fully
engaged in the temple activities" and to "assist the other devotees there as much as possible and
cooperate very closely for helping me." This does not preclude their working outside; in one
conversation, Srila Prabhupada cited his own purva-ashrama as an example: he lived and
worked outside, but contributed to his spiritual master's mission in ways that were much
appreciated by Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati and the Gaudiya Matha devotees. If one mistrusts
certain devotees because of unhappy past encounters, he should "keep direct company with the
spiritual master, and if there is any doubt, one should consult the spiritual master." One keeps
contact with the spiritual master either through vapuh-seva or vani-seva. Either way, his
instructions and the regulative principles must be followed. "By mental concoction, one falls
down. By associating with nondevotees, one breaks the regulative principles and is thereby lost."
Is this too demanding? Computer technology is certainly demanding, yet almost everybody
acknowledges its benefit and tries to stay apace with it so as not to be left behind. Srila
Prabhupada, answering a question put to him by the author in 1975, said, "Vedic technology
means guru-parampara." Just as karmi society depends upon scientific technology for realizing
its goals, the society of devotees must similarly depend up the guru-parampara for realization of
the supreme goal of life, love of Godhead. If we think we can attain that goal by some "easier"
means, we become sahajiyas. In the society of devotees, some serve as leaders and others serve
as followers, but all must adhere to guru-parampara. If a leader believes himself transcendental
to it, he creates havoc by misusing his influential position. And a follower who reacts to such
misleadership by inventing something new in the name of reform similarly creates only havoc.
As certain unhappy events in the recent history of ISKCON clearly show, deviated leaders show
symptoms of jati-gosani contamination: they tend to think of themselves as the unassailable
inheritors of their spiritual master's position and power no matter what faults of character they
exhibit, and they are easily provoked by real or imagined challenges to their authority. Deviated
followers show symptoms of kartabhaja contamination: they decry all leaders as corrupt on the
plea of the misdeeds of a few. Like the followers of Anukul Chandra, they advise newcomers to
take initiation and instruction only from the founder-acarya, though he is no longer physically
present.
Both classes -- deviated leaders and deviated followers -- are sahajiyas. They seem quite sure
that their mental concoctions are lofty realizations and their emotional turmoils are states of
ecstasy. So sure are they of themselves that any sudden inspiration is accepted as divine, even if
it means that Srila Prabhupada's clear instructions are ignored or violated. A clear example of this
is seen in modern trends of syncretism: just as the sahajiyas of old tried to blend mayavada,
Islam and Buddhism with Mahaprabhu's teachings, so today Christianity is the foreign element
of choice; one person formerly associated with ISKCON even claims he is reviving the lost
parampara that descended from Jesus Christ.
We shall surely be confronted with newer and newer permutations of the apasampradaya
phenomena as time goes on, but the pattern of deviation seen in the original thirteen remain the
frame of reference for all latter-day perversions of krishna-bhakti. That people continue to fall
victim to this pattern of deviation despite the explicit warnings of the acaryas shows the tenacity
of Maya-devi in her service of weeding out the insincere from the community of devotees. The
lesson is obvious -- we must become more tenacious than she in our service to the lotus feet of
the spiritual master, the vaishnavas, and Lord Krishna. "Those who fail to learn from history are
condemned to repeat it."
It is said that the list of thirteen apasampradayas -- aula, baula, kartabhaja, neda, daravesa,
sain, sahajiya, sakhi-bekhi, smarta, jati-gosani, ativadi, cudadhari and gauranga-nagari -- was
first spoken by a great devotee named Tota Ram das Babaji, who lived before the time of Sri
Caitanya Mahaprabhu. He predicted that these groups would arise like weeds from the same
earth from which grows the plant of pure devotion (that is, Lord Caitanya's movement). In Sri
Harinama Cintamani, Lord Caitanya Himself declared to Haridas Thakur that in the future many
pretenders would darken the world by perverting the pure teachings of the holy name.
Bhaktivinoda Thakur comments that the Lord foresaw the rise of these apasampradayas when he
made this statement.
Mantra modernizers and the mother-in-law guru
The apasampradayas have steadily multiplied down to the present day. More than a hundred
years ago, a researcher named Akoyakumar Datta compiled a list of fifty-six deviant Gaudiya
Vaishnava sects. Among them are: guru-prasadi (gurus who are offered the brides of their
disciples for sex enjoyment, and who return them to the disciples as guru-prasada), sisya-vilasi
(gurus who keep female disciples for sex life), and even a group that believes one must accept
one's mother-in-law as guru. Akoyakumar Datta admitted that his list of fifty-six was far from
complete. A widespread fashion among the apasampradayas is the introduction of new "maha-
mantras" to fit modern times. Caran Das Babaji lived at the same time as Srila Bhaktivinoda
Thakur; he popularized the chanting of bhaja nitai-gaura radhe-syama, japa hare krsna hare
rama. Bhaktivinoda Thakur had a lenghty debate with him and forced Caran Das to admit that
his mantra was a concoction and he had been wrong to preach it. Six months after this discussion
Caran Das died, having lost his mind. His chief follower, Ram Das Babaji, continued to spread
this bogus maha-mantra all over Orissa, West Bengal, Bangladesh and Vrindavan. Srila
Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati called this group's chanting 'chuh-chuh kirtan,' after a kind of rodent
that emits a bad smell when disturbed. In Puri, whenever a nagara-kirtan party of these people
came down the road, he had his disciples stand at the gate of the Gaudiya Matha temple and beat
gongs to drown it out so that he would not have to hear it. Such bogus mantras continue to be
popular because the common people are uneducated and easily mislead, and because the
propagators of the nonsense are often so enthusiastic and well organized. Both Caran Das and
Ram Das travelled widely, preached, got land donated at holy places, built new temples, fixed up
broken old temples, standardized Deity worship, established vegetarianism and organized nice
festivals.
But their mantra is rasabhasa, for it equates Nityananda and Caitanya with Radha and Krishna.
By preaching this concoction, they committed a great offense to the lotus feet of Lord Caitanya
and His followers by telling people that Lord Caitanya didn't give the world the real maha-
mantra for the deliverance of the fallen souls of Kali-yuga.
One very active sahajiya preacher holds a Ph.D. from an American university; he is therefore
considered a great sage by the simple people of Bengal. He makes publicity for one Jagatbandhu
Shorkar, now dead, whom he claims to be the reincarnation of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabu. This
"avatar" used to walk naked and practice mauna (the vow of not speaking). His representative,
the sahajiya preacher, claims Jagatbandhu was on the highest platform of God consciousness,
higher than that of Lord Caitanya. He has invented a name for this exalted state: sisubhava
(child-like ecstasy). He has also introduced a new maha-mantra: hari-purusa jagatbandhu
maha-uddharana. When challenged by an ISKCON devotee to explain how he could advertise
Jagatbandhu Shorkar as an incarnation of God, the preacher replied, "The name jagatbandhu is
listed as one of the thousand names of Lord Vishnu." By this logic, any person in India who
happen to be named Gopal or Ram could claim to be an incarnation.
The Haribol movement was started about one hundred years ago in the jungles of East Bengal by
a person called Haricand. His followers are known by their keeping of very long hair, hookah
smoking, and their shouting of haribol over and over while beating on big drums. They hope to
attain a state they call matual, or "drunken madness." Then there is the sect of Kaivalyanath Ram
Thakur, who told his followers to chant the Hare Krishna maha-mantra and nothing else. He
never discussed philosophy -- his reply to questions was inevitably, "Just chant Hare Krishna."
While he certainly cannot be accused of having invented a new mantra, Kaivalyanath Ram
promoted a very wrong understanding of the genuine mantra. His followers chant to him in their
kirtan, not to Krishna, because they think he is God.
When the general population is constantly exposed to such nonsense, they gradually become
twisted. They come to expect that a popular, successful preacher will one fine day declare
himself to be God. In Bangladesh, there is a traveling preacher named Vivekananda Brahmacari
whose followers have recently informed him, "It's time for you to become an incarnation."
Because such a preacher completely depends upon the material support of such followers, he
must be obliging. And so in the world of cheaters and cheated, ordinary men become God
overnight. Among sahajiyas, everyone styles himself an uttama-adhikari or first-class devotee.
There is no concern for the indications given in the sastra of higher and lower ranks of devotees;
in sahajiya eyes, making such differentiations is offensive. Now, it only stands to reason that if
such first-class devotees are moved to flock around a guru, that guru must be an avatar of God
himself. The sahajiya community is thus dedicated to a program of collective reinforcement of
each member's self-delusions: the guru is proclaimed to be God and is given money and women
by his followers, and the followers get the satisfaction of belonging to some select group of
exalted souls -- which in rural Bengali society is usually the only claim to fame one gets a chance
at.
Srila Prabhupada's humble request: "Don't Deviate"
Just by considering what the acronym ISKCON stands for, we know clearly the difference
between the sampradaya and the apasampradaya. Krishna is the absolute center of ISKCON.
Even ISKCON's spiritual masters are the paraphernalia of Krishna, as are the temples, money
and all properties. In Hawaii, Srila Prabhupada was asked, "Are you ISKCON?" He humbly
answered, "I am a member of ISKCON." ISKCON is the society in which the members
surrender their identities to Krishna's service and work together to please Him. The
apasampradaya society is quite different. In it, the guru takes the forefront, and Krishna fades
into a background role -- or fades out of any role whatsoever. The guru's disciples do not think of
serving Krishna. They do not even necessarily think they are devotees of Krishna at all. But they
very proudly boast, "I am a disciple of such and such guru." Thus the guru takes the place of
God, if not in principle, then at least in practice. Since 1978, several modern apasampradayas
have broken off from the main body of ISKCON. Each one exhibits total lack of faith in and
appreciation for the institution that Srila Prabhupada started. But despite whatever faults these
groups exhibit, we should keep in mind that Srila Prabhupada laid the burden or responsibility
for keeping his movement whole upon the ISKCON leadership -- the GBC and the temple
presidents.
"With our GBC and senior men present we should discuss how to make unity in diversity. But, if
we fight on account of diversity, then it is simply the material platform. Please try to maintain the
philosophy of unity in diversity. That will make our movement successful. One section of men
have already gone out, therefore we must be very careful to maintain unity in diversity, and
remember the story of Aesop's fables of the father of many children with the bundle of sticks.
When the father asked the children to break the bundle of sticks wrapped in the bag, none of
them could do it. But, when they removed the sticks from the bag, and tried one-by-one, the
sticks were easily broken. So this is the strength of unity. If we are bunched up we can never be
broken, but when divided, then we can become broken very easily." (Letter of 18 October 1973)
And though ISKCON management may sometimes be perceived as imperfect, we should always
try to satisfy Srila Prabhupada's desire, having faith that he will rectify any discrepancies.
"Of course, some of my authorities and so-called officers, they sometimes also order in such a
way that everything becomes topsy-turvy. So you may write to me your grievance. What can I
do? But meanwhile you must follow him exactly, whatever he says. If there is complaint, I can
make adjustment later. But first of all you must without hesitation obey. It is something like the
appealing to the higher court if one is not satisfied by decision of the lower court." (Letter of 13
December 1972)
Finally, every devotee has a personal responsibility to always serve Krishna according to the
engagements that Srila Prabhupada created for ISKCON.
"And because we are not at the stage where we can chant and do nothing else all day, there are so
many other engagements. So you have sufficient engagement there? Because if we are not
fulltime engaged then the mind is free to do its fickle business of rejection and acceptance for
sense gratification. Maya will immediately enter -- we do not even have to call her -- the moment
we are not absorbed in Krishna's devotional service." (Letter of 20 July 1973)