lunes, 30 de junio de 2014

THE GOOD AND EVIL

The good and evil, by Javier Figuerola
  Good people are kind, tolerant, friendly to all, always respect all and never want to be respected, are true, pure heart, conquer hunger, thirst, lamentation and envy, not deceive themselves or others, are happy when they see others happy in God consciousness and suffer when they see others suffer and have as their best friends to God and his representatives. Imagine if you govern us good people in a year ending hunger in the world, all in one year would end and ecological disorders Mother Earth would be very happy.
Unfortunately govern us bad people, they are intolerant, dirty heart, just looking to be respected and they do not respect anyone, are very envious and do not believe in God, they themselves think they are God. If a person is associated with good people just being a good person and if it is associated with bad people being bad person just tell me who your friends are and I will tell you who you are. The other day I asked the two candidates for president of the PSOE if they believed in God, and both proudly said no. I remember a talk in Los Angeles, USA, my spiritual master said before many educated people, most were directors of the most prestigious universities in USA, that he who does not believe in God is a fool, and one of these people with great respect told Srila Prabhupada that what you just said I look very heavy, could not call you dumb or stupid?, and Srila Prabhupada with his great humor said that insanity is the sum total of all the stupid, and everyone laughed good wins.
I am fully convinced that political item means the law of the funnel, wide to narrow for me and others. Spiritual Politics means that God is in the center and there is an understanding and acceptance that we are all eternal spirit souls, eternal and loving servants of God, there is no pure goodness. Material life means sense gratification, selfishness, me and mine, and spiritual life means to satisfy the transcendental senses of God, and as I am part and parcel of God to do this God gives me happiness, transcendental knowledge, eternity and bliss unlimited.

sábado, 28 de junio de 2014

THE DEATH PENALTY

By the mercy of Srila Prabhupada, understand and agree here that the death penalty is beneficial to the murderer.



SB 4.6.4

tad ākarṇya vibhuḥ prāha
tejīyasi kṛtāgasi
kṣemāya tatra sā bhūyān
na prāyeṇa bubhūṣatām


Word for word:

tat — the events related by the demigods and the others; ākarṇya — after hearing; vibhuḥ — Lord Brahmā; prāha — replied; tejīyasi — a great personality; kṛta-āgasi — has been offended; kṣemāya — for your happiness; tatra — in that way; — that; bhūyāt na — is not conducive; prāyeṇa — generally; bubhūṣatām — desire to exist.

Translation:

When Lord Brahmā heard everything from the demigods and the members who had attended the sacrifice, he replied: You cannot be happy in executing a sacrifice if you blaspheme a great personality and thereby offend his lotus feet. You cannot have happiness in that way.

Purport:

Lord Brahmā explained to the demigods that although Dakṣa wanted to enjoy the results of fruitive sacrificial activities, it is not possible to enjoy when one offends a great personality like Lord Śiva. It was good for Dakṣa to have died in the fight because if he had lived he would have committed such offenses at the lotus feet of great personalities again and again. According to Manu’s law, when a person commits murder, punishment is beneficial for him because if he is not killed he might commit more and more murders and therefore be entangled in his future lives for having killed so many persons. Therefore the king’s punishment of a murderer is appropriate. lf those who are extremely offensive are killed by the grace of the Lord, that is good for them. In other words, Lord Brahmā explained to the demigods that it was good for Dakṣa to have been killed.

jueves, 26 de junio de 2014

SRILA SIVANANDA SENA KI JAYA

Srila Sivananda Sena - Disappearance

 
He was a Vaidya by caste.
In his past incarnation he was Vira Duti.
(GGD. 176).

His Sripata was located at Kumarahatta at Halisahara (Pata Paryatana).

Sivananda had three sons named Caitanyadasa, Ramadasa, and Paramanandadasa (Kavi Karnapura).
Sivananda was one of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu's intimate associates.
As directed by the Lord, he escorted the Gaudiya devotees to Nilacala every year, providing them with food and lodging along the way.

During one pilgrimage to Nilacala a dog joined their party and Sivananda took personal care of him, even paying extra fare to allow the dog to across the river along with them.
One night Sivananda was detained for sometime and arrived at the camp late in the evening, only to find that the dog had not been given prasada and, despite a thorough search, the dog was nowhere to be found.
Thus Sivananda did not accept any food that night.
When their party arrived in Nilacala, they found the dog in the presence of the Lord.
The dog was eating some coconut given by the Lord and was chanting, "Krsna, Krsna."
Sivananda offered his humble obeisances at the feet of the dog and apologized.

On another occasion Sivananda was detained and thus accommodations for the party had not been made.
It was quite late at night and Lord Nityananda appeared to be restless and hungry, thus He said, "I am so hungry yet still there is no sign of Sivananda, therefore I curse his three sons to die."
Hearing this Sivananda's wife began to cry.
When Sivananda returned and his wife informed him what had happened, he consoled her saying, "Why are you crying?
Let my three sons die if it is the desire of Lord Nityananda."

Sivananda then went before Lord Nityananda, who kicked him.
Sivananda, however, was extremely happy and said, "Lord, at last I know that you have accepted this wretched soul as Your servant.

Vasudeva Datta was an extraordinarily generous man, thus he never saved any money.
Lord Caitanya therefore directed Sivananda as follows:
"You should become the accountant of Vasudeva and take charge of his expenses."

Once Lord Caitanya appeared within the body of Nakula Brahmacari at Ambika.
Upon hearing this Sivananda went to Ambika but instead of meeting Nakula, he remained hidden.
Hoping to test the authenticity of Nakula brahmacari, Sivananda thought "If that brahmacari calls me by name and speaks out my Istamantra, then I will be convinced that the omniscient Lord Gauranga has truly entered his body.
It happened as Sivananda desired; the brahmacari called him and spoke out his Istamantra.

Once Lord Caitanya, without manifesting Himself physically, partook of food presented by Nrsimhananda in the house of Sivananda.
Not having personally seen the Lord, Sivananda was uncertain of this incident.
However, the next year when visiting the Lord in Puri, Lord Caitanya mentioned the time which He had come to accept prasada at Sivananda's house, thus clearing up Sivananda's doubts.
Before writing his books Kavi Karnapura collected considerable information about Lord Caitanya's life from Sivananda.

The following are references to Sivananda given in CC:
1.20.52 A close devotee of Lord Gauranga.
1.10.52-53 Responsible caretaker of the Gaudiya devotees in their pilgrimage to Nilacala.
2.1.129, 2.16.18-19;25-26, 3.2.160;3.10.11,
2.15.98 Directed by Lord Caitanya to guide all Gaudiya devotees to Nilacala.
2.1.130;3.1.12-28 Paid equal attention to a stray dog along the journey.
2.15.94-97 Directed by Lord Caitanya to take charge of Vasudeva Datta's accounts.
2.16.203 Lord Caitanya visits Sivananda's house on his way from Nilacala to Gauda.
3.2.21-31 Test of Nakula brahmacari.
3.2.41-42;3.2.44-77 Lord Caitanya partaking of food in a subtle form.
3.6.178-180 Letter from Govardhana dasa to Sivananda after the former's son, Raghunatha dasa, renounced home.
3.6.242-244 At Nilacala Raghunatha dasa was informed about his father's letter.
3.6.245-253 On return from Nilacala the messenger of Govardhana is informed about Raghunatha dasa's condition.
3.6.255-258 Govardhana sends money through messenger to Sivananda after learning about his son; Sivananda's advice to the messenger.
3.6.139-148 Sivananda's eldest son, Caitanyadasa, meets Lord Caitanya; the Lord invites Caitanyadasa and the latter also invites the Lord.
3.12.17-31 Receives grace showered by Lord Nityananda on the pretext of chastisement.
3.12.43-48 Lord Caitanya meets the three sons of Sivananda; mystery associated with the name of Puridasa, the youngest son.
3.12.52 Lord Caitanya directs Govinda to pass on the remnants of the Lord's food to the wife and sons of Sivananda as long as they stay at Nilacala.
3.12.101-102 Arrival of Jagadananda at Sivananda's house and preparation of herbal oil.
3.16.60-70 Grace showered by Lord Caitanya on Puridasa.

Further information from GPC :
Sivananda Sena utilized his entire property and wealth in the service of Hari-guru-Vaisnavas.
All his family members, including his friends, servants and three sons (Sri Caitanya dasa, Sri Rama dasa and Sri Karnapura), even his nephew Sri Vallabha Sena were great devotees of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu.
Sri Sivananda lived in Kumarahatta, which is known as Halisahara.
The Deity Gaura-Gopala which was worshiped by him, is now at Kancrapada, one and a half miles away from Halisahara.

In GGD, Kavi Karnapura writes that Sivananda Sena was the associate of Sri Radha in Dvapara yuga and was known as Vira.
Every year Sivananda took full responsibility for bringing the Gaudiya devotees to Puri on foot.
Once the devotees started their journey on an auspicious day and on their way came to the house of Advaita Acarya at Santipura.
After spending one day there performing sankirtana, they went to the house of Sri Saci devi in Navadvipa, along with Advaita Acarya, his wife and his son.
Mother Saci was living in distress due to separation from her son.
She offered her respects to the devotees, and after serving Sri Advaita Acarya and Sita devi, she began to weep in remembrance of Sri Gauranga.
After consoling her the devotees continued on their journey.

Though Mahaprabhu had advised Sri Nityananda Prabhu to preach and spread love of God, Nityananda set off with the devotees to meet Mahaprabhu.
Amongst the devotees were Sri Acaryaratna, Pundarika Vidyanidhi, Srivasa Pandita and his wife and brothers , Vasudeva Ghosh, Govinda Ghosh, Madhava Ghosh, Murari Gupta Ojha, Sri Raghava Pandita, Narahari from Srikhanda, Gunaraja Khan and many others.
Sivananda Sena's wife and three sons also accompanied the party.
Many of the devotees brought along their wives, who eagerly collected many varieties of food for the pleasure of Mahaprabhu.
Sivananda took charge of paying the fares and food of the devotees.
Wherever they spent the night, they engaged in sankirtana.

One year Sri Sivananda, along with his first son Sri Caitanya dasa, came to Puri.
When Mahaprabhu asked Sivananda why he named the boy as such, Sivananda replied that he had been inspired from within.
One day, by his father's instruction, Caitanya dasa invited Mahaprabhu to their house for prasada.
Mahaprabhu accepted the invitation and when He came to their house, Sivananda and his wife showed Him great respect and offered Him various types of food.
Being very pleased the Lord said, "Today Caitanya dasa invited me."
Caitanya dasa then placed various items such as curd, lemon, ginger, fry, salt, etc. in front of Mahaprabhu, who happily said,
"This boy knows my mind, therefore I am very satisfied with his service."

With those words Mahaprabhu began eating with great pleasure and after finishing He gave the food left on His plate to Caitanya dasa.
After spending four months in the Lord's association, the devotees from Bengal were preparing to leave when Mahaprabhu told Sivananda that he should name his next son Puri dasa.
Sivananda became very happy and with the blessings of Mahaprabhu, returned to Gauda.

After a few months a son was born and the astrologer gave him the name Paramananda.
The next year Sivananda and the devotees visited Puri.
As usual Sivananda arranged for their boarding and food and the devotees eventually arrived in the presence of the Lord.
Along with the devotees, Sivananda happily participated in singing and dancing before the Ratha of Sri Jagannatha Deva.

One day Sivananda and his wife came to Mahaprabhu and the little child fell down at the lotus feet of Mahaprabhu and fixed his eyes on the reddish feet of the Lord.
A bit amused, Mahaprabhu gently placed His toe in front of the little boy, who began to suck the toe with great pleasure.
The devotees present were filled with joy and began chanting the holy name.
This child later became the poet Kavi Karnapura Gosvami.

SRILA SVRUPA DAMODARA GOSWAMI KI JAYA

Svarupa Damodara Goswami

 
Svarupa Damodara Goswami
Just as Lalita and Vishakha are Radharani's dearest gopis, Svarupa Damodara (Vishakha-sakhi) and Ramananda Raya (Lalita-sakhi) are Shri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu's most confidential associates. (In the image: Shrimati Vishakha Devi, ISKCON Chowpatty, Mumbai).
  One of the closest associates of Shri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Purushottama Acharya (Svarupa) knew exactly the heart of Shri Krishna Chaitanya. Glorifying him as "the storehouse of all devotional mellows," Lord Chaitanya added the word Damodara to his name.
   Svarupa Damodara revealed to the world the innermost emotions of Shri Chaitanya's mood of Radharani feeling separation from Krishna. Sensing Lord Gauranga's moods, Svarupa Damodara would perform kirtana to enhance the Lord's internal sentiments. To soothe Lord Chaitanya's love pangs in viraha bhava he would sing songs from Gita-Govinda, Krishna Karnamrta, and the love poems of Chandidasa and Vidyapati.
   Throughout the day and night Svarupa Damodara and Ramananda Raya stayed near Shri Chaitanya in order to nourish His pastimes. "He is one of the three and one-half most intimate Devotees of Lord Chaitanya (Ramananda Raya, Sikhi Mahiti, Madhavi Devi)." Just as Lalita and Vishakha are Radharani's dearest gopis, Svarupa Damodara (Vishakha-sakhi) and Ramananda Raya (Lalita-sakhi) are Shri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu's most confidential associates.
   Svarupa Damodara was the "guardian of the Gaudiya Devotees." So whenever a Devotee misbehaved Lord Gaurasundara would say, "Svarupa, your Gaudiya did such and such." Svarupa Damodara would personally check for grammatical or philosophical flaws in any newly written verse, song, or book before giving it to Lord Chaitanya for approval.
   Krishna Dasa Kaviraja used Svarupa Damodara's Karcha (memoirs of Shri Chaitanya's life) to compile the Chaitanya-charitamrta. Svarupa Damodara Goswami also wrote Sangita-Damodara, a book of music. His samadhi is in the 64 Samadhis Area. 
- See more at: http://gaudiyahistory.com/sri-svarupa-damodara-goswami/#sthash.Z7rmfMp9.dpuf

RATHA YTRA OF PURI KI JAYA

Ratha Jatra, the Festival of Chariots of Lord Jagannatha is celebrated every year at Puri, the temple town in Orissa, on the east coast of India. The presiding deities of the main temple, Sri Mandira, Lord Jagannatha, Lord Balabhadra and Goddess Subhadra, with the celestial wheel Sudarshana are taken out from the temple precincts in an elaborate ritual procession to their respective chariots. The huge, colourfully decorated chariots, are drawn by hundreds and thousands of devotees on the bada danda, the grand avenue to the Gundicha temple, some two miles away to the North. After a stay for seven days, the deities return to their abode in Srimandira.
Ratha Jatra is perhaps the grandest festival on earth. Everything is on a scale befitting the great Lord. Full of spectacle, drama and colour, the festival is a typical Indian fair of huge proportions. It is also the living embodiment of the synthesis of the tribal, the folk, and the autochthonous with the classical, the elaborately formal and the sophisticated elements of the socio-cultural-religious ethos of the Indian civilization.

Sanctity and Significance of Ratha Jatra
The festival is also known as Gundicha Jatra, Ghosa Jatra, Navadina Jatra, Dasavatara Jatra and by a variety of other names. For the devoted and believers, it is considered the most auspicious occasion. Rathe tu vamanam drishtwa punarjanmam na vidyate A glimpse of the Vamana, the dwarf form, an incarnation of Lord Jagannatha, is sure to ensure emancipation, release from the cycle of birth and death.
Jatra is an essential part of the ritual of the Hindu system of worship. Jatra literally means travel or journey. Normally, it is the representative deities of temples more popularly known as Utsava Murti in south and Chalanti Pratima or Bije Pratima in Orissa, partake in these journeys. It is rarely that the presiding deities come out of the sanctum for such ritual journeys. The Jatra for the Ritual Journey take two forms – one involving the short circumbulation around the temple and other involving a longer journey from the temple to some other destination. The Jatra is considered as an important part of festivities and ceremonies of each temple and is considered as a special and sacred occasion.
Rath Jatra being unique among all Jatras is the grandest festival of the supreme divinity who has manifested himself in the Kali Yuga to emancipate humanity and to relieve them from their sufferings. Lord Jagannatha is identified fully with Vishnu and Krishna. In his original manifestation as Nilamadhaba, he was worshipped in a sacred Nyagrodha Briksha or banyan tree. The branches of the tree had spread for several miles and any one entering this area was instantly emancipated and was relieved of the travails of the birth and re-birth. In fact, the influence of Yama, the God of Death, is supposed to have been curtailed in the sacred city of Puri – Srikshetra on account of the presence of Lord Jagannatha and therefore it is also called the Yamanika Tirtha.
A glimpse of Lord Jagannatha on the chariot is considered to be very auspicious and saints, poets and scriptures have repeatedly glorified the sanctity of this special festival.
The sanctity of the festival is such that even a touch of the chariot or even the ropes with which these are pulled is considered enough to confer the results of several pious deeds or penance for ages. In fact, there is a famous Oriya song which says that on this occasion, the chariot, the wheels, the grand avenue all become one with Lord Jagannatha himself.
The concept of the chariot has been explained in the Kathopanishada in the following words-
Atmanam rathinam viddhi sareeram rathamevatu
Buddhim tu saarathim viddhi marah pragrahameva cha.
The body is the Chariot and the soul is the deity installed in the chariot. The wisdom acts as the charioteer to control the mind and thoughts.
The Skanda Purana glorifies the sanctity of the Rath Jatra in the following words-
Gundicha mandapam namam yatrahamajanam pura
Ashwamedha sahasrasya mahabedi tadadvabat.
Those who are fortunate to see the deities of the Srimandira in the Gundicha Temple, the final destination of the procession of the chariots, derive the benefits of a thousand horse sacrifices, an immensely pious deed. Kabi Samrat Upendra Bhanja in his famous Vaidehisa Vilasa mentions that the Lord comes out from his sanctum for participating in the Gundicha Jatra, another name of the Festival of Chariots, only for redeeming the fallen, the patita jana who get the opportunity to behold their dearest god at close quarters on this occasion. Similarly, saint poet Salabega waxes eloquent in praise of his dearest dark darling and says that the Lord swaying and moving like a wild elephant arrives at the Grand Avenue and rides his chariot and destroys in a flash all the sins of his devotees, even if these may be grave or unpardonable.

GUNDICA MARJANA KI JAYA

Gundica Marjana

Sri Caitanya Caritamrta Madhya 12 Summary

In his Amrta-pravaha-bhasya, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura summarizesthis chapter as follows. The King of Orissa, Maharaja Prataparudra,tried his best to see Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu. Srila Nityananda Prabhu andthe other devotees informed the Lord about the King's desire, but SriCaitanya Mahaprabhu would not agree to see him. At that time Sri NityanandaPrabhu devised a plan, and He sent a piece of the Lord's outward garmentto the King. The next day, when Ramananda Raya again entreated SriCaitanya Mahaprabhu to see the King, the Lord, denying the request, askedRamananda Raya to bring the King's son before Him. The prince visited theLord dressed like a Vaisnava, and this awakened remembrance of Krsna. Thus SriCaitanya Mahaprabhu delivered the son of Maharaja Prataparudra.

After this, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu washed the Gundica temple before the Ratha-yatra took place. He then took His bath at Indradyumna Lakeand partook of prasadam in the garden nearby. While Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu washed the temple of Gundica, a Gaudiya Vaisnava washed the lotus feet of the Lord and drank the water. This incident is very significant,for it awoke within the devotee ecstatic love. Then the son of AdvaitaPrabhu named Gopala fainted during kirtana, and when he did not come to hissenses, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu favored him by awakening him. There was alsosome humorous talk between Nityananda Prabhu and Advaita Prabhu duringprasadam. Advaita Prabhu said that Nityananda Prabhu was unknown to anyoneand that it was not the duty of a householder brahmana to accept dinner with aperson unknown in society. In answer to this humorous statement, SriNityananda Prabhu replied that Advaita Acarya was a monist and that one couldnot know how his mind could be turned by eating with such an impersonalist.The conversation of these two prabhus - Nityananda Prabhu and AdvaitaPrabhu - carried a deep meaning that only an intelligent man can understand.After all the Vaisnavas finished their luncheon, Svarupa Damodara andothers took their prasadam within the room. Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu took greatpleasure when He saw the Jagannatha Deity after the period of the Deity'sretirement. At that time Lord Caitanya was accompanied by all the devotees, andall of them were very pleased.

Sri Caitanya Caritamrta Madhya 12 - The Cleansing of theGundica Temple CC Madhya 12.1: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu washed and cleansed theGundica temple with His devotees and associates. In this way He made it ascool and bright as His own heart, and thus He made the temple a befittingplace for Lord Sri Krsna to sit.

CC Madhya 12.2: All glories to Gauracandra! All glories toNityananda! All
glories to Advaitacandra! And all glories to all the devotees ofLord Sri
Caitanya Mahaprabhu!

CC Madhya 12.3: All glories to the devotees of Lord Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu,
headed by Srivasa Thakura! I beg their power so that I can properlydescribe
Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu.

CC Madhya 12.4: When Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu returned from HisSouth Indian
tour, Maharaja Prataparudra, the King of Orissa, became veryanxious to meet
Him.

CC Madhya 12.5: The King sent a letter from his capital, Kataka,to
Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya, entreating him to obtain the Lord spermission so
that he could go and see Him.

CC Madhya 12.6: Replying to the King s letter, the Bhattacaryawrote that
Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu had not given His permission. After this,the King
wrote him another letter.

CC Madhya 12.7: In this letter the King requested SarvabhaumaBhattacarya,
"Please appeal to all the devotees associated with Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu
and submit this petition to them on my behalf.

CC Madhya 12.8: "If all the devotees associated with the Lord arefavorably
disposed toward me, they can submit my petition at the lotus feetof the
Lord.

CC Madhya 12.9: "By the mercy of all the devotees, one can attainthe
shelter of the lotus feet of the Lord. Without His mercy, mykingdom does
not appeal to me.

CC Madhya 12.10: "If Gaurahari, Lord Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, willnot show
mercy to me, I shall give up my kingdom, become a mendicant and begfrom
door to door."

CC Madhya 12.11: When the Bhattacarya received this letter, hebecame very
anxious. He then took the letter and went to the devotees of theLord.

CC Madhya 12.12: Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya met with all the devoteesand
described the King s wishes. Then he presented the letter to all ofthem for
inspection.

CC Madhya 12.13: Upon reading the letter, everyone was astonishedto see
that King Prataparudra had so much devotion for the lotus feet ofSri
Caitanya Mahaprabhu.

CC Madhya 12.14: The devotees gave their opinion and said, "TheLord will
never meet the King, and if we requested Him to do so, the Lordwould surely
feel very unhappy."

CC Madhya 12.15: Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya then said, "We shall goonce again
to the Lord, but we shall not request Him to meet the King. Rather,we shall
simply describe the good behavior of the King."

CC Madhya 12.16: Having thus reached a decision, they all went tothe place
of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. There, although ready to speak, theycould not
even utter a word.

CC Madhya 12.17: After they arrived at Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu splace, the
Lord, seeing them, said, "What have you all come here to say I seethat you
want to say something, but you do not speak. What is thereason"

CC Madhya 12.18: Nityananda Prabhu then said, "We want to tellYou
something. Although we cannot stay without speaking, we are stillvery much
afraid to speak.

CC Madhya 12.19: "We want to submit before You something that mayor may not
be befitting. The matter is this: unless he sees You, the King ofOrissa
will become a mendicant."

CC Madhya 12.20: Nityananda Prabhu continued, "The King has decidedto
become a mendicant and accept the sign of a mendicant by wearing anivory
earring. He does not want to enjoy his kingdom without seeing thelotus feet
of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu."

CC Madhya 12.21: Nityananda Prabhu continued, "The King alsoexpressed his
desire to see the moonlike face of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu to hiseyes full
satisfaction. He would like to raise the lotus feet of the Lord tohis
heart."

CC Madhya 12.22: Hearing all these statements, Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu s
mind was certainly softened, but externally He wished to speak someharsh
words.

CC Madhya 12.23: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu said, "I can understandthat you
all desire to take Me to Kataka to see the King."

CC Madhya 12.24: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu continued, "What to speakof
spiritual advancement - all the people will blaspheme Me. And whatto speak
of all the people - Damodara would chastise Me.

CC Madhya 12.25: "I shall not meet the King at the request of allthe
devotees, but I shall do so if Damodara will give hispermission."

CC Madhya 12.26: Damodara immediately replied, "My Lord, You arethe fully
independent Supreme Personality of Godhead. Since everything isknown to
You, You know what is permissible and what is not permissible.

CC Madhya 12.27: "I am merely an insignificant jiva, so what powerdo I have
to give directions to You By Your own personal choice You will meetwith the
King. I shall see it.

CC Madhya 12.28: "The King is very much attached to You, and Youare feeling
affection and love toward him. Thus I can understand that by virtueof the
King s affection for You, You will touch him.

CC Madhya 12.29: "Although You are the Supreme Personality ofGodhead and
are completely independent, still You are dependent on the loveand
affection of Your devotees. That is Your nature."

CC Madhya 12.30: Nityananda Prabhu then said, "Who is there in thethree
worlds who can ask You to see the King

CC Madhya 12.31: "Still, isn t it the nature of an attached man togive up
his life if he does not attain his desired object

CC Madhya 12.32: "For instance, some of the wives of the brahmanaswho were
performing sacrifices gave up their lives in the presence of theirhusbands
for the sake of Krsna."

CC Madhya 12.33: Nityananda Prabhu then submitted one suggestionfor the
Lord s consideration. "There is a way," He suggested, "by which Youneed not
meet the King but which would enable the King to continueliving.

CC Madhya 12.34: "If You, out of Your mercy, send one of Your outergarments
to the King, the King would live hoping to see You some time in thefuture."

CC Madhya 12.35: The Lord said, "Since you are all very learned
personalities, whatever you decide I shall accept."

CC Madhya 12.36: Lord Nityananda Prabhu then obtained an externalgarment
used by the Lord by requesting it from Govinda.

CC Madhya 12.37: Thus Nityananda Prabhu delivered the old clothinto the
care of Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya, and Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya sentit to the
King.

CC Madhya 12.38: When the King received the old cloth, he began toworship
it exactly as he would worship the Lord personally.

CC Madhya 12.39: After returning from his service in South India,Ramananda
Raya requested the King to allow him to remain with Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu.

CC Madhya 12.40: When Ramananda Raya requested the King to allowhim to stay
with the Lord, the King immediately gave him permission withgreat
satisfaction. As for the King himself, he began to solicitRamananda Raya to
make a meeting arrangement.

CC Madhya 12.41: The King told Ramananda Raya, "Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu is
very, very merciful to you. Therefore please solicit my meetingwith Him
without fail."

CC Madhya 12.42: The King and Ramananda Raya returned togetherto
Jagannathaksetra [Puri], and Sri Ramananda Raya met Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu.

CC Madhya 12.43: At that time, Ramananda Raya informed SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu about the ecstatic love of the King. Indeed, as soon asthere was
some opportunity, he repeatedly informed the Lord about theKing.

CC Madhya 12.44: Sri Ramananda Raya was indeed a diplomaticminister for the
King. His general behavior was very expert, and simply bydescribing the
King s love for Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, he gradually softened theLord s
mind.

CC Madhya 12.45: Maharaja Prataparudra, in great anxiety, could notendure
not seeing the Lord; therefore Sri Ramananda Raya, by hisdiplomacy,
arranged a meeting with the Lord for the King.

CC Madhya 12.46: Sri Ramananda Raya frankly requested SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu, "Please show Your lotus feet to the King at leastonce."

CC Madhya 12.47: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu replied, "My dearRamananda, you
should make this request after duly considering whether it isbefitting for
a sannyasi to meet a king.

CC Madhya 12.48: "If a mendicant meets a king, this world and thenext world
are both destroyed for the mendicant. Indeed, what is there to sayof the
next world In this world, people will joke if a sannyasi meets aking."

CC Madhya 12.49: Ramananda Raya replied, "My Lord, You are thesupreme
independent personality. You have nothing to fear from anyonebecause You
are not dependent on anyone."

CC Madhya 12.50: When Ramananda Raya addressed Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu as
the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Caitanya Mahaprabhu objected,saying, "I
am not the Supreme Personality of Godhead but an ordinary humanbeing.
Therefore I must fear public opinion in three ways - with My body,mind and
words.

CC Madhya 12.51: "As soon as the general public finds a littlefault in the
behavior of a sannyasi, they advertise it like wildfire. A blackspot of ink
cannot be hidden on a white cloth. It is always veryprominent."

CC Madhya 12.52: Ramananda Raya replied, "My dear Lord, You havedelivered
so many sinful people. This King Prataparudra, the King of Orissa,is
actually a servitor of the Lord and Your devotee."

CC Madhya 12.53: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu then said, "There may bemuch milk
in a big pot, but if it is contaminated by a drop of liquor, itis
untouchable.

CC Madhya 12.54: "The King certainly possesses all good qualities,but
simply by taking up the name king, he has infected everything.

CC Madhya 12.55: "But if you are still very eager for the King tomeet with
Me, please first bring his son to meet Me.

CC Madhya 12.56: "It is indicated in the revealed scriptures thatthe son
represents the father; therefore the son s meeting with Me would bejust as
good as the King s meeting with Me."

CC Madhya 12.57: Ramananda Raya then went to inform the King abouthis talks
with Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, and, following the Lord s orders,brought the
King s son to see Him.

CC Madhya 12.58: The prince, just entering upon his youth, wasvery
beautiful. He was blackish in complexion and had large lotuseyes.

CC Madhya 12.59: The prince was dressed in yellow cloth, and therewere
jeweled ornaments decorating his body. Therefore anyone who saw himwould
remember Lord Krsna.

CC Madhya 12.60: Seeing the boy, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhuimmediately
remembered Krsna. Meeting the boy in ecstatic love, the Lord beganto speak.

CC Madhya 12.61: "Here is a great devotee," Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhusaid.
"Upon seeing him, everyone can remember the Supreme Personality ofGodhead,
Krsna, son of Maharaja Nanda."

CC Madhya 12.62: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu continued, "I have becomevery much
obligated just by seeing this boy." After saying this, the Lordagain
embraced the prince.

CC Madhya 12.63: As soon as the prince was touched by Lord SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu, symptoms of ecstatic love immediately manifestedthemselves in
his body. These symptoms included perspiration, trembling, tears,being
stunned and jubilation.

CC Madhya 12.64: The boy began to cry and dance, and he chanted,"Krsna!
Krsna!" Upon seeing his bodily symptoms and his chanting anddancing, all
the devotees praised him for his great spiritual fortune.

CC Madhya 12.65: At that time, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu calmed theyouth and
ordered him to come there daily to meet Him.

CC Madhya 12.66: Ramananda Raya and the boy then departed from SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu, and Ramananda took him back to the King s palace. TheKing was
very happy when he heard of his son s activities.

CC Madhya 12.67: Just by embracing his son, the King was filledwith
ecstatic love, just as if he had touched Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhudirectly.

CC Madhya 12.68: From then on, the fortunate prince was one of themost
intimate devotees of the Lord.

CC Madhya 12.69: Thus Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu acted in the societyof His
pure devotees, performing His pastimes and spreading the sankirtana
movement.

CC Madhya 12.70: Some of the prominent devotees like Advaita Acaryaused to
invite Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu to take His meals at their homes.The Lord
accepted such invitations accompanied by His devotees.

CC Madhya 12.71: In this way, the Lord passed some days in greatjubilation.
Then the car festival of Lord Jagannatha approached.

CC Madhya 12.72: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu first of all called forKas i Mis
ra, then for the superintendent of the temple, then forSarvabhauma
Bhattacarya.

CC Madhya 12.73: When these three people came before the Lord, Hebegged
them for permission to wash the temple known as Gundica.

CC Madhya 12.74: Upon hearing the Lord s request for permission towash the
Gundica temple, the padicha, the superintendent of thetemple, said, "My
dear Sir, we are all Your servants. Whatever You desire is our dutyto
perform.

CC Madhya 12.75: "The King gave a special order for me to dowithout delay
whatever Your Lordship orders.

CC Madhya 12.76: "My dear Lord, washing the temple is not servicebefitting
You. Nonetheless, if You wish to do so, it is to be accepted as oneof Your
pastimes.

CC Madhya 12.77: "To wash the temple, You need many waterpots andbrooms.
Therefore order me. I can immediately bring all these things toYou."

CC Madhya 12.78: As soon as the superintendent understood thedesire of the
Lord, he immediately delivered a hundred new waterpots and ahundred brooms
for sweeping the temple.

CC Madhya 12.79: The next day, early in the morning, the Lord tookHis
personal associates with Him and, with His own hand, smearedsandalwood pulp
on their bodies.

CC Madhya 12.80: He then gave each devotee a broom with His ownhand, and
taking all of them personally with Him, the Lord went toGundica.

CC Madhya 12.81: In this way the Lord and His associates went tocleanse the
Gundica temple. At first they cleansed the temple with thebrooms.

CC Madhya 12.82: The Lord cleansed everything inside the templevery nicely,
including the ceiling. He then took up the sitting place[simhasana],
cleansed it and again put it in its original place.

CC Madhya 12.83: Thus the Lord and His companions cleansed andswept all the
temple s buildings, big and small, and finally cleansed the areabetween the
temple and the kirtana hall.

CC Madhya 12.84: Indeed, hundreds of devotees were engaged incleansing all
around the temple, and Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu was personallycarrying out
the operation just to instruct others.

CC Madhya 12.85: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu washed and cleansed thetemple in
great jubilation, chanting the holy name of Lord Krsna all thetime.
Similarly, all the devotees were also chanting and at the sametime
performing their respective duties.

CC Madhya 12.86: The entire beautiful body of the Lord was coveredwith dust
and dirt. In this way it became transcendentally beautiful. Attimes, when
cleansing the temple, the Lord shed tears, and in some places Heeven
cleansed with those tears.

CC Madhya 12.87: After this, the place where the Deity s food waskept
[bhogamandira] was cleansed. Then the yard was cleansed, and thenall the
residential quarters, one after the other.

CC Madhya 12.88: After Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu collected all thestraw, dust
and grains of sand in one place, He gathered it all in His clothand threw
it outside.

CC Madhya 12.89: Following the example of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu,all the
devotees, in great jubilation, began to gather straws and dust withtheir
own cloths and throw them outside the temple.

CC Madhya 12.90: The Lord then told the devotees, "I can tell howmuch you
have labored and how well you have cleansed the temple simply byseeing all
the straw and dust you have collected outside."

CC Madhya 12.91: Even though all the devotees collected dirt in onepile,
the dirt collected by Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu was much greater.

CC Madhya 12.92: After the inside of the temple was cleansed, theLord again
allotted areas for the devotees to cleanse.

CC Madhya 12.93: The Lord then ordered everyone to cleanse theinside of the
temple very perfectly by taking finer dust, straws and grains ofsand and
throwing them outside.

CC Madhya 12.94: After Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu and all theVaisnavas
cleansed the temple for the second time, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhuwas very
happy to see the cleansing work.

CC Madhya 12.95: While the temple was being swept, about a hundredmen stood
ready with filled waterpots, and they simply awaited the Lord sorder to
throw the water from them.

CC Madhya 12.96: As soon as Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu called forwater, all
the men immediately brought the hundred waterpots, which werecompletely
filled, and delivered them before the Lord.

CC Madhya 12.97: In this way, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu first washedthe main
temple and then thoroughly washed the ceiling, the walls, thefloor, the
sitting place [simhasana] and everything else within the room.

CC Madhya 12.98: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu Himself and His devoteesbegan to
throw water onto the ceiling. When this water fell, it washed thewalls and
floor.

CC Madhya 12.99: Then Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu began to wash thesitting
place of Lord Jagannatha with His own hands, and all the devoteesbegan to
bring water to the Lord.

CC Madhya 12.100: All the devotees within the temple began to wash.Each one
had a broom in his hand, and in this way they cleansed the templeof the
Lord.

CC Madhya 12.101: Someone brought water to pour into the hands ofSri
Caitanya Mahaprabhu, and someone poured water on His lotusfeet.

CC Madhya 12.102: The water that fell from the lotus feet of SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu was drunk by someone who hid himself. Someone elsebegged for
that water, and another person was giving that water incharity.

CC Madhya 12.103: After the room was washed, the water was let outthrough
an outlet, and it then flowed and filled the yard outside.

CC Madhya 12.104: The Lord mopped the rooms with His own clothes,and He
polished the throne with them also.

CC Madhya 12.105: In this way all the rooms were cleansed with ahundred
waterpots. After the rooms had been cleansed, the minds of thedevotees were
as clean as the rooms.

CC Madhya 12.106: When the temple was cleansed, it was purified,cool and
pleasing, just as if the Lord s own pure mind had appeared.

CC Madhya 12.107: Since hundreds of men were engaged in bringingwater from
the lake, there was no place to stand on the banks. Consequentlysomeone
began to draw water from a well.

CC Madhya 12.108: Hundreds of devotees brought water in the pots,and
hundreds took the empty pots away to fill them up again.

CC Madhya 12.109: With the exception of Nityananda Prabhu, AdvaitaAcarya,
Svarupa Damodara, Brahmananda Bharati and Paramananda Puri,everyone was
engaged in filling the waterpots and bringing them there.

CC Madhya 12.110: Many of the waterpots were broken when peoplecollided
with one another, and hundreds of men had to bring new waterpots tofill.

CC Madhya 12.111: Some people were filling the pots, and otherswere washing
the rooms, but everyone was engaged in chanting the holy name ofKrsna and
Hari.

CC Madhya 12.112: One person begged for a waterpot by chanting theholy
names "Krsna, Krsna," and another delivered a pot while chanting"Krsna,
Krsna."

CC Madhya 12.113: Whenever anyone had to speak, he did so byuttering the
holy name of Krsna. Consequently, the holy name of Krsna becamean
indication for everyone who wanted something.

CC Madhya 12.114: As Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu was vibrating the holyname of
Krsna in ecstatic love, He Himself was performing the work ofhundreds of
men.

CC Madhya 12.115: It appeared as though Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhuwere
cleansing and washing with a hundred hands. He approached everydevotee just
to teach him how to work.

CC Madhya 12.116: When He saw someone doing nicely, the Lordpraised him,
but if He saw that someone was not working to His satisfaction,He
immediately chastised that person, not bearing him any grudge.

CC Madhya 12.117: The Lord would say, "You have done well. Pleaseteach this
to others so that they may act in the same way."

CC Madhya 12.118: As soon as they heard Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu saythis,
everyone became ashamed. Thus the devotees began to work withgreat
attention.

CC Madhya 12.119: They washed the Jagamohana area and then theplace where
food was kept. All other places were also washed.

CC Madhya 12.120: In this way the meeting place was washed, theentire yard,
the raised sitting places, the kitchen and every other room.

CC Madhya 12.121: Thus all places around the temple were thoroughlywashed
within and without.

CC Madhya 12.122: After everything was thoroughly washed, aVaisnava from
Bengal, who was very intelligent and simple, came and poured wateron the
lotus feet of the Lord.

CC Madhya 12.123: The Gaudiya Vaisnava then took that water anddrank it
himself. Seeing that, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu felt a little unhappyand was
also outwardly angry.

CC Madhya 12.124: Although the Lord was certainly satisfied withhim, He
became angry externally in order to establish the etiquette ofreligious
principles.

CC Madhya 12.125: The Lord then called for Svarupa Damodara andtold him,
"Just see the behavior of your Bengali Vaisnava.

CC Madhya 12.126: "This person from Bengal has washed My feetwithin the
temple of the Personality of Godhead. Not only that, but he hasdrunk the
water himself.

CC Madhya 12.127: "I now do not know what My destination is becauseof this
offense. Indeed, your Bengali Vaisnava has greatly implicatedMe."

CC Madhya 12.128: At this point Svarupa Damodara Gosvami caught theGaudiya
Vaisnava by the neck and, giving him a little push, ejected himfrom the
Gundica Puri temple and made him stay outside.

CC Madhya 12.129: After Svarupa Damodara Gosvami returned withinthe temple,
he requested Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu to excuse that innocentperson.

CC Madhya 12.130: After this incident, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu wasvery
satisfied. He then asked all of the devotees to sit down in twolines on
both sides.

CC Madhya 12.131: The Lord then personally sat down in the middleand picked
up all kinds of straw, grains of sand and dirty things.

CC Madhya 12.132: While Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu was picking up thestraws
and grains of sand, He said, "I shall gather everyone s collection,and I
shall ask whoever has collected less than all the others to pay afine of
sweet cakes and sweet rice."

CC Madhya 12.133: In this way all the quarters of the Gundica temple were
completely cleansed and cleared. All quarters were cool andspotless, like
one s cleansed and pacified mind.

CC Madhya 12.134: When the water from the different rooms wasfinally let
out through the halls, it appeared as if new rivers were rushingout to meet
the waters of the ocean.

CC Madhya 12.135: Outside the gateway of the temple, all the roadswere also
cleansed, and no one could tell exactly how this was done.

CC Madhya 12.136: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu also cleansed the Nrsimhatemple
inside and outside. Finally, He rested a few minutes and then begandancing.

CC Madhya 12.137: All around Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu all thedevotees
performed congregational chanting. The Lord, just like a maddenedlion,
danced in the middle.

CC Madhya 12.138: As usual, when Caitanya Mahaprabhu danced, therewere
perspiration, trembling, fading, tears, jubilation and roaring.Indeed, the
tears from His eyes washed His body and those before Him.

CC Madhya 12.139: In this way Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu washed thebodies of
all the devotees with the tears from His eyes. The tears pouredlike the
rains in the month of Sravana.

CC Madhya 12.140: The sky was filled with the great and loudchanting of san
kirtana, and the earth shook from the jumping and dancing of LordCaitanya
Mahaprabhu.

CC Madhya 12.141: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu always liked the loudchanting of
Svarupa Damodara. Therefore when Svarupa Damodara sang, SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu danced and jumped high in jubilation.

CC Madhya 12.142: The Lord thus chanted and danced for some time.Finally,
understanding the circumstances, He stopped.

CC Madhya 12.143: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu then ordered Sri Gopala,the son
of Advaita Acarya, to dance.

CC Madhya 12.144: While dancing in ecstatic love, Sri Gopalafainted and
fell to the ground unconscious.

CC Madhya 12.145: When Sri Gopala fainted, Advaita Acarya hastilytook him
upon His lap. Seeing that he was not breathing, He became verymuch
agitated.

CC Madhya 12.146: Advaita Acarya and others began to chant the holyname of
Lord Nrsimha and sprinkle water. The roaring of the chant was sogreat that
it seemed to shake the entire universe.

CC Madhya 12.147: When the boy did not regain consciousness aftersome time,
Advaita Acarya and the other devotees began to cry.

CC Madhya 12.148: Then Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu placed His hand onthe chest
of Sri Gopala and said loudly, "Gopala, stand up."

CC Madhya 12.149: As soon as Gopala heard the voice of SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu, he immediately came to his senses. All the devoteesthen began
to dance, chanting the holy name of Hari.

CC Madhya 12.150: This incident has been described in detail byVrndavana
dasa Thakura. Therefore I have described it only in brief.

CC Madhya 12.151: After taking rest, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu andall the
devotees departed to take their baths.

CC Madhya 12.152: After bathing, the Lord stood on the bank of thelake and
put on dry garments. After offering obeisances to Lord Nrsimhadeva,whose
temple was nearby, the Lord entered a garden.

CC Madhya 12.153: In the garden, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu sat downwith the
other devotees. Vaninatha Raya then came and brought all kindsof
mahaprasadam.

CC Madhya 12.154155: Kas i Mis ra and Tulasi, the superintendent ofthe
temple, brought as much prasadam as five hundred men could eat.Seeing the
large quantity of prasadam, which consisted of rice, cakes, sweetrice and a
variety of vegetables, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu was verysatisfied.

CC Madhya 12.156: Among the devotees present with Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu
were Paramananda Puri, Brahmananda Bharati, Advaita Acarya andNityananda
Prabhu.

CC Madhya 12.157: Acaryaratna, Acaryanidhi, Srivasa Thakura,Gadadhara
Pandita, San kara, Nandanacarya, Raghava Pandita and Vakres varawere also
present.

CC Madhya 12.158: Receiving the permission of the Lord,Sarvabhauma
Bhattacarya sat down. Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu and all His devoteessat on
raised wooden seats.

CC Madhya 12.159: In this way all the devotees sat down to taketheir lunch
in consecutive lines, one beside the other.

CC Madhya 12.160: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu was repeatedly calling,"Haridasa,
Haridasa," and at that time Haridasa, standing at a distance, spokeas
follows.

CC Madhya 12.161: Haridasa Thakura said, "Let Lord Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu
take His lunch with the devotees. Since I am abominable, I cannotsit down
among you.

CC Madhya 12.162: "Govinda will give me prasadam later, outside thedoor."
Understanding his mind, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu did not call himagain.

CC Madhya 12.163164: Svarupa Damodara Gosvami, Jagadananda,Damodara
Pandita, Kas is vara, Gopinatha, Vaninatha and San karadistributed
prasadam, and the devotees chanted the holy names at intervals.

CC Madhya 12.165: Lord Sri Krsna had previously taken His lunch inthe
forest, and that very pastime was remembered by Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu.

CC Madhya 12.166: Just by remembering the pastimes of Lord SriKrsna, Sri
Caitanya Mahaprabhu was agitated by ecstatic love. But consideringthe time
and circumstance, He remained somewhat patient.

CC Madhya 12.167: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu said, "You can give Methe
ordinary vegetable known as laphravyañjana, and you may deliver toall the
devotees better preparations like cakes, sweet rice andamrtagutika."

CC Madhya 12.168: Since Lord Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu is omniscient,He knew
what types of preparations each person liked. He therefore hadSvarupa
Damodara deliver these preparations to each devotee to his full
satisfaction.

CC Madhya 12.169: Jagadananda went to distribute prasadam, andsuddenly he
placed all the firstclass preparations on the plate of SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu.

CC Madhya 12.170: When such nice prasadam was put on the plate ofSri
Caitanya Mahaprabhu, the Lord was outwardly very angry.Nonetheless, when
the preparations were placed on His plate sometimes by tricks andsometimes
by force, the Lord was satisfied.

CC Madhya 12.171: When the food was thus delivered, Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu
looked at it for some time. Being afraid of Jagadananda, He finallyate
something.

CC Madhya 12.172: The Lord knew that if He did not eat the foodoffered by
Jagadananda, Jagadananda would certainly fast. Being afraid ofthis, Lord
Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu ate some of the prasadam he offered.

CC Madhya 12.173: Svarupa Damodara Gosvami then brought someexcellent
sweetmeats and, standing before the Lord, offered them to Him.

CC Madhya 12.174: Svarupa Damodara Gosvami then said, "Just take alittle of
this mahaprasadam, and see how it is that Lord Jagannatha hasaccepted it."

CC Madhya 12.175: Upon saying this, Svarupa Damodara Gosvami placedsome
food before the Lord, and the Lord, out of affection, ate it.

CC Madhya 12.176: Svarupa Damodara and Jagadananda again and againoffered
the Lord some food. Thus they behaved affectionately with the Lord.This was
very, very uncommon.

CC Madhya 12.177: The Lord made Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya sit on Hisleft
side, and when Sarvabhauma saw the behavior of Svarupa Damodaraand
Jagadananda, he smiled.

CC Madhya 12.178: Lord Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu also wanted tooffer
Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya firstclass food; therefore, out ofaffection, He had
the servers put firstclass food on his plate again and again.

CC Madhya 12.179: Gopinatha Acarya also brought firstclass food andoffered
it to Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya while speaking sweet words.

CC Madhya 12.180: After serving the Bhattacarya with firstclassprasadam,
Gopinatha Acarya said, "Just consider what the Bhattacarya sprevious
mundane behavior was! Just consider how at present he isenjoying
transcendental bliss!"

CC Madhya 12.181: Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya replied to GopinathaAcarya, "I
was simply a less intelligent logician. But by your grace I havereceived
this opulence of perfection.

CC Madhya 12.182: "But for Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu," SarvabhaumaBhattacarya
continued, "who is so merciful He has converted a crow into aGaruda. Who
could be so merciful

CC Madhya 12.183: "In the association of the jackals known aslogicians, I
simply continued to bark a resounding bheu bheu. Now, from the samemouth I
am chanting the holy names Krsna and Hari.

CC Madhya 12.184: "Whereas I once associated with the disciples oflogic,
all nondevotees, I am now merged in the waves of the nectareanocean of the
association of devotees."

CC Madhya 12.185: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu said to SarvabhaumaBhattacarya,
"From your previous birth you have been in Krsna consciousness.Thus you
love Krsna so much that simply by your association we are alldeveloping
Krsna consciousness."

CC Madhya 12.186: Thus there is no one within these three worlds -save for
Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu - who is always so willing to increase theglories
of the devotees and give them satisfaction.

CC Madhya 12.187: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu then took all theremnants of food
offered to Jagannatha, such as cakes and sweet rice, anddistributed them to
all the other devotees, calling them individually.

CC Madhya 12.188: Sri Advaita Acarya and Nityananda Prabhu sat sideby side,
and when prasadam was being distributed They engaged in a type ofmock
fighting.

CC Madhya 12.189: First Advaita Acarya said, "I am sitting in linewith an
unknown mendicant, and because I am eating with Him, I do not knowwhat kind
of destination is awaiting Me.

CC Madhya 12.190: "Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu is in the renouncedorder of
life. Consequently He does not recognize discrepancies. As a matterof fact,
a sannyasi is not affected by eating food from anywhere andeverywhere.

CC Madhya 12.191: "According to the s astras, there is nodiscrepancy in a
sannyasi s eating at another s house. But for a householderbrahmana, this
kind of eating is faulty.

CC Madhya 12.192: "It is not proper for householders to dine withthose
whose previous birth, family, character and behavior areunknown."

CC Madhya 12.193: Nityananda Prabhu immediately refuted SrilaAdvaita
Acarya, saying, "You are a teacher of impersonal monism, and themonistic
conclusion is a great hindrance to progressive, pure devotionalservice.

CC Madhya 12.194: "One who participates in Your impersonalmonistic
philosophy does not accept anything but the one Brahman."

CC Madhya 12.195: Nityananda Prabhu continued, "You are such amonist! And
now I am eating beside You. I do not know how My mind will beaffected in
this way."

CC Madhya 12.196: Thus They both went on talking and praising oneanother,
although Their praise appeared negative, for it appeared as ifThey
exchanged ill names.

CC Madhya 12.197: Thereafter, calling all the Vaisnavas, SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu distributed mahaprasadam as if sprinkling nectar. Atthat time
the mock fight between Advaita Acarya and Nityananda Prabhu becamemore and
more delicious.

CC Madhya 12.198: After taking their lunch, all the Vaisnavas stoodup and
chanted the holy name of Hari, and the resounding noise filled allthe upper
and lower planetary systems.

CC Madhya 12.199: After this, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu offeredflower
garlands and sandalwood pulp to all His devoted personalassociates.

CC Madhya 12.200: The seven persons headed by Svarupa Damodara whowere
engaged in distributing prasadam to others then took their mealswithin the
room.

CC Madhya 12.201: Govinda saved some remnants of food left by SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu and kept them carefully. Later, one portion of theseremnants was
delivered to Haridasa Thakura.

CC Madhya 12.202: The remnants of food left by Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu were
later distributed among devotees who begged for them, and finallyGovinda
personally took the last remnants.

CC Madhya 12.203: The fully independent Supreme Personality ofGodhead
performs various types of pastimes. The pastime of washing andcleansing the
Gundica temple is but one of them.

CC Madhya 12.204: The next day marked the performance of thefestival of
Netrotsava. This great festival was the life and soul of thedevotees.

CC Madhya 12.205: Everyone was unhappy for a fortnight because theycould
not see the Deity of Lord Jagannatha. Upon seeing the Lord at thefestival,
the devotees were very happy.

CC Madhya 12.206: On this occasion, greatly happy, Sri CaitanyaMahaprabhu
took all the devotees with Him and visited the Lord in thetemple.

CC Madhya 12.207: When Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu went to visit thetemple, Kas
is vara walked in front, checking the crowds of people, and Govindawalked
in the rear, bringing the sannyasi s pitcher filled with water.

CC Madhya 12.208: When Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu went toward thetemple,
Paramananda Puri and Brahmananda Bharati walked in front of Him,and at His
two sides walked Svarupa Damodara and Advaita Acarya.

CC Madhya 12.209: With great eagerness all the other devoteesfollowed them
into the temple of Lord Jagannatha.

CC Madhya 12.210: Out of great eagerness to see the Lord, they allneglected
the regulative principles and, just to see the Lord s face, went tothe
place where the food was offered.

CC Madhya 12.211: Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu was very thirsty to seethe Lord,
and His eyes became like two bumblebees drinking the honey fromthe
lotuslike eyes of Lord Jagannatha, who is Krsna Himself.

CC Madhya 12.212: The eyes of Lord Jagannatha conquered the beautyof
blossoming lotus flowers, and His neck was as lustrous as a mirrormade of
sapphires.

CC Madhya 12.213: The chin of the Lord, tinged with buff color,conquered
the beauty of the bandhuli flower. This increased the beauty of Hismild
smiling, which was like lustrous waves of nectar.

CC Madhya 12.214: The luster of His beautiful face increased atevery
moment, and the eyes of hundreds and thousands of devotees drankits honey
like bumblebees.

CC Madhya 12.215: As their eyes began to drink the nectarean honeyof His
lotus face, their thirst increased. Thus their eyes did not leaveHim.

CC Madhya 12.216: Thus Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu and His devoteesenjoyed
transcendental bliss upon seeing the face of Jagannatha. Thiscontinued to
midday.

CC Madhya 12.217: As usual, there were transcendental blissfulsymptoms in
Caitanya Mahaprabhu s body. He perspired and trembled, and aconstant flow
of tears fell from His eyes. But the Lord checked these tears sothey would
not disturb His seeing the face of the Lord.

CC Madhya 12.218: Their looking at the face of Lord Jagannathawas
interrupted only when He was offered food. Afterwards they wouldagain look
upon His face. When the food was being offered to the Lord, SriCaitanya
Mahaprabhu performed His kirtana.

CC Madhya 12.219: Feeling such great pleasure upon seeing the faceof Lord
Jagannatha, Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu forgot everything. Thedevotees,
however, took Him to His lunch at noontime.

CC Madhya 12.220: Knowing that the car festival would take place inthe
morning, all the servants of Lord Jagannatha were doubling theirofferings
of food.I have briefly described the pastimes of the Lord inwashing and
cleansing the Gundica temple. By seeing or hearing these pastimes,even
sinful men can awaken their Krsna consciousness.

CC Madhya 12.222: Praying at the lotus feet of Sri Rupa and SriRaghunatha,
always desiring their mercy, I, Krsnadasa, narrate SriCaitanyacaritamrta,
following in their footsteps.

SRILA BHAKTIVINODA THAKURA KI JAYA

Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura – Biography

Bhaktivinod Thakur
Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur.
 namo bhaktivinodaya saccidananda-murtaye
gaura-shakti-svarupaya rupanuga-varaya te
   I offer my obeisances to you, O Bhaktivinoda, the form of eternity, knowledge and bliss, the incarnation of Gaura’s potency and the best of the followers of Rupa Goswami.
   Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s transcendental identity is revealed to the members of his spiritual family. He is the best of the followers of Rupa Manjari who is the leader of Lalita Sakhi’s entourage. Lalita Sakhi is the foremost of Radharani’s eight girlfriends. In various places in his own writings, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur has indicated this divine identity:
yugala-sevaya, shri-rasa-mandale, niyukta kara amay
lalita-sakhira, ayogya-kinkari, vinoda dhariche pay
   Bhaktivinoda holds your feet and asks you to engage this unworthy servant of Lalita Sakhi in the service of the Divine Couple while they are performing the rasa-lila.
(Kalyana-kalpataru)
   In the song Siddhi-lalasa in his Gita-mala, also, Bhaktivinoda Thakur gives his eternal spiritual identity as Kamala Manjari, the servant of Sri Rupa Manjari. Her kunja is in the bower of Lalita, Vrajananda-sukhada-kuïja, where she sets the standard of worship to the Divine Couple.
varane tariit, vasa taravali, kamala-maïjari nama
sarie baro varsha, vayas satata, svananda-sukhada dhama
   My bodily hue is like that of lightning and I wear a sari the colour of a clear night sky sprinkled with stars. I am twelve and a half years old and I live in Svananda-sukhada-kuïja.
The need for Bhaktivinoda’s appearance
   After the disappearance of Sri Krishna Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Svarupa Damodar, Ramananda Raya and the Six Goswamis, Srinivas Acharya, Narottama Das and Shyamananda Prabhu, a dark age descended on the world of Gaudiya Vaishnavism. Those unable to understand the transcendental purity of Mahaprabhu’s religion of love started numerous heretical sects or apasampradayas. Totarama Das Babaji named thirteen such heretical sects:
aul, baul, kartabhaja, neria, daravesha, sain
sahajiya, sakhibheki, smarta, jata-gosaïi
atibarii, curiadhari, gauranga-nagari
tota kahe ei teror sanga nahi kari
   Educated upper class Bengali society was shocked and disgusted by the practices of these heretical sects and came to identify Mahaprabhu’s religion with the lower classes, the uneducated and immoral. People of the gentle classes thus had no understanding or faith in Mahaprabhu’s true religion. The most munificent incarnation Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu took pity on these bewildered persons and in order to reclaim them for his path of divine love sent his eternal associate Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur into this world. Possessed of superhuman prowess, the Thakur wrote more than a hundred books in several different languages with the goal of defeating all the unorthodox views opposed to the true doctrines of Mahaprabhu’s religion. The result was that many members of discerning society and others from all over the world came to recognize the unequalled value of Mahaprabhu’s teachings. The founder of the Chaitanya Math and the worldwide Gaudiya Maths, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur, based his mission on the books and teachings given by Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur and set into motion the fulfillment of Mahaprabhu’s message, found in the Chaitanya Bhagavat:
prithivite paryanta ache jata desha-grama
sarvatra saïcara ha+ibeka mora nama
   My name will pervade every village and country in the world. (Chaitanya Bhagavat 3.4.126) 
Bhaktivinod Thakur
My name will pervade every village and country in the world. (Chaitanya Bhagavat 3.4.126)

   Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur thus made an unequalled contribution to the ultimate, spiritual welfare of humankind. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur wrote in his preface to the Jaiva-dharma: “Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur is an extremely dear associate of Sri Chaitanya Chandra. In the course of time, when those who preached the desires of Chaitanya Deva had left this world to enter the Lord’s eternal pastimes, the sky over Bengal slowly darkened, covered by the thick clouds of sensual enjoyment and false renunciation. The sky was covered and the world was bereft of the rays of light coming from the sankirtan propagated by Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu. One by one, the sun, the moon and the unlimited stars of that sky faded from view, leaving only the occasional flash of lightning to disrupt the unending darkness of ignorance. Almost 350 years after the appearance of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur came to illuminate the Gaudiya sky.
   All the great virtues are present in the body of a Vaishnava. The good qualities of Krishna gradually develop in his Devotees. All these transcendental qualities are the characteristics of pure Vaishnavas, and they cannot be fully explained, but I shall try to point out some of the most important. Devotees are always merciful; they are not bellicose. They are truthful, equal to all, faultless, generous, mild and clean. They are without material possessions, and they work for the welfare of all. They are peaceful, surrendered to Krishna and desireless. They are meek, resolute, and completely control the six character flaws of lust, anger, greed and so forth. They eat only as much as required and are prudent, respectful, and free from false prestige. They are grave, sympathetic, friendly, poetic, expert and silent.
(Chaitanya-caritamrita 2.22.75-80)
   “All these Devotee qualities were perfectly displayed by Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur throughout his life of pure devotion. The ocean of compassion, Sri Gaurahari, displayed this merciful nature to the conditioned souls in nine different ways. The same kind of distribution of mercy is seen in the life and work of Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur.”
The Sampradaya’s debt to Bhaktivinoda Thakur
   Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur is the root of the daily activities in the Chaitanya Math, the Gaudiya Math, the Chaitanya Gaudiya Math, the Gaudiya Missions, etc. The Gaudiya Math institutions cannot be separated from Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur. These institutions are entirely indebted to his sublime contributions.
   Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur has written, “Devotees in the line of Srila Rupa Goswami do not preach faith in their own powers, but rather direct attention to the source of their spiritual strength. We also do everything for the sake of Sri Krishna Chaitanya, Sri Rupa, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur and our divine spiritual master.”
(From Patravali, Srila Prabhupada’s letters, vol. 3, p. 89.)
   Devotees of the Brahma-Madhva-Sarasvata-Gaudiya sampradaya pay their respects daily to Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur as follows:
shuddha-bhakti-pracarasya mulibhuta ihottamah
shri-bhaktivinodo devas tat-priyatvena vishrutah
Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur is a transcendental personality who is the root of the preaching movement of pure devotion. He is renowned as one who is dear to Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu.
Hymns to Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur
   Two of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur’s most prominent disciples, His Grace Bhaktirakshaka Shridhara Deva Goswami and His Grace Bhaktivicara Yayabara Maharaj wrote hymns in praise of Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur, the former in Sanskrit, the latter in Bengali. These have been given below:
vande bhaktivinodam shri-gaurashakti-Svarupakam
bhakti-shastra-jïa-samrajam radha-rasa-sudhanidhim
   I bow to Sri Thakur Bhaktivinoda, Mahaprabhu’s divine energies personified. He is the emperor of Vaishnava scholars and possesses the ambrosial treasure of Sri Radha’s sacred rapture.
Bhakativinoda prabhu, daya koro more
tava kripa bale pai shri-prabhupadere
bhakati-siddhanta sarasvati prabhupada
jagate aniya dile kariya prasada
sarasvati krishna-priya, krishna-bhakti tanra hiya
vinodera sei se vaibhava
ei gitera bhavartha, prabhupada para-artha
ebe mora kari anubhava
   O Bhaktivinoda Prabhu, be merciful to me, for by your blessings I can attain Srila Prabhupada, Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati. Out of compassion for the world, you brought him whose heart is filled with devotion to Krishna and who is dear to Krishna. This is the glory of Bhaktivinoda Thakur. The purpose of this song is to find complete dedication to Srila Prabhupada and this is what we now experience.
shri-caitanya-janma-sthana shri-mayapura
tomara pracare ebe janila samsara
shikshamrita, jaiva-dharma, adi grantha shata
sajjana-toshani-patri sarva-samadrita
ei saba grantha-patri kariya pracara
lupta-praya shuddha-bhakti karile uddhara
jivere janale tumi hao krishna-dasa
krishna bhajo krishna cinto charii anya asha
krishna-dasye jiva saba parananda pay
sakala vipad ha’te mukta haye jay
   The whole world has learned that Chaitanya’s birthplace is in Mayapur thanks to your preaching efforts. Your hundred books such as Sri-Chaitanya-Shikshamrita, Jaiva Dharma, etc., and your magazine, Sajjana-toshani are valued by all. You preached these books and magazines and by so doing were able to restore the religion of pure devotion which had almost been lost. You told the fallen souls that they were in truth servants of Krishna and you told them to worship Krishna, to think of Krishna and to give up all other ambition. Through service to Krishna, the living being finds full happiness in life and freedom from all danger.
apani acari dharma shikhale sabare
grihe kimba dhame thaki bhajaha krishnere
gadadhara-gaurahari-seva prakashile
shri-radha-madhava-rupe tandera dekhile
gosvami-ganera grantha vicara kariya
susiddhanta shikhayeche pramanadi diya
taha parii shuni loka akrishta haila
jaga-bhari tava nama gahite lagila
vyasera abhinna tumi purana prakasha
shuk_bhinna prabhupada shri-dayita-dasa
   You taught everyone by your own example that they should worship Krishna whether they are living as a householder or residing in the dham. You consecrated Deities of Gadadhara-Gauranga, seeing Radha and Madhava in them. You studied the scriptures of the Goswamis and preached the pure doctrines that you found there with the appropriate evidence. Those who heard and read these doctrines were attracted and began to sing your glories throughout the world. You are like Vyasadeva who published the Puranas, and Srila Prabhupada, Dayita Das, your son, is like Sukadeva.
vaishnavera jata guna achaye granthete
sakala prakasha haila tomara dehete
shri-gaura-mandala majhe shri-biranagar
tava avirbhava sthana sarva-shubhankara
vandi ami nata-shire sei punya-kshetra
mastake dharana kari se dhuli pavitra
tomara kripaya ishodyane sthana pai
bhagavata-mathe basi tava nama gai
tomara dasanudasa yati yayabara
prarthana karaye dhama-vasa nirantara
   All the Vaishnava qualities described in the books are manifest in your body. You appeared in Gaura-mandala-bhumi, in the village of Birnagar, a place which is auspicious for all. I worship that holy spot with my head bowed low, taking its holy dust on my head. By your mercy, I have found a place in Ishodyan, the divine garden of Mayapur, and here in the Bhagavata Math, I glorify your name. The servant of your servants, the sannyasi Yayabara, prays to you to grant him eternal life in the Holy Dhama.
Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s family history
   Just as the Supreme Lord Sri Krishna’s highest perfection is in his human activities in a human form, so similarly his eternal associates also act in human-like ways when they descend to the worldly platform for the benefit of the fallen living entities. Even though they appear to be ordinary human beings, they are in fact never touched by the illusory nature and always remain transcendental to it. They may be situated in householder life, but they are never entangled in material sensual desires like an ordinary conditioned soul because of their deep attachment and love for the Lord. They are simply engaged in a pastime whereby they imitate the activities of the rest of mankind for the sake of exchanging with them for the purposes of benefitting them. Those who have surrendered with sincerity to Vishnu and the Vaishnavas are able to recognize the non-material character of these personalities.
   The King Adishura invited Brahmins and other upper class Hindus to Bengal, amongst whom was the kayastha Purushottam. His seventh and eighth generation descendants were Sri Vinayaka and Narayan who became government ministers. The fifteenth generation descendant was Mahaprabhu’s contemporary, Raja Krishnananda Datta. He was a devotee of Krishna and Nityananda Prabhu came to stay in his home with his entourage and bestowed profuse blessings on him. Descendents of Krishnananda Datta include Govindasharana Datta who founded the village of Govindapura. Kalighata, Sutanuti and Govindapura are the three villages which later became Calcutta.
   Govindasharana Datta’s grandson was Ramachandra. His grandson was Madana Mohana Datta, who donated Calcutta’s Heduwa Pukur to the municipality for public use. He also spent a great deal of his personal wealth in 1774 to build steps at Gaya’s Pretashila Tirtha and the Candranatha mountain. Madana Mohana Datta’s grandson was Rajavallabha Datta, whose son Anandacandra Datta was very religious and detached from material life. Anandacandra married Jaganmohini Devi, the daughter of the celebrated zamindar of Ula village in Nadia district, Ishvaracandra Mustaufi.
   Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur accepted Anandacandra Datta and Jaganmohini Devi as his parents and appeared in Ula-Birnagar in the home of his maternal grandfather. It was the 352nd year after the birth of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Sunday, Sept. 2, 1838; the tithi was Shukla Trayodashi of Bhadra. His parents gave him the name Kedaranatha.
Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s childhood
   Bhaktivinoda composed his first poem when he was only two years old. This extraordinary display of talent gave an indication of his future vocation and the transcendental devotional songs he would write later in his life. Songs full of devotion for the Lord and sacred sentiment like his are not the result of any worldly scholarship or creativity, but are self-manifested in the eternally perfect associate of the Lord. The words of the residents of Vaikuntha are all not different from the object of their speech, the Supreme Lord. They can in no way be compared to any mundane sound vibration. Every word used by the Thakur is divine ambrosia which awakens the mood of love for the Lord and is full of the flavors of devotional sentiment.
   At only six, had learned all the details of the historical epics, Mahabharata and Ramayana. Is an ordinary six-year old capable of such a feat? Without divine mercy, it is impossible to understand the basis of all the devotional scriptures. They are not accessible to mere scholarship. The meaning of the scriptures was revealed in the heart of the Thakur on its own. Thus, there is a basic difference between the explanations of scripture given by him and those derived from a mundane scholarly analysis.
   Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur began researching astrological texts when he was nine years old, but according to his autobiography, he began inquiring into spiritual truth at the age of ten. Though he was naturally fixed in spiritual truth at every moment, he displayed this pastimes in order to demonstrate the special character of human life. He began to mix with people in order to find out what preoccupied people and what they thought about. With his sweet words and respectful attitude, he won over all those whom he encountered. Whenever he pointed out the flaws of anyone’s argument, they would not feel angry or disappointed but rather joy. This was not within the capacity of an ordinary restless boy of ten years.
   The following is Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s account of several childhood events from his autobiography: “I would go whenever a festival was held at someone’s house. There were often such religious festivals at the Brahmachari’s house. There was a nice temple on the outside, and inside a flower garden and a fire-sacrifice altar. The Brahmachari worshiped according to the Tantrik cult. He kept a human skull in a small, hidden room. Some people said that if you gave water and milk to a human skull, it will smile. I took the skull down and gave it water, but I saw no smile.
   “Nearby there was also an astrologer’s house where I would listen to singing performances. One old carpenter was engaged to paint backdrops for the image during the Durga puja. I sat near him while he worked and asked him many questions, which he always answered. I asked, ‘When does the spirit of the god enter into the image?’ The carpenter answered, ‘When I paint its eyes, the god will come and take up residence in the image.’ The day that he was actually going to paint the deity’s eyes, I eagerly came but I never saw the god actually appear. I said, ‘Goloka Pal made this image. He first tied bundles of straw and then covered it with clay. You covered it with chalk and then painted it. There is no god anywhere in this statue at all, is there?’ The old carpenter then said, ‘When the Brahmins consecrate the Deity then the god incarnates and enters the form.’ I observed this consecration ceremony carefully, but I was never able to see any divine manifestation. I thought that the carpenter was a fairly wise fellow and so I went to his house and asked him to explain again. He then said to me, ‘I have no faith in this worship of idols. My belief is that the Brahmins simply use this as a means of deception for taking money from gullible people.’ The carpenter’s words brought me great pleasure and I asked him to tell me something about the Supreme Lord. He said, ‘Say what you will, I believe in nothing other than the one Supreme Lord, Parameshvara. The gods and goddesses are all imaginary. I worship the one God every day.’ These words of the old man gave me faith. 
Bhaktivinod Thakur
...‘Rama and Rahim are one...

   “I became even more inquisitive. The Muslim footman Golam Khan used to guard the treasury. Once in response to my questions, he said, ‘God’s name is Khoda. At one time he was alone and there was no one and nothing but him. Then he took the dirt from his body and made a pancake out of it which he threw into the single ocean. The upper part of the pancake became the sky and the lower part became the earth. He then created humankind, starting with Adam and Eve. We are all the descendants of Adam and Eve.’ After hearing this myth, I asked him, ‘Who do you think Rama is?’ He said, ‘Rama and Rahim are one. That is Khoda.’ Then I learned from him about a spell which chases ghosts. Golam Khan said, ‘Ghosts are the descendants of Satan. They are afraid of the name of Rahim.’ These teachings gave me great pleasure.
   “My maternal uncle Parashurama Mustaufi was studying law at that time. At first, he had some faith in God, but later dismissed the idea. While he was a believer, my other uncles Raghu and Nashu were his followers. When he stopped believing in the personal god, he started calling Rama Mohana Raya his guru. I was very troubled because, being just an ignorant child, I was uncomfortable having a difference of opinion with him. Uncle Parashurama said, ‘Everything in the world is a product of natural forces. There is no such thing as a God outside of nature.’ When I heard this, I went to see some Bhattacharya in his school and asked him to respond to it. His answers caused me to become more confused. Though I was confused, I never gave up chanting the name of Rama.”
   From all these stories, we can draw the lesson that rather than entering into the confusing business of establishing exact doctrines of the relation of the divine and the creation, one should chant the Holy Name with faith. At one point, Mahaprabhu also bound his books in their cloth wrappers and told his students to simply chant the Holy Name. Dogmatic truths will all be revealed through the Holy Name. Dogmatic spiritual truth is not arrived at through mental speculation; one is bound to arrive at a mistaken conception of God.
Kedaranatha’s marriage
   When Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur was only eleven years old, his father died. According to the custom prevalent at that time, Kedaranatha’s mother arranged for her twelve-year-old son to be married to a five-year-old from nearby Ranaghat. Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur has the following to say about his marriage: “It was just like a doll’s play-marriage. Because I would not be able to stay alone at my in-laws’ house, my parents sent my nanny to accompany me.” Though the Thakur had direct perception of human entanglement, he did nothing to protest the defects of the marriage system of the period.
Studies
Bhaktivinod Thakur
Bhaktivinoda Thakur - student years.
    At six years of age, Kedaranatha went to study Sanskrit at the Tola of Vidyavacaspati. Then at the age of seven, his grandfather sent him to study at Krishnagar College. At that time, the college principal’s name was Captain D. L. Richardson and the principle native professor was Ramtanu Lahiri. The next year, an English-language school was established in Ula in which Kedaranatha was enrolled. While studying at Krishnagar College, one of his fellow students was the King of Koochbihar, who was still a child.
   When his maternal grandfather died, he and his mother came to live in Calcutta at the family home at the corner of Beadon Street and Hedua in Bhawanipur. He recommenced his studies at the Hindu Charitable Trust School. After four years there, he was admitted to the Hindu School in 1856.
   Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur was one of Ishvaracandra Vidyasagara’s first students, whom he held in great affection. One day, Bhaktivinoda visited the great scholar in his house in Calcutta. Vidyasagara Mahashaya said to him, “Since none of us has ever seen God, it is best that we not talk about him.” Though he was his student, Bhaktivinoda Thakur did not refrain from speaking the truth to the venerated teacher. He asked, “Pandit Mahashaya, why then did you write in your [children’s] book Bodhodaya that God is formless and pure consciousness. If you haven’t seen God, then why have you written this about him? God is omnipotent. Don’t you think that if he can do anything, that he has the power to maintain a form? The Supreme Lord is my eternal master, and I am his eternal servant. The natural affection that we have for the Supreme Lord is called bhakti, brahma-vidya or para-vidya in the Veda. This is real knowledge, the realization of which means that there is no shortage of any knowledge.”
   Those who are always engaged in a direct relationship with the absolute truth, the Supreme Lord, are immediately able to recognize any statement which goes contrary to the spiritual truth. There is a complete difference between knowledge which has been garnered from the reading of books and the knowledge which arises from the epiphany of the self-effulgent truth.
   Calcutta University was founded in 1856 and entrance exams held for the first time. Amongst Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s fellow students were Satyendranath and Ganendranath Tagore, Tarak Nath Palit and Naragopal Mitra. Principal Clint, Reverend Duff, George Thompson, and Keshab Chandra Sen were attracted by the young man’s mastery of the English language and literature. Toward the end of 1856, Kedaranatha published an English poem, The Poriade, which was well-received in educated circles in Calcutta. All the Thakur’s English poems were published in the paper, Library (Literary) Gazette. He delivered a lecture to the British Indian Society in 1856 on the evolution of matter which was much applauded.
Bhaktivinod Thakur
He considered Christianity superior to the Brahma religion because of its acceptance of God’s eternal personality.

   During this time, the Thakur also studied the Brahma Dharma, Christianity, the Bible and Qur’an and many other religious traditions and books. He considered Christianity superior to the Brahma religion because of its acceptance of God’s eternal personality. In 1857, the Sepoy Mutiny broke out. Kedaranatha spent some of this time traveling and lecturing.
The prediction of grandfather Krishnavallabha
   In 1858, Kedaranatha went to Nilachala. On the way back to Calcutta, he stopped at Chutigram, where his grandfather Krishnavallabha Datta was living. His grandfather said prophetically that Kedaranatha would be a great Vaishnava. Immediately upon making this prediction, his life airs passed out through the top of his head. Kedaranatha remained there for a few more days before continuing through Cuttack, Bhadrak, and Midnapor to Calcutta.
The title 'Bhaktivinoda'
   On Ishvara Candra Vidyasagara’s recommendation, Kedaranatha Datta took a job teaching at the Cuttack Government Secondary School and shortly thereafter, the headmaster’s position at a school in Bhadrak in 1860. During this time, he wrote a book on the various religious institutions of Orissa, Maths of Orissa, which Sir William Hunter made much use of as a reference work in his Orissa. He also wrote a work named Shri-Caitanya-Gita under the pen name Saccidananda Premalankara. He was given the title Bhaktivinoda by the Sri Gaudiya Goswami Sangha on the 400th anniversary of Mahaprabhu’s appearance (1885). From this time on, Kedaranatha Datta was known in Vaishnava society as Sri Saccidananda Bhaktivinoda Thakur.
Travels and Preaching
Bhaktivinod Thakur
Bhagavati Devi - second wife of Bhaktivinoda Thakur.
    The Thakur also taught at a school in Midnapore. One day a follower of the Brahmo religion, Rama Narayan Basu, heard him speak at literary society meeting on the truth of religion and was deeply affected. During his time in Midnapor, the Thakur’s first wife died and he married for a second time, to Bhagavati Devi. From Midnapore, he went to Burdwan to preach. While there, he published an English book, Our Wants, in 1863. He was involved in the arguments between the Brahmo Samaj and Christians and tried to mediate between the two religions. In two lectures he showed the problems with both groups’ positions. While in Burdwan, he started a group called the Bhratri-samaja. At one of the meetings of this group, he gave a learned speech on the soul which attracted the attention of a certain Mr. Heiley.
   From Burdwan, the Thakur went to Chuadanga and Ranaghat before going to live temporarily in Chapra in Bihar. While living there, he made his first visit to Vrindavan, traveling by train through Kashi, Mirzapur, Prayag, Agra, etc. While in Chapra, the Thakur studied Urdu and Persian and mastered these languages. He also gave a speech on Gautama while there.
   From Chapra, he went to Purniya and then, in 1868, to Dinajpur where he was engaged as Deputy Magistrate. In Dinajpur, he found that there was a dispute between Hindus and Brahmos in which he intervened, giving a speech on the Bhagavat: Its Philosophy, Its Ethics and Its Theology.
   In June of 1868, he visited Rupa and Sanatan’s home in Ramakeli as well as Rajmahal, etc. Thereafter he returned to Calcutta, where he undertook research to find copies of Chaitanya-charitamrita and Srimad Bhagavatam. After much work, he finally found copies at the Bata Tala publishing house. With these valuable editions, he went to Purushottam Dhama. He was engaged as a director of the temple to oversee its management. He lived in Puri continuously for over five years, from 1869-1874.
Punishing Bishikishana for deception
   In Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s life we find that he personified the description of a Vaishnava as one who is more gentle than a rose, yet more terrible than the thunderbolt. Although he was generally kind and sympathetic, he gave no quarter to dishonesty in the name of religion. One event in his life which took place while he was in Orissa is an indication of this. In 1871, a member of the Khandait caste and the Atibarii sect named Bishakishana who had gained some mystic powers through yogic practices proclaimed himself to be an incarnation of Mahavishnu. 
   He was staying with his acolyt saj/p/pnbsp;In Srila Bhaktivinoda Thak urjana-toshani-patri sarva-samadritape sajjana-toshani-patri sarva-samadritap s at the edge of the jungle near the tow sajjana-toshani-patri sarva-samadritapn of Bhuvaneshvara. He announced that on the 14th of Chaitra, he would reveal a four-armed form and destroy all the foreigners, restoring the true religion. His announcement was written in Orissan verse:
banere achi bishakishana
guptare achi na janani ana
tera minare arambhiba rana,
caturbhuja hoi nashiba mleccha-gana
   In the forest am I hiding and no one else knows me. But on the 13th of Mina I will begin the war. Taking on a four-armed form, I will destroy the Mlecchas.
   Through his mystic powers, he had been able to cure incurable diseases and these powers had won for him a large following. One day he announced that on the f ull-moon day he would perform the rasa-lila and invited the girls of a nearby village to come and join him. The Chaudhuris of the Bhringara clan found that he had polluted their womenfolk and went to complain en masse to the district commissioner, Ravenshaw. The Commissioner gave the task of investigating the matter to Bhaktivinoda Thakur, who went personally into the jungle to meet with Bishakishana. Bishakishana told Bhaktivinoda that he was the living Mahavishnu and that Jagannath Deva was nothing but a lifeless wooden statue. He tried in various ways to flatter the Thakur and to win him over. When he saw that Bishakishana had no intention of stopping his efforts to deceive the people, Bhaktivinoda had him arrested and brought back to Puri.
   The Thakur proceeded to investigate the background of Bishakishana by going to many villages and Buddhist viharas in the Khandagiri area of Puri district. After accumulating a mass of evidence showing the extent to which this yogi was cheating people, he had him brought to court. While the case was being heard, the yogi used his mystic power to cause Bhaktivinoda and his family to be attacked by various illnesses, in an effort to intimidate him, but without success. The Thakur was determined to see Bishakishana punished for conspiracy to rebellion and gave him a sentence of one and a half years. Bishakishana went for 21 days without food or drink and then left his body.
   In the months which followed, another rascal in Jajpur proclaimed himself to be the incarnation of Brahma, while someone else in Khurda said that he was a manifestation of Balaram. Bhaktivinoda Thakur quickly thwarted their efforts to cheat the populace.
Other activities of the Thakur in Puri
   While living in Puri, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur took the opportunity to study the Bhagavat, the Six Sandarbhas of Jiva Goswami, the Govinda-bhashya, Siddhanta-ratnam, Prameya-ratnavali, etc., of Baladeva Vidyabhushana. He also studied Rupa Goswami’s Bhakti-rasamrita-sindhu in great detail. By making a display of intense study, he demonstrated the necessity of cultivating an understanding of the scriptures in order to learn the truths about pure devotion contained therein. Mahaprabhu indicated that one of the five principle limbs of devotional service is hearing the Bhagavat. Jiva Goswami indicated that this is the best of all devotional activities. In order to proclaim this same truth, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur founded a regular group for discussion of the Bhagavat, Bhagavata Samsat which was held in the Jagannath-vallabha gardens in Puri.
   Many of the leading Vaishnavas in Puri such as Nityananda Das, Paramananda Das, Narayan Das Mahanta, Harihara Das Mahanta of Uttara Parshva were attracted to hearing the Bhagavat from his lips. Just as Mahaprabhu performed the pastime of hearing Bhagavat from Srila Gadadhara Pandit Goswami, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur also listened to discourses given by Sri Gopinath Pandit. A certain renounced Vaishnava, Raghunath Das Babaji of Hati Akharia, objected to the Thakur’s speaking on Bhagavat and was attacked by disease. After Jagannath appeared to him in a dream and ordered him, he went and begged Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur for forgiveness, after which he was cured.
   When the Thakur went to the Jagannath Temple, he did not sit in the so-called Mukti-mandapa, where Mayavadi scholars discussed their philosophy. He would sit by the Lakshmi temple where Mahaprabhu’s footprints are enshrined and discussed devotional doctrines there. Many of the Mayavadis were attracted by his discourses and soon the place became known as the Bhakti-mandapa or the Bhakti-prangana.
   During this time, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur studied Krishnadas Kaviraj Goswami’s Chaitanya Charitamrita, Narahari Chakravarti’s Bhakti-ratnakara, but he did not accept Jayananda’s Chaitanya-mangala as being authoritative. He associated with a siddha Vaishnava named Svarupa Das Babaji, discussing scripture with him. He also wrote the Sanskrit work, Datta-kaustubha and began writing the Sanskrit verses of Shri-Krishna-samhita.
The birth of Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati
   A wealthy family in Puri had leased land along the Grand Road from the Dakshina Parshva Math and build a house on it. Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur and his family resided in this building, which is not far from the Jagannath temple, next to the Narayan Chata. This house was reclaimed in 1974 by His Grace Bhakti Dayita Madhava Goswami Maharaj and now houses a Chaitanya Gaudiya Math with a beautiful temple building.
Bhaktivinod Thakur
Bimal Prasad.
    At 3:30 on Friday, February 6, 1874, on the Krishna-païcami of Magh month, an effulgent and beautiful child was born to Bhagavati Devi in this home, while the Thakur and other family members sang the names of the Lord. Everyone was amazed to see that the child’s umbilical cord was wrapped around his body like a sacred thread. He was named after the divine energy of Jagannath Deva, Vimala Devi, as Bimala Prasad (Vimala-prasada). His first solid food was Jagannath’s maha prasad. When he grew up, this child became the founder of the Chaitanya Math and the worldwide Gaudiya Maths, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur Prabhupada.
   Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur was Jagannath Deva’s own man. It was by his arrangement that he was brought to Puri and put in charge of the Temple’s management. After the birth of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur, the preaching of Mahaprabhu’s message spread over the entire planet. This gave meaning to the words written by Vyasadeva in the Padma-Purana, hy utkale purushottamat, “out of Purushottam in Orissa.” Ten months after the child’s birth, Bhaktivinoda Thakur returned to Bengal with his family, this time going to Ranaghat. They traveled overland by palanquin.
Bhaktivinoda’s unequalled contribution
   Vedavyasa and the scriptures he wrote are the foundation of all those who claim to follow the Sanatan Dharma. He himself practiced and preached the means by which humankind can attain the supreme peace. Vedavyasa compiled and divided the Veda, wrote the eighteen Puranas and the Mahabharata including the Bhagavad-gita, but remained unsatisfied. Finally, while at Badarikashrama, Narada Muni instructed him to glorify the activities of Sri Krishna in order to attain his pleasure. After writing the twelve cantos of the Srimad Bhagavatam, Vedavyasa finally found the peace he had been looking for. Mahaprabhu Sri Chaitanya preached the Bhagavat religion which is found in this text. After the disappearance of Mahaprabhu and his associates, however, the path of pure devotion became covered with thorns until Bhaktivinoda Thakur appeared to write many books and to preach the pure doctrine of devotional service to Krishna. Through his tireless efforts, all the heretical doctrines were shown to be empty, the path of supreme auspiciousness and compassion was shown to all the world. These efforts can only be said to constitute an unequalled and certainly unsurpassed contribution. Without being empowered by Krishna himself, the message of pure devotion cannot be spread. Such a display of empowerment could not be possible were he not a direct associate of Gauranga Mahaprabhu, Sri Krishna.
   Externally he was a householder with family obligations, a government servant engaged in the administrative service, but despite these responsibilities he was still able to write over a hundred books in several different languages. One cannot fail to be impressed by this monumental achievement. Every word of his writing is scripture; every word awakens the spirit of devotion to him who is beyond the grasp of the material senses and mind. Mundane scholars would never be able to achieve the kind of synthesis that he did. His every thought was perfectly reasonable and never far-fetched. His writings are a permanent display of compassion to the fallen souls. His Grace Bhakti Dayita Madhava Maharaj used to say to his disciples, “You need do nothing else other than translate Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s books into the world’s various languages and you will have done the greatest act of welfare for the people of the world.” In fact, everything that is done in the Gaudiya Maths throughout the world has come from Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur.
Bhaktivinoda’s travels and preaching activities
   After the birth of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur returned to Bengal. From then on he engaged in preaching the doctrine of pure devotional service, traveling throughout India. We will give a brief summary here of all the places he visited during the period between 1877 and 1910, whether for the sake of pilgrimage or for preaching. He went to Amta in the Uluberiiya subdivision, to Abhiram Thakur’s Shripata in Khanakula Krishnanagara, Shyamapura, Bhadrak in Orissa, Nariail in Jessore district, Calcutta, Prayag, Vrindavan (where he met Jagannath Das Babaji for the first time), Sri Radha Kund, Sri Govardhana (where he broke up the Kaijhara gang of dacoits who were harassing pilgrims to the Dhama), Mathura, Lucknow, Faiyedabad, Goptara Ghat, Ayodhya and Benares.
Bhaktivinod Thakur
Srila Bhaktivinod Thakur in Mayapur.
    He then returned to Calcutta where in 1882 he started construction on Bhakti Bhavana at 181 Maniktola Street. While digging the foundations for the building, a murti of Kurmadeva was found. Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur gave this deity to Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur and taught him how to worship it. He also visited Mayapur for the first time.
   He was engaged as Deputy Collector in the Barasat subdivision. Then he was transferred to Shriramapura (1884) Vaidyanatha, Bakipura, and Gaya, where he saw the steps on Pretashila constructed by his great-grandfather, Madana Mohana Datta. He returned to Nariail, Barasat, Memari, Kulinagrama, Byandel, and Saptagram. In Kulinagrama he lectured on the Holy Name, distinguishing between the pure name, namabhasa and namaparadha. There he also gave Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur initiation in the Holy Name and the Nrisingha mantra.
In Calcutta in 1885, he established the Chaitanya-yantra printing press. In 1886, he helped establish the Vishva-Vaishnava-sabha at the Durga Mandapa of Rama Gopal Basu in Krishnasimhera Gali off Bethune Road. There he gave lectures on Chaitanya Charitamrita and Bhakti-rasamrita-sindhu. He met Ramakrishna Paramahamsa at this time and countered his impersonal philosophy and described the truth of pure devotion to him.
Discovery of Mahaprabhu’s birthplace
   In 1887, he visited the most important Shiva-linga in Bengal at Tarakeshvara where Shiva appeared to him in a dream and said, “You want to go to Vrindavan, but there is much work left to do in Nabadwip Dhama nearby. What have you done there?” Later that year, he was transferred to Krishnanagara. Then, while visiting Kuliya, the modern city of Nabadwip, he was standing on the roof of the Ranira Dharmashala overlooking the Ganges. At about ten o’clock at night, he saw an illuminated building on the other side of the river. His son Kamala Prasada who was there with him also saw this light. On inquiry, they learned that this place was Ballaladighi. When he made inquiries from the elderly residents of Ballaladighi, they told him that this was the birthplace of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu.
Bhaktivinod Thakur
Surabhi Kunj, Navadwipa Dham.
    Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur continued to research old maps and documents and was able to establish conclusively that Mahaprabhu’s birthplace was indeed there.
   He continued to maintain his Calcutta home where he installed a Giradhari Shila given him by Jagannath Das Babaji, but in 1888 purchased the property in Godrumadvipa known as Surabhi Kunja. While working at Krishnanagara he was also able to visit his birthplace at Ula.
   In 1889, he was transferred to East Bengal in the Netrakona subdivision in Mymensingh District, whence he visited Narayan Gaij, Mymensingh city, the Garo Hills where he blessed the people of the Hajong tribe, and Gowalanda. Though he was able to visit Calcutta during this period, he was soon transferred to Tangail and then to Burdwan. He visited Shantipur, Kalna, Baghna Para, Kaigram, and Denur, the site of Vrindavan Das Thakur’s Shripata. During this time he visited Kuliya again where he met Jagannath Das Babaji at his bhajana-kutira. He had a concrete veranda built on this occasion (May, 1890). While in Burdwan, he also performed kirtan with the devotees of Amlajora village and visited Gopalpura, Raniganj and Barakara.
   In 1890, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur was again transferred to Raniganj in East Bengal and then back to Dinajpur in 1891. When he visited Calcutta, he met Shishira Kumara Ghosh who considered him a guru, even calling him “the seventh Goswami”. Shishira Kumara Ghosh would come regularly to visit him at Bhakti Bhavan and at the Thakur’s direction, started chanting japa and wearing a tulasi mala around his neck. He was not able to accept the principles of Vaishnava behavior in their entirety, however.
   During this period Bhaktivinoda also visited Midnapore (Medinipura), where he preached to Sitanatha Mahapatra and other devotees, Ghatal in Midnapore district and Kayapata Badana Gaij in Hooghly district. From there he returned to Krishnanagar, staying once again in Surabhi Kunja. He arranged for some large assemblies to be called in Krishnanagara at which he spoke. Messrs, Mulrow, Revelshaw, and Butler were regular attendants.
   At Amaljora on March 9, 1892, he participated in a Harivasara program at which Jagannath Das Babaji was present. From there he traveled to Vrindavan, stopping at Baksar (Bihar) and Prayag. He was in Vraja from March 21 to 29, during which time he managed to visit Bilvavana, Bhandiravana, Mathavana, Manasarovara, Mathura, Gokula, Madhuvana, Talavana, Kumudavana, Bahulavana, Radhakunda, Govardhana, etc. He then returned to Calcutta via Kanpur and Allahabad.
   In Calcutta, he once again engaged in preaching the message of Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu at Bhakti Bhavana, as well as continuing to hold assemblies at Krishnanagara. In Magh 1399 (February, 1893), he held a kirtan festival at Godrumadvipa at which Jagannath Das Babaji was the guest of honor. Later that spring, on the 20th of Phalguna (March, 1893), Jagannath Das indicated the exact spot where Mahaprabhu had first appeared in this world. 
Bhaktivinod Thakur
Jagannath Das Babaji Maharaj.

   At this time, the Thakur had an argument with a certain member of a Goswami family who held that one of Mahaprabhu’s closest associates was a Shudra. Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur was very displeased when he heard this and warned him with the words: 
aishnava-caritra, sarvada pavitra, jei ninde himsa kari
bhakativinoda, na sambhashe tare, thake sada mauna dhari
   The character of a Vaishnava is always spotless. Bhaktivinoda will not talk to anyone who criticizes a Vaishnava out of spite, but always remains silent. Also at about this time, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur wrote down his guru-parampara and hung it on the outside of Bhakti Bhavan.
   In January of 1894, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur held another large meeting at the A.V. School in Krishnanagara. At this meeting it was decided that Deities should be installed at Mahaprabhu’s birthplace. At the same time, the Nabadwip Pracarini Sabha was formed to preach the newly discovered birthsite. Nafar Chandra Pal Bhaktibhushana, the zamindar of Natudaha in Nadia district, was elected executive secretary of the of the Sabha. Dvarika Babu, Nafar Babu, and other members of the Sabha decided that a thatched cottage would be constructed on the site would house Deities of Gaura and Vishnupriya. These Deities were consecrated on Friday, March 21, 1894 (Chaitra 9, 1300 Bengali), on the Phalguni Purnima, in the midst of a rousing kirtan during a lunar eclipse. For the maintenance of the Deities, a committee was formed (Sri Mayapur Seva Samiti) which had many distinguished Vaishnavas as its members, including Shyamalal Goswami, Shashibhushana Goswami, Radhikanatha Goswami, Vipina Vihari Goswami, Mahamahopadhyaya Pandit Ajitanatha Nyayaratna, Mahendranatha Bhattacharya Vidyaranya, Satyajivana Lahirii, Raja Vanamali Raya Bahadura or Tariasa in Pabna district, Shishira Kumara Ghosh, Matilal a Ghosh, Yatindranatha Chaudhuri, Mahendranatha Majumdara, the advocate Kishorilala Sarkara, Nalinaksha Datta, Kanailala De Bahadura, Deputy Magistrate Navina Candra Sena, and Jagaccandra Raya.
Bhaktivinoda spends some time in Puri
   On October 4, 1894, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur retired from government service and came to live permanently in Surabhi Kuija in Godrumadvipa where he once again gave discourses on the Vaishnava scriptures. Some time after the disappearance of Jagannath Das Babaji in February of 1896, he accepted the invitation of the independent Raja of Tiperrah (Tripura), Birchandra Devavarma Manikya Bahadura, to go to Agartola. He went there with Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati in July 1896 and gave discourses on pure devotional service which enchanted the Raja. Later in the same year, he took Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati to Kashiyang, then in 1898 to Benares and Prayag.
   In 1899, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur purchased the property on which Svananda Sukhada Kuija would be built. When the building was finished, he came to perform his bhajana there. Gaura Kishora Das Babaji would come there to hear the Thakur’s Bhagavat lectures and it was here that Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur first met him. In 1900, Bhaktivinoda Thakur traveled with Bhaktisiddhanta through Baleshvara, Remuna, Bhuvaneshvara, and Sakshi Gopal to Puri. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur displayed a deep desire to engage in bhajana by the beach near Hari Das Thakur’s samadhi and his father arranged with Puri’s sub-registrar, Jagabandhu Pattanayaka, for him to be given the service of the Giridhari asana at the Satasana Math. In March of 1901, they came to Puri again and in 1902 the construction of Bhakti-Kuti was begun. At this time the Raja of Cossimbazar, Manindra Candra Nandi took instruction in devotional service from the Thakur.
   In 1903, Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati regularly read and gave discourses on Chaitanya Charitamrita to the Thakur at Bhakti Kuti. The famous Radha ramana Carana Das Babaji came to visit Bhaktivinoda Thakur during this time and they discussed devotional doctrines. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur found Carana Das’s activities and dogmas to be heterodox and showed how by reference to the scriptures. Later, after Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur had returned to Nabadwip, Carana Das indicated his desire to participate in the Nabadwip-parikrama that the Thakur had inaugurated, but unfortunately left his body before he was able to do so.
The Thakur returns to Godrumadvipa
   In 1906, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur gave a lengthy discourse on Mahaprabhu’s teachings at the house of zamindar Yatindranatha Raya Chaudhuri in Taki. On February 26, 1906, the Thakur came to Calcutta again and from there to Svarupa Gaij in Godrumadvipa where he engaged in his devotional activities at Svananda-sukhada-kuïja. While there, a certain Tarakabrahma Goswami of Jessore came to him and asked him to accept the service of his Radha Madhava deities for Mahaprabhu’s birthplace. Tarakabrahma Goswami also began to live there with his wife and family, but after a short time it became clear that his behavior was at odds with the standards expected of them and they were obliged to leave. On April 29, 1906, however, the Shri Dhama Pracarini Sabha decided to award an annual stipend of 500 rupees to the temple for the service of Sri Sri Radha Madhava.
   In 1908, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur took the dress of a renounced Vaishnava, that of a Bhagavata-paramahamsa, in order to dedicate his life to the full relishing the sacred nectar of Radha and Govinda’s intimate pastimes.
   On March 25, 1910, which was Phalguni Purnima, Bhakti Pradipa Tirtha, at that time still a householder, visited Bhaktivinoda Thakur at Mayapur and five days later was given initiation by him at Godrumadvipa. Another disciple, Krishna Das Babaji, was living at Svananda-sukhada-kuïja at that time.
   Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur preached that the rules of the Daiva-varnashrama dharma should always be followed. Thus, he upheld the directives of the Sat-kriya-sara-dipika in giving the sacred thread to Jagadisa Bhaktipradipa (who after taking sannyasa from Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur became Bhaktipradipa Tirtha Maharaj), Sitanatha Mahapatra, Vasanta Kumara Ghosh, and Manmathanatha Raya.
   In this connection, it is worth examining the Thakur’s following words: “The Varnashrama dharma which is current in society is distinct from the transcendental religion of exclusive devotion to Krishna. The practice of Varnashrama dharma on its own does not result in full surrender to the Lord. The ultimate instruction of the Bhagavad-gita is to discard all the principles related to the varnas and ashramas, in short, all activities based on bodily identification, and to engage in a cultivation of devotional activities based on the natural emotional constitution of the soul, which is pure and without ulterior motive. Dedicated scholars such as Raghavacari have no understanding of this glorious characteristic of Gaudiya Vaishnavism’s concept of pure devotion.”
Bhaktivinoda sends Bhaktisiddhanta to Balighai
   In 1910, while still at Svananda-sukhada Kunja, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur was engaged in writing his Svaniyama-dvadashaka when suddenly he became extremely ill. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur and other dear disciples and followers gathered there, afraid that he was about to enter the nitya-lila. Even in a state of extreme physical discomfort, however, his enthusiasm for preaching Lord Chaitanya’s message was unabated. Though unable to walk, he indicated a desire to be taken from place to place on horseback so that he could continue to spread the teachings of Mahaprabhu.
   Three years before the Thakur’s disappearance, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur approached his father and indicated to him that though he felt himself to be an unworthy servant, he vowed to take up the ultimate welfare work of defeating all the heterodox doctrines which went against pure devotional service. Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s was delighted to hear his son’s determination and when Gopivallabhapura’s Sri Vishvambharananda Deva Goswami invited him to participate in a conference in Balighai, Midnapore, he sent Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur and Sureshacandra Mukhopadhyaya in his place. The conference, the theme of which was to establish orthodox doctrines in certain areas of theology, took place from Sept. 8-11, 1911. Many respected and well-reputed scholars of the sampradaya were present, including Madhusudana Goswami Sarvabhauma of the Radharamana Ghera in Vrindavan.
   Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur gave a talk on the distinctions between a Vaishnava and a Brahmin, demonstrating clearly a great amount of research, which left the assembly of scholars enchanted and speechless. A year later, when Madhusudana Goswami visited Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur at the Bhakti Bhavan he enthusiastically proclaimed that Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur was his capable successor in protecting the Gaudiya sampradaya.
   In 1913, Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati wrote a commentary on the Chaitanya-caritamrita meant to accompany the Amrita-pravaha-bhashya written by Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur. He read several passages of this Anubhashya to the Thakur, giving him indescribable pleasure.
Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s entry into the eternal pastimes
   A few days before his disappearance, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur left Godrumadvipa to come to Bhakti Bhavan. On June 23, 1914, on the disappearance day of Gaura-shakti, Srila Gadadhara Pandit Goswami, in his Calcutta home, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur entered the midday pastimes of Sri Sri Radha and Govinda at Radha Kund. Six years later, the worshipable Mata Thakurani, his wife Sri Bhagavati Devi, went to join him.
Srimad-Bhaktivinoda-viraha-dashakam
(Ten verses describing the feelings of separation from Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur written for the occasion of his disappearance day by His Grace Bhakti-rakshaka Shridhara Deva Goswami in 1936)
ha ha bhaktivinoda thakkura guro dvavimshatis te sama
dirghad-duhkha-bharad ashesha-virahad duhkhikrita bhur iyam
jivanam bahu-janma-punya-nivahakrishto mahimandale
avirbhava-kripam cakara ca bhavan shri-gaura-shaktih svayam 1
   Alas! Alas! My guru Bhaktivinoda Thakur! It is now twenty-two long years that the world has been burdened with the grief of your separation. You are the personification of Sri Gauranga’s energy and you mercifully appeared in this world being attracted by many lifetimes of the living beings’ pious activities.
dino’ham cira-dushkritir na hi bhavat-padabja-dhuli-kana-
snanananda-nidhim prapanna-shubhadam labdhum samartho’bhavam
kintv audarya-gunat tavati-yashasah karunya-shaktih svayam
shri-shri-gaura-mahaprabhoh prakatita vishvam samanvagrahit 2
   Being most fallen and possessing nothing but sinful activity in my past, I have not been able to attain the joyful treasure of being bathed in the dust of your lotus feet, which brings all auspiciousness to the surrendered. Even so, you are deservedly renowned for your magnanimity. You are the personification of Lord Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu’s compassionate powers who have appeared in this world in order to bestow upon it his divine blessings.
he deva! stavane tavakhila-gunanam te viriïcadayo
deva vyartha-manorathah kim u vayam martyadhamah kurmahe
etan no vibudhaih kadapy atishayalankara ity ucyatam
shastreshv eva na paraye’ham iti yad gitam mukundena ca 3
   O Lord! The gods led by Brahma are frustrated when they endeavor to glorify your unlimited virtues. What then can low-born humans such as we accomplish? This is no rhetorical exaggeration, as some scholars may claim, for even Mukunda himself has said the same to the gopis in the Bhagavat (10.32.22).
dharmash carmagato’jïataiva satata yogash ca bhogatmako
jïane shunya-gatir japena tapasa khyati-jighamsaiva ca
dane dambhikatanuraga-bhajane dushtapacaro yada
buddhim buddhimatam bibheda hi tada dhatra bhavan preshitah 4
   You were sent by the Lord when even the most intelligent people’s wisdom was ruined through religious activities which only sought bodily pleasures, through a constant state of ignorance, in yoga which had sensual enjoyment as its goal, in the idea that the goal of knowledge is the void, in the desire to destroy individual consciousness through prayer and austerity, in arrogant pride in giving charity, and from evil practices spread in the name of raganuga-bhajana.
vishve’smin kiranair yatha himakarah saïjivayan naushadhir
nakshatrani ca raïjayan nija-sudham vistarayan rajate
sac-chastrani ca toshayan budha-ganam sammodayams te tatha
nunam bhumi-tale shubhodaya iti hlado bahuh satvatam 5
   Just as in this universe, the moon gives life to the world’s vegetation, revitalizes the constellations and spreads its own nectar with its rays, so too, your auspicious appearance on Earth brought satisfaction to the holy scriptures, joy to the intelligent and a great amounts of ecstasy to the Vaishnavas.
lokanam hita-kamyaya bhagavato bhakti-pracaras tvaya
granthanam racanaih satam abhimatair nanavidhair darshitah
acaryaih krita-purvam eva kila yad ramanujadyair budhaih
premambhodhi-vigrahasya bhavato mahatmya-sima na tat 6
   Desiring the welfare of everyone in the world, you displayed the method of preaching devotion to the Supreme Lord through writing a variety of books which were appreciated by the saintly. The glorious achievements of all the previous acharyas such as Ramanuja, etc., cannot match yours, for you are the embodiment of the ocean of prema.
yad-dhamnah khalu dhama caiva nigame brahmeti samjïayate
yasyamshasya kalaiva duhkha-nikarair yogeshvarair mrigyate
vaikunthe para-mukta-bhringa-carano narayano yah svayam
tasyamshi bhagavan svayam rasa-vapuh krishno bhavan tat-pradah 7
   You came to give the Supreme Person Krishna himself, whose body is the form of sacred rapture, the effulgence of whose abode is known in the Veda as Brahman, whose mere partial expansion is the goal of the great yogis’ austere practices, who is the source of Narayan himself, whose lotus feet are surrounded by the most advanced, bee-like liberated souls in Vaikuntha.
sarvacintya-maye paratpara-pure goloka-vrindavane
cil-lila-rasa-rangini parivrita sa radhika shri-hareh
vatsalyadirasaish ca sevita-tanor madhurya-seva-sukham
nityam yatra mada tanoti hi bhavan tad-dhama-seva-pradpah 8
   You bestowed service to the completely inconceivable divine abode of Goloka Vrindavan, which lies beyond the other spiritual worlds, where Radha, surrounded by hernbsp;In the forest am I hiding and no one else knows me. But on the 13th of Mina I will begin the war. Taking on a four-armed form, I will destroy the Mlecchas. rsquo;s concept of pure devotion. sakhis, whose pleasure is in the transcendental nectar of the spiritual pastimes, joyfully constantly serves in the erotic mood Sri Hari who is worshiped in the moods of parenthood, etc.
shri-gauranumatam Svarupa-viditam rupagrajenadritam
rupadyaih pariveshitam raghu-ganair asvaditam sevitam
jivadyair abhirakshitam shuka-shiva-brahmadi-sammanitam
shri-radha-pada-sevanamritam aho tad datum isho bhavan 9
   You are perfectly competent to give the nectar of service to Sri Radha’s feet, which was approved by Gauranga Mahaprabhu, which was understood by Svarupa Damodar, adorped by Sanatan Goswami, distributed by Sri Rupa Goswami, relished and enjoyed by Raghunath and the rest of Sri Rupa’s followers, and which is respected by Suka, Shiva and Brahma, etc.,
kvaham manda-matis tv ativa patitah kva tvam jagat-pavanah
bho svamin kripayaparadha-nicayo nunam tvaya kshamyatam
yace’ham karuna-nidhe varam imam padabja-mule bhavat-
sarvasvavadhi-radhika-dayita-dasanam gane ganyatam 10
   I am a wicked-minded fallen soul, so far from you who purify the entire universe. O Master! Please forgive me all my offenses out of your great compassion. I beg you, O ocean of mercy, to grant me this boon thatp In 1889, he was transferred to East Bengal in the Netrakona subdivision in Mymensingh District, whence he visited Narayan Gaij, Mymensingh city, the Garo Hills where he blessed the people of the Hajong tribe, and Gowalanda. Though he rsquo;s birthplacewas able to visit Calcutta during this period, he was soopn transferred to Tangail and then to Burdwan. He visited Shantipur, Kalna, Baghna Para, Kaigram, and Denur, the site of Vrindavan Das Thakur I be included amongst the followers of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur, for whom your lotus feet are everything.
Srimad-Bhaktivinoda-dashakam
(This poem appeared in the Gaudiya magazine, July 1939, 7.47)
amanda-karunya-gunakara shri-
caitanya-devasya dayavatarah
sa gaura-shaktir bhavita punah kim
padam drishor bhakti-vinoda-devah 1 dharmash carmagato sarvacintya-maye paratpara-pure goloka-vrindavane
   O ocean of unlimited compassion, you are the incarnation of Chaitanya Deva’s mercy. You are the energy of Gauranga. O Lord Bhaktivinoda, when will you again be visible to me? 1
shrimaj-Jagannath-prabhu-priyo ya
ekatmako gaura-kishorakena
 shri-gaura-karunya-mayo bhavet kim
 nityam smritau bhakti-vinoda-devah 2
   When will Bhaktivinoda Prabhu, the embodiment of Mahaprabhu’s ble nakshatrani ca rassings, remain fixed in my memory? He is dear to Jagannath Prabhu and is not different from Gaura Kishora Das Babaji.
shri-nama-cintamani-sampracarair
adarsham acaravidhau dadhau yah
 sa jagarukah smriti- mandire kim
 nityam bhaved bhakti-vinoda-devah 3
   When will Bhaktivinoda Prabhu, who gave the example how to act by preaching the jewel of the Holy Name, remain alive in the temple of my memory?
namaparadhai rahitasya n/p lokanam hita-kamyaya bhagavato bhakti-pracaras tvaya amno
mahatmya-jatam prakatam vidhaya
jive dayalur bhavita smritau kim
kritasano bhakti-vinoda-devah 4
   When will Bhaktivinoda Prabhu, most merciful to all living beings, take his place in my mind after revealing the glories of the Holy Name, void of any offenses?
gaurasya gudha-prakatalayasya
sato’sato harsha-kunatyayosh ca
prakashako gaurajano bhavet kim
smrityaspadam
bhakti-vinoda-devah 5
   When will Irsquo;s determination and when Gopivallabhapura/strong remember Bhaktivinoda Prabhpu, the member of Gauranga’s entourage who revealed his hidden birthplace, to the joy of the saintly and the envious reaction of the wicked?
nirasya vighnan iha bhakti-ganga-
pravahanenoddhrita-sarvalokah
bhagiratho nitya-dhiyam padam kim
bhaved asau bhakti-vinoda-devah 6
   Like King Bhagiratha, he saved the entire world by destroying all impediments and allowing the Ganga of pure devotion to flow. When will Bhaktivinoda Prabhu be the permanent object of my meditation?
vishveshu caitanya-katha-pracari
mahatmya-shamsi guru-vaishnavanam
nama-grahadarsha iha smritah kim
citte bhaved bhakti-vinoda-devah 7
   When will I remember Bhaktivinoda Prabhu, who preached the message of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu throughout the world, who glorified the guru and the Vaishnavas and who set the example for chanting the Holy Name.
prayojanam sann abhidheya-bhakti-
siddhanta-vanya samam atra gaura-
kishora-sambandha-yuto bhavet kim
cittam gato bhakti-vinoda-devah 8
   When will Bhaktivinoda Prabhu, himself the representative of the proyojana-tattva, appear in my mind, accompanied by Gaura Kishora Das Babaji, the personification of the sambandha-tattva, and by Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati, the incarnation of the abhidheya-tattva. [bhakti-vinoda or taking delight in devotional service is the ultimate goal of prema, sambandha is the relationship with Mahaprabhu (Gaura-kishora) and the devotional processes established by the doctrine, or bhakti-siddhanta are the abhidheya-tattva.]
shikshamritam sajjana-toshanim ca
cintamanim catra sajaiva-dharmam
prakashya caitanya-prado bhavet kim
citte dhrito bhakti-vinoda-devah 9
   When will Bhaktivino/p/pda Prabhu, who made people conscious of Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu through his publications Chaitanya-shikshamrita, Sajjana-toshani, Harinama-cintamani, and Jaiva Dharma, be held constantly in my mind.
ashadha-darshe’hani gaura-shakti-
gadadharabhinna-tanur jahau yah
prapaïca-lilam iha no bhavet kim
drishyah punar bhakti-vinoda-devah 10
   When will Bhaktivinoda Prabhu appear to us again? Being non-different from Gaura-shakti Gadadhara Pandit, he left the material world on the same day as he, the dark-moon-day of Asharha month.
Sri Godrumacandra-bhajanopadesha
(“Instructions to worship the Moon of Godruma”. These verses were published posthumously for the first time in 1950 in Gaudiya magazine, 18.47-8 (pp. 757-8)
yadi te hari-pada-saroja-sudha-
rasa-pana-param hridayam satatam
parihritya griham kali-bhava-mayam
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 1
   If your heart wishes to always drink the nectar of Hari’s lotus feet, then abandon your home which is filled with the spirit of Kali and worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
dhana-yauvana-jivana-rajya-sukham
Nahi nityam anukshana-nasha-param
tyaja gramya-katha-sakalam viphalam
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 2
   All your joys from wealth, youth, life and power are all temporary and susceptible to destruction at any moment. Give up all your useless mundane discourses and worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
ramani-jana-sanga-sukham ca sakhe
carame bhayadam purushartha-haram
hari-nama-sudha-rasa-matta-matir
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 3
   O friend! The joys of intercourse with beautiful women are ultimately a source of fear, for they prevent the achievement of life’s goals. Become intoxicated with the nectar of the Holy Names and worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
jada-kavya-raso nahi kavya-rasah
kali-pavana-gaura-raso hi rasah
alam any-kathady-anushilanaya
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 4
   The relishing of poetic sentiments is not the sacred rapture of devotional poetry. Real sacred rapture is found in the sentiments connected to the purifier of the age of Kali, Gaura. Give up the study of all other subjects and worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
vrishabhanu-sutanvita-vama-tanum
yamuna-tata-nagara-nanda-sutam
murali-kala-gita-vinoda-param
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 5
   Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers, the son of Nanda, the playboy who sports on the Yamuna’s banks with the daughter of Vrishabhanu at his left side, joyfully playing wonderful songs on his flute.
hari-kirtana-madhyagatam svajanaih
pariveshtita-jambunadabha-harim
nija-gauda-janaika-kripa-jaladhim
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 6
   Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers, the ocean of mercy for his own associates from the land of Gauda, whose effulgent form, surrounded by these associates as he dances in the midst of the kirtan, has been stolen from refined gold.
giriraja-suta-parivita-griham
nava-khanda-patim yati-citta-haram
sura-sangha-nutam priyaya sahitam
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 7
   Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers, whose house is surrounded by the daughters of the king of mountains, who is the Lord of the abode of nine islands, who steals the minds of the sannyasis and who, in the company of his beloved, is praised by the heavenly hosts.
kali-kukkura-mudgara-bhava-dharam
hari-nama-mahaushadha-dana-param
patitarta-dayardra-sumurti-dharam
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 8
   Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers, who has taken the mood of the hammer-wielding chastiser of the Kali-dog, who brings the gift of the Holy Name medicine, and whose form is soaked in tearful compassion for the fallen.
ripu-bandhava-bheda-vihina-daya
yad abhikshnam udeti mukhabja-tatau
tam akrishnam iha vraja-raja-sutam
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 9
   His mercy makes no distinction between friend and foe. Though his bodily hue is not black, he is the son of the King of Vraja. Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
iha copanishat-parigita-vibhur
dvija-raja-sutah puratabha-harih
nija-dhamani khelati bandhu-yuto
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 10
   Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers–he whose glories are sung in the Upanishads and is now a son of the best of Brahmins with a golden bodily hue, playing in his own dham with his eternal associates.
avatar-varam paripurna-phalam
para-tattvam ihatma-vilasa-mayam
vraja-dhama-rasambudhi-gupta-rasam
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 11
   Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers, who is the best of the incarnations of the Supreme, who brings the ultimate fruit of spiritual life, who is the Supreme Truth come into this world out of his own pleasure and who relish a taste hidden in the ocean of rapture that is Vraja Dhama.
shruti-varna-dhanadi na yasya kripa-
janane balavad-bhajanena vina
tam ahaituka-bhava-patha hi sakhe
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 12
   Learning or high birth are useless in bringing about his mercy without intense bhajana. O friend, worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers without any desire for any fruits.
api nakra-gatau hrada-madhya-gatam
kam amocayad arta-janam tam ajam
avicintya-balam shiva-kalpa-tarum
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 13
   This same Lord also once liberated a distressed demigod from a crocodile body within the lake known as Goradaha. He is the unborn one, possessing inconceivable power, and is truly a desire tree of pure auspiciousness. Just worship the beautiful Moon of Godruma's forest bowers. [FN: This incident is recounted in Jagadananda’s Prema-vilasa, chapter 15.]
surabhindra-tapah-paritushta-mano
vara-varna-dharo harir avirabhut
tam ajasra-sukham muni-dhairya-haram
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 14
   When his mind was pleased by the austerities of Indra and Surabhi, he appeared in a golden form before them. Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers, who brings unlimited pleasure and who disturbs the calm minds of the silent sages. [This incident is described in Bhaktivinoda’s Nabadwip-dhama-mahâtmya.]
abhilasha-cayam tad abheda-dhiyam
ashubham ca shubham ca tyaja sarvam idam
anukulataya priya-sevanaya
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 15
   Give up all your desires for sense enjoyment. Give up the idea that you are identical with the Lord. Abandon both auspicious and inauspicious works. Only worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers with acts compatible with his pleasure and by serving those dear to him.
hari-sevaka-sevana-dharma-paro
hari-nama-rasamrita-pana-ratah
nati-dainya-daya-paramana-yuto
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 16
   Become fixed in the religion of serving the servants of Hari. Be fixed in drinking the nectar of the Holy Names. Always be fixed in respect, humility and compassion. Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
vada yadava madhava krishna hare
vada rama janardana keshava he
vrishabhanu-suta-priyanatha sada
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 17
   Sing the names of Yadava, Madhava, Krishna and Hari. Sing the names of Rama, Janardana and Keshava. Always sing the name of the dearest lord of the daughter of Vrishabhanu. Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
vada yamuna-tira-vanadri-pate
vada gokula-kanana-puïja-rave
vada rasa-rasayana gaura-hare
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 18
   Sing the name of the Lord of the forests by the Yamuna banks. Sing the name of the sun which lights up the gardens of Gokula. Sing the name of Gaurahari, the alchemist of sacred rapture. Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
cala gaura-vanam nava-khandamayam
patha gauraharesh caritani muda
lutha gaura-padankita-ganga-tatam
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 19
   Go live in Gauranga’s forest with its nine divisions. Study the lives of Gaurahari. Roll about in the dust by the banks of the Ganges marked with Gauranga’s footprints. And worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
smara gaura-gadadhara-keli-kalam
bhava gaura-gadadhara-paksha-carah
shrnu gaura-gadadhara-caru-katham
bhaja godruma-kanana-kuïja-vidhum 20
   Remember always the enchanting pastimes of Gaura-Gadadhara. Become a follower of Gaura-Gadadhara. Always listen to the enchanting topics of Gaura-Gadadhara. Worship the moon of Godruma’s forest bowers.
A list of Bhaktivinoda Thakur’s written works
   Other than the titles already mentioned, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur wrote numerous works from 1866 to 1907 which are listed here as far as possible.
(1) Balid-e-registry (Urdu), 1856.
(2) Speech on Gautam (English), 1856.
(3) Speech on the Bhagavatam (English), 1869.
(4) Garbha-stotra-vyakhya (Bengali), 1870.
(5) Reflections (English), 1871.
(6) Slokas of Haridas Thakur’s Samadhi (English), 1871.
(7) Jagannatha Mandir of Puri (English), 1871.
(8) Akhras of Puri (English), 1871.
(9) Vedantadhikarana-mala (Sanskrit), 1872.
(10) Datta-kaustubham (Sanskrit), 1874.
(11) Datta-vamsha-mala (Sanskrit), 1876.
(12) Bauddha-vijaya-kavyam (Sanskrit), 1878.
(13) Shri-Krishna-samhita (Sanskrit and Bengali), 1880.
(14) Kalyana-kalpa-taru (Bengali songs), 1881.
(15) Shri-sajjana-toshani (Bengali monthly magazine) from 1881-1898.
(16) Review of Nitya-Svarupa-samsthapana (English), 1883.
(17) Srimad-Bhagavad-gita, with Vishvanath Chakravarti’s commentary, and Rasika-raïjana translation (Bengali), 1886.
(18) Shri-Caitanya-shikshamrita (Bengali), 1886.
(19) Sammodana commentary to Shikshashtaka (Sanskrit), 1886.
(20) Manah-shiksha padyanuvada (Bengali), 1886.
(21) Dashopanishac-curnika (Sanskrit), 1886.
(22) Bhavavali, verses and commentary (Sanskrit), 1886.
(23) Prema-pradipa (Bengali novel), 1886.
(24) Vishnu-sahasra-nama with Baladeva’s commentary (Sanskrit), 1886.
(25) Published Satyaraja Khan’s Shri-Krishna-vijaya, 1886.
(26) Caitanyopanishat with Chaitanya-caranamrita commentary (Sanskrit), 1887.
(27) Vaishnava-siddhanta-mala (Bengali), 1888.
(28) Shri-Amnaya-sutra (Sanskrit sutras, Bengali explanation), 1890.
(29) Shridhama-Nabadwip-mahatmya (Bengali), 1890.
(30) Siddhanta-darpana translation (Bengali), 1890.
(31) Srimad-Bhagavad-gita, Bengali translation (Vidvad-raïjana-bhashya) and Baladeva’s Sanskrit commentary (Bengali), 1891.
(32) Shri-Harinama (Bengali), 1892.
(33) Shri-Nama (Bengali), 1892.
(34) Shri-Nama-tattva (Bengali), 1892.
(35) Shri-Nama-mahima (Bengali), 1892.
(36) Shri-Nama-pracara (Bengali), 1892.
(37) Shriman-Mahaprabhura Shiksha (Bengali), 1892.
(38) Tatta-viveka (Sanskrit verses and Bengali comment), 1893.
(39) Sharanagati (Bengali songs), 1893.
(40) Shoka-shatana (Bengali song), 1893.
(41) Jaiva-dharma (Bengali), 1893.
(42) Tattva-sutra (Sanskrit and Bengali), 1894.
(43) Ishopanishat Vedarka-didhiti-vyakhya (Bengali), 1894.
(44) Tattva-muktavali or Mayavada-shata-dushani (Sanskrit and Bengali), 1894.
(45) Amrita-pravaha-bhashya on Chaitanya-caritamrita (Bengali), 1895.
(46) Shri-Gauranga-smarana-mangala-stotra (Sanskrit), 1896.
(47) Life and Precepts of Sree Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (English), 1896.
(48) Shri-Ramanuja-Upedesha (Bengali), 1896.
(49) Artha-paicaka (Bengali), 1896.
(50) Bengali translation of Brahma-samhita, 1897.
(51) Kalyana-kalpa-taru (Revised), 1897.
(52) Translation and comment on Krishnakarnamrita (Bengali), 1898.
(53) Translation and commentary on Upadeshamritam (Bengali), 1898.
(54) Bhagavad-gita with Madhva’s commentary (Bengali), 1898.
(55-56) Sanatan Goswami’s Brihad-Bhagavatamrita in two volumes (Bengali translation), 1898.
(57) Narahari Thakur’s Bhajanamrita (Bengali translation), 1899.
(58) Nabadwip-bhava-tarangini (Bengali verse), 1899.
(59) Shri-Harinama-cintamani (Bengali verse), 1900.
(60) Tattva-vamsha-mala (Bengali)
(61) Bhagavatarka-marici-mala (compilation and Bengali translation), 1900.
(62) Shri-sankalpa-kalpadruma (Bengali translation), 1900.
(63) Padma-purana (edited), 1901.
(64) Bhajana-rahasya (collection of verses and Bengali verse translation), 1902.
(65) Vijana-grama o sannyasai (Bengali verse, revised edition), 1902.
(66) Shri-Krishna-samhita (Sanskrit and Bengali, revised), 1903.
(67) Sat-kriya-sara-dipika (edited), 1903.
(68) Shri-Caitanya-shikshamrita (revised and expanded), 1905.
(69) Prema-vivarta (Bengali), 1905.
(70) Sva-niyama-dvadashakam (Sanskrit verse), 1906.
(71) Shri-Nimbarka-Dasha-shloki (Bengali trans. and comment), 1907.
(72) Shri-Gitimala (Bengali songs), 1907.
(73) Shri-Gitavali (Bengail songs), 1907.
(74) Harikatha (Bengali verse), 1850.
   From 1878 to 1881, while Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur was living at Nariala in Jessore district, he wrote Shri-Krishna-samhita and Kalyana-kalpa-taru and started publishing the monthly magazine, Sajjana-toshani. While in Barasat in 1883, he published Sajjana-toshani in English. Then while in Serampore (Shriramapura) in 1886 he published his translation-commentary Rasika-raijana with Vishvanath’s commentary Sarartha-darshini to Bhagavad-gita, Chaitanya-shikshamrita, Sanmodana-bhashya to Shikshamrita and Bhaktivinoda. In 1887 while in Sambalpur, he received an old manuscript of Caitanyopanishat from a disciple named Madhusudana Das. Later in the same year, while living in Krishnanagara, he started work on Amnaya-sutra and published his Nabadwip-mahatmya. In 1896, after returning to Calcutta from Tripura he wrote his English Life and Precepts of Sree Chaitanya Mahaprabhu and the Sanskrit Gauranga-smarana-mangala-stotra.

[Excerpted from "Sri Chaitanya: His Life & Associates" by Srila Bhakti Ballabh Tirtha Maharaj
If your heart wishes to always drink the nectar of Hari
dhana-yauvana-jivana-rajya-sukham (74) Harikatha (Bengali verse), 1850.
His mercy makes no distinction between friend and foe. Though his bodily hue is not black, he is the son of the King of Vraja. Worship the moon of Godruma forest bowers, the son of Nanda, the playboy who sports on the Yamuna
(69) Prema-vivarta (Bengali), 1905.
(53) Translation and commentary on Upadeshamritam (Bengali), 1898.
Sing the name of the Lord of the forests by the Yamuna banks. Sing the name of the sun which lights up the gardens of Gokula. Sing the name of Gaurahari, the alchemist of sacred rapture. Worship the moon of Godruma
vishveshu caitanya-katha-pracari
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