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A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada (IAST: Abhaya Caraṇāravinda Bhaktivedānta Svāmī Prabhupāda; Bengali: অভয চরণারৱিন্দ ভক্তিৱেদান্ত স্ৱামী প্রভুপাদ) (1896–1977) was a spiritual, philosophical, and religious teacher from India who spread the Hare Krishna mantra and the teachings of “Krishna consciousness” to the world. Born as Abhay Charan De and later legally named Abhay Charanaravinda Bhaktivedanta Swami, he is often referred to as “Bhaktivedanta Swami”, "Srila Prabhupada", or simply “Prabhupada”.[3]

His Divine Grace
A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami in Germany, 1974
TitleFounder-Acharya of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness
Personal
Born
Abhay Charan De

(1896-09-01)1 September 1896
Died14 November 1977(1977-11-14) (aged 81)
Resting placeSrila Prabhupada's Samadhi Mandir, ISKCON Vrindavan
27°34′19″N 77°40′38″E / 27.57196°N 77.67729°E / 27.57196; 77.67729
ReligionHinduism
NationalityIndian
Parents
  • Gour Mohan De (father)
  • Rajani De (mother)
DenominationGaudiya Vaishnavism
Lineagefrom Chaitanya Mahaprabhu
Notable work(s)
Alma materScottish Churches College, University of Calcutta[2]
Known forthe Hare Krishna movement[1]
Signature
Religious career
GuruBhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur
Initiationdiksha: 1933 (by Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati)
sannyasa: 1959 (by Bhakti Prajnan Keshava)

To carry out an order received in his youth from his spiritual teacher to spread “Krishna consciousness” in English, in his old age, at 69, he journeyed in 1965 from Kolkata to New York City on a cargo ship, taking with him little more than a few trunks of books. He knew no one in America, but he chanted Hare Krishna in a park in New York City, gave classes, and in 1966, with the help of some early students, established the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), which now has centers throughout the world.

He taught a path in which one aims at realizing oneself to be an eternal spiritual being, distinct from one’s temporary material body, and seeks to revive one’s dormant relationship with the supreme living being, known by the Sanskrit name Krishna. One does this through various practices, especially through hearing about Krishna from standard texts, chanting mantras consisting of names of Krishna, and adopting a life of devotional service to Krishna. As part of these practices, Prabhupada required that his initiated students strictly refrain from gambling, eating meat, fish, and eggs, using intoxicants (even coffee, tea, or cigarettes), and engaging in extramarital sex. In contrast to earlier Indian teachers who had promoted in the West the idea that the ultimate truth is essentially impersonal, he taught that the Absolute is ultimately personal.

His duty as a guru, or teacher, he held, was to convey intact the message of Krishna as found in core spiritual texts such as the Bhagavad Gita. To this end, he wrote and published a translation and commentary he called Bhagavad-gita As It Is. He also wrote and published translations and commentaries for texts celebrated in India but hardly known elsewhere, such as the Srimad-Bhagavatam (Bhagavata Purana) and the Chaitanya Charitamrita, thereby making those texts accessible in English for the first time. In all, he wrote more than eighty books.

In the late 1970s and the 1980s ISKCON came to be labeled a destructive cult by critics in America and some European countries. Although scholars and courts rejected claims of cultic brainwashing and recognized ISKCON as representing an authentic branch of Hinduism, in some places the “cult” label and image have persisted. Some of Prabhupada's views or statements have been perceived as racist towards blacks, discriminatory against lower castes, or misogynistic.[4][5][6] Decades after his demise, Prabhupada's teachings and the Society he established continue to be influential,[7] with some scholars and Indian political leaders calling him one of the most successful propagators of Hinduism abroad.[8][9][10][11]

Early life (1896–1922)

Abhay Charan De was born in Calcutta (now Kolkata), India, on September 1, 1896, the day after Janmashtami (the birth anniversary of Krishna).[12] His parents, Gour Mohan De and Rajani De, named him Abhay Charan, meaning “one who is fearless, having taken shelter of Lord Krishna’s lotus feet”.[3] Following Indian tradition, Abhay’s father invited an astrologer, who predicted that at the age of seventy, Abhay would cross the ocean,[13] become a famous religious teacher, and open 108 temples around the world.[14]

Abhay was raised in a religious family belonging to the suvarna-vanik mercantile community. His parents were Gaudiya Vaishnavas, or followers of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, who taught that Krishna is the Supreme Personality and that pure love for Krishna is the highest attainment.[15][16]

Gour Mohan was a middle-income merchant and had his own fabric and clothing store.[17] He was related to the rich and aristocratic Mullik mercantile family,[13] who had been trading in gold and salt for centuries.[17]

Opposite the De house was a temple of Radha-Krishna that for a century and a half had been supported by the Mullik family.[17] Every day, young Abhay, accompanied by his parents or servants, attended temple services.[17]

At the age of six, Abhay organized a likeness of the “chariot festival”, or Ratha-yatra, the huge Vaishnava festival held annually in the city of Puri in Odisha.[18] For this purpose, Abhay persuaded his father to obtain for him a scaled-down copy of the massive chariot on which the form of Jagannatha (Krishna as “Lord of the universe”) rides in procession in Puri.[18] Decades later, after going to America, Abhay would bring Ratha-yatra festivals to the West.[19]

Though Abhay’s mother wanted Abhay to go to London to study law,[20] his father rejected the idea, fearing Abhay would be negatively influenced by Western society and acquire bad habits.[12] In 1916 Abhay began his studies at Scottish Church College, a prestigious school in Calcutta founded by Alexander Duff, a Christian missionary.[21][a]

In 1918, while in college, Abhay, as arranged by his father, married Radharani Datta, also from an aristocratic family.[12][18][22] They had five children over the course of their marriage.[16] After graduation from college, Abhay began a career in pharmaceuticals[23] and later opened his own pharmaceutical company in Allahabad.[24]

Abhay grew up while India was under British rule, and like many other youth his age he was attracted to Mahatma Gandhi's non-cooperation movement. In 1920, Abhay graduated from college with a specialization in English, philosophy, and economics.[25] He successfully passed the final exams, but as a sign of opposition to British rule he refused to take part in the graduation ceremony and receive a diploma.[12][22]

Midlife (1922–1965)

 
Memorial at the spot of Abhay Charan De's first meeting with Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati. Kolkata. (2024)

In 1922, while still in college, Abhay was persuaded by a friend, Narendranath Mullik,[17] to meet with Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati (1874-1937), a Vaishnava scholar and teacher and the founder of the Gaudiya Math — a spiritual institution for spreading the teachings of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu.[12] The word “math” denotes a monastic or missionary center.[26] Bhaktisiddhanta was continuing the work of his father, Bhaktivinoda Thakur (1838-1914), who regarded Chaitanya's teachings as the highest form of theism, intended not for any one religion or nation but for all of humanity.[23]

When the meeting took place, Bhaktisiddhanta said to Abhay, “You are an educated young man. Why don’t you take the message of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu and spread it in English?”[12][27][28] But Abhay, according to his own later account, argued that India first needed to become independent before anyone would take Chaitanya’s message seriously — an argument Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati defeated.[29] Convinced, Abhay accepted the instruction to spread the message of Chaitanya in English, and it was in pursuance of this order from Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati that he later traveled to New York.[30] Many years later he recalled: “I immediately accepted him as spiritual master. Not formally, but in my heart”.[31]

The Gaudiya Math and initiation (1933)

After meeting Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati in 1922, Abhay had little contact with the Gaudiya Math until 1928, when sannyasis (renounced, itinerant preachers) from the Math came to open a center in Allahabad, where Abhay and his family were living.[32] Abhay became a regular visitor, contributed funds, and brought important people to the lectures of the Math’s sannyasis. In 1932, he visited Bhaktisiddhanta in the holy town of Vrindavan, and in 1933, when Bhaktisiddhanta came to Allahabad to lay the cornerstone for a new temple, Abhay received diksha (spiritual initiation) from him and was given the name Abhay Charanaravinda.[3][32]

Over the next three years, whenever Abhay was able to visit Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati in Calcutta[33] or Vrindavan,[34] Abhay would carefully hear from his spiritual master.[35] In 1935, Abhay moved for business to Bombay[36] and then in 1937 back to Calcutta.[37] In both places he assisted other members of the Gaudiya Math by donating money, leading kirtans, lecturing, writing, and bringing others to the Math. At the end of 1936, he visited Vrindavan, where he again met Bhaktisiddhanta, who told him, “If you ever get money, print books”[18] — an instruction that would inform his life’s work.[citation needed]

Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati, two weeks before his death on January 1, 1937, wrote a letter to Abhay urging him to teach Gaudiya Vaishnavism in English.[38][39][40][41] After Bhaktisiddhanta passed away, the unified mission of the Gaudiya Math split,[42] and a battle for power broke out between his senior disciples.[43] Although Abhay continued to serve with other disciples of his spiritual master and wrote articles for their publications, he kept clear of the political struggles.[43][44]

“Bhaktivedanta” title (1939)

In 1939, elders in the Gaudiya community honored Abhay Charanaravinda (A. C.) with the title “Bhaktivedanta”. In the title, bhakti means “devotion”, and vedanta means “the culmination of Vedic knowledge”.[45] Thus the honorary title acknowledged his scholarship and devotion.[3]

Back to Godhead magazine (1944)

In an effort to fulfill the order of his guru, in 1944 A. C. Bhaktivedanta began publishing Back to Godhead, an English fortnightly magazine presenting the teachings of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu.[40][46][47] He singlehandedly wrote, edited, financed, published, and distributed the magazine,[48][49] today still published and distributed by his followers.[50][51]

Accepting vanaprastha

In 1950 A. C. Bhaktivedanta accepted the vanaprastha ashram (the traditional retired order of life), and went to live in Vrindavan, regarded as the site of Krishna’s Lila (divine pastimes),[32] although continuing to commute to Delhi on occasion.[52] In Mathura, adjoining Vrindavan, he wrote for and edited the Gauḍīya Patrikā magazine published by his godbrother[b] Bhakti Prajnan Keshava.[53]

Forming “The League of Devotees” (1952)

 
Prabhupada's passport, issued for his journey to the United States. (1965)

In 1952, A. C. Bhaktivedanta attempted to set up organized spiritual activities in the central Indian city of Jhansi, where he started “The League of Devotees”[54][55] — only to see the organization collapse two years later.[47][56]

Taking sannyasa (1959)

On September 17, 1959,[52] prompted by a dream of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati calling on him to accept sannyasa (renounced order of life), A. C. Bhaktivedanta formally entered sannyasa asrama from Bhakti Prajnan Keshava at his Keshavaji Gaudiya Math in Mathura and was given the name Bhaktivedanta Swami. Wishing to preserve the initiatory name given him by Bhaktisiddhanta, as a sign of humility and connection to his spiritual master he kept the initials “A. C”. before his sannyasa name. Now he was A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami.[57]

Staying at the Radha Damodar temple (1962–1965)

From 1962 to 1965 Bhaktivedanta Swami stayed in Vrindavan at the Radha-Damodar temple. There he began the task of translating from Sanskrit into English and commenting on the eighteen-thousand-verse Srimad-Bhagavatam (Bhagavata Purana), [58] the foundational text of Gaudiya Vaishnavism.[59] With great effort and struggle, he finally succeeded to translate, produce, raise funds for, and print the first of its twelve cantos, in three volumes.[60]

Journey to the United States (1965)

 
The Jaladuta. (1961)
 
August 31, 1965. After Prabhupada undergoes a heart attack onboard the Jaladuta, for five days his diary has no entries. He then writes, “Passed over a great crisis on the struggle for life and death”.[61]

After accepting sannyasa, Bhaktivedanta Swami began planning to travel to America to fulfill his spiritual master’s desire to spread Chaitanya’s teachings in the West.[62][63]

To leave India, Bhaktivedanta Swami had many hurdles to overcome: He needed a sponsor in America, official approvals in India, and a ticket for his travel. After significant difficulties he managed to secure the needed sponsorship and approvals,[58] he approached one of his well-wishers, Sumati Morarjee, the head of the Scindia Steam Navigation Company, to ask for free passage to America on one of her cargo ships.[64] Because of his age, she at first tried to dissuade him.[52][65] Finally she relented and granted him a ticket on a freighter, the Jaladuta. Bhaktivedanta Swami began the 35-day journey to America on August 13, 1965, at the age of 69.[66][67]

Bhaktivedanta took with him little more than a suitcase, an umbrella, some dry cereal, forty Indian rupees (about seven US dollars), and two hundred three-volume sets of his translation of the first canto of Srimad-Bhagavatam.[68][69][70][71]

After surviving two heart attacks during his maritime journey,[72] Bhaktivedanta Swami finally arrived at the Boston Harbor on September 17, 1965, and then continued on to New York City.[73]

Later years (1965-1977)

Beginnings in New York City

Bhaktivedanta Swami had no support or acquaintances in the United States except the Agarwals, an Indian-American family, who, although strangers to him, had agreed to sponsor his visa.[63][c] Upon reaching New York, he took a bus to the town of Butler, Pennsylvania, where the Agarwals lived. In Butler he delivered lectures to different groups at venues like the local YMCA.[75][76]

After a month in Butler, he returned by bus to New York City.[63] He stayed at various places — sometimes in a windowless room,[77] sometimes a Bowery loft[78] — until with the help of early followers he found a place to stay in the Lower East Side, where he converted a storefront curiosity shop with the serendipitous name “Matchless Gifts” into a small temple[79][80] at 26 Second Avenue.[79][81][82][83][84] There he offered classes on the Bhagavad-gita and other Vaishnava texts and held kirtan (group chanting) of the Hare Krishna mantra:

Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare
Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare.
[85]

 
The Hare Krishna Tree in Tompkins Square Park, New York.

After he and his followers held Hare Krishna kirtan one Sunday under a tree in nearby Tompkins Square Park, The New York Times reported the event: “Swami’s Flock Chants in Park to Find Ecstasy; 50 Followers Clap and Sway to Hypnotic Music at East Side Ceremony”.[86] He slowly gained a following, mainly from young people of the 60s counterculture.[79]

In contrast to the 60s countercultural lifestyle, he required that in order to receive spiritual initiation his followers had to vow to follow four “regulative principles”: no illicit sex (that is, sex outside of marriage), no eating of meat, fish, or eggs, no intoxicants (including drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, and even coffee and tea), and no gambling.[87][88] New initiates also vowed to daily chant sixteen meditative “rounds” of the Hare Krishna 'mantra' (that is, to complete sixteen circuits of chanting the mantra on a 108-bead strand). During the first year in New York, he initiated nineteen people.[79]

In July 1966 he incorporated the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON).[82][79][89][90][d]

In December of 1966 he made a recording of Krishna kirtan (along with a brief explanatory talk) that took the form of an album entitled Krishna Consciousness,[92] released under the “Happening” record label. The record helped the early spread of what he called “the Hare Krishna movement”. [93][94]

With his small band of followers in a little storefront, he was already sharing a vision of spreading “Krishna consciousness” around the world. He asked them to help — for example, by typing his manuscripts for the second canto of the Srimad-Bhagavatam.[95] After he completed his Bhagavad-gita As It Is (by mid January of 1967),[96] he asked a new disciple to find a publisher for it.[97]

Bhaktivedanta Swami personally taught his first followers to spread Krishna’s message, prepare food to offer to Krishna, collect donations, and chant the Hare Krishna maha-mantra (“great mantra”) on the streets.[98]

San Francisco

 
Allen Ginsberg greeting A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami at the San Francisco airport. (January 1967)

In 1967 Bhaktivedanta Swami established a second center, in San Francisco.[7][99][100] The opening of the temple in the heart of the booming hippie community of Haight-Ashbury attracted many new adherents and was a turning point in his movement’s history, marking the beginning of rapid growth.[79][101] To gain attention and raise funds, his disciples organized a two-hour concert with kirtan led by Bhaktivedanta Swami and rock performances by the Grateful Dead and other famous rock groups of the day.[102] This “Mantra Rock Dance”, held at the popular Avalon Ballroom, attracted some three thousand people[102] and brought attention to the local Hare Krishna temple. One commentator dubbed it the “ultimate high of that era”.[103]

 
The Mantra-Rock Dance poster by Harvey W. Cohen (created December 1966).

Later that year, Bhaktivedanta Swami’s followers organized San Francisco’s first Ratha Yatra, the festival he had celebrated as a child in imitation of the massive parade held annually in the Indian city of Puri. For this first San Francisco version, a flatbed truck with four pillars holding a canopy took the place of Puri’s three huge ornate wooden vehicles.[104] He would later establish this annual festival in major cities around the world,[105] with big vehicles —“chariots” — and thousands of people taking part.

At first Bhaktivedanta Swami’s followers referred to him as “the Swami[106] or “Swamiji”.[79] From mid-1968 onwards they called him “Prabhupada”, a respectful epithet that “enjoys currency with devotees and an increasing number of scholars”.[3]

Great Britain and Europe

In 1968, Prabhupada asked three married couples among his disciples to open a temple in London, England. Following his instructions, the disciples, dressed in their robes and saris, began singing Hare Krishna regularly on London streets and at once attracted attention. Soon newspapers carried headlines like “Krishna Chant Startles London” and “Happiness is Hare Krishna”.[107]

A further breakthrough came in December 1969 when the disciples managed to meet with members of the rock band the Beatles, who were at the peak of their global fame.[108][107] Even before then, George Harrison and John Lennon had gotten a copy of the maha-mantra recording released by Prabhupada and his students in New York and had begun singing Hare Krishna.[94][109]

In August 1969, Harrison produced a single of the Hare Krishna mantra, sung by the London disciples, and released it on Apple Records.[108][107][109] For the recording, the disciples called themselves “The Radha Krishna Temple”.[110] Harrison told a press conference convened by Apple that the Hare Krishna mantra was not a pop song but an ancient mantra that awakened spiritual bliss in the hearts of people listening to and repeating it.[111] Seventy thousand copies of the record sold on the first day.[107] It rose to number 11 on the British charts,[109] and Prabhupada’s students performed live four times on the BBC’s popular TV show Top of the Pops.[112] The record was also a success in Germany, Holland, France, Sweden, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia (as well as South Africa and Japan), and so the group was invited to perform in a number of European countries.[113]The next year, 1970, Harrison produced with Prabhupada’s disciples another hit single, “Govinda”, and in May 1971 the album The Radha Krishna Temple.[108][109] In 1970, Harrison sponsored the publishing of the first volume of Prabhupada’s book Kṛṣṇa, the Supreme Personality of Godhead,[107][114] which relates the activities of Krishna's life as told in the tenth canto of the Srimad-Bhagavatam. In 1973 Harrison donated a seventeen-acre estate known as Piggots Manor,[115] fifteen miles northwest of London. The Hare Krishna devotees converted this into a rural temple-ashram and renamed it Bhaktivedanta Manor[116] in Prabhupada’s honor.

Once Prabhupada’s disciples had made a start in England, Prabhupada over the years visited England many times and from there traveled to Germany, France, Italy, Sweden, Switzerland, and the Netherlands,[117] leading kirtans, installing forms of Krishna in ISKCON temples, meeting religious and intellectual leaders and others keen to meet him, and guiding and encouraging his disciples.[e]

Africa

In 1970 Prabhupada made the first of several visits to Kenya.[117] Although the disciples he had sent there had settled into doing spiritual programs for the local Indian people, Prabhupada insisted on doing programs meant for Africans. On one notable occasion in Nairobi, when he was scheduled to do a program at an Indian Radha-Krishna temple in a mainly African area downtown, he ordered the doors opened to invite the local residents, so that the hall soon flooded with African people.[118] Then he held kirtan and gave a talk. Prabhupada told his local leaders that this is what they should do: spread Krishna consciousness among the local African people.[119] Prabhupada also later visited Mauritius and South Africa[117] and sent his disciples to Nigeria and Zambia.[120]

The Soviet Union

 
Prabhupada in front of Saint Basil's Cathedral on Red Square in Moscow. (July 1972)

Prabhupada’s visit to Moscow from June 20 to June 25, 1971 marked the beginning of Krishna consciousness in the Soviet Union.[121] During his five days in Moscow, Prabhupada managed to meet only two Soviet citizens: Grigory Kotovsky, a professor of Indian and South Asian studies, and Anatoly Pinyaev, a twenty-three-year-old Muscovite.[f] Pinyaev, who went on to become the first Soviet Hare Krishna devotee, met Prabhupada through the son of an Indian diplomat stationed in Moscow.[122] Prabhupada’s assistant gave Pinyaev a copy of Prabhupada’s Bhagavad-gita, which Pinyaev was able to translate into Russian, copy, and then distribute underground in the Soviet Union during Communist times.[123] Pinyaev showed a great interest in Gaudiya Vaishnavism, accepted initiation from Prabhupada, and did much to ignite interest in Krishna consciousness in the Soviet Union.[121] Pinyaev was later imprisoned in Smolensk Special Psychiatric Hospital and forcibly treated with drugs for his practice of Krishna consciousness.[121][124]

India

Having achieved some success in the West, in 1970 Prabhupada directed his attention especially to India, with the hope of turning India back toward her original spiritual sensibilities.[125] He came back to India with a party of Western disciples[62] — ten American sannyasis and twenty other devotees[107] — and for the next seven years focused much of his effort on establishing temples in Bombay, Vrindavan, Hyderabad, and a planned international headquarters in Mayapur, West Bengal (the birthplace of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu).[62]

By that time, Prabhupada saw, India had set a course towards Europeanization[72] and sought to imitate the West. Therefore, the appearance on Indian soil of American and European Hare Krishna devotees who had rejected Western materialism and embraced Indian spiritual culture “caused nothing less than a sensation among the modernizing (i.e. Westernizing) Indians, planting seeds for an authentic religious revival there”.[126]

Timeline of Prabhupada's travels around the world (1965‒1977)[117]

By the early 1970s, Prabhupada had established his movement’s American headquarters in Los Angeles and its world headquarters in Mayapur.[127]

Around the world

In Latin America, Prabhupada visited Mexico and Venezuela. In Asia he visited Hong Kong, Japan, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines. He also spent time in Australia, New Zealand, and Fiji. In the Middle East he visited Iran.[117] Among the places he sent disciples to spread Krishna consciousness was China.[120]

Early in the movement, Prabhupada had guided his students personally, but later, as the movement rapidly expanded, he relied more on letters and his secretaries.[128] By giving his students instructions, advice, and encouragement, he ensured a “strong paternal presence” in their lives.[98] He wrote more than six thousand letters, many now collected and kept at the Bhaktivedanta Archives.[129] Besides receiving reports of accomplishments, via correspondence he also had to deal — almost daily — with setbacks, perplexities, quarrels, and failures. He tried to correct them as much as possible and kept on advancing his movement.[129]

Wherever he was, he took an hour-long early-morning walk, which became a time for disciples to ask questions and receive personal guidance.[130] On returning from his walk, he lectured daily on the Srimad-Bhagavatam,[131] often reading from the portion of the manuscript he was working on. Every afternoon he met with disciples or with dignitaries and leaders from various parts of his mission.

Traveling constantly to lecture and tend to his disciples, Prabhupada circled the world fourteen times in ten years.[132] He opened more than one hundred temples and dozens of farm communities and restaurants, as well as gurukulas (boarding schools) for ISKCON's children.[133] He initiated nearly five thousand disciples.[134]

Death (1977)

On November 14, 1977, at the age of 81, after a long illness,[g] Prabhupada passed away in his room at the Krishna Balaram Mandir,[2][136] the temple he had established in Vrindavan, India.[137][138][139] His burial site is located in the courtyard of the temple beneath a samadhi (memorial shrine) built by his followers.[2][140]

Succession

 
Prabhupada's samadhi in Vrindavan, India.

In 1970 Prabhupada established a Governing Body Commission (GBC), then consisting of twelve leading disciples, to oversee ISKCON’s activities around the world and to serve as ISKCON’s ultimate managing authority.[139] In 1977, four months before his death, he appointed eleven senior disciples to perform spiritual initiations on his behalf while he was ill.[141]

Despite the measures Prabhupada took to organize the management of his movement, his death caused a crisis of authority in ISKCON that destabilized the organization and became a turning point in its development.[138][142][143] The succession process was beset by conflicts, with disagreements persisting for decades.[144][145] Nonetheless, by 2023 nearly one hundred disciples and grand-disciples in succession from Prabhupada were serving as initiating gurus in his branch of the Gaudiya Vaishnava lineage.[146]

Philosophy and teachings

Within Eastern systems, spiritual lineages are integral to each tradition, and a teacher is mandated to maintain theological fidelity by transmitting knowledge as given in the lineage.[147] Prabhupada comes in the Brahma-Madhva-Gaudiya lineage, which traces back to the saint and mystic Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1486–1533)[148] and the theologian Madhvacharya (1238–1317), and further back, its teachings say, to the beginnings of creation.[149] This lineage (sampradaya) follows such texts as Srimad-Bhagavatam, the Bhagavad-gita, and the writings of Chaitanya’s disciples and their followers.[150] Prabhupada’s extensive commentaries on the sacred texts follow those of Bhaktisiddhanta, Bhaktivinoda, and other traditional teachers, such as Baladeva Vidyabhushana, Vishvanatha Chakravarti, Jiva Goswami, Madhvacharya, and Ramanujacharya.[151][152]

The Absolute Truth

In accordance with the teachings of the Srimad-Bhagavatam, Prabhupada taught that the supreme truth, or Absolute Truth, is the one unlimited, undivided spiritual entity that is the source of all. That Absolute Truth, he taught, is realized in three phases: as Brahman (all-pervading impersonal oneness), as Paramatma (the aspect of God present within the heart of every living being), and as Bhagavan, the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Though the Absolute Truth is one, he taught, that one Absolute is progressively realized in these three features according to one’s level of spiritual advancement. In the initial stage the Absolute is realized as Brahman, in a more advanced stage as Paramatma, and at the most advanced stage as Bhagavan.[153][154][155][156]

 
Radha-Krishna, the supreme manifestation of God in the teachings of Gaudiya Vaishnavism, which Prabhupada represented. Radha-Krishna installed by Prabhupada in his temple in Vrindavan, India.

Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead

In the Srimad-Bhagavatam, and so in Prabhupada’s teachings, Krishna is seen as the original and supreme manifestation of Bhagavan[149] – in Sanskrit, svayam-bhagavan, or the Supreme Personality of Godhead himself.[157] No one is equal to or greater than Krishna.[158] Brahman and Paramatma are partial realizations of Krishna.[158] The various Vishnu forms, such as Rama and Narasimha, are “nondifferent” from Krishna; they are the same Personality of Godhead, appearing in different roles. The form of Krishna is the original and the most complete form. In the Hindu pantheon, he taught, the gods other than the Vishnu forms are demigods — that is, assistants of the Supreme Personality of Godhead.[153]

The energies of the Absolute

If the Absolute Truth is one, this raises the question of how there can be diversity. If, as the Upanishads say, there is only the Absolute Truth and nothing else, we need some way to account for the existence of living beings, with all their differences, and the world, with all its many colors, forms, sounds, aromas, and so on. Prabhupada responds by referencing a statement from the Upanishads that the Absolute Truth has varied energies.[159][160] As a fire located in one place gives off heat and light throughout a room, the Absolute Truth fills the world with every sort of variety.[161]

Oneness and difference

Prabhupada taught Chaitanya’s doctrine of achintya bheda-abheda-tattva, in which everything is seen as simultaneously, inconceivably one with the Absolute — that is, with Krishna — and yet different.[159][162][163] By way of analogy, Prabhupada gives the example that heat is in one sense identical with the fire from which it emerges and yet the two are different — when sitting in a fire’s warmth, we are not burning in the fire itself.[161][164] This “oneness and difference” accounts for the oneness of an Absolute Truth that includes limitless varieties.[159][162][163]

The inferior and superior energies

Among Krishna’s energies, Prabhupada taught, the ingredients of this world collectively belong to Krishna’s “inferior energy”[165] — inferior in that, being inert matter, it lacks consciousness.[166][167] But superior to inert matter are the conscious living beings (jivas) that belong to Krishna’s “superior energy”.[168][169]

The predicament of the living being

Because the living beings belong to Krishna’s “superior energy”, Prabhupada taught, they share in Krishna’s divine qualities, including knowledge, bliss, and eternality (sat, cit, and ananda).[166][169] But because of contact with the “inferior energy” since time immemorial,[170] the divine nature of the living beings has been covered, and subjecting the living beings in this world to ignorance, suffering, and repeated birth and death.[171] In each life the living beings struggle against birth and death, disease and old age.[172] While trying to control and enjoy the resources of nature, the living beings increasingly suffer from entanglement in nature’s complexities.[173]

As spiritual beings, belonging to the “superior energy”, the living beings are different from their material bodies: the body may be male or female, young or old, white or black, American or Indian, but the living being within the body is beyond what he called these “material designations”.[174] Prabhupada phrased this understanding in a maxim he often used: “I am not this body”.[175][176]

When we falsely identify with these bodies, he taught, we are under the influence of maya, or illusion. Only when this illusion is dispelled can the soul become liberated from material existence.[172]

Bhakti

Prabhupada taught that the living beings can be freed from illusion, and from their entire material predicament, by recognizing that they are tiny but eternal parts of Krishna and that their natural engagement lies in serving Krishna, just as a hand serves the body. Dormant within every living being, Prabhupada taught, is an eternal loving relationship with that Absolute, or Krishna, and when that loving relationship is revived, the living being resumes its natural eternal and joyful life.[177] This eternal service in devotion to Krishna, rendered by one freed from all material designation, is called bhakti.[158]

Prabhupada sings a Bengali bhajan by Narottama Dasa Thakur.

One can begin practicing bhakti, Prabhupada taught, even while in the earliest stages of spiritual life. In this way, bhakti is both the final end to be achieved and the means by which to achieve it. As a spiritual practice, bhakti is a powerful, transformative process that purifies the soul and enables it to see God directly.[172]

Impersonalism

Prabhupada crusaded against what he called “impersonalism” — that is, the idea that ultimately the Supreme has no form, qualities, activities, or personal attributes. In this way he stood opposed to the teachings of Shankara (A.D. 788–820), who held that everything except Brahman is illusory, including the soul, the world, and God.[178] Before Prabhupada, Shankara’s system of thought, known as Advaita Vedanta, had generally provided the framework for Western understandings of Hinduism,[179] and the “steady procession of Hindu swamis” who came to America generally aligned themselves with Shankara’s monistic views and the idea of “the ultimate absorption of the self into an impersonal Reality or Brahman”.[180]

But prominent Vaishnava philosophers from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries like Madhva and Ramanuja had opposed Shankara’s views with personalistic understandings of Vedanta. Those teachers presented strong philosophical arguments criticizing Shankara’s “illusionism” (mayavada), his view that personal individuality, indeed all individuality, is illusory.[178][181] Philosophers in the Gaudiya line such as, in the sixteenth century, Jiva Goswami had continued to argue formidably against impersonalism, which they regarded as the essential metaphysical misconception”.[182] So Prabhupada strongly opposed impersonalistic views wherever he encountered them and asserted the eternal personal existence of the Absolute and of all living beings.[178] Where Buddhism shares ground with Shankara’s views by teaching that ultimately personality disintegrates, leaving nothing but a void nirvana,[183] Buddhism too came in for Prabhupada’s strong personalistic critique.[183][184]

Societal organization

Prabhupada taught that society should ideally be organized in such a way that people have specific duties according to their occupation (varna) and stage of life (ashrama).[185] The four varnas are intellectual work; administrative and military work; agriculture and business; and ordinary labor and assistance. The four ashramas are student life, married life, retired life, and renounced life. In accordance with the Bhagavad-gita and in opposition to the modern Hindu caste system, Prabhupada taught that one’s varna, or occupational standing, should be understood in terms of one’s qualities and the work one actually does, not by one’s birth.[186]

Moreover, devotional qualifications always supersede material ones.[187] Following Chaitanya, who challenged the caste system and undercut hierarchical power structures,[188] Prabhupada taught that anyone could take to the practice of bhakti-yoga and become self-realized through the chanting of God’s holy names, as found in the Hare Krishna maha-mantra.[172]

Prabhupada also emphasized the importance of self-sufficient farming communities as places where one could live simply and cultivate Krishna consciousness.[189]

Spiritual practices

Kirtan

 
Pranbhupada plays the harmonium during a recording session in Germany. (1974)

The main spiritual practice Prabhupada taught was Krishna sankirtana (also simply called kirtan or kirtana), in which people musically chant together names of Krishna, especially in the form of the maha-mantra:

Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare
Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare.

Kirtan literally means “description”, hence “praise”, and sankirtana indicates kirtan performed by people together.[190]

On the authority of traditional Sanskrit texts, Chaitanya Mahaprabhu had taught that Krishna kirtan is the most effective method for spiritual realization in the present age (Kali-yuga) – more effective than silent meditation (dhyana), speculative study (jnana), worship in temples (puja), or performing the various physical or mental disciplines of yoga. Krishna kirtan, he had taught, can be done by anyone, anywhere, at any time, and without hard-and-fast rules. Because the names of Krishna are “transcendental sounds”, identical with Krishna himself, the chanting is spiritually uplifting.[191]

Prabhupada leads Hare Krishna kirtan and explains the maha-mantra. October 1966.

When Prabhupada began his efforts to spread Krishna consciousness in the United States, he held kirtans in a Bowery loft, in his early storefront temples, in Tompkins Square Park in New York and Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, and wherever else he went.[192] Following Prabhupada, his disciples soon began holding kirtans regularly in streets, parks, temples, and other venues in major cities in North America and Europe and then in Latin America, Australia, Africa, and Asia.Because of Hare Krishna kirtan, Prabhupada’s movement itself came to be referred to simply as “Hare Krishna” and its followers as “Hare Krishnas”.[h]

Theologically speaking, the term sankirtana can extend from the public chanting of Hare Krishna to the distribution of books spoken by or about Krishna. Kirtan in the sense of public chanting is traditionally accompanied by kartals (hand cymbals) and mridangas (drums), and Prabhupada’s spiritual master and grand spiritual master had said that distribution of Krishna literature was the “great mridanga” because such distribution spreads Krishna consciousness still further.[128][193][194] Prabhupada therefore gave great importance to such distribution.

Association with devotees

Prabhupada’s tradition constantly makes the point that “association with saints inspires saintliness, association with devotees inspires devotion. The association of genuine devotees can exert a powerful effect upon one's consciousness”.[195] And so when Prabhupada incorporated ISKCON, its founding document included as one the Society’s purposes “To bring the members of the Society together with each other and nearer to Krishna”.[196]

Initiation vows

Prabhupada required of his followers, as a prerequisite for spiritual initiation, that they promise to follow four “regulative principles”: no illicit sex (that is, no sex outside of marriage), no eating of meat, fish, or eggs, no intoxicants (including drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, and even coffee and tea), and no gambling.[88][197] New initiates also vowed to daily chant sixteen meditative “rounds” of the Hare Krishna mantra (that is, to complete sixteen circuits of chanting the mantra on a 108-bead strand).[88]

Hearing of Srimad-Bhagavatam

For at least the last millennium, the Srimad-Bhagavatam has been “by far the most important work in the Krishna tradition” and “the scripture par excellence of the Krishnaite schools”.[198] It is sometimes described as “the ripened fruit of the Vedic tree”.[45][199] Accordingly, Prabhupada instituted daily classes on the Bhagavatam in all his centers,[200] and he spoke on Bhagavatam daily, wherever he went.[201]

Deity worship

In accordance with Vaishnava teachings, Prabhupada introduced worship of Krishna in the form of a murti: figures cast in metal or carved in stone or wood to match descriptions of Krishna given in Vaishnava texts. Scholar of religion Kenneth Valpey writes:

“Prabhupāda explained that although omnipresent, Kṛṣṇa makes himself perceivable and hence worshipable through material elements which are, after all, his own ‘energies.’ Based on this reasoning one should understand the image of Kṛṣṇa to be ‘Kṛṣṇa personally,’ appearing in a way quite suitable for our vision,’ that is, perceivable by ordinary persons with ordinary powers of sight”.[202]

Prabhupada taught that because Krishna is personally present as the deity (the term Prabhupada used for such a form), worshiping the deity helps one develop loving exchanges with Krishna. Prabhupada installed deities in ISKCON temples around the world.[203]

Food prepared and offered to the deity of Krishna with devotion becomes sanctified as krishna-prasadam ("mercy of Krishna"). Prabhupada taught that eating only prasadam purifies one’s existence and helps one develop in bhakti.[204] From the beginning of his mission Prabhupada distributed prasadam to visitors[205][206] and soon made it into the movement's major outreach vehicle.[207][208] A weekly prasadam feast for the public has always been a program at all of ISKCON centers.[209][210] Prabhupada wrote, “The Hare Krishna Movement is based on the principle: chant Hare Krishna mantra at every moment, both inside and outside of the temples, and, as far as possible, distribute prasadam".[211]

Living in Vrindavan

Prabhupada’s predecessors such as Rupa Goswami had taught the value of living in Vrindavan (sometimes spelled “Vrindaban”), the sacred town between Agra and New Delhi that is held to be the site of Krishna’s rural “pastimes” on earth and therefore conducive to constant remembrance of Krishna. Prabhupada accordingly brought his disciples on pilgrimage to Vrindavan and there established the Krishna-Balaram temple. Yet with a broader outlook he wrote one disciple, “[W]herever you remain, if you are fully absorbed in your transcendental work in Krishna consciousness, that place is eternally Vrindaban. It is the consciousness that creates Vrindaban”.[212]

Principal writings

Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati, who had specifically encouraged writing and publishing, at one meeting told Prabhupada: If you ever get money, print books.[18][213] So regardless of how busy or sometimes unwell Prabhupada might have been, he remained focused on producing books.[214] Prabhupada slept little, waking at 1:00 am every night[215] to translate and comment on the Srimad-Bhagavatam and other texts.[216] During the day he would give attention to guiding disciples and seeing to the affairs of his international society and its temples, and very early in the morning, while most people were asleep, he did most of his writing “because even with his age and uncertain health, he was unwilling to sacrifice his writing time for extra rest”.[217]

By 1970 he had translated the Bhagavad-gita, two cantos of the Bhagavatam, a summary study of its tenth canto, and a summary volume drawn from the expansive Caitanya-caritamrta. From 1970 on, his literary output slowed only slightly due to the demands of his expanding Hare Krishna movement.[218] His task, as scholars have observed, was not merely to translate the text but to translate an entire tradition.[219][220]

Historian of religion Thomas Hopkins relates that Prabhupada told him in a conversation in Philadelphia in 1975 that "the Gita provided the basic education on Krishna devotion, the Srimad-Bhagavatam was like graduate study, and the Caitanya-caritamrita was like postgraduate education for the most advanced devotees”.[221]

Hopkins says that by presenting in English such works as the Bhagavatam and Caitanya-caritamrta, Prabhupada made important texts accessible to the Western world that were simply not accessible before. Hopkins says, “[W]hat few English translations there were of the Bhagavata Purana and Caitanya-caritamrta were barely adequate and very hard to get hold of”.[220][i] Prabhupada, Hopkins says, “made these and other texts available in a way that they never were before” and “made the tradition itself accessible to the West”.[220]

Bhagavad-gita As It Is

 
President of India Pratibha Patil receives a copy of Bhagavad Gita As It Is. (14 December 2011)

In 1966-67, Prabhupada wrote a translation and commentary on the Bhagavad-gita he entitled Bhagavad-gita As It Is. It was first published by the Macmillan Company in 1968 in an abridged edition and later, in 1972, in full.[222] For each verse he first gives the Sanskrit Devanagari script, then a roman transliteration and word-for-word gloss, followed by his translation and a commentary, or “purport”.[223] Scholar of religion Richard H. Davis comments that this was “the first English translation of the Gita to supply an authentic interpretation from an Indian devotional tradition”.[224] It is “by far the most widely distributed of all English Gita translations”.[223] In 2015 Davis wrote, “The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust estimates that twenty-three million copies of Prabhupada’s translation have been sold, including the English original and secondary translations into fifty-six other languages”.[224] For Prabhupada, Davis says, “the essential fact about the Bhagavad-gita is its speaker. The Gita contains the words of Krishna, and Krishna is the ‘Supreme Personality of Godhead.’” In Prabhupada’s view, other translations lack authority because the translators use them to express their own opinions rather than the message of Krishna. In contrast, Prabhupada saw his task in presenting what Krishna wanted to say, and so he claimed to present the Bhagavad-gita “as it is”.[225]

Srimad-Bhagavatam

At once a sacred history, a theological treatise, and a philosophical text,[226] the Srimad-Bhagavatam “stands out by reason of its literary excellence, the organization that it brings to its vast material, and the effect that it has had on later writers”.[227] Praising the poetry of the Bhagavatam, scholar of religion Edwin Bryant says, “[S]cholars of the text have every right to say that ‘the Bhagavata can be ranked with the best of the literary works produced by mankind.’”[228]

 
Prabhupada’s edition of Srimad-Bhagavatam, with his translation and commentary.

It was this great work that Prabhupada, after taking sannyasa, set out to present in English, with, once again, the original Sanskrit text, its word-for-word meanings, a translation, and an in-depth commentary.[229] Also known as Srimad-Bhagavata Purana, Bhagavata Purana, or just the Bhagavata[230] Srimad-Bhagavatam is a work of twelve books (“cantos” was the word Prabhupada used) comprising more than fourteen thousand verse couplets.[231]Srimad” means “beautiful” or “glorious”.[232]

Prabhupada began his translation and commentary on the Bhagavatam after accepting sannyasa in 1959, and by 1965 he had completed and published the first canto.[233] He worked on translating the Srimad-Bhagavatam into English for the rest of his life.[217]

The cantos were published one by one, as he finished them. He completed nine cantos and thirteen chapters of the tenth. The rest of the Bhagavatam was completed by his disciples.[217]

Krsna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead

Considering his old age and the vast size of the Bhagavatam, Prabhupada knew he might not live to finish it. So in 1968 he undertook to present the Bhagavatam’s tenth canto — the essence of the work — in summary form as Krsna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead.[234]

This summary study is “Prabhupada’s own exposition of the story of Krishna as it is told in the Tenth Canto”.[217] It “laid out the account of Krishna from the Bhagavata Purana that provides the images and stories central to Krishna devotion”.[235]

As Bryant says:

“The tenth book of the Bhāgavata has inspired generations of artists, dramatists, musicians, poets, singers, writers, dancers, sculptors, architects and temple-patrons across the centuries. Its stories are well known to every Hindu household across the length and breadth of the Indian subcontinent, and celebrated in regional festivals all year round”.[236]

Prabhupada himself inspired artists among his disciples to provide the text with profuse full-color illustrations. Such illustrations became a feature of nearly all his books.[237]

A related work is Light of the Bhagavat, written by Prabhupada in Vrindavan in 1961, before he went to the West, but published only after his death. The book is a treatment of one chapter (chapter twenty) of the tenth canto. Prabhupada composed forty-eight commentaries for the chapter’s verses. The book is accordingly illustrated with forty-eight paintings.[238]

Ishopanishad

In 1969 Prabhupada published, again in his full verse-by-verse format, his translation and commentary for the Ishopanishad[239] — also known as the Īśa Upaniṣad or Īśāvāsya Upaniṣad,[240] which in 1960 he had partially serialized in his Back to Godhead magazine.[239] The Ishopanishad, consisting of only eighteen mantras,[241] is considered one of the principal Upanishads.[242] In all indigenous collections of the Upanishads, the Iśopaniṣad comes first.[240] Its first verse, “highly regarded as a capsule of Vedic theology”,[45] presents a god-centered view of the universe.[239] The celebrated traditional commentator Shankara wrote, “One who is eager to rid himself of the suffering and delusion of saṁsāra, created by ignorance, and attain Supreme Bliss is entitled to read this Upaniṣad”.[243]

The Nectar of Devotion

Begun in 1968,[244] The Nectar of Devotion is a summary study of Rupa Goswami’s Bhakti-rasamrita-sindhu, his “famous exposition of the principles of devotion”.[244] Scholar-practitioner Shrivatsa Goswami has described Bhakti-rasamrita-sindhu as “a textbook of devotional practice, an exposition on the philosophy of devotion, and a study of devotional psychology”.[245] The Nectar of Devotion “gave access to Gaudiya Vaisnavism’s most important theological treatise on devotion”.[235]

Caitanya-caritamrta

Caitanya-caritamrta is the seventeenth-century account of the life and teachings of Chaitanya, who founded the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition.[244] Written in the Bengali language, it runs to more than 15,000 verses and “is regarded as the most authoritative work on Śrī Caitanya”, a work of “rare merit”, with “no parallel in the whole of Bengali literature”.[246] Scholar of religion Hugh Urban calls it “one of the greatest works in all of Indian vernacular literature”.[247]

Prabhupada completed his translation in 1974, within two years,[218] and it was published in seventeen volumes, again with verse-by-verse text, transliteration, word meanings, translation and commentary.[229] He based his commentary on the Bengali commentaries of his predecessors Bhaktivinoda Thakura and Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati.[151]

Before Srila Prabhupada’s translation, the work in English was simply unavailable. After Prabhupada’s edition came out, scholar J. Bruce Long wrote, “The appearance of an English translation of Kṛṣṇadāsa Kavirāja Gosvāmī's Śri Caitanya-caritāmṛta by A. C. Bhaktivedānta, Founder-Ācārya of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, is a cause for celebration among both scholars in Indian Studies and lay-people seeking to enrich their knowledge of Indian spirituality”.[248]

Several years earlier, in 1968, Prabhupada published Teachings of Lord Caitanya.[249] The book offers a summary of selected portions of Caitanya-caritamrita.[250] [j]

The Nectar of Instruction

Prabhupada also wrote a verse-by-verse commentated translation of Rupa Goswami’s eleven-verse Upadeshamrita,[239] one of Rupa Goswami’s shortest works,[251] which provides concise directions on how to carry out devotional service.[147]

Bhaktivedanta Book Trust

In 1972 Prabhupada founded the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust (BBT), which manages the international publishing and distribution of his writings.[62][90][252] Apart from his major works, the BBT publishes various paperbacks derived from his lectures.[232] The BBT also publishes Back to Godhead, the magazine Prabhupada founded, in multiple languages.[253] Between 1973 and 1977, Prabhupada’s followers distributed several million books and other pieces of Krishna conscious literature every year in shopping malls, airports, and other public locations in the United States and worldwide.[254] As of 2023, his books had been translated into eighty-seven languages.[255] In 2022, the BBT printed more than two million pieces of literature.[256]

Critical assessments of Prabhupada’s writings

Shrivatsa Goswami has said, “Making these Vaiṣṇava texts available is one of Śrīla Prabhupāda’s greatest contributions. Apart from the masses, his books have also reached well into academic circles and have spurred academic interest in the Caitanya tradition”.[257] Further, he says, “The significance of making these texts available is not merely academic or cultural; it is spiritual. Jñāna, knowledge, is spread, proper doctrines are made known, people come closer to reality”.[257] Other academics, too, have applauded Prabhupada’s publications[258] as his most significant legacy.[259]

But his edition of Bhagavad-gita, in particular, has come in for criticism as well. Eric Sharpe, scholar of religion, considers Prabhupada’s reading of Bhagavad-gita single-minded and fundamentalist.[260] Sanskrit scholar A.L. Herman concurs.[261] Another scholar, K. P. Sinha, takes exception to Prabhupada’s “misinterpretations and unkind remarks” directed toward Advaita Vedanta, the philosophy of absolute monism.[262][k]

The most detailed critical analysis by a Western, non-Hindu scholar comes from historian of religion Robert D. Baird.[260] Baird takes upon himself the task of not merely seeing Prabhupada as “an authentic proponent of Vaishnavism” but of examining as an academic scholar the way Prabhupada reads the Bhagavad-gita.[263]

 
Prabhupada lectures on The Nectar of Devotion in front of Rupa Goswami’s samadhi in Vrindavan, India. (1972)

Whereas many scholars, Baird writes, see “some degree of progression” in the Gita, with different themes emphasized in different parts of the book, Prabhupada “reads the complete teaching of the book, indeed of Vedic literature generally, into any passage”.[264] It appears “that he considers it legitimate to interpret any verse in the light of the whole system found in the Gītā whether it is explicitly mentioned in that verse of the Gītā or not”.[265] In this way, he reads “Krishna consciousness” even into portions of the text where Krishna is not explicitly mentioned.[266] Prabhupada cites later passages in the Gita to explain earlier passages.[267] Indeed, he even quotes from other texts in the canon (whether written before the Gita or after[267]) to indicate the intention of the Gita, “as though they have the same authority as the Gita itself”.[267] And so: “In all, a wide range of texts are used to serve as authorities for understanding the Gītā. Swami Bhaktivedanta not only treats specific texts in a way that would be unusual among Western scholars, but he sees specific texts in the light of the Vedas in general”.[268]

Whereas other scholars, Baird writes, would give great attention to the overall structure of the Gita, Prabhupada gives the structure scant notice, preferring instead to make this point: “In every chapter of Bhagavad-gītā, Lord Kṛṣṇa stresses that devotional service unto the Supreme Personality of Godhead is the ultimate goal of life”.[269]

Prabhupada uses the text of the Gita to present various aspects of Krishna theology.[270] And “he also goes beyond specific texts and the Gītā itself when he makes it the occasion for the inculcation of a Vaishnava lifestyle,”[265] typified by chanting the maha-mantra, regulating one’s sexual activity, offering food to Krishna, and following a vegetarian diet.[271] And so: “Swami Bhaktivedanta is more interested in expounding the principles of Krishna consciousness than in merely explicating the text at hand”.[272] In one instance cited, “the text recommends one thing [astanga-yoga] and Bhaktivedanta Swami cancels that and offers the mahāmantra”.[272]

As for competing interpretations: “Bhaktivedanta often seeks to show the superiority of the Vaishnava position and the error of other positions”.[273] “The position that is attacked with the most regularity and vigor is that of Advaita Vedanta,”[273] “the system of thought that is commonly used to provide the structure for Western understandings of ‘Hinduism’”,[179] whose advocates Prabhupada calls Mayavadins, impersonalists, or monists.[273] For Advaita Vedanta he reserves his strongest condemnations.[179]

Nor does Prabhupada only criticize “impersonalists”. Rather, “Scholars in particular come under Swami Bhaktivedanta’s condemnation because they are merely ‘mental speculators’”.[274] In Prabhupada’s view, Baird says, “Since these scholars are not surrendered to Krishna, they are not Krishna conscious; they are merely offering their own ideas rather than the truth within the paramparā system [the lineage of masters and disciples]”.[274] Prabhupada “seldom engages in the kind of argumentation that scholars are accustomed to when deciding between alternative positions”.[275] Instead he takes a position as a spiritual master within the disciplic succession and “merely declares" what is true.[275] And so, Baird says, “The gulf between Swami Bhaktivedanta’s presentation and that of the scholarly exegete is simply unbridgeable, for their purposes operate on different levels”.[263][l]

But what some scholars might see as faults, others see as virtues. Thomas Hopkins sees Prabhupada’s translations and purports as successfully conveying the meaning of the text precisely because Prabhupada draws upon the commentaries of his predecessors and brings to his work the understandings of his entire tradition.[277] Moreover, Hopkins says, Prabhupada does this in such a way that the entire text becomes comprehensible to a modern reader, not only theoretically but practically.[278] Translations of such texts as the Gita, Hopkins says, cannot be done mechanically.[279] The translator has to understand the spirit and the experience that lie behind the text.[279] Where Prabhupada’s translations expand the text, they do so “for the sake of making the meaning more clear, rather than obscuring it”.[280] Hopkins says, “Writing a commentary is not a merely intellectual or academic exercise—it has a practical goal: to engage people with a living spiritual tradition”.[278] Prabhupada, he says, brings the meaning of the text out of the past and into the present, giving it meaning in terms of people’s lives.[151]

Challenges and controversies

In Prabhupada’s efforts to establish and expand Krishna consciousness, some of the difficulties he faced were internal to his new and growing movement. He had to train disciples unaccustomed to Vaishnava culture and philosophy and engage them in furthering his Hare Krishna movement;[281] he had to set up and then guide his Governing Body Commission to see to ISKCON's global management. He often had to intervene when clashes and controversies within ISKCON grew out of hand. He had to sort out difficulties faced by individual disciples, ensure a proper understanding of his teachings, and, more broadly, transplant an entire cultural movement.[282] He also faced challenges from the outside world.

Cult image and “brainwashing”

Until the mid-1970s the attitude of the Western public towards Prabhupada and his movement was cordial. News reports tried to reliably describe the Hare Krishna devotees, their beliefs, and their religious practices. The spirit of curiosity prevailed, while hostility was almost nonexistent.[283]

But by the mid-1970s this changed. The rapidly expanding Hare Krishna movement — distinctive, foreign, highly visible, and vigorous (often over-vigorous) in spreading its message — became an early target for a nascent “anti-cult movement”. No longer was the Hare Krishna movement seen to represent an authentic spiritual tradition. Rather, it was now one of a myriad of “destructive cults” that won converts and took over their lives by “mind control” and “brainwashing”. When young adults, supposedly robbed of free will and “programmed” by mind control, became Hare Krishna devotees, some parents hired “deprogrammers” to kidnap them and “free them from the cult”. “Deprogrammings” typically involved days or weeks of isolation, browbeating, and intense verbal haranguing and harassment.[284][285][286][287]

After one such “deprogramming” failed, the New York City District Attorney’s Office charged two local Hare Krishna leaders with illegally imprisoning two Hare Krishna followers by brainwashing them.[288][m]

Prabhupada instructed his disciples to fight these charges, among other ways by entering his books into evidence.[289] Meanwhile, two hundred scholars signed a document defending ISKCON as an authentic Indian missionary movement.[290]

In March of 1977 a New York State Supreme Court justice threw out the charges and recognized that ISKCON represents a bona fide religious tradition.[288] Nonetheless, in America and Europe the “cult” label and image persisted for the rest of Prabhupada’s lifetime and beyond.[291][286]

As scholar James Beckford notes, in the 1970s Hare Krishna devotees became increasingly active in selling their literature and collecting donations from the public,[292] so they were sharply criticized for what was seen as harassing people for money at airports and other public places. As Bryant and Ekstrand comment, “Questionable fund-raising tactics, confrontational attitudes to mainstream authorities, and an isolationist mentality, coupled with the excesses of neophyte proselytizing zeal, brought public disapproval”[133] — something that Prabhupada had to deal with too.

Institutionalization

As ISKCON evolved towards being a worldwide organization, it suffered from the inevitable travails of institutionalization. Young disciples, mostly from an anti-establishment, anti-authoritarian background, became members of the GBC and found themselves running a worldwide institution. Preaching sometimes started giving way to revenue production; gender issues arose; leaders sometimes fell, and scandals broke out. Bureaucracy intruded on spontaneity, and many members left. As much as Prabhupada tried to leave management to the GBC, much of this he too had to deal with personally.[133][293]

Child abuse

Prabhupada directed his disciples to train children in boarding schools called gurukulas, where they would receive education from spiritual teachers. However, as reported by sociologist of religion E. Burke Rochford, through mismanagement these schools became like orphanages. After Prabhupada's departure it came to light that physical and sexual abuse occurred within these schools due to lack of oversight.[294]

Obstacles in India

In India, Prabhupada faced a special set of challenges. He had much to accomplish there, but his American and European disciples were inexperienced in how to get things done in India and even how to live there.[295]

When Prabhupada’s young American followers came to India in the early 1970s and began holding festivals, including public sankirtana, many Indians were surprised to see Westerners adopting Indian modes of worship and devotion. Some local people, including even some Indian officials, suspected that the American devotees must be undercover operatives of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).[296][297]

Outspoken and uncompromising as he was in the way he presented Krishna’s teachings, in India, as elsewhere, Prabhupada found himself battling with opposing views of all sorts.[298] Therefore another challenge came from Prabhupada’s consistent rejection of the common Hindu notion of caste by birth. Since Prabhupada, like his predecessors, insisted that anyone, from any race or nation, could become spiritually purified and fit to perform the duties of priests, he faced opposition from Hindu brahmins who held that performing such duties was an exclusive birthright of their caste.[299][300]

When Prabhupada resolved to build a temple on land in Juhu, Bombay (now Mumbai), the man who had sold ISKCON the land tried to swindle the devotees and take it back. The man had deep political connections in the Bombay municipality and employed lawyers and even thugs to drive the devotees off, but Prabhupada persisted and eventually won.[301][n][non-primary source needed]

Deviations

While working to establish his movement, Prabhupada had to deal with problems caused even by leading disciples, who, monks or not, could still hold on to intellectual baggage, disdain for authority, and ambitions for power.[302] In 1968 Prabhupada's first sannyasi disciple openly disregarded Prabhupada’s instructions to him and twisted core tenets of Prabhupada’s teachings. This foreshadowed succession problems and issues of authority that Prabhupada’s movement would face both during Prabhupada’s presence and after.[302]

Unlike Indian gurus who declared themselves avatars, divine appearances of God, Prabhupada from the very beginning of his preaching called himself only a servant or representative of God.[303] But in 1970 four of Prabhupada’s early sannyasis announced at a large ISKCON gathering that Prabhupada’s followers had failed to recognize that Prabhupada was actually Krishna, God himself. Prabhupada expelled those sannyasis from his Society (he eventually readmitted them, after they recanted their claim).[302]

In 1972, without consulting Prabhupada, eight of the twelve members of the GBC held a meeting in New York aimed at centralizing control of ISKCON's activities and finances. Their plans would have lessened Prabhupada's own oversight and set aside his emphasis on the autonomy of each ISKCON center. This prompted Prabhupada to suspend the entire GBC "until further notice", establish direct lines of communication with each temple's leaders, and re-emphasize spiritual purity, the selfless and voluntary nature of devotional life, and the exemplary conduct befitting ISKCON leaders. This, he said, is what he wanted, not corporate bureaucracy and excessive centralization. (He later unsuspended the GBC).[302]

In 1975 a clash broke out when a team of ten parties of itinerant sannyasis, assisted by two hundred brahmacharis, criss-crossed America, visiting ISKCON temples to extoll renunciation and a missionary spirit — and urge brahmacharis to abandon the temples and join the sannyasi parties. The temples, the team argued, were led by presidents who were grihasthas (married men), and grihasthas had a propensity for enjoyment that undermined what should be an austere temple atmosphere.[302]

The conflict reached its peak in 1976 in Mayapur at ISKCON’s annual global gathering when a sannyasi-dominated GBC passed resolutions severely restricting the role of women and families in ISKCON.[302] After hearing from both sides, Prabhupada came down against this type of discrimination, calling it “fanaticism”, and had the GBC undo the resolutions. Prabhupada said, "I cannot discriminate — man, woman, child, rich, poor, educated, or foolish. Let them all come, and let them take Krishna consciousness".[302]

Controversial views and statements

In the course of his preaching work in the West, Prabhupada made controversial statements that criticized various ideals of modern society or spoke offensively of certain groups.[304][305][4][o]

"In a traditional Hindu vein”,[6] Prabhupada spoke favorably of the myth of Aryan bloodlines and compared darker races to shudras [people of low caste], thus implying them being inferior to the lighter-complexioned humans.[6] In a recorded room conversation with disciples in 1977, he calls African Americans "uncultured and drunkards", further stating that after being given freedom and equal rights, they caused disturbance in the society.[307]

Prabhupada called democracy "the government of the asses", "nonsense", and "farce", at the same time praising the monarchial form of government and speaking favorably of dictatorship.[308] While comparing Napoleon and Hitler to great demons of Hindu mythology Hiranyakashipu and Kamsa, he called their activities "very great". On other occasions, he made "generally approving remarks about Hitler" and said that Hitler killed the Jews because they "were financing against Germany".[309] He also expressed some misogynistic views, asserting that "women cannot properly utilize freedom and it is better for them to be dependent",[310] stating that they are "generally not very intelligent",[311] and "in general should not be trusted".[311]

Scholars have commented, however, on the contrast between such controversial pronouncements and the full picture of what Prabhupada actually taught and did.[312] Kim Knott, a religious studies scholar, extensively discusses Prabhupada’s statements about women.[313] Describing her perspective in relation to ISKCON as that of an “outsider” and a “western feminist”,[313] she highlights Prabhupada's firm belief that "bhakti-yoga", the path of Krishna Consciousness, allows transcendence beyond gender distinctions.[314] Knott emphasizes that, according to Prabhupada, women devotees, regardless of their gender, possess equal potential for spiritual advancement and service to Krishna.[314] She further commends Prabhupada for opening up the Hare Krishna movement to women, despite cultural norms and traditional prescriptions.[315] In this way, she writes, Prabhupada took time, place, and circumstance into account and acted in the spirit of Krishna consciousness, “in the manner of Chaitanya”.[316]

Commenting on the role and degree of responsibility that Prabhupada's statements about women played in their abuse in ISKCON, E. Burke Rochford notes that Prabhupada’s personal example in dealings with his earliest women disciples was "far more important".[317] Their collective personal experiences, Rochford observes, portray Prabhupada’s "respectful attitude and behavior toward his women disciples"[317] and his empowerment for the same rights and duties as his male disciples.[318] Prabhupada encouraged and engaged women in conducting public scriptural discourses, kirtans and temple worship, writing for ISKCON magazines and publications, personally accompanying and assisting him, and assuming "significant institutional positions in ISKCON".[319][320]

Similarly, scholar of religion Akshay Gupta observes that Prabhupada did not regard his black disciples as lower or "untouchables",[321] displaying to some of them the same or even greater degree of affection than to his followers of other ethnicities.[321][p] Another scholar of religion Mans Broo adds that when Prabhupada speaks about castes, he referred to an envisioned “ideal society” in which people would be divided into different occupational groups “based not on hereditary but on individual qualifications”.[324]

Broo also notes that scholarly analyses[325] attribute some of such statements to Prabhupada's "flair for drama and overstatement"[326] — particularly noting his penchant for making politically incorrect remarks to reporters[324] and adding, “It is difficult to decide how seriously any single remark is meant to be taken from a transcript”. However, Broo concludes that this behavior does not clear Prabhupada from responsibility for his more radical of his politically incorrect statements.[327] [324] Another scholar of religion, Fred Smith, suggests that some of Prabhupada's statements (such as those concerning Hitler) “must be understood in the context of the intellectual and political culture in which he matured”[328] — specifically that of mid-twentieth-century Bengal,[305] brewing with anti-colonialist nationalism championed by such figures as Subhash Chandra Bose, and therefore more favorably disposed to Nazi Germany than to Great Britain.[328][q]

Broo notes that Prabhupada's followers continue to grapple with his controversial statements[325] — which paint "a picture of a not very pleasant man, one far removed from the Gaudiya Vaishnava ideals described in the classical texts of the tradition"[329] — and respond to them in different ways: Some remain silent, while others invoke context or argue that Prabhupada is being unfairly quoted due to negative biases. Still, others are willing to differentiate between his statements they deem "absolute" and those they consider "relative", acknowledging that some teachings may be contingent on the circumstances of Prabhupada's life before coming to the US.[330] However, some followers view this approach as "exceedingly risky", questioning who has the authority to determine which teachings are relative and which are not.[325] Therefore, Broo concludes, this issue is "not likely to be resolved soon".[325]

Commenting on the underlying causes for such controversies, scholar of religion Larry Shinn attributes the conflict between Prabhupada's teachings and western cultural values to "[Prabhupada]'s insistence on the infallibility of the Krishna scriptures and (...) the authenticity of Prabhupada’s Krishna faith and practice".[331][r]

Influence

By explaining the teachings of bhakti yoga and Gaudiya Vaishnavism and arousing interest in them worldwide, Prabhupada made a lasting contribution.[7][9][8] Through his writings and his movement, many Westerners have become aware of bhakti for the first time.[332] He translated and commented on important spiritual texts, particularly the Bhagavad-gita, the Srimad-Bhagavatam, and the Caitanya-caritamrta, making these texts accessible to a global audience.[220] His commentaries brought the traditional wisdom of these writings into a contemporary context, making possible a deeper comprehension of their spiritual meaning and its practical application in one’s life.[9] Within Gaudiya Vaishnavism, Prabhupada's preaching achievements are viewed as the fulfillment of a mission to introduce Caitanya Mahaprabhu's teachings to the world.[333]

Although the “steady procession of Hindu swamis” who had come to America before Prabhupada had generally aligned their views with the monistic Advaita Vedanta of Shankara (AD 788‒820) and the idea of “the ultimate absorption of the self into an impersonal Reality or Brahman”,[180] Prabhupada rejected Advaita Vedanta[334] and coherently argued that the Absolute is ultimately the Personality of Godhead.[335]

Sardella has written that in the twelve years between Prabhupada’s arrival in America and his demise, Prabhupada “managed to build ISKCON into an institution comprising thousands of dedicated members, establish Caitanya Vaishnava temples in most of the world’s major cities, and publish numerous volumes of Caitanya Vaishnava texts (in twenty-eight languages), tens of millions of which were distributed throughout the world”.[7][336] Prabhupada also spread the chanting of the Hare Krishna mantra worldwide.[336]

In 2013 Rochford wrote, “[T]he fact that ISKCON has survived for nearly 50 years, despite significant change, is a testament to the devotees’ resilience and to the power of Prabhupada’s teachings and vision for ISKCON”.[337]

In India Prabhupada’s movement has become a well-respected institution, with recognition at all levels of Hindu society.[338][339] ISKCON has large temple complexes active in cities like Mumbai, New Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai, and Kolkata.[340][341] ISKCON’s center in Mayapur has become an Eastern Indian place of pilgrimage for millions every year. Thousands of middle-class Hindus, both in India and elsewhere, have joined ISKCON.[340] And Hindus both in India and in the Hindu diaspora have provided ISKCON vast support.[339][342]

But Prabhupada's legacy also faces scrutiny on various fronts. Criticisms have emerged regarding the movement's organizational structure, controversies have arisen surrounding continuity of leadership after his passing,[343][344] and misdeeds and even criminal acts have been committed by some ISKCON members, including once-respected former leaders.[345][s] Concerns have been expressed about the movement's adaptability to modern values, especially concerning gender roles and societal norms.[346] And although ISKCON has benefited from the support and participation of a large and growing number of Indian families in its congregations outside India,[338][347] the “Hinduization” of ISKCON has in many places tended to diminish the involvement of other audiences.[348]

Nonetheless, Prabhupada's influence endures through his writings and ISKCON's ongoing activities.[7] Despite significant setbacks, the movement he started continues to grow.[349]

Recognition

From scholars

Kim Knott writes that scholars describe Prabhupada as a charismatic spiritual leader and emphasize his “humanity” and “uniqueness”.[350] Prabhupada’s missionary successes in such a short period, and at such an advanced age, she writes, are extolled by scholars using terms such as “stunning”, “remarkable”, and “extraordinary”.[350] In the same vein, Klaus Klostermaier, scholar of Hinduism and Indian history, refers to Prabhupada as "probably, the most successful propagator of Hinduism abroad".[8]

Representing such thoughts, Harvey Cox, American theologian and Professor of Divinity Emeritus at Harvard University, said:

There aren't many people you can think of who successfully implant a whole religious tradition in a completely alien culture. That's a rare achievement in the history of religion. In his case it's even all the more remarkable for his having done this at such an advanced age. When most people would have already retired, he began a whole new phase of his life by coming to the United States and initiating this movement. He began simply, with only a handful of disciples. Eventually he planted this movement deeply in the North American soil, throughout other parts of the European-dominated world, and beyond. Although I didn't know him personally, the fact that we now have in the West a vigorous, disciplined, and seemingly well-organized movement–not merely a philosophical movement or a yoga or meditation movement, but a genuinely religious movement--introducing the form of devotion to God that he taught, is a stunning accomplishment. So when I say [he’s] “one in a million,” I think that's in some ways an underestimate. Perhaps he was one in a hundred million.[10]

From officials

Prabhupada's success in spreading Indian spirituality among non-Indians across the world brought him acclaim from Indian political leaders.[11]

Indian Prime Ministers Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Deve Gowda,[351] Narendra Modi, and Indian Presidents Shankar Dayal Sharma, Pranab Mukherjee, and Pratibha Patil have praised Prabhupada, his work and mission.[11][352]

Narendra Modi speaks on Prabhupada's 125th birth anniversary. (2 September 2021)[353]

In 1998, speaking at the opening ceremony of an ISKCON temple in New Delhi, Prime Minister Vajpayee credited Prabhupada's movement with publishing the Bhagavad Gita "in millions of copies in scores of Indian languages" and distributing it "in all nooks and corners of the world",[340] calling Prabhupada's journey to the West and the rapid global propagation of his movement "one of the greatest spiritual events of the century".[340][t]

Releasing a 125-rupee commemorative coin on the occasion of Prabhupada's 125th birth anniversary,[354] Prime Minister Modi also praised Prabhupada for his efforts “to give India’s most priceless treasure to the world”, describing Prabhupada's accomplishments in spreading the thought and philosophy of India to the world as “nothing less than a miracle.”[353]

On the fiftieth anniversary of Prabhupada’s voyage to the West, US Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard praised the "compassion that drove Srila Prabhupada to attempt something so brave and so daring to deliver the message of Lord Chaitanya and the Holy Name to all of mankind".[355]

Commemoration

Shrines, memorials, museums

 
Pushpa-samadhi of Prabhupada in Mayapur, West Bengal.

In keeping with Gaudiya-Vaisnava rites, after Prabhupada's death at the Krishna-Balarama temple in Vrindavan (Uttar Pradesh, India), his disciples interred his body on the temple premises and erected a marble samadhi, or shrine, over his burial site.[356][357] In Mayapur (West Bengal), they built a much larger pushpa-samadhi — a shrine sanctified with flowers from Prabhupada's burial ceremony.[358] Daily puja (traditional worship) is offered to larger-than-life statues of Prabhupada at both sites.[358]

Another shrine is dedicated to Prabhupada in New Vrindaban (West Virginia, USA), where a residence built to host Prabhupada during his occasional visits evolved into the elaborate Prabhupada's Palace of Gold.[359] After opening to the public in 1979, two years after Prabhupada’s death, the memorial site is now a place of worship and an attraction for pilgrims and tourists,[360][361] listed in America’s National Register of Historic Places.[362] Other rooms ‌in which Prabhupada stayed while in Vrindavan, Mumbai, Los Angeles, London, Melbourne and several other places around the world have been preserved as museums.

 
Prabhupada's birthplace.

Prabhupada’s birthplace, in the Tollygunge neighborhood of Kolkata, was inaugurated as a memorial site in 2001, on the 125th anniversary of Prabhupada’s birth, by West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.[363] In the Ultadanga neighborhood of Kolkata, the building, known as Bhaktivinode Asan where Prabhupada first met his guru, Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati, has also been restored as a heritage site.[364]

 
Prabhupada's son Vrindavan Chandra De (back, in red shirt) in front of the Jaladuta monument with his family (standing) and the monument's team (seated, left to right): concept director, manager, and sculptor. ISKCON Kolkata. (August 2015)

On August 13, 2015, the fiftieth anniversary of Prabhupada’s departure from Kolkata to the United States, a two-meter-high bronze monument, created by Ukrainian sculptor Volodymyr Zhuravel, was unveiled in Kolkata by the Governor of West Bengal Keshari Nath Tripathi and Lieutenant Governor of Pondicherry Kiran Bedi.[365] The monument was created in two parts — one depicting Prabhupada’s departure for America, the other his arrival. After the monument was unveiled, the “departure” part was installed at the ISKCON temple in Kolkata, the “arrival” part in front of the ISKCON temple in Boston.[366]

Biographies, memoirs, diaries

In 2008 Ketola wrote that there were more than thirty historical, biographical, and autobiographical works centering on Prabhupada.[367] Since then they have increased.

Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami’s official six-volume biography Srila Prabhupada-lilamrta (“carefully researched”, Ketola reports[367]) has more recently been joined by a shorter biography, Swami in a Strange Land, by Joshua Greene.[368] Both authors are Prabhupada’s disciples. Among memoirs that focus on specific times or places, Ketola mentions several, including Hayagriva Dasa’s The Hare Krishna Explosion.[367])

Ketola also notes two published diaries kept by direct assistants of Prabhupada: Tamal Krishna Goswami’s TKG’s Diary and Hari Sauri Dasa’s multi-volume Transcendental Diary.[u]

List of biographical publications about A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
  • Ācārya: The Lifestory of A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada by Bhaktisiddhanta Das (2021), ASIN B095PTSKC7
  • Ācārya: Portraits of His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada by Sesa Dasa (1996), ISBN 978-0947259051
  • Blazing Sadhus by Achyutananda Das (2016), ISBN 978-1537508863
  • By His Example: The Wit and Wisdom of A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada by Guru Das (2004), ISBN 978-1887089364
  • Chasing Rhinos With The Swami by Shyamasundar Das (2016), in 3 volumes, ISBN 978-1495177088
  • Dancing White Elephants: Traveling with Srila Prabhupada in India, August 1970—March 1972 by Giriraj Swami (2023), ISBN 978-1-925850-03-1
  • Five Years, Eleven Months and a Lifetime of Unexpected Love: A Memoir by Visakha Dasi (2016), ISBN 978-1522838449
  • The Great Transcendental Adventure: Pastimes of His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada in Australia and New Zealand by Kurma Dasa (1999), ISBN 9780947259228
  • The Hare Krishna Explosion: The Birth of Krishna Consciousness in America, 1966‒1969 by Hayagriva Dasa (1985), ISBN 9780932215017
  • He Lives Forever by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami (2022), ISBN 979-8353149606
  • I'll Build You a Temple — The Juhu Story by Giriraj Swami (2021), ISBN 978-1925850017
  • In Conversation with Srila Prabhupada by Lokanath Swami (2016), ASIN B09HKRBMHG
  • ISKCON in the 1970s by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami (1997), ISBN 978-0911233728
  • Jaya Srila Prabhupada! by Bhakti Vikasa Swami (2014), ISBN 978-9382109112
  • Journey to the Pacific Rim by Bali Mardan Das, ISBN 9788193291801
  • Life with the Perfect Master: A Personal Servant's Account by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami (2022), ISBN 979-8411706741
  • Memories – Anecdotes of a Modern–Day Saint by Siddhanta Dasa (2020), in 4 volumes ISBN 9788192970226, 9780972259712, 9789389050806
  • Miracle on Second Avenue by Mukunda Goswami (2011), ISBN 978-0981727349
  • Mission in the Service of His Divine Grace: Birth of the Hare Krishna Movement in South Africa by Riddha Dasa (2003), ISBN 978-1901593013
  • The Mayapur Vrindavan Festivals with Srila Prabhupada (1972‒77) by Lokanath Swami (2020), ISBN 9780620694827
  • My Days with Prabhupada: A Young Man’s Path to God in the Hare Krishna Movement by Umapati Swami (2016), ASIN B01EVBQ6M4
  • My Glorious Master: Remembrances of Prabhupada's Mercy on a Fallen Soul by Bhurijana Dasa (1996), ISBN 9780992521943
  • My Memories of Srila Prabhupada by Bhakti Vikasa Swami (2012), ISBN 978-9382109303
  • Ocean of Mercy by Bhakti Charu Swami (2016), ISBN 978-0892135332
  • Our Srila Prabhupada — A Friend to All by Mulaprakrti Devi (2000), ASIN B004Q6XSXA
  • A Place of Sandalwood and Roses, by Govinda Dasi (2023), ISBN 979-8987382912
  • Prabhupada Antya-lila: Final Pastimes of Srila Prabhupada by Tamal Krishna Goswami (1988), ISBN 978-0936979014
  • Prabhupada Appreciation by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami (2022), ISBN 979-8357966339
  • Prabhupada at Radha-Damodara by Mahanidhi Swami (2013), ASIN B00CTRMKKK
  • Prabhupãda in Malaysia by Janananda Das Goswami (2020), ISBN 978-8193859711
  • Prabhupada-lila by Satsvarupa dasa Goswami (1987), ISBN 978-0911233360
  • Prabhupada Meditations by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami (2023) in 2 volumes, ISBN 979-8446353095
  • Prabhupada: Messenger Of The Supreme Lord by Sastvarupa Dasa Goswami (2014), ISBN 978-8189574307
  • Prabhupāda Nectar: Anecdotes from the Life of His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami (1984), ISBN 9780911233223
  • Prabhupada Stories by Govinda Dasi
  • Servant of the Servant by Tamal Krishna Goswami (2019), ISBN 9788193992166
  • Srila Prabhupada and His Disciples in Germany by Bhakti Gauravani Goswami (2021), ISBN 9789391545048
  • Srila Prabhupada is Coming: My Personal Memories of His Divine Grace, A.C. Bhaktivehanta Swami Prabhupada by Mahamaya Dasi (2000), ISBN 9780970453013
  • Srila Prabhupada-lilamrta by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami (2008), in 7 volumes, ISBN 978-8189574222
  • Srila Prabhupada Uvaca by Srutakirti Dasa
  • Swami in a Strange Land by Joshua M. Greene (Yogeshvara Dasa) (2018), ISBN 9789387944091
  • TKG's Diary: Prabhupãda's Final Days by Tamal Krishna Goswami (1999), ISBN 9788187216124
  • A Transcendental Diary by Hari Sauri Dasa (2021), in 5 volumes, ISBN 978-1880404379
  • Vrindaban Days: Memories of an Indian Holy Town by Howard Wheeler (Hayagriva Swami) (1990) ISBN 9780932215208
  • With Srila Prabhupada in the Early Days (1966‒1969): A Memoir by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami (1997), ISBN 978-0911233841
  • "You Cannot Leave Boston" by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami, in 2 volumes (1998) ASIN B09HKSY9L7

Film, and filmed memoir collections

In 1996 Gaurav Seth produced the fifty-five-minute biographical film Prabhupada: A Lifetime in Preparation.[370] In 2017 John Griesser, a Prabhupada disciple, produced an uncritical 91-minute film: Hare Krishna! The Mantra, the Movement, and the Swami who started it All.[371]

Disciples have also undertaken two video projects collecting memories of Srila Prabhupada, one entitled Remembering Srila Prabhupada,[372] the other Following Srila Prabhupada.[373]

The Bhaktivedanta Archives, in North Carolina, serves as a repository for Srila Prabhupada’s manuscripts and letters, for photographs of Srila Prabhupada, and for audio recordings.[v]

 
 
125-rupee commemorative coin released by Narendra Modi on Prabhupada's 125th birth anniversary.

Stamps, coin, and plaque

In 1996 the Government of India issued a commemorative stamp in Prabhupada’s honor and in 2021 a 125-rupee commemorative coin.[374]

In 2001 the City of New York installed a plaque in Tompkins Square Park to mark the “Hare Krishna tree”, the elm under which Prabhupada and his early followers first began chanting the Hare Krishna mantra in 1966.[375]

 
The plaque near the Hare Krishna Tree in Tompkins Square Park, New York.

Schools

Various ISKCON-related schools and other institutions have been named after Srila Prabhupada, including the Bhaktivedanta Research Centre in Kolkata, which holds a full collection of the works of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati as well as publications from the first twenty years of the Gaudiya Math.[376]

In 2023, Scottish Church College and the Bhaktivedanta Research Center jointly established the "A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada Memorial Award" to commemorate Prabhupada's student years at the college, meant to recognize both the most meritorious student for outstanding academic achievements and a faculty member for exceptional community service.[377][378]

Roads

In 1978 a prominent entrance road into Vrindavan was named Bhaktivedanta Swami Marg after Prabhupada.[379]

Bibliography

Translations with commentary

Summary studies

Other books

Posthumously published

Notes

  1. ^ After the unification of the Church of Scotland in 1929, the institution became known as Scottish Church College. "Sen, Asit and John Abraham. Glimpses of college history, 2008 (1980). Retrieved on 2009-10-03" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 November 2023.
  2. ^ A term used in the Gaudiya Math and ISKCON for denoting disciples of the same diksha-guru.
  3. ^ Jones notes that Bhaktivedanta Swami became the first Hindu preacher to take advantage of the removal of national quotas by the 1965 Immigration Act of the United States.[74]
  4. ^ Responding to suggestions that his organization be named "International Society for God Consciousness", Bhaktivedanta Swami defended his choice my maintaining that Krishna included all other forms and concepts of God.[91]
  5. ^ Prabhupada’s travels to and from Europe and his programs there are described in Srila Prabhupada-lilamrita, volumes 4 and 5.[71]
  6. ^ Kotovsky was the head of the Department of India and South Asia of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the USSR Academy of Sciences.
  7. ^ Eastern mysteries (1991) cites "diabetes and complications following a stroke" as the cause of Prabhupada's death.[135]
  8. ^ See the etymologies for “Hare Krishna” in, for example, the Oxford English Dictionary, the Merriam-Webster dictionaries, and Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary.
  9. ^ Hopkins recalls that, when he was working on his doctoral work in the early 1960s, the only copy of the Bhagavata Purana he was able to obtain was by interlibrary loan on microfilm from Harvard’s Widener Library.[220]
  10. ^ Scholar and disciple Tamal Krishna Goswami writes that Prabhupada’s first publishing Bhagavad-gītā As It Is in abridged form and publishing summary studies from the Bhagavatam and Caitanya-caritamrita before completing full translations and commentaries “expresses both an urgency that Prabhupāda felt in transmitting these works as essential sacred texts and the weightiness that each of these three foundational texts possessed within the tradition that Prabhupāda represented”.[250]
  11. ^ For a discussion of the criticisms by Herman, see Tamal Krishna Goswami, A Living Theology of Krishna Bhakti (2012) pp 75–76.[261] Goswami leaves Sinha’s critique aside on the grounds that it is “clearly a sectarian polemic rather than an academic study” and for a rebuttal points us to Gerald Surya’s review of Sinha’s "A critique of A.C. Bhaktivedanta" in ISKCON Communications Journal, 7:2, December 1999, http://content.iskcon.org/icj/7_2/72surya.html.
  12. ^ For a discussion of Baird’s critique, see Tamal Krishna Goswami's A Living Theology of Krishna Bhakti: Essential Teachings of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada (2012), pp. 66–71.[276]
  13. ^ The case is People v. Murphy (N.Y. 1977) 98 Misc.2d 235.
  14. ^ For a book-length telling of this saga, see I’ll Build You a Temple by Giriraja Swami.
  15. ^ Two essays by a student of Indology and former ISKCON disciple Ekkehard Lorenz in The Hare Krishna Movement: The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant document controversial Prabhupada’s quotes on a number of subjects. The editors of the volume, Edwin Bryant and Maria Ekstrand, sought to include in the book “a wide range of voices”, including those not only of well-credentialed academics but also of current ISKCON members and of former members (in the editors’ words, the movement’s “most vocal” critics).[306]
  16. ^ One such disciple, Ghanashyama Dasa, went on to become the first African-American sannyasi and guru in history, with the name Bhakti Tirtha Swami.[322][323]
  17. ^ Bose's influence and his efforts to mobilize people against British rule significantly contributed to the growth of anti-British sentiments in Bengal and throughout India. Nazi Germany was sympathetic to India's independence and during the World War II offered financial and military assistance to Bose's Indian National Army in their struggle against Great Britain.
  18. ^ Larry Shinn writes: "Perhaps Prabhupada’s piousness centering upon his deep faith in Krishna was both his greatest strength and the source of ISKCON’s most consistent tension in America. As an acharya or teacher of the Krishna scriptures and devotional faith, Prabhupada was a “holy man,” a guru whose translations of the Sanskrit scripture of the Bhagavata Purana, the Bhagavad Gita, and of Chaitanya’s teachings were the center of his own devotional life and of his education of his new American devotees. His insistence on the infallibility of the Krishna scriptures and his interpretation of them continues to be a source of unrest within ISKCON, and certainly between ISKCON and its surrounding culture.... In one respect, it was the authenticity of Prabhupada’s Krishna faith and practice that enticed new converts to ISKCON and also caused the society to stand out in contrast, and even opposition, to western religious and cultural values".[331]
  19. ^ Sources that have discussed ISKCON’s post-charismatic crises and disruptions include Bryant and Ekstrand (2004), Dwyer and Cole (2007), and Rochford (2007).
  20. ^ "If today the Bhagavad Gita is printed in millions of copies in scores of Indian languages and distributed in all nooks and corners of the world, the credit for this great sacred service goes chiefly to ISKCON.... For this one accomplishment alone, Indians should be eternally grateful to the devoted spiritual army of Swami Prabhupada's followers. The voyage of Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada to the United States in 1965 and the spectacular popularity his movement gained in a very short spell of twelve years must be regarded as one of the greatest spiritual events of the century".[340]
  21. ^ E. Burke Rochford writes in his Foreword to one volume, “For scholars and students of religion the material presented represents a critically important historical record”. Foreword to A Transcendental Diary: November 1975–April 1976, p. xv[369]
  22. ^ https://www.prabhupada.com/About/AAbout.html. Claire C. Robison describes the Archives, though not by name, in “ISKCON–Christian Encounters,” Chapter 16 in The Routledge Handbook of Hindu-Christian Relations. p=194

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bhaktivedanta, swami, prabhupada, bhaktivedanta, prabhupada, redirect, here, college, international, society, krishna, consciousness, other, people, called, prabhupada, prabhupad, iast, abhaya, caraṇāravinda, bhaktivedānta, svāmī, prabhupāda, bengali, অভয, চরণ. Bhaktivedanta and Prabhupada redirect here For the college see International Society for Krishna Consciousness For other people called Prabhupada see Prabhupad A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada IAST Abhaya Caraṇaravinda Bhaktivedanta Svami Prabhupada Bengali অভয চরণ রৱ ন দ ভক ত ৱ দ ন ত স ৱ ম প রভ প দ 1896 1977 was a spiritual philosophical and religious teacher from India who spread the Hare Krishna mantra and the teachings of Krishna consciousness to the world Born as Abhay Charan De and later legally named Abhay Charanaravinda Bhaktivedanta Swami he is often referred to as Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada or simply Prabhupada 3 His Divine GraceA C Bhaktivedanta Swami PrabhupadaA C Bhaktivedanta Swami in Germany 1974TitleFounder Acharya of the International Society for Krishna ConsciousnessPersonalBornAbhay Charan De 1896 09 01 1 September 1896Calcutta Bengal Presidency British IndiaDied14 November 1977 1977 11 14 aged 81 Vrindavan IndiaResting placeSrila Prabhupada s Samadhi Mandir ISKCON Vrindavan27 34 19 N 77 40 38 E 27 57196 N 77 67729 E 27 57196 77 67729ReligionHinduismNationalityIndianParentsGour Mohan De father Rajani De mother DenominationGaudiya VaishnavismLineagefrom Chaitanya MahaprabhuNotable work s Srimad Bhagavatam trans and comm Caitanya caritamṛta trans and comm Bhagavad gita As It Is trans and comm Kṛṣṇa the Supreme Personality of GodheadTeachings of Lord CaitanyaThe Nectar of Devotionisopaniṣad trans and comm Alma materScottish Churches College University of Calcutta 2 Known forthe Hare Krishna movement 1 SignatureReligious careerGuruBhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati ThakurInitiationdiksha 1933 by Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati sannyasa 1959 by Bhakti Prajnan Keshava A C Bhaktivedanta Swami explains the Hare Krishna maha mantra source source recorded in October 1966 5 20 To carry out an order received in his youth from his spiritual teacher to spread Krishna consciousness in English in his old age at 69 he journeyed in 1965 from Kolkata to New York City on a cargo ship taking with him little more than a few trunks of books He knew no one in America but he chanted Hare Krishna in a park in New York City gave classes and in 1966 with the help of some early students established the International Society for Krishna Consciousness ISKCON which now has centers throughout the world He taught a path in which one aims at realizing oneself to be an eternal spiritual being distinct from one s temporary material body and seeks to revive one s dormant relationship with the supreme living being known by the Sanskrit name Krishna One does this through various practices especially through hearing about Krishna from standard texts chanting mantras consisting of names of Krishna and adopting a life of devotional service to Krishna As part of these practices Prabhupada required that his initiated students strictly refrain from gambling eating meat fish and eggs using intoxicants even coffee tea or cigarettes and engaging in extramarital sex In contrast to earlier Indian teachers who had promoted in the West the idea that the ultimate truth is essentially impersonal he taught that the Absolute is ultimately personal His duty as a guru or teacher he held was to convey intact the message of Krishna as found in core spiritual texts such as the Bhagavad Gita To this end he wrote and published a translation and commentary he called Bhagavad gita As It Is He also wrote and published translations and commentaries for texts celebrated in India but hardly known elsewhere such as the Srimad Bhagavatam Bhagavata Purana and the Chaitanya Charitamrita thereby making those texts accessible in English for the first time In all he wrote more than eighty books In the late 1970s and the 1980s ISKCON came to be labeled a destructive cult by critics in America and some European countries Although scholars and courts rejected claims of cultic brainwashing and recognized ISKCON as representing an authentic branch of Hinduism in some places the cult label and image have persisted Some of Prabhupada s views or statements have been perceived as racist towards blacks discriminatory against lower castes or misogynistic 4 5 6 Decades after his demise Prabhupada s teachings and the Society he established continue to be influential 7 with some scholars and Indian political leaders calling him one of the most successful propagators of Hinduism abroad 8 9 10 11 Contents 1 Early life 1896 1922 2 Midlife 1922 1965 2 1 The Gaudiya Math and initiation 1933 2 2 Bhaktivedanta title 1939 2 3 Back to Godhead magazine 1944 2 4 Accepting vanaprastha 2 5 Forming The League of Devotees 1952 2 6 Taking sannyasa 1959 2 7 Staying at the Radha Damodar temple 1962 1965 2 8 Journey to the United States 1965 3 Later years 1965 1977 3 1 Beginnings in New York City 3 2 San Francisco 3 3 Great Britain and Europe 3 4 Africa 3 5 The Soviet Union 3 6 India 3 7 Around the world 3 8 Death 1977 3 9 Succession 4 Philosophy and teachings 4 1 The Absolute Truth 4 2 Krishna the Supreme Personality of Godhead 4 3 The energies of the Absolute 4 4 Oneness and difference 4 5 The inferior and superior energies 4 6 The predicament of the living being 4 7 Bhakti 4 8 Impersonalism 4 9 Societal organization 4 10 Spiritual practices 4 10 1 Kirtan 4 10 2 Association with devotees 4 10 3 Initiation vows 4 10 4 Hearing of Srimad Bhagavatam 4 10 5 Deity worship 4 10 6 Living in Vrindavan 5 Principal writings 5 1 Bhagavad gita As It Is 5 2 Srimad Bhagavatam 5 3 Krsna the Supreme Personality of Godhead 5 4 Ishopanishad 5 5 The Nectar of Devotion 5 6 Caitanya caritamrta 5 7 The Nectar of Instruction 5 8 Bhaktivedanta Book Trust 6 Critical assessments of Prabhupada s writings 7 Challenges and controversies 7 1 Cult image and brainwashing 7 2 Institutionalization 7 3 Child abuse 7 4 Obstacles in India 7 5 Deviations 7 6 Controversial views and statements 8 Influence 9 Recognition 9 1 From scholars 9 2 From officials 10 Commemoration 10 1 Shrines memorials museums 10 2 Biographies memoirs diaries 10 3 Film and filmed memoir collections 10 4 Stamps coin and plaque 10 5 Schools 10 6 Roads 11 Bibliography 11 1 Translations with commentary 11 2 Summary studies 11 3 Other books 11 4 Posthumously published 12 Notes 13 References 14 Sources 14 1 Academic and documentary 14 2 Media 14 2 1 News 14 2 2 Officials 14 2 3 Videos 14 3 ISKCON related 14 4 Works by Prabhupada s followers 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life 1896 1922 Abhay Charan De was born in Calcutta now Kolkata India on September 1 1896 the day after Janmashtami the birth anniversary of Krishna 12 His parents Gour Mohan De and Rajani De named him Abhay Charan meaning one who is fearless having taken shelter of Lord Krishna s lotus feet 3 Following Indian tradition Abhay s father invited an astrologer who predicted that at the age of seventy Abhay would cross the ocean 13 become a famous religious teacher and open 108 temples around the world 14 Abhay was raised in a religious family belonging to the suvarna vanik mercantile community His parents were Gaudiya Vaishnavas or followers of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu who taught that Krishna is the Supreme Personality and that pure love for Krishna is the highest attainment 15 16 Gour Mohan was a middle income merchant and had his own fabric and clothing store 17 He was related to the rich and aristocratic Mullik mercantile family 13 who had been trading in gold and salt for centuries 17 Opposite the De house was a temple of Radha Krishna that for a century and a half had been supported by the Mullik family 17 Every day young Abhay accompanied by his parents or servants attended temple services 17 At the age of six Abhay organized a likeness of the chariot festival or Ratha yatra the huge Vaishnava festival held annually in the city of Puri in Odisha 18 For this purpose Abhay persuaded his father to obtain for him a scaled down copy of the massive chariot on which the form of Jagannatha Krishna as Lord of the universe rides in procession in Puri 18 Decades later after going to America Abhay would bring Ratha yatra festivals to the West 19 Though Abhay s mother wanted Abhay to go to London to study law 20 his father rejected the idea fearing Abhay would be negatively influenced by Western society and acquire bad habits 12 In 1916 Abhay began his studies at Scottish Church College a prestigious school in Calcutta founded by Alexander Duff a Christian missionary 21 a In 1918 while in college Abhay as arranged by his father married Radharani Datta also from an aristocratic family 12 18 22 They had five children over the course of their marriage 16 After graduation from college Abhay began a career in pharmaceuticals 23 and later opened his own pharmaceutical company in Allahabad 24 Abhay grew up while India was under British rule and like many other youth his age he was attracted to Mahatma Gandhi s non cooperation movement In 1920 Abhay graduated from college with a specialization in English philosophy and economics 25 He successfully passed the final exams but as a sign of opposition to British rule he refused to take part in the graduation ceremony and receive a diploma 12 22 Midlife 1922 1965 nbsp Memorial at the spot of Abhay Charan De s first meeting with Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Kolkata 2024 In 1922 while still in college Abhay was persuaded by a friend Narendranath Mullik 17 to meet with Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati 1874 1937 a Vaishnava scholar and teacher and the founder of the Gaudiya Math a spiritual institution for spreading the teachings of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu 12 The word math denotes a monastic or missionary center 26 Bhaktisiddhanta was continuing the work of his father Bhaktivinoda Thakur 1838 1914 who regarded Chaitanya s teachings as the highest form of theism intended not for any one religion or nation but for all of humanity 23 When the meeting took place Bhaktisiddhanta said to Abhay You are an educated young man Why don t you take the message of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu and spread it in English 12 27 28 But Abhay according to his own later account argued that India first needed to become independent before anyone would take Chaitanya s message seriously an argument Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati defeated 29 Convinced Abhay accepted the instruction to spread the message of Chaitanya in English and it was in pursuance of this order from Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati that he later traveled to New York 30 Many years later he recalled I immediately accepted him as spiritual master Not formally but in my heart 31 The Gaudiya Math and initiation 1933 After meeting Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati in 1922 Abhay had little contact with the Gaudiya Math until 1928 when sannyasis renounced itinerant preachers from the Math came to open a center in Allahabad where Abhay and his family were living 32 Abhay became a regular visitor contributed funds and brought important people to the lectures of the Math s sannyasis In 1932 he visited Bhaktisiddhanta in the holy town of Vrindavan and in 1933 when Bhaktisiddhanta came to Allahabad to lay the cornerstone for a new temple Abhay received diksha spiritual initiation from him and was given the name Abhay Charanaravinda 3 32 Over the next three years whenever Abhay was able to visit Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati in Calcutta 33 or Vrindavan 34 Abhay would carefully hear from his spiritual master 35 In 1935 Abhay moved for business to Bombay 36 and then in 1937 back to Calcutta 37 In both places he assisted other members of the Gaudiya Math by donating money leading kirtans lecturing writing and bringing others to the Math At the end of 1936 he visited Vrindavan where he again met Bhaktisiddhanta who told him If you ever get money print books 18 an instruction that would inform his life s work citation needed Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati two weeks before his death on January 1 1937 wrote a letter to Abhay urging him to teach Gaudiya Vaishnavism in English 38 39 40 41 After Bhaktisiddhanta passed away the unified mission of the Gaudiya Math split 42 and a battle for power broke out between his senior disciples 43 Although Abhay continued to serve with other disciples of his spiritual master and wrote articles for their publications he kept clear of the political struggles 43 44 Bhaktivedanta title 1939 In 1939 elders in the Gaudiya community honored Abhay Charanaravinda A C with the title Bhaktivedanta In the title bhakti means devotion and vedanta means the culmination of Vedic knowledge 45 Thus the honorary title acknowledged his scholarship and devotion 3 Back to Godhead magazine 1944 In an effort to fulfill the order of his guru in 1944 A C Bhaktivedanta began publishing Back to Godhead an English fortnightly magazine presenting the teachings of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu 40 46 47 He singlehandedly wrote edited financed published and distributed the magazine 48 49 today still published and distributed by his followers 50 51 Accepting vanaprastha In 1950 A C Bhaktivedanta accepted the vanaprastha ashram the traditional retired order of life and went to live in Vrindavan regarded as the site of Krishna s Lila divine pastimes 32 although continuing to commute to Delhi on occasion 52 In Mathura adjoining Vrindavan he wrote for and edited the Gauḍiya Patrika magazine published by his godbrother b Bhakti Prajnan Keshava 53 Forming The League of Devotees 1952 nbsp Prabhupada s passport issued for his journey to the United States 1965 In 1952 A C Bhaktivedanta attempted to set up organized spiritual activities in the central Indian city of Jhansi where he started The League of Devotees 54 55 only to see the organization collapse two years later 47 56 Taking sannyasa 1959 On September 17 1959 52 prompted by a dream of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati calling on him to accept sannyasa renounced order of life A C Bhaktivedanta formally entered sannyasa asrama from Bhakti Prajnan Keshava at his Keshavaji Gaudiya Math in Mathura and was given the name Bhaktivedanta Swami Wishing to preserve the initiatory name given him by Bhaktisiddhanta as a sign of humility and connection to his spiritual master he kept the initials A C before his sannyasa name Now he was A C Bhaktivedanta Swami 57 Staying at the Radha Damodar temple 1962 1965 From 1962 to 1965 Bhaktivedanta Swami stayed in Vrindavan at the Radha Damodar temple There he began the task of translating from Sanskrit into English and commenting on the eighteen thousand verse Srimad Bhagavatam Bhagavata Purana 58 the foundational text of Gaudiya Vaishnavism 59 With great effort and struggle he finally succeeded to translate produce raise funds for and print the first of its twelve cantos in three volumes 60 Journey to the United States 1965 nbsp The Jaladuta 1961 nbsp August 31 1965 After Prabhupada undergoes a heart attack onboard the Jaladuta for five days his diary has no entries He then writes Passed over a great crisis on the struggle for life and death 61 After accepting sannyasa Bhaktivedanta Swami began planning to travel to America to fulfill his spiritual master s desire to spread Chaitanya s teachings in the West 62 63 To leave India Bhaktivedanta Swami had many hurdles to overcome He needed a sponsor in America official approvals in India and a ticket for his travel After significant difficulties he managed to secure the needed sponsorship and approvals 58 he approached one of his well wishers Sumati Morarjee the head of the Scindia Steam Navigation Company to ask for free passage to America on one of her cargo ships 64 Because of his age she at first tried to dissuade him 52 65 Finally she relented and granted him a ticket on a freighter the Jaladuta Bhaktivedanta Swami began the 35 day journey to America on August 13 1965 at the age of 69 66 67 Bhaktivedanta took with him little more than a suitcase an umbrella some dry cereal forty Indian rupees about seven US dollars and two hundred three volume sets of his translation of the first canto of Srimad Bhagavatam 68 69 70 71 After surviving two heart attacks during his maritime journey 72 Bhaktivedanta Swami finally arrived at the Boston Harbor on September 17 1965 and then continued on to New York City 73 Later years 1965 1977 Beginnings in New York City See also International Society for Krishna Consciousness Bhaktivedanta Swami had no support or acquaintances in the United States except the Agarwals an Indian American family who although strangers to him had agreed to sponsor his visa 63 c Upon reaching New York he took a bus to the town of Butler Pennsylvania where the Agarwals lived In Butler he delivered lectures to different groups at venues like the local YMCA 75 76 After a month in Butler he returned by bus to New York City 63 He stayed at various places sometimes in a windowless room 77 sometimes a Bowery loft 78 until with the help of early followers he found a place to stay in the Lower East Side where he converted a storefront curiosity shop with the serendipitous name Matchless Gifts into a small temple 79 80 at 26 Second Avenue 79 81 82 83 84 There he offered classes on the Bhagavad gita and other Vaishnava texts and held kirtan group chanting of the Hare Krishna mantra Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare 85 nbsp The Hare Krishna Tree in Tompkins Square Park New York After he and his followers held Hare Krishna kirtan one Sunday under a tree in nearby Tompkins Square Park The New York Times reported the event Swami s Flock Chants in Park to Find Ecstasy 50 Followers Clap and Sway to Hypnotic Music at East Side Ceremony 86 He slowly gained a following mainly from young people of the 60s counterculture 79 In contrast to the 60s countercultural lifestyle he required that in order to receive spiritual initiation his followers had to vow to follow four regulative principles no illicit sex that is sex outside of marriage no eating of meat fish or eggs no intoxicants including drugs alcohol cigarettes and even coffee and tea and no gambling 87 88 New initiates also vowed to daily chant sixteen meditative rounds of the Hare Krishna mantra that is to complete sixteen circuits of chanting the mantra on a 108 bead strand During the first year in New York he initiated nineteen people 79 In July 1966 he incorporated the International Society for Krishna Consciousness ISKCON 82 79 89 90 d In December of 1966 he made a recording of Krishna kirtan along with a brief explanatory talk that took the form of an album entitled Krishna Consciousness 92 released under the Happening record label The record helped the early spread of what he called the Hare Krishna movement 93 94 With his small band of followers in a little storefront he was already sharing a vision of spreading Krishna consciousness around the world He asked them to help for example by typing his manuscripts for the second canto of the Srimad Bhagavatam 95 After he completed his Bhagavad gita As It Is by mid January of 1967 96 he asked a new disciple to find a publisher for it 97 Bhaktivedanta Swami personally taught his first followers to spread Krishna s message prepare food to offer to Krishna collect donations and chant the Hare Krishna maha mantra great mantra on the streets 98 San Francisco Main article Mantra Rock Dance nbsp Allen Ginsberg greeting A C Bhaktivedanta Swami at the San Francisco airport January 1967 In 1967 Bhaktivedanta Swami established a second center in San Francisco 7 99 100 The opening of the temple in the heart of the booming hippie community of Haight Ashbury attracted many new adherents and was a turning point in his movement s history marking the beginning of rapid growth 79 101 To gain attention and raise funds his disciples organized a two hour concert with kirtan led by Bhaktivedanta Swami and rock performances by the Grateful Dead and other famous rock groups of the day 102 This Mantra Rock Dance held at the popular Avalon Ballroom attracted some three thousand people 102 and brought attention to the local Hare Krishna temple One commentator dubbed it the ultimate high of that era 103 nbsp The Mantra Rock Dance poster by Harvey W Cohen created December 1966 Later that year Bhaktivedanta Swami s followers organized San Francisco s first Ratha Yatra the festival he had celebrated as a child in imitation of the massive parade held annually in the Indian city of Puri For this first San Francisco version a flatbed truck with four pillars holding a canopy took the place of Puri s three huge ornate wooden vehicles 104 He would later establish this annual festival in major cities around the world 105 with big vehicles chariots and thousands of people taking part At first Bhaktivedanta Swami s followers referred to him as the Swami 106 or Swamiji 79 From mid 1968 onwards they called him Prabhupada a respectful epithet that enjoys currency with devotees and an increasing number of scholars 3 Great Britain and Europe In 1968 Prabhupada asked three married couples among his disciples to open a temple in London England Following his instructions the disciples dressed in their robes and saris began singing Hare Krishna regularly on London streets and at once attracted attention Soon newspapers carried headlines like Krishna Chant Startles London and Happiness is Hare Krishna 107 A further breakthrough came in December 1969 when the disciples managed to meet with members of the rock band the Beatles who were at the peak of their global fame 108 107 Even before then George Harrison and John Lennon had gotten a copy of the maha mantra recording released by Prabhupada and his students in New York and had begun singing Hare Krishna 94 109 In August 1969 Harrison produced a single of the Hare Krishna mantra sung by the London disciples and released it on Apple Records 108 107 109 For the recording the disciples called themselves The Radha Krishna Temple 110 Harrison told a press conference convened by Apple that the Hare Krishna mantra was not a pop song but an ancient mantra that awakened spiritual bliss in the hearts of people listening to and repeating it 111 Seventy thousand copies of the record sold on the first day 107 It rose to number 11 on the British charts 109 and Prabhupada s students performed live four times on the BBC s popular TV show Top of the Pops 112 The record was also a success in Germany Holland France Sweden Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia as well as South Africa and Japan and so the group was invited to perform in a number of European countries 113 The next year 1970 Harrison produced with Prabhupada s disciples another hit single Govinda and in May 1971 the album The Radha Krishna Temple 108 109 In 1970 Harrison sponsored the publishing of the first volume of Prabhupada s book Kṛṣṇa the Supreme Personality of Godhead 107 114 which relates the activities of Krishna s life as told in the tenth canto of the Srimad Bhagavatam In 1973 Harrison donated a seventeen acre estate known as Piggots Manor 115 fifteen miles northwest of London The Hare Krishna devotees converted this into a rural temple ashram and renamed it Bhaktivedanta Manor 116 in Prabhupada s honor Once Prabhupada s disciples had made a start in England Prabhupada over the years visited England many times and from there traveled to Germany France Italy Sweden Switzerland and the Netherlands 117 leading kirtans installing forms of Krishna in ISKCON temples meeting religious and intellectual leaders and others keen to meet him and guiding and encouraging his disciples e Africa In 1970 Prabhupada made the first of several visits to Kenya 117 Although the disciples he had sent there had settled into doing spiritual programs for the local Indian people Prabhupada insisted on doing programs meant for Africans On one notable occasion in Nairobi when he was scheduled to do a program at an Indian Radha Krishna temple in a mainly African area downtown he ordered the doors opened to invite the local residents so that the hall soon flooded with African people 118 Then he held kirtan and gave a talk Prabhupada told his local leaders that this is what they should do spread Krishna consciousness among the local African people 119 Prabhupada also later visited Mauritius and South Africa 117 and sent his disciples to Nigeria and Zambia 120 The Soviet Union nbsp Prabhupada in front of Saint Basil s Cathedral on Red Square in Moscow July 1972 Prabhupada s visit to Moscow from June 20 to June 25 1971 marked the beginning of Krishna consciousness in the Soviet Union 121 During his five days in Moscow Prabhupada managed to meet only two Soviet citizens Grigory Kotovsky a professor of Indian and South Asian studies and Anatoly Pinyaev a twenty three year old Muscovite f Pinyaev who went on to become the first Soviet Hare Krishna devotee met Prabhupada through the son of an Indian diplomat stationed in Moscow 122 Prabhupada s assistant gave Pinyaev a copy of Prabhupada s Bhagavad gita which Pinyaev was able to translate into Russian copy and then distribute underground in the Soviet Union during Communist times 123 Pinyaev showed a great interest in Gaudiya Vaishnavism accepted initiation from Prabhupada and did much to ignite interest in Krishna consciousness in the Soviet Union 121 Pinyaev was later imprisoned in Smolensk Special Psychiatric Hospital and forcibly treated with drugs for his practice of Krishna consciousness 121 124 India Having achieved some success in the West in 1970 Prabhupada directed his attention especially to India with the hope of turning India back toward her original spiritual sensibilities 125 He came back to India with a party of Western disciples 62 ten American sannyasis and twenty other devotees 107 and for the next seven years focused much of his effort on establishing temples in Bombay Vrindavan Hyderabad and a planned international headquarters in Mayapur West Bengal the birthplace of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu 62 By that time Prabhupada saw India had set a course towards Europeanization 72 and sought to imitate the West Therefore the appearance on Indian soil of American and European Hare Krishna devotees who had rejected Western materialism and embraced Indian spiritual culture caused nothing less than a sensation among the modernizing i e Westernizing Indians planting seeds for an authentic religious revival there 126 source source source source source source source source Timeline of Prabhupada s travels around the world 1965 1977 117 By the early 1970s Prabhupada had established his movement s American headquarters in Los Angeles and its world headquarters in Mayapur 127 Around the world In Latin America Prabhupada visited Mexico and Venezuela In Asia he visited Hong Kong Japan Malaysia Indonesia and the Philippines He also spent time in Australia New Zealand and Fiji In the Middle East he visited Iran 117 Among the places he sent disciples to spread Krishna consciousness was China 120 Early in the movement Prabhupada had guided his students personally but later as the movement rapidly expanded he relied more on letters and his secretaries 128 By giving his students instructions advice and encouragement he ensured a strong paternal presence in their lives 98 He wrote more than six thousand letters many now collected and kept at the Bhaktivedanta Archives 129 Besides receiving reports of accomplishments via correspondence he also had to deal almost daily with setbacks perplexities quarrels and failures He tried to correct them as much as possible and kept on advancing his movement 129 Wherever he was he took an hour long early morning walk which became a time for disciples to ask questions and receive personal guidance 130 On returning from his walk he lectured daily on the Srimad Bhagavatam 131 often reading from the portion of the manuscript he was working on Every afternoon he met with disciples or with dignitaries and leaders from various parts of his mission Traveling constantly to lecture and tend to his disciples Prabhupada circled the world fourteen times in ten years 132 He opened more than one hundred temples and dozens of farm communities and restaurants as well as gurukulas boarding schools for ISKCON s children 133 He initiated nearly five thousand disciples 134 Death 1977 On November 14 1977 at the age of 81 after a long illness g Prabhupada passed away in his room at the Krishna Balaram Mandir 2 136 the temple he had established in Vrindavan India 137 138 139 His burial site is located in the courtyard of the temple beneath a samadhi memorial shrine built by his followers 2 140 Succession nbsp Prabhupada s samadhi in Vrindavan India In 1970 Prabhupada established a Governing Body Commission GBC then consisting of twelve leading disciples to oversee ISKCON s activities around the world and to serve as ISKCON s ultimate managing authority 139 In 1977 four months before his death he appointed eleven senior disciples to perform spiritual initiations on his behalf while he was ill 141 Despite the measures Prabhupada took to organize the management of his movement his death caused a crisis of authority in ISKCON that destabilized the organization and became a turning point in its development 138 142 143 The succession process was beset by conflicts with disagreements persisting for decades 144 145 Nonetheless by 2023 nearly one hundred disciples and grand disciples in succession from Prabhupada were serving as initiating gurus in his branch of the Gaudiya Vaishnava lineage 146 Philosophy and teachingsWithin Eastern systems spiritual lineages are integral to each tradition and a teacher is mandated to maintain theological fidelity by transmitting knowledge as given in the lineage 147 Prabhupada comes in the Brahma Madhva Gaudiya lineage which traces back to the saint and mystic Chaitanya Mahaprabhu 1486 1533 148 and the theologian Madhvacharya 1238 1317 and further back its teachings say to the beginnings of creation 149 This lineage sampradaya follows such texts as Srimad Bhagavatam the Bhagavad gita and the writings of Chaitanya s disciples and their followers 150 Prabhupada s extensive commentaries on the sacred texts follow those of Bhaktisiddhanta Bhaktivinoda and other traditional teachers such as Baladeva Vidyabhushana Vishvanatha Chakravarti Jiva Goswami Madhvacharya and Ramanujacharya 151 152 The Absolute Truth In accordance with the teachings of the Srimad Bhagavatam Prabhupada taught that the supreme truth or Absolute Truth is the one unlimited undivided spiritual entity that is the source of all That Absolute Truth he taught is realized in three phases as Brahman all pervading impersonal oneness as Paramatma the aspect of God present within the heart of every living being and as Bhagavan the Supreme Personality of Godhead Though the Absolute Truth is one he taught that one Absolute is progressively realized in these three features according to one s level of spiritual advancement In the initial stage the Absolute is realized as Brahman in a more advanced stage as Paramatma and at the most advanced stage as Bhagavan 153 154 155 156 nbsp Radha Krishna the supreme manifestation of God in the teachings of Gaudiya Vaishnavism which Prabhupada represented Radha Krishna installed by Prabhupada in his temple in Vrindavan India Krishna the Supreme Personality of Godhead In the Srimad Bhagavatam and so in Prabhupada s teachings Krishna is seen as the original and supreme manifestation of Bhagavan 149 in Sanskrit svayam bhagavan or the Supreme Personality of Godhead himself 157 No one is equal to or greater than Krishna 158 Brahman and Paramatma are partial realizations of Krishna 158 The various Vishnu forms such as Rama and Narasimha are nondifferent from Krishna they are the same Personality of Godhead appearing in different roles The form of Krishna is the original and the most complete form In the Hindu pantheon he taught the gods other than the Vishnu forms are demigods that is assistants of the Supreme Personality of Godhead 153 The energies of the Absolute If the Absolute Truth is one this raises the question of how there can be diversity If as the Upanishads say there is only the Absolute Truth and nothing else we need some way to account for the existence of living beings with all their differences and the world with all its many colors forms sounds aromas and so on Prabhupada responds by referencing a statement from the Upanishads that the Absolute Truth has varied energies 159 160 As a fire located in one place gives off heat and light throughout a room the Absolute Truth fills the world with every sort of variety 161 Oneness and difference Prabhupada taught Chaitanya s doctrine of achintya bheda abheda tattva in which everything is seen as simultaneously inconceivably one with the Absolute that is with Krishna and yet different 159 162 163 By way of analogy Prabhupada gives the example that heat is in one sense identical with the fire from which it emerges and yet the two are different when sitting in a fire s warmth we are not burning in the fire itself 161 164 This oneness and difference accounts for the oneness of an Absolute Truth that includes limitless varieties 159 162 163 The inferior and superior energies Among Krishna s energies Prabhupada taught the ingredients of this world collectively belong to Krishna s inferior energy 165 inferior in that being inert matter it lacks consciousness 166 167 But superior to inert matter are the conscious living beings jivas that belong to Krishna s superior energy 168 169 The predicament of the living being Because the living beings belong to Krishna s superior energy Prabhupada taught they share in Krishna s divine qualities including knowledge bliss and eternality sat cit and ananda 166 169 But because of contact with the inferior energy since time immemorial 170 the divine nature of the living beings has been covered and subjecting the living beings in this world to ignorance suffering and repeated birth and death 171 In each life the living beings struggle against birth and death disease and old age 172 While trying to control and enjoy the resources of nature the living beings increasingly suffer from entanglement in nature s complexities 173 As spiritual beings belonging to the superior energy the living beings are different from their material bodies the body may be male or female young or old white or black American or Indian but the living being within the body is beyond what he called these material designations 174 Prabhupada phrased this understanding in a maxim he often used I am not this body 175 176 When we falsely identify with these bodies he taught we are under the influence of maya or illusion Only when this illusion is dispelled can the soul become liberated from material existence 172 BhaktiPrabhupada taught that the living beings can be freed from illusion and from their entire material predicament by recognizing that they are tiny but eternal parts of Krishna and that their natural engagement lies in serving Krishna just as a hand serves the body Dormant within every living being Prabhupada taught is an eternal loving relationship with that Absolute or Krishna and when that loving relationship is revived the living being resumes its natural eternal and joyful life 177 This eternal service in devotion to Krishna rendered by one freed from all material designation is called bhakti 158 source source Prabhupada sings a Bengali bhajan by Narottama Dasa Thakur One can begin practicing bhakti Prabhupada taught even while in the earliest stages of spiritual life In this way bhakti is both the final end to be achieved and the means by which to achieve it As a spiritual practice bhakti is a powerful transformative process that purifies the soul and enables it to see God directly 172 Impersonalism Prabhupada crusaded against what he called impersonalism that is the idea that ultimately the Supreme has no form qualities activities or personal attributes In this way he stood opposed to the teachings of Shankara A D 788 820 who held that everything except Brahman is illusory including the soul the world and God 178 Before Prabhupada Shankara s system of thought known as Advaita Vedanta had generally provided the framework for Western understandings of Hinduism 179 and the steady procession of Hindu swamis who came to America generally aligned themselves with Shankara s monistic views and the idea of the ultimate absorption of the self into an impersonal Reality or Brahman 180 But prominent Vaishnava philosophers from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries like Madhva and Ramanuja had opposed Shankara s views with personalistic understandings of Vedanta Those teachers presented strong philosophical arguments criticizing Shankara s illusionism mayavada his view that personal individuality indeed all individuality is illusory 178 181 Philosophers in the Gaudiya line such as in the sixteenth century Jiva Goswami had continued to argue formidably against impersonalism which they regarded as the essential metaphysical misconception 182 So Prabhupada strongly opposed impersonalistic views wherever he encountered them and asserted the eternal personal existence of the Absolute and of all living beings 178 Where Buddhism shares ground with Shankara s views by teaching that ultimately personality disintegrates leaving nothing but a void nirvana 183 Buddhism too came in for Prabhupada s strong personalistic critique 183 184 Societal organization Prabhupada taught that society should ideally be organized in such a way that people have specific duties according to their occupation varna and stage of life ashrama 185 The four varnas are intellectual work administrative and military work agriculture and business and ordinary labor and assistance The four ashramas are student life married life retired life and renounced life In accordance with the Bhagavad gita and in opposition to the modern Hindu caste system Prabhupada taught that one s varna or occupational standing should be understood in terms of one s qualities and the work one actually does not by one s birth 186 Moreover devotional qualifications always supersede material ones 187 Following Chaitanya who challenged the caste system and undercut hierarchical power structures 188 Prabhupada taught that anyone could take to the practice of bhakti yoga and become self realized through the chanting of God s holy names as found in the Hare Krishna maha mantra 172 Prabhupada also emphasized the importance of self sufficient farming communities as places where one could live simply and cultivate Krishna consciousness 189 Spiritual practices Kirtan nbsp Pranbhupada plays the harmonium during a recording session in Germany 1974 The main spiritual practice Prabhupada taught was Krishna sankirtana also simply called kirtan or kirtana in which people musically chant together names of Krishna especially in the form of the maha mantra Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare Kirtan literally means description hence praise and sankirtana indicates kirtan performed by people together 190 On the authority of traditional Sanskrit texts Chaitanya Mahaprabhu had taught that Krishna kirtan is the most effective method for spiritual realization in the present age Kali yuga more effective than silent meditation dhyana speculative study jnana worship in temples puja or performing the various physical or mental disciplines of yoga Krishna kirtan he had taught can be done by anyone anywhere at any time and without hard and fast rules Because the names of Krishna are transcendental sounds identical with Krishna himself the chanting is spiritually uplifting 191 source source Prabhupada leads Hare Krishna kirtan and explains the maha mantra October 1966 When Prabhupada began his efforts to spread Krishna consciousness in the United States he held kirtans in a Bowery loft in his early storefront temples in Tompkins Square Park in New York and Golden Gate Park in San Francisco and wherever else he went 192 Following Prabhupada his disciples soon began holding kirtans regularly in streets parks temples and other venues in major cities in North America and Europe and then in Latin America Australia Africa and Asia Because of Hare Krishna kirtan Prabhupada s movement itself came to be referred to simply as Hare Krishna and its followers as Hare Krishnas h Theologically speaking the term sankirtana can extend from the public chanting of Hare Krishna to the distribution of books spoken by or about Krishna Kirtan in the sense of public chanting is traditionally accompanied by kartals hand cymbals and mridangas drums and Prabhupada s spiritual master and grand spiritual master had said that distribution of Krishna literature was the great mridanga because such distribution spreads Krishna consciousness still further 128 193 194 Prabhupada therefore gave great importance to such distribution Association with devotees Prabhupada s tradition constantly makes the point that association with saints inspires saintliness association with devotees inspires devotion The association of genuine devotees can exert a powerful effect upon one s consciousness 195 And so when Prabhupada incorporated ISKCON its founding document included as one the Society s purposes To bring the members of the Society together with each other and nearer to Krishna 196 Initiation vows Prabhupada required of his followers as a prerequisite for spiritual initiation that they promise to follow four regulative principles no illicit sex that is no sex outside of marriage no eating of meat fish or eggs no intoxicants including drugs alcohol cigarettes and even coffee and tea and no gambling 88 197 New initiates also vowed to daily chant sixteen meditative rounds of the Hare Krishna mantra that is to complete sixteen circuits of chanting the mantra on a 108 bead strand 88 Hearing of Srimad Bhagavatam For at least the last millennium the Srimad Bhagavatam has been by far the most important work in the Krishna tradition and the scripture par excellence of the Krishnaite schools 198 It is sometimes described as the ripened fruit of the Vedic tree 45 199 Accordingly Prabhupada instituted daily classes on the Bhagavatam in all his centers 200 and he spoke on Bhagavatam daily wherever he went 201 Deity worshipIn accordance with Vaishnava teachings Prabhupada introduced worship of Krishna in the form of a murti figures cast in metal or carved in stone or wood to match descriptions of Krishna given in Vaishnava texts Scholar of religion Kenneth Valpey writes Prabhupada explained that although omnipresent Kṛṣṇa makes himself perceivable and hence worshipable through material elements which are after all his own energies Based on this reasoning one should understand the image of Kṛṣṇa to be Kṛṣṇa personally appearing in a way quite suitable for our vision that is perceivable by ordinary persons with ordinary powers of sight 202 Prabhupada taught that because Krishna is personally present as the deity the term Prabhupada used for such a form worshiping the deity helps one develop loving exchanges with Krishna Prabhupada installed deities in ISKCON temples around the world 203 Food prepared and offered to the deity of Krishna with devotion becomes sanctified as krishna prasadam mercy of Krishna Prabhupada taught that eating only prasadam purifies one s existence and helps one develop in bhakti 204 From the beginning of his mission Prabhupada distributed prasadam to visitors 205 206 and soon made it into the movement s major outreach vehicle 207 208 A weekly prasadam feast for the public has always been a program at all of ISKCON centers 209 210 Prabhupada wrote The Hare Krishna Movement is based on the principle chant Hare Krishna mantra at every moment both inside and outside of the temples and as far as possible distribute prasadam 211 Living in Vrindavan Prabhupada s predecessors such as Rupa Goswami had taught the value of living in Vrindavan sometimes spelled Vrindaban the sacred town between Agra and New Delhi that is held to be the site of Krishna s rural pastimes on earth and therefore conducive to constant remembrance of Krishna Prabhupada accordingly brought his disciples on pilgrimage to Vrindavan and there established the Krishna Balaram temple Yet with a broader outlook he wrote one disciple W herever you remain if you are fully absorbed in your transcendental work in Krishna consciousness that place is eternally Vrindaban It is the consciousness that creates Vrindaban 212 Principal writingsBhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati who had specifically encouraged writing and publishing at one meeting told Prabhupada If you ever get money print books 18 213 So regardless of how busy or sometimes unwell Prabhupada might have been he remained focused on producing books 214 Prabhupada slept little waking at 1 00 am every night 215 to translate and comment on the Srimad Bhagavatam and other texts 216 During the day he would give attention to guiding disciples and seeing to the affairs of his international society and its temples and very early in the morning while most people were asleep he did most of his writing because even with his age and uncertain health he was unwilling to sacrifice his writing time for extra rest 217 By 1970 he had translated the Bhagavad gita two cantos of the Bhagavatam a summary study of its tenth canto and a summary volume drawn from the expansive Caitanya caritamrta From 1970 on his literary output slowed only slightly due to the demands of his expanding Hare Krishna movement 218 His task as scholars have observed was not merely to translate the text but to translate an entire tradition 219 220 Historian of religion Thomas Hopkins relates that Prabhupada told him in a conversation in Philadelphia in 1975 that the Gita provided the basic education on Krishna devotion the Srimad Bhagavatam was like graduate study and the Caitanya caritamrita was like postgraduate education for the most advanced devotees 221 Hopkins says that by presenting in English such works as the Bhagavatam and Caitanya caritamrta Prabhupada made important texts accessible to the Western world that were simply not accessible before Hopkins says W hat few English translations there were of the Bhagavata Purana and Caitanya caritamrta were barely adequate and very hard to get hold of 220 i Prabhupada Hopkins says made these and other texts available in a way that they never were before and made the tradition itself accessible to the West 220 Bhagavad gita As It Is nbsp President of India Pratibha Patil receives a copy of Bhagavad Gita As It Is 14 December 2011 In 1966 67 Prabhupada wrote a translation and commentary on the Bhagavad gita he entitled Bhagavad gita As It Is It was first published by the Macmillan Company in 1968 in an abridged edition and later in 1972 in full 222 For each verse he first gives the Sanskrit Devanagari script then a roman transliteration and word for word gloss followed by his translation and a commentary or purport 223 Scholar of religion Richard H Davis comments that this was the first English translation of the Gita to supply an authentic interpretation from an Indian devotional tradition 224 It is by far the most widely distributed of all English Gita translations 223 In 2015 Davis wrote The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust estimates that twenty three million copies of Prabhupada s translation have been sold including the English original and secondary translations into fifty six other languages 224 For Prabhupada Davis says the essential fact about the Bhagavad gita is its speaker The Gita contains the words of Krishna and Krishna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead In Prabhupada s view other translations lack authority because the translators use them to express their own opinions rather than the message of Krishna In contrast Prabhupada saw his task in presenting what Krishna wanted to say and so he claimed to present the Bhagavad gita as it is 225 Srimad Bhagavatam At once a sacred history a theological treatise and a philosophical text 226 the Srimad Bhagavatam stands out by reason of its literary excellence the organization that it brings to its vast material and the effect that it has had on later writers 227 Praising the poetry of the Bhagavatam scholar of religion Edwin Bryant says S cholars of the text have every right to say that the Bhagavata can be ranked with the best of the literary works produced by mankind 228 nbsp Prabhupada s edition of Srimad Bhagavatam with his translation and commentary It was this great work that Prabhupada after taking sannyasa set out to present in English with once again the original Sanskrit text its word for word meanings a translation and an in depth commentary 229 Also known as Srimad Bhagavata Purana Bhagavata Purana or just the Bhagavata 230 Srimad Bhagavatam is a work of twelve books cantos was the word Prabhupada used comprising more than fourteen thousand verse couplets 231 Srimad means beautiful or glorious 232 Prabhupada began his translation and commentary on the Bhagavatam after accepting sannyasa in 1959 and by 1965 he had completed and published the first canto 233 He worked on translating the Srimad Bhagavatam into English for the rest of his life 217 The cantos were published one by one as he finished them He completed nine cantos and thirteen chapters of the tenth The rest of the Bhagavatam was completed by his disciples 217 Krsna the Supreme Personality of Godhead Considering his old age and the vast size of the Bhagavatam Prabhupada knew he might not live to finish it So in 1968 he undertook to present the Bhagavatam s tenth canto the essence of the work in summary form as Krsna the Supreme Personality of Godhead 234 This summary study is Prabhupada s own exposition of the story of Krishna as it is told in the Tenth Canto 217 It laid out the account of Krishna from the Bhagavata Purana that provides the images and stories central to Krishna devotion 235 As Bryant says The tenth book of the Bhagavata has inspired generations of artists dramatists musicians poets singers writers dancers sculptors architects and temple patrons across the centuries Its stories are well known to every Hindu household across the length and breadth of the Indian subcontinent and celebrated in regional festivals all year round 236 Prabhupada himself inspired artists among his disciples to provide the text with profuse full color illustrations Such illustrations became a feature of nearly all his books 237 A related work is Light of the Bhagavat written by Prabhupada in Vrindavan in 1961 before he went to the West but published only after his death The book is a treatment of one chapter chapter twenty of the tenth canto Prabhupada composed forty eight commentaries for the chapter s verses The book is accordingly illustrated with forty eight paintings 238 Ishopanishad In 1969 Prabhupada published again in his full verse by verse format his translation and commentary for the Ishopanishad 239 also known as the isa Upaniṣad or isavasya Upaniṣad 240 which in 1960 he had partially serialized in his Back to Godhead magazine 239 The Ishopanishad consisting of only eighteen mantras 241 is considered one of the principal Upanishads 242 In all indigenous collections of the Upanishads the Isopaniṣad comes first 240 Its first verse highly regarded as a capsule of Vedic theology 45 presents a god centered view of the universe 239 The celebrated traditional commentator Shankara wrote One who is eager to rid himself of the suffering and delusion of saṁsara created by ignorance and attain Supreme Bliss is entitled to read this Upaniṣad 243 The Nectar of Devotion Begun in 1968 244 The Nectar of Devotion is a summary study of Rupa Goswami s Bhakti rasamrita sindhu his famous exposition of the principles of devotion 244 Scholar practitioner Shrivatsa Goswami has described Bhakti rasamrita sindhu as a textbook of devotional practice an exposition on the philosophy of devotion and a study of devotional psychology 245 The Nectar of Devotion gave access to Gaudiya Vaisnavism s most important theological treatise on devotion 235 Caitanya caritamrta Caitanya caritamrta is the seventeenth century account of the life and teachings of Chaitanya who founded the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition 244 Written in the Bengali language it runs to more than 15 000 verses and is regarded as the most authoritative work on Sri Caitanya a work of rare merit with no parallel in the whole of Bengali literature 246 Scholar of religion Hugh Urban calls it one of the greatest works in all of Indian vernacular literature 247 Prabhupada completed his translation in 1974 within two years 218 and it was published in seventeen volumes again with verse by verse text transliteration word meanings translation and commentary 229 He based his commentary on the Bengali commentaries of his predecessors Bhaktivinoda Thakura and Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati 151 Before Srila Prabhupada s translation the work in English was simply unavailable After Prabhupada s edition came out scholar J Bruce Long wrote The appearance of an English translation of Kṛṣṇadasa Kaviraja Gosvami s Sri Caitanya caritamṛta by A C Bhaktivedanta Founder Acarya of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness is a cause for celebration among both scholars in Indian Studies and lay people seeking to enrich their knowledge of Indian spirituality 248 Several years earlier in 1968 Prabhupada published Teachings of Lord Caitanya 249 The book offers a summary of selected portions of Caitanya caritamrita 250 j The Nectar of Instruction Prabhupada also wrote a verse by verse commentated translation of Rupa Goswami s eleven verse Upadeshamrita 239 one of Rupa Goswami s shortest works 251 which provides concise directions on how to carry out devotional service 147 Bhaktivedanta Book Trust In 1972 Prabhupada founded the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust BBT which manages the international publishing and distribution of his writings 62 90 252 Apart from his major works the BBT publishes various paperbacks derived from his lectures 232 The BBT also publishes Back to Godhead the magazine Prabhupada founded in multiple languages 253 Between 1973 and 1977 Prabhupada s followers distributed several million books and other pieces of Krishna conscious literature every year in shopping malls airports and other public locations in the United States and worldwide 254 As of 2023 his books had been translated into eighty seven languages 255 In 2022 the BBT printed more than two million pieces of literature 256 Critical assessments of Prabhupada s writingsShrivatsa Goswami has said Making these Vaiṣṇava texts available is one of Srila Prabhupada s greatest contributions Apart from the masses his books have also reached well into academic circles and have spurred academic interest in the Caitanya tradition 257 Further he says The significance of making these texts available is not merely academic or cultural it is spiritual Jnana knowledge is spread proper doctrines are made known people come closer to reality 257 Other academics too have applauded Prabhupada s publications 258 as his most significant legacy 259 But his edition of Bhagavad gita in particular has come in for criticism as well Eric Sharpe scholar of religion considers Prabhupada s reading of Bhagavad gita single minded and fundamentalist 260 Sanskrit scholar A L Herman concurs 261 Another scholar K P Sinha takes exception to Prabhupada s misinterpretations and unkind remarks directed toward Advaita Vedanta the philosophy of absolute monism 262 k The most detailed critical analysis by a Western non Hindu scholar comes from historian of religion Robert D Baird 260 Baird takes upon himself the task of not merely seeing Prabhupada as an authentic proponent of Vaishnavism but of examining as an academic scholar the way Prabhupada reads the Bhagavad gita 263 nbsp Prabhupada lectures on The Nectar of Devotion in front of Rupa Goswami s samadhi in Vrindavan India 1972 Whereas many scholars Baird writes see some degree of progression in the Gita with different themes emphasized in different parts of the book Prabhupada reads the complete teaching of the book indeed of Vedic literature generally into any passage 264 It appears that he considers it legitimate to interpret any verse in the light of the whole system found in the Gita whether it is explicitly mentioned in that verse of the Gita or not 265 In this way he reads Krishna consciousness even into portions of the text where Krishna is not explicitly mentioned 266 Prabhupada cites later passages in the Gita to explain earlier passages 267 Indeed he even quotes from other texts in the canon whether written before the Gita or after 267 to indicate the intention of the Gita as though they have the same authority as the Gita itself 267 And so In all a wide range of texts are used to serve as authorities for understanding the Gita Swami Bhaktivedanta not only treats specific texts in a way that would be unusual among Western scholars but he sees specific texts in the light of the Vedas in general 268 Whereas other scholars Baird writes would give great attention to the overall structure of the Gita Prabhupada gives the structure scant notice preferring instead to make this point In every chapter of Bhagavad gita Lord Kṛṣṇa stresses that devotional service unto the Supreme Personality of Godhead is the ultimate goal of life 269 Prabhupada uses the text of the Gita to present various aspects of Krishna theology 270 And he also goes beyond specific texts and the Gita itself when he makes it the occasion for the inculcation of a Vaishnava lifestyle 265 typified by chanting the maha mantra regulating one s sexual activity offering food to Krishna and following a vegetarian diet 271 And so Swami Bhaktivedanta is more interested in expounding the principles of Krishna consciousness than in merely explicating the text at hand 272 In one instance cited the text recommends one thing astanga yoga and Bhaktivedanta Swami cancels that and offers the mahamantra 272 As for competing interpretations Bhaktivedanta often seeks to show the superiority of the Vaishnava position and the error of other positions 273 The position that is attacked with the most regularity and vigor is that of Advaita Vedanta 273 the system of thought that is commonly used to provide the structure for Western understandings of Hinduism 179 whose advocates Prabhupada calls Mayavadins impersonalists or monists 273 For Advaita Vedanta he reserves his strongest condemnations 179 Nor does Prabhupada only criticize impersonalists Rather Scholars in particular come under Swami Bhaktivedanta s condemnation because they are merely mental speculators 274 In Prabhupada s view Baird says Since these scholars are not surrendered to Krishna they are not Krishna conscious they are merely offering their own ideas rather than the truth within the parampara system the lineage of masters and disciples 274 Prabhupada seldom engages in the kind of argumentation that scholars are accustomed to when deciding between alternative positions 275 Instead he takes a position as a spiritual master within the disciplic succession and merely declares what is true 275 And so Baird says The gulf between Swami Bhaktivedanta s presentation and that of the scholarly exegete is simply unbridgeable for their purposes operate on different levels 263 l But what some scholars might see as faults others see as virtues Thomas Hopkins sees Prabhupada s translations and purports as successfully conveying the meaning of the text precisely because Prabhupada draws upon the commentaries of his predecessors and brings to his work the understandings of his entire tradition 277 Moreover Hopkins says Prabhupada does this in such a way that the entire text becomes comprehensible to a modern reader not only theoretically but practically 278 Translations of such texts as the Gita Hopkins says cannot be done mechanically 279 The translator has to understand the spirit and the experience that lie behind the text 279 Where Prabhupada s translations expand the text they do so for the sake of making the meaning more clear rather than obscuring it 280 Hopkins says Writing a commentary is not a merely intellectual or academic exercise it has a practical goal to engage people with a living spiritual tradition 278 Prabhupada he says brings the meaning of the text out of the past and into the present giving it meaning in terms of people s lives 151 Challenges and controversiesIn Prabhupada s efforts to establish and expand Krishna consciousness some of the difficulties he faced were internal to his new and growing movement He had to train disciples unaccustomed to Vaishnava culture and philosophy and engage them in furthering his Hare Krishna movement 281 he had to set up and then guide his Governing Body Commission to see to ISKCON s global management He often had to intervene when clashes and controversies within ISKCON grew out of hand He had to sort out difficulties faced by individual disciples ensure a proper understanding of his teachings and more broadly transplant an entire cultural movement 282 He also faced challenges from the outside world Cult image and brainwashing Until the mid 1970s the attitude of the Western public towards Prabhupada and his movement was cordial News reports tried to reliably describe the Hare Krishna devotees their beliefs and their religious practices The spirit of curiosity prevailed while hostility was almost nonexistent 283 But by the mid 1970s this changed The rapidly expanding Hare Krishna movement distinctive foreign highly visible and vigorous often over vigorous in spreading its message became an early target for a nascent anti cult movement No longer was the Hare Krishna movement seen to represent an authentic spiritual tradition Rather it was now one of a myriad of destructive cults that won converts and took over their lives by mind control and brainwashing When young adults supposedly robbed of free will and programmed by mind control became Hare Krishna devotees some parents hired deprogrammers to kidnap them and free them from the cult Deprogrammings typically involved days or weeks of isolation browbeating and intense verbal haranguing and harassment 284 285 286 287 After one such deprogramming failed the New York City District Attorney s Office charged two local Hare Krishna leaders with illegally imprisoning two Hare Krishna followers by brainwashing them 288 m Prabhupada instructed his disciples to fight these charges among other ways by entering his books into evidence 289 Meanwhile two hundred scholars signed a document defending ISKCON as an authentic Indian missionary movement 290 In March of 1977 a New York State Supreme Court justice threw out the charges and recognized that ISKCON represents a bona fide religious tradition 288 Nonetheless in America and Europe the cult label and image persisted for the rest of Prabhupada s lifetime and beyond 291 286 As scholar James Beckford notes in the 1970s Hare Krishna devotees became increasingly active in selling their literature and collecting donations from the public 292 so they were sharply criticized for what was seen as harassing people for money at airports and other public places As Bryant and Ekstrand comment Questionable fund raising tactics confrontational attitudes to mainstream authorities and an isolationist mentality coupled with the excesses of neophyte proselytizing zeal brought public disapproval 133 something that Prabhupada had to deal with too Institutionalization As ISKCON evolved towards being a worldwide organization it suffered from the inevitable travails of institutionalization Young disciples mostly from an anti establishment anti authoritarian background became members of the GBC and found themselves running a worldwide institution Preaching sometimes started giving way to revenue production gender issues arose leaders sometimes fell and scandals broke out Bureaucracy intruded on spontaneity and many members left As much as Prabhupada tried to leave management to the GBC much of this he too had to deal with personally 133 293 Child abuse Prabhupada directed his disciples to train children in boarding schools called gurukulas where they would receive education from spiritual teachers However as reported by sociologist of religion E Burke Rochford through mismanagement these schools became like orphanages After Prabhupada s departure it came to light that physical and sexual abuse occurred within these schools due to lack of oversight 294 Obstacles in India In India Prabhupada faced a special set of challenges He had much to accomplish there but his American and European disciples were inexperienced in how to get things done in India and even how to live there 295 When Prabhupada s young American followers came to India in the early 1970s and began holding festivals including public sankirtana many Indians were surprised to see Westerners adopting Indian modes of worship and devotion Some local people including even some Indian officials suspected that the American devotees must be undercover operatives of the Central Intelligence Agency CIA 296 297 Outspoken and uncompromising as he was in the way he presented Krishna s teachings in India as elsewhere Prabhupada found himself battling with opposing views of all sorts 298 Therefore another challenge came from Prabhupada s consistent rejection of the common Hindu notion of caste by birth Since Prabhupada like his predecessors insisted that anyone from any race or nation could become spiritually purified and fit to perform the duties of priests he faced opposition from Hindu brahmins who held that performing such duties was an exclusive birthright of their caste 299 300 When Prabhupada resolved to build a temple on land in Juhu Bombay now Mumbai the man who had sold ISKCON the land tried to swindle the devotees and take it back The man had deep political connections in the Bombay municipality and employed lawyers and even thugs to drive the devotees off but Prabhupada persisted and eventually won 301 n non primary source needed Deviations While working to establish his movement Prabhupada had to deal with problems caused even by leading disciples who monks or not could still hold on to intellectual baggage disdain for authority and ambitions for power 302 In 1968 Prabhupada s first sannyasi disciple openly disregarded Prabhupada s instructions to him and twisted core tenets of Prabhupada s teachings This foreshadowed succession problems and issues of authority that Prabhupada s movement would face both during Prabhupada s presence and after 302 Unlike Indian gurus who declared themselves avatars divine appearances of God Prabhupada from the very beginning of his preaching called himself only a servant or representative of God 303 But in 1970 four of Prabhupada s early sannyasis announced at a large ISKCON gathering that Prabhupada s followers had failed to recognize that Prabhupada was actually Krishna God himself Prabhupada expelled those sannyasis from his Society he eventually readmitted them after they recanted their claim 302 In 1972 without consulting Prabhupada eight of the twelve members of the GBC held a meeting in New York aimed at centralizing control of ISKCON s activities and finances Their plans would have lessened Prabhupada s own oversight and set aside his emphasis on the autonomy of each ISKCON center This prompted Prabhupada to suspend the entire GBC until further notice establish direct lines of communication with each temple s leaders and re emphasize spiritual purity the selfless and voluntary nature of devotional life and the exemplary conduct befitting ISKCON leaders This he said is what he wanted not corporate bureaucracy and excessive centralization He later unsuspended the GBC 302 In 1975 a clash broke out when a team of ten parties of itinerant sannyasis assisted by two hundred brahmacharis criss crossed America visiting ISKCON temples to extoll renunciation and a missionary spirit and urge brahmacharis to abandon the temples and join the sannyasi parties The temples the team argued were led by presidents who were grihasthas married men and grihasthas had a propensity for enjoyment that undermined what should be an austere temple atmosphere 302 The conflict reached its peak in 1976 in Mayapur at ISKCON s annual global gathering when a sannyasi dominated GBC passed resolutions severely restricting the role of women and families in ISKCON 302 After hearing from both sides Prabhupada came down against this type of discrimination calling it fanaticism and had the GBC undo the resolutions Prabhupada said I cannot discriminate man woman child rich poor educated or foolish Let them all come and let them take Krishna consciousness 302 Controversial views and statements In the course of his preaching work in the West Prabhupada made controversial statements that criticized various ideals of modern society or spoke offensively of certain groups 304 305 4 o In a traditional Hindu vein 6 Prabhupada spoke favorably of the myth of Aryan bloodlines and compared darker races to shudras people of low caste thus implying them being inferior to the lighter complexioned humans 6 In a recorded room conversation with disciples in 1977 he calls African Americans uncultured and drunkards further stating that after being given freedom and equal rights they caused disturbance in the society 307 Prabhupada called democracy the government of the asses nonsense and farce at the same time praising the monarchial form of government and speaking favorably of dictatorship 308 While comparing Napoleon and Hitler to great demons of Hindu mythology Hiranyakashipu and Kamsa he called their activities very great On other occasions he made generally approving remarks about Hitler and said that Hitler killed the Jews because they were financing against Germany 309 He also expressed some misogynistic views asserting that women cannot properly utilize freedom and it is better for them to be dependent 310 stating that they are generally not very intelligent 311 and in general should not be trusted 311 Scholars have commented however on the contrast between such controversial pronouncements and the full picture of what Prabhupada actually taught and did 312 Kim Knott a religious studies scholar extensively discusses Prabhupada s statements about women 313 Describing her perspective in relation to ISKCON as that of an outsider and a western feminist 313 she highlights Prabhupada s firm belief that bhakti yoga the path of Krishna Consciousness allows transcendence beyond gender distinctions 314 Knott emphasizes that according to Prabhupada women devotees regardless of their gender possess equal potential for spiritual advancement and service to Krishna 314 She further commends Prabhupada for opening up the Hare Krishna movement to women despite cultural norms and traditional prescriptions 315 In this way she writes Prabhupada took time place and circumstance into account and acted in the spirit of Krishna consciousness in the manner of Chaitanya 316 Commenting on the role and degree of responsibility that Prabhupada s statements about women played in their abuse in ISKCON E Burke Rochford notes that Prabhupada s personal example in dealings with his earliest women disciples was far more important 317 Their collective personal experiences Rochford observes portray Prabhupada s respectful attitude and behavior toward his women disciples 317 and his empowerment for the same rights and duties as his male disciples 318 Prabhupada encouraged and engaged women in conducting public scriptural discourses kirtans and temple worship writing for ISKCON magazines and publications personally accompanying and assisting him and assuming significant institutional positions in ISKCON 319 320 Similarly scholar of religion Akshay Gupta observes that Prabhupada did not regard his black disciples as lower or untouchables 321 displaying to some of them the same or even greater degree of affection than to his followers of other ethnicities 321 p Another scholar of religion Mans Broo adds that when Prabhupada speaks about castes he referred to an envisioned ideal society in which people would be divided into different occupational groups based not on hereditary but on individual qualifications 324 Broo also notes that scholarly analyses 325 attribute some of such statements to Prabhupada s flair for drama and overstatement 326 particularly noting his penchant for making politically incorrect remarks to reporters 324 and adding It is difficult to decide how seriously any single remark is meant to be taken from a transcript However Broo concludes that this behavior does not clear Prabhupada from responsibility for his more radical of his politically incorrect statements 327 324 Another scholar of religion Fred Smith suggests that some of Prabhupada s statements such as those concerning Hitler must be understood in the context of the intellectual and political culture in which he matured 328 specifically that of mid twentieth century Bengal 305 brewing with anti colonialist nationalism championed by such figures as Subhash Chandra Bose and therefore more favorably disposed to Nazi Germany than to Great Britain 328 q Broo notes that Prabhupada s followers continue to grapple with his controversial statements 325 which paint a picture of a not very pleasant man one far removed from the Gaudiya Vaishnava ideals described in the classical texts of the tradition 329 and respond to them in different ways Some remain silent while others invoke context or argue that Prabhupada is being unfairly quoted due to negative biases Still others are willing to differentiate between his statements they deem absolute and those they consider relative acknowledging that some teachings may be contingent on the circumstances of Prabhupada s life before coming to the US 330 However some followers view this approach as exceedingly risky questioning who has the authority to determine which teachings are relative and which are not 325 Therefore Broo concludes this issue is not likely to be resolved soon 325 Commenting on the underlying causes for such controversies scholar of religion Larry Shinn attributes the conflict between Prabhupada s teachings and western cultural values to Prabhupada s insistence on the infallibility of the Krishna scriptures and the authenticity of Prabhupada s Krishna faith and practice 331 r InfluenceBy explaining the teachings of bhakti yoga and Gaudiya Vaishnavism and arousing interest in them worldwide Prabhupada made a lasting contribution 7 9 8 Through his writings and his movement many Westerners have become aware of bhakti for the first time 332 He translated and commented on important spiritual texts particularly the Bhagavad gita the Srimad Bhagavatam and the Caitanya caritamrta making these texts accessible to a global audience 220 His commentaries brought the traditional wisdom of these writings into a contemporary context making possible a deeper comprehension of their spiritual meaning and its practical application in one s life 9 Within Gaudiya Vaishnavism Prabhupada s preaching achievements are viewed as the fulfillment of a mission to introduce Caitanya Mahaprabhu s teachings to the world 333 Although the steady procession of Hindu swamis who had come to America before Prabhupada had generally aligned their views with the monistic Advaita Vedanta of Shankara AD 788 820 and the idea of the ultimate absorption of the self into an impersonal Reality or Brahman 180 Prabhupada rejected Advaita Vedanta 334 and coherently argued that the Absolute is ultimately the Personality of Godhead 335 Sardella has written that in the twelve years between Prabhupada s arrival in America and his demise Prabhupada managed to build ISKCON into an institution comprising thousands of dedicated members establish Caitanya Vaishnava temples in most of the world s major cities and publish numerous volumes of Caitanya Vaishnava texts in twenty eight languages tens of millions of which were distributed throughout the world 7 336 Prabhupada also spread the chanting of the Hare Krishna mantra worldwide 336 In 2013 Rochford wrote T he fact that ISKCON has survived for nearly 50 years despite significant change is a testament to the devotees resilience and to the power of Prabhupada s teachings and vision for ISKCON 337 In India Prabhupada s movement has become a well respected institution with recognition at all levels of Hindu society 338 339 ISKCON has large temple complexes active in cities like Mumbai New Delhi Bengaluru Chennai and Kolkata 340 341 ISKCON s center in Mayapur has become an Eastern Indian place of pilgrimage for millions every year Thousands of middle class Hindus both in India and elsewhere have joined ISKCON 340 And Hindus both in India and in the Hindu diaspora have provided ISKCON vast support 339 342 But Prabhupada s legacy also faces scrutiny on various fronts Criticisms have emerged regarding the movement s organizational structure controversies have arisen surrounding continuity of leadership after his passing 343 344 and misdeeds and even criminal acts have been committed by some ISKCON members including once respected former leaders 345 s Concerns have been expressed about the movement s adaptability to modern values especially concerning gender roles and societal norms 346 And although ISKCON has benefited from the support and participation of a large and growing number of Indian families in its congregations outside India 338 347 the Hinduization of ISKCON has in many places tended to diminish the involvement of other audiences 348 Nonetheless Prabhupada s influence endures through his writings and ISKCON s ongoing activities 7 Despite significant setbacks the movement he started continues to grow 349 RecognitionFrom scholars Kim Knott writes that scholars describe Prabhupada as a charismatic spiritual leader and emphasize his humanity and uniqueness 350 Prabhupada s missionary successes in such a short period and at such an advanced age she writes are extolled by scholars using terms such as stunning remarkable and extraordinary 350 In the same vein Klaus Klostermaier scholar of Hinduism and Indian history refers to Prabhupada as probably the most successful propagator of Hinduism abroad 8 Representing such thoughts Harvey Cox American theologian and Professor of Divinity Emeritus at Harvard University said There aren t many people you can think of who successfully implant a whole religious tradition in a completely alien culture That s a rare achievement in the history of religion In his case it s even all the more remarkable for his having done this at such an advanced age When most people would have already retired he began a whole new phase of his life by coming to the United States and initiating this movement He began simply with only a handful of disciples Eventually he planted this movement deeply in the North American soil throughout other parts of the European dominated world and beyond Although I didn t know him personally the fact that we now have in the West a vigorous disciplined and seemingly well organized movement not merely a philosophical movement or a yoga or meditation movement but a genuinely religious movement introducing the form of devotion to God that he taught is a stunning accomplishment So when I say he s one in a million I think that s in some ways an underestimate Perhaps he was one in a hundred million 10 From officials Prabhupada s success in spreading Indian spirituality among non Indians across the world brought him acclaim from Indian political leaders 11 Indian Prime Ministers Atal Bihari Vajpayee Deve Gowda 351 Narendra Modi and Indian Presidents Shankar Dayal Sharma Pranab Mukherjee and Pratibha Patil have praised Prabhupada his work and mission 11 352 source source source source source source source source Narendra Modi speaks on Prabhupada s 125th birth anniversary 2 September 2021 353 In 1998 speaking at the opening ceremony of an ISKCON temple in New Delhi Prime Minister Vajpayee credited Prabhupada s movement with publishing the Bhagavad Gita in millions of copies in scores of Indian languages and distributing it in all nooks and corners of the world 340 calling Prabhupada s journey to the West and the rapid global propagation of his movement one of the greatest spiritual events of the century 340 t Releasing a 125 rupee commemorative coin on the occasion of Prabhupada s 125th birth anniversary 354 Prime Minister Modi also praised Prabhupada for his efforts to give India s most priceless treasure to the world describing Prabhupada s accomplishments in spreading the thought and philosophy of India to the world as nothing less than a miracle 353 On the fiftieth anniversary of Prabhupada s voyage to the West US Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard praised the compassion that drove Srila Prabhupada to attempt something so brave and so daring to deliver the message of Lord Chaitanya and the Holy Name to all of mankind 355 CommemorationShrines memorials museums nbsp Pushpa samadhi of Prabhupada in Mayapur West Bengal In keeping with Gaudiya Vaisnava rites after Prabhupada s death at the Krishna Balarama temple in Vrindavan Uttar Pradesh India his disciples interred his body on the temple premises and erected a marble samadhi or shrine over his burial site 356 357 In Mayapur West Bengal they built a much larger pushpa samadhi a shrine sanctified with flowers from Prabhupada s burial ceremony 358 Daily puja traditional worship is offered to larger than life statues of Prabhupada at both sites 358 Another shrine is dedicated to Prabhupada in New Vrindaban West Virginia USA where a residence built to host Prabhupada during his occasional visits evolved into the elaborate Prabhupada s Palace of Gold 359 After opening to the public in 1979 two years after Prabhupada s death the memorial site is now a place of worship and an attraction for pilgrims and tourists 360 361 listed in America s National Register of Historic Places 362 Other rooms in which Prabhupada stayed while in Vrindavan Mumbai Los Angeles London Melbourne and several other places around the world have been preserved as museums nbsp Prabhupada s birthplace Prabhupada s birthplace in the Tollygunge neighborhood of Kolkata was inaugurated as a memorial site in 2001 on the 125th anniversary of Prabhupada s birth by West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee 363 In the Ultadanga neighborhood of Kolkata the building known as Bhaktivinode Asan where Prabhupada first met his guru Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati has also been restored as a heritage site 364 nbsp Prabhupada s son Vrindavan Chandra De back in red shirt in front of the Jaladuta monument with his family standing and the monument s team seated left to right concept director manager and sculptor ISKCON Kolkata August 2015 On August 13 2015 the fiftieth anniversary of Prabhupada s departure from Kolkata to the United States a two meter high bronze monument created by Ukrainian sculptor Volodymyr Zhuravel was unveiled in Kolkata by the Governor of West Bengal Keshari Nath Tripathi and Lieutenant Governor of Pondicherry Kiran Bedi 365 The monument was created in two parts one depicting Prabhupada s departure for America the other his arrival After the monument was unveiled the departure part was installed at the ISKCON temple in Kolkata the arrival part in front of the ISKCON temple in Boston 366 Biographies memoirs diaries In 2008 Ketola wrote that there were more than thirty historical biographical and autobiographical works centering on Prabhupada 367 Since then they have increased Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami s official six volume biography Srila Prabhupada lilamrta carefully researched Ketola reports 367 has more recently been joined by a shorter biography Swami in a Strange Land by Joshua Greene 368 Both authors are Prabhupada s disciples Among memoirs that focus on specific times or places Ketola mentions several including Hayagriva Dasa s The Hare Krishna Explosion 367 Ketola also notes two published diaries kept by direct assistants of Prabhupada Tamal Krishna Goswami s TKG s Diary and Hari Sauri Dasa s multi volume Transcendental Diary u List of biographical publications about A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada Acarya The Lifestory of A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada by Bhaktisiddhanta Das 2021 ASIN B095PTSKC7Acarya Portraits of His Divine Grace A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada by Sesa Dasa 1996 ISBN 978 0947259051Blazing Sadhus by Achyutananda Das 2016 ISBN 978 1537508863By His Example The Wit and Wisdom of A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada by Guru Das 2004 ISBN 978 1887089364Chasing Rhinos With The Swami by Shyamasundar Das 2016 in 3 volumes ISBN 978 1495177088Dancing White Elephants Traveling with Srila Prabhupada in India August 1970 March 1972 by Giriraj Swami 2023 ISBN 978 1 925850 03 1Five Years Eleven Months and a Lifetime of Unexpected Love A Memoir by Visakha Dasi 2016 ISBN 978 1522838449The Great Transcendental Adventure Pastimes of His Divine Grace A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada in Australia and New Zealand by Kurma Dasa 1999 ISBN 9780947259228The Hare Krishna Explosion The Birth of Krishna Consciousness in America 1966 1969 by Hayagriva Dasa 1985 ISBN 9780932215017He Lives Forever by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami 2022 ISBN 979 8353149606I ll Build You a Temple The Juhu Story by Giriraj Swami 2021 ISBN 978 1925850017In Conversation with Srila Prabhupada by Lokanath Swami 2016 ASIN B09HKRBMHGISKCON in the 1970s by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami 1997 ISBN 978 0911233728Jaya Srila Prabhupada by Bhakti Vikasa Swami 2014 ISBN 978 9382109112Journey to the Pacific Rim by Bali Mardan Das ISBN 9788193291801Life with the Perfect Master A Personal Servant s Account by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami 2022 ISBN 979 8411706741Memories Anecdotes of a Modern Day Saint by Siddhanta Dasa 2020 in 4 volumes ISBN 9788192970226 9780972259712 9789389050806Miracle on Second Avenue by Mukunda Goswami 2011 ISBN 978 0981727349Mission in the Service of His Divine Grace Birth of the Hare Krishna Movement in South Africa by Riddha Dasa 2003 ISBN 978 1901593013The Mayapur Vrindavan Festivals with Srila Prabhupada 1972 77 by Lokanath Swami 2020 ISBN 9780620694827My Days with Prabhupada A Young Man s Path to God in the Hare Krishna Movement by Umapati Swami 2016 ASIN B01EVBQ6M4My Glorious Master Remembrances of Prabhupada s Mercy on a Fallen Soul by Bhurijana Dasa 1996 ISBN 9780992521943My Memories of Srila Prabhupada by Bhakti Vikasa Swami 2012 ISBN 978 9382109303Ocean of Mercy by Bhakti Charu Swami 2016 ISBN 978 0892135332Our Srila Prabhupada A Friend to All by Mulaprakrti Devi 2000 ASIN B004Q6XSXAA Place of Sandalwood and Roses by Govinda Dasi 2023 ISBN 979 8987382912Prabhupada Antya lila Final Pastimes of Srila Prabhupada by Tamal Krishna Goswami 1988 ISBN 978 0936979014Prabhupada Appreciation by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami 2022 ISBN 979 8357966339Prabhupada at Radha Damodara by Mahanidhi Swami 2013 ASIN B00CTRMKKKPrabhupada in Malaysiaby Janananda Das Goswami 2020 ISBN 978 8193859711Prabhupada lila by Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 1987 ISBN 978 0911233360Prabhupada Meditations by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami 2023 in 2 volumes ISBN 979 8446353095Prabhupada Messenger Of The Supreme Lord by Sastvarupa Dasa Goswami 2014 ISBN 978 8189574307Prabhupada Nectar Anecdotes from the Life of His Divine Grace A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupadaby Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami 1984 ISBN 9780911233223Prabhupada Stories by Govinda DasiServant of the Servant by Tamal Krishna Goswami 2019 ISBN 9788193992166Srila Prabhupada and His Disciples in Germany by Bhakti Gauravani Goswami 2021 ISBN 9789391545048Srila Prabhupada is Coming My Personal Memories of His Divine Grace A C Bhaktivehanta Swami Prabhupada by Mahamaya Dasi 2000 ISBN 9780970453013Srila Prabhupada lilamrta by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami 2008 in 7 volumes ISBN 978 8189574222Srila Prabhupada Uvaca by Srutakirti DasaSwami in a Strange Land by Joshua M Greene Yogeshvara Dasa 2018 ISBN 9789387944091TKG s Diary Prabhupada s Final Days by Tamal Krishna Goswami 1999 ISBN 9788187216124A Transcendental Diary by Hari Sauri Dasa 2021 in 5 volumes ISBN 978 1880404379Vrindaban Days Memories of an Indian Holy Town by Howard Wheeler Hayagriva Swami 1990 ISBN 9780932215208With Srila Prabhupada in the Early Days 1966 1969 A Memoir by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami 1997 ISBN 978 0911233841 You Cannot Leave Boston by Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami in 2 volumes 1998 ASIN B09HKSY9L7 Film and filmed memoir collections In 1996 Gaurav Seth produced the fifty five minute biographical film Prabhupada A Lifetime in Preparation 370 In 2017 John Griesser a Prabhupada disciple produced an uncritical 91 minute film Hare Krishna The Mantra the Movement and the Swami who started it All 371 Disciples have also undertaken two video projects collecting memories of Srila Prabhupada one entitled Remembering Srila Prabhupada 372 the other Following Srila Prabhupada 373 The Bhaktivedanta Archives in North Carolina serves as a repository for Srila Prabhupada s manuscripts and letters for photographs of Srila Prabhupada and for audio recordings v nbsp nbsp 125 rupee commemorative coin released by Narendra Modi on Prabhupada s 125th birth anniversary Stamps coin and plaque In 1996 the Government of India issued a commemorative stamp in Prabhupada s honor and in 2021 a 125 rupee commemorative coin 374 In 2001 the City of New York installed a plaque in Tompkins Square Park to mark the Hare Krishna tree the elm under which Prabhupada and his early followers first began chanting the Hare Krishna mantra in 1966 375 nbsp The plaque near the Hare Krishna Tree in Tompkins Square Park New York Schools Various ISKCON related schools and other institutions have been named after Srila Prabhupada including the Bhaktivedanta Research Centre in Kolkata which holds a full collection of the works of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati as well as publications from the first twenty years of the Gaudiya Math 376 In 2023 Scottish Church College and the Bhaktivedanta Research Center jointly established the A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada Memorial Award to commemorate Prabhupada s student years at the college meant to recognize both the most meritorious student for outstanding academic achievements and a faculty member for exceptional community service 377 378 Roads In 1978 a prominent entrance road into Vrindavan was named Bhaktivedanta Swami Marg after Prabhupada 379 BibliographyTranslations with commentary Bhagavad gita As It Is ISBN 9780892131341 Srimad Bhagavatam Bhagavata Purana multiple volumes ISBN 9789177693000 completed by disciples Sri isopaniṣad ISBN 9780892131389 Sri Caitanya caritamrta multiple volumes ISBN 9780947259068 The Nectar of Instruction ISBN 9780912776859 Summary studies Teachings of Lord Caitanya ISBN 9780912776088 Kṛṣṇa the Supreme Personality of Godhead multiple volumes ISBN 9780892133338 The Nectar of Devotion ISBN 9780912776057 Other books Easy Journey to Other Planets 1990 ISBN 9780912776101 The Perfection of Yoga ISBN 9780912776361 Beyond Birth and Death ISBN 9780912776415 On the Way to Kṛṣṇa ISBN 9780912776392 Raja vidya The King of Knowledge ISBN 978 1602930094 Elevation to Kṛṣṇa Consciousness ISBN 9780912776439 Kṛṣṇa Consciousness The Matchless Gift ISBN 9780912776613 Kṛṣṇa Consciousness The Topmost Yoga System ISBN 9780912776118 Perfect Questions Perfect Answers ISBN 9780912776620 Teachings of Lord Kapila the Son of Devahuti ISBN 9789383095988 The Science of Self Realization ISBN 9781845990398 Posthumously published Mukunda mala stotra The Prayers of King Kulasekhara ISBN 9780892132751 completed by disciples Narada bhakti sutra ISBN 9780892132737 completed by disciples Light of the Bhagavata ISBN 9789171492678 Message of Godhead ISBN 9780892132997 Renunciation Through Wisdom ISBN 9780947259044 Beyond Illusion and Doubt ISBN 9780892133369 Teachings of Queen Kunti ISBN 9780892131020 Civilization And Transcendence ISBN 9780892132980 Dharma The Way Of Transcendence ISBN 9780892133260 Kṛṣṇa the Reservoir of Pleasure ISBN 9780892131495 The Path of Perfection ISBN 9789382176510 The Quest for Enlightenment ISBN 9780892132928Notes After the unification of the Church of Scotland in 1929 the institution became known as Scottish Church College Sen Asit and John Abraham Glimpses of college history 2008 1980 Retrieved on 2009 10 03 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 November 2023 https web archive org web 20091222083113 http scottishchurch ac in College 20History02 pdf A term used in the Gaudiya Math and ISKCON for denoting disciples of the same diksha guru Jones notes that Bhaktivedanta Swami became the first Hindu preacher to take advantage of the removal of national quotas by the 1965 Immigration Act of the United States 74 Responding to suggestions that his organization be named International Society for God Consciousness Bhaktivedanta Swami defended his choice my maintaining that Krishna included all other forms and concepts of God 91 Prabhupada s travels to and from Europe and his programs there are described in Srila Prabhupada lilamrita volumes 4 and 5 71 Kotovsky was the head of the Department of India and South Asia of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the USSR Academy of Sciences Eastern mysteries 1991 cites diabetes and complications following a stroke as the cause of Prabhupada s death 135 See the etymologies for Hare Krishna in for example the Oxford English Dictionary the Merriam Webster dictionaries and Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Hopkins recalls that when he was working on his doctoral work in the early 1960s the only copy of the Bhagavata Purana he was able to obtain was by interlibrary loan on microfilm from Harvard s Widener Library 220 Scholar and disciple Tamal Krishna Goswami writes that Prabhupada s first publishing Bhagavad gita As It Is in abridged form and publishing summary studies from the Bhagavatam and Caitanya caritamrita before completing full translations and commentaries expresses both an urgency that Prabhupada felt in transmitting these works as essential sacred texts and the weightiness that each of these three foundational texts possessed within the tradition that Prabhupada represented 250 For a discussion of the criticisms by Herman see Tamal Krishna Goswami A Living Theology of Krishna Bhakti 2012 pp 75 76 261 Goswami leaves Sinha s critique aside on the grounds that it is clearly a sectarian polemic rather than an academic study and for a rebuttal points us to Gerald Surya s review of Sinha s A critique of A C Bhaktivedanta in ISKCON Communications Journal 7 2 December 1999 http content iskcon org icj 7 2 72surya html For a discussion of Baird s critique see Tamal Krishna Goswami s A Living Theology of Krishna Bhakti Essential Teachings of A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada 2012 pp 66 71 276 The case is People v Murphy N Y 1977 98 Misc 2d 235 For a book length telling of this saga see I ll Build You a Temple by Giriraja Swami Two essays by a student of Indology and former ISKCON disciple Ekkehard Lorenz in The Hare Krishna Movement The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant document controversial Prabhupada s quotes on a number of subjects The editors of the volume Edwin Bryant and Maria Ekstrand sought to include in the book a wide range of voices including those not only of well credentialed academics but also of current ISKCON members and of former members in the editors words the movement s most vocal critics 306 One such disciple Ghanashyama Dasa went on to become the first African American sannyasi and guru in history with the name Bhakti Tirtha Swami 322 323 Bose s influence and his efforts to mobilize people against British rule significantly contributed to the growth of anti British sentiments in Bengal and throughout India Nazi Germany was sympathetic to India s independence and during the World War II offered financial and military assistance to Bose s Indian National Army in their struggle against Great Britain Larry Shinn writes Perhaps Prabhupada s piousness centering upon his deep faith in Krishna was both his greatest strength and the source of ISKCON s most consistent tension in America As an acharya or teacher of the Krishna scriptures and devotional faith Prabhupada was a holy man a guru whose translations of the Sanskrit scripture of the Bhagavata Purana the Bhagavad Gita and of Chaitanya s teachings were the center of his own devotional life and of his education of his new American devotees His insistence on the infallibility of the Krishna scriptures and his interpretation of them continues to be a source of unrest within ISKCON and certainly between ISKCON and its surrounding culture In one respect it was the authenticity of Prabhupada s Krishna faith and practice that enticed new converts to ISKCON and also caused the society to stand out in contrast and even opposition to western religious and cultural values 331 Sources that have discussed ISKCON s post charismatic crises and disruptions include Bryant and Ekstrand 2004 Dwyer and Cole 2007 and Rochford 2007 If today the Bhagavad Gita is printed in millions of copies in scores of Indian languages and distributed in all nooks and corners of the world the credit for this great sacred service goes chiefly to ISKCON For this one accomplishment alone Indians should be eternally grateful to the devoted spiritual army of Swami Prabhupada s followers The voyage of Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada to the United States in 1965 and the spectacular popularity his movement gained in a very short spell of twelve years must be regarded as one of the greatest spiritual events of the century 340 E Burke Rochford writes in his Foreword to one volume For scholars and students of religion the material presented represents a critically important historical record Foreword to A Transcendental Diary November 1975 April 1976 p xv 369 https www prabhupada com About AAbout html Claire C Robison describes the Archives though not by name in ISKCON Christian Encounters Chapter 16 in The Routledge Handbook of Hindu Christian Relations p 194References Klostermaier 2000 p 25 a b c Jones 2007 pp 77 78 a b c d e Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 22 a b Lorenz 2004 pp 112 128 347 390 Brown 2020 p 122 a b c Lucia 2014 p 238 a b c d e Lewis 2005 p 128 a b c Klostermaier 1998 p 183 a b c Hopkins 1983 pp 136 142 a b Cox 1983 pp 40 41 a b c Ivanenko 2008 pp 73 74 a b c d e f Ketola 2008 p 66 a b Chryssides 1999 p 171 Bhat 2004 p 61 sfn error no target CITEREFBhat2004 help Zeller 2010 p 74 a b Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 33 a b c d e Shinn 1987 p 34 a b c d e Shinn 1987 p 35 Ravindra Svarupa Dasa 1985 pp 69 70 Mitchiner 1992 p 146 Emmott 1965 p 160 a b Zeller 2010 p 76 a b Sooklal 1986 p 24 Hopkins 1989 p 50 Melton 1992 p 233 Valpey 2006 p 97 Sardella 2013 pp 102 103 Rochford 1985 p 10 Broo 2006 p 41 Judah 1974 pp 40 41 Zeller 2010 p 80 a b c Sherbow 2004 p 131 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 71 72 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 86 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 65 66 69 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 77 78 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 77 78 93 Sooklal 1986 p 25 Zeller 2010 p 81 a b Knott 1986 p 28 Melton 1991 p 449 Bryant amp Ekstrand 2004 p 2 a b Nye 2001 p 10 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 92 a b c Rahul Peter Das 1998 Sooklal 1986 p 26 a b Shinn 1987 p 36 Zeller 2010 p 14 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 104 105 Eck 1979 Zeller 2010 p 92 a b c Shinn 1987 p 37 Greene 2016 p 51 Greene 2016 p 48 Sooklal 1986 p 27 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 163 164 Sherbow 2004 pp 131 132 a b Ketola 2008 p 67 Kapoor 1976 p 74 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 249 256 Prabhupada 1965 p 26 a b c d Sherbow 2004 p 132 a b c Selengut 1996 Shinn 1987 pp 37 38 Morarjee 2017 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 277 Sardella 2019 p 82 Klostermaier 1998 p 186 Gallagher amp Willsky Ciollo 2021 p 299 Rochford 2007 p 10 a b Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 a b Rosen 2007 p 12 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 281 Jones 2007 p xxxvi Ritts 1965 Dwyer amp Cole 2007 p 17 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 301 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 343 344 a b c d e f g Rochford 2007 p 12 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 36 Dwyer amp Cole 2007 p 29 a b Ketola 2008 p 68 Zeller 2010 p 70 Poling amp Kenny 1986 p 7 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 391 Sikes 1966 Rochford 2007 p 13 a b c Rochford 2005 p 102 Gupta 1976 p 17 sfn error no target CITEREFGupta1976 help a b Srivatsa Goswami 1983 p 986 sfn error no target CITEREFSrivatsa Goswami1983 help Bryant amp Ekstrand 2004 pp 120 122 Lavezzolli 2006 p 195 sfn error no target CITEREFLavezzolli2006 help Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 376 379 a b Satyaraja Dasa 2011 Greene 2016 p 99 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 393 Greene 2016 p 148 a b Daner 1976 p 17 Dwyer amp Cole 2007 p 22 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 550 Ketola 2008 p 1 a b Brooks 1989 p 79 Greene 2006 p 139 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 699 Gelberg 1989 pp 149 150 Mukunda Goswami 2011 p 352 a b c d e f Brooks 1989 p 83 a b c Dwyer amp Cole 2007 p 23 a b c d Lavezzoli 2006 p 195 Badman amp Miles 2001 pp 350 351 Greene 2006 p 146 Beck 2007 p 459 Greene 2006 p 147 Greene 2006 p 195 Uncut 2013 Nye 2001 p 12 a b c d e Vanipedia 2024 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 1018 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 1018 1019 a b Karapanagiotis 2021 p 81 a b c Anderson 1986 p 316 Kotovsky 1997 p 109 114 Syamasundar Das 2017 Marzo 1986 p 7 Brooks 1989 p 89 Sooklal 1986 p 31 Melton 1992 p 238 a b Daner 1976 pp 17 18 a b Greene 2016 p 227 Greene 2016 p 207 Naughtie 2010 p 11 Smith 2003 p 178 a b c Bryant amp Ekstrand 2004 p 4 Rochford 2005 p 103 Doyle 1991 p 127 New York Times 1977 p 2 Ketola 2008 p 184 a b Rochford 2007 p 14 a b Hopkins 2007 p 181 De Backer 2016 p 13 Burt 2020 pp 88 90 Rochford 1985 p 8 Dwyer amp Cole 2007 p 72 Burt 2023 pp 51 54 Burt 2020 pp 86 99 GBC 2024 a b Burt 2023 p 12 Burt 2023 p 1 a b Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 23 Burt 2023 p 13 a b c Hopkins 1983 p 141 Ravindra Svarupa Dasa 1985 pp 71 72 a b Sherbow 2004 pp 133 134 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 pp 127 131 132 Schweig 2004 pp 15 19 Deadwyler 1989 p 66 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 142 145 a b c Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 132 a b c Sherbow 2004 p 135 Gupta 2007 p 45 a b Gupta 2007 p 40 a b Gupta 2007 pp 45 55 a b Kapoor 1976 pp 150 158 Hayagriva Dasa 1970 Judah 1974 pp 50 54 a b Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 134 Kapoor 1976 p 95 Sooklal 1986 p 21 a b Kapoor 1976 p 133 Sherbow 2004 pp 135 136 Sherbow 2004 pp 135 137 a b c d Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 135 Ravindra Svarupa Dasa 1993 pp 22 23 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 758 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 238 Jayadvaita Swami 2015 p 80 Knott 1998 p 62 64 a b c Sherbow 2004 pp 140 141 a b c Baird 1987 p 105 a b Judah 1974 p 19 Basham 1983 pp 176 180 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 120 a b Basham 1983 p 176 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 68 King 2012a p 200 Hopkins 1983 p 119 Valpey 2004 p 49 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 131 Farkas 2021 p 2 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 pp 177 178 Ketola 2008 p 51 Greene 2016 pp 117 118 Haddon 2013 p 262 Sardella 2013 p 262 Hopkins 1983 p 129 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 174 Rochford 2007 pp 12 13 Bryant 2007 p 9 Bryant 2007 p 113 Fahy 2014 p 8 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 1984 amp Chapter 15 sfn error no target CITEREFSatsvarupa dasa Goswami1984Chapter 15 help Valpey 2006 p 127 citing a lecture by Prabhupada Ravindra Svarupa Dasa 1985 pp 70 72 Zeller 2012 p 686 Dwyer amp Cole 2010 p 29 sfn error no target CITEREFDwyerCole2010 help Zeller 2012 pp 682 683 Zeller 2012 p 688 Knott 1986 p 72 King 2012b pp 444 448 Zeller 2012 p 681 King 2012b p 442 citing Prabhupada s purport to Srimad Bhagavatam 4 12 10 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 189 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 112 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 113 Sherbow 2004 p 143 Goswami2012 p 114 sfn error no target CITEREFGoswami2012 help a b c d Hopkins 2007 p 177 a b Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 118 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 117 a b c d e Hopkins 1983 p 140 Hopkins 2007 pp 178 179 Davis 2015 p 166 a b Davis 2015 p 167 a b Davis 2015 p 168 Davis 2015 p 165 Bryant 2003 p xxxix sfn error no target CITEREFBryant2003 help Ingalls 1968 p vi Bryant 2003 p lx quoting Ramnarayan Vyas The Synthetic Philosophy of the Bhagavata sfn error no target CITEREFBryant2003 help a b Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 pp 35 36 Bryant 2007 p 111 Gupta amp Valpey 2016 p 1 a b Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 119 Hopkins 1983 p 127 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 766 a b Hopkins 2007 p 178 Bryant 2003 pp lxviii lxix sfn error no target CITEREFBryant2003 help Jacobsen 2024 p 405 A C Bhaktivedanta Swami 1997 a b c d Sherbow 2004 p 144 a b Olivelle 1998 p 405 Nikhilananda 1949 p 195 sfn error no target CITEREFNikhilananda1949 help Hume 1921 p xii Nikhilananda 1949 p 199 sfn error no target CITEREFNikhilananda1949 help a b c Hopkins 2007 p 176 Shrivatsa Goswami 1983 pp 246 247 Kapoor 1976 pp 61 62 Urban 2003 p 265 Long 1978 p 286 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 233 a b Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 209 Valpey 2004 p 52 Shinn amp Bromley 1989 p 53 sfn error no target CITEREFShinnBromley1989 help Sherbow 2004 p 142 Rochford 1983 p 285 The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust sfn error no target CITEREFThe Bhaktivedanta Book Trust help Haribol 2023 a b Shrivatsa Goswami 1983 p 247 Knott 1998 p 81 Sharma 1981 p 971 a b Knott 1998 p 82 a b Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 pp 75 76 Sinha 1997 preface a b Baird 1986 p 200 Baird 1986 p 201 a b Baird 1986 p 203 Baird 1986 pp 201 203 a b c Baird 1986 p 213 Baird 1986 p 216 Baird 1986 p 217 Baird 1986 p 207 Baird 1986 pp 203 207 a b Baird 1986 p 205 a b c Baird 1986 p 208 a b Baird 1986 p 220 a b Baird 1986 p 221 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 pp 66 71 Hopkins 1983 pp 140 141 a b Hopkins 1983 p 142 a b Hopkins 1983 p 146 Hopkins 1983 p 144 Deadwyler 2004 p 154 sfn error no target CITEREFDeadwyler2004 help Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 pp 1 23 Melton 1989 p 92 Cox 1983 p 57 Shinn 1983 p 95 a b Rochford 1995 p 217 Goswami2012 p 38 sfn error no target CITEREFGoswami2012 help a b Schumach 1977 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 53 Melton 1989 p 95 Lewis 2005 p 129 Beckford 1985 p 26 Anuttama Dasa amp Mukunda Goswami 2004 p 408 Rochford 2007 pp 75 91 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 37 Mehta 1993 p 78 Cole 2007 p 33 sfn error no target CITEREFCole2007 help Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 99 Tamal Krishna Goswami 2012 p 192 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 p 155 Satsvarupa dasa Goswami 2002 pp 536 537 a b c d e f g Tamal Krishna Goswami 1997 Daner 1976 p 19 Burt 2023 p 57 a b Gupta 2022 p 153 Bryant amp Ekstrand 2004 p 6 Lorenz 2004 p 372 Lorenz 2004 pp 367 369 Lorenz 2004 pp 369 370 Lorenz 2004 p 379 a b Lorenz 2004 p 378 Rochford 2007 pp 126 127 a b Knott 2004 p 292 a b Knott 2004 p 296 Knott 2004 p 300 Knott 2004 pp 300 301 a b Rochford 2007 p 126 Rochford 2007 p 127 Rochford 2007 p 128 Gupta 2021 p 51 a b Gupta 2021 p 50 McCray 1983 pp 34 36 Princeton University a b c Broo 2006 p 46 a b c d Broo 2006 pp 47 48 Smith 2004 p 185 Broo 2006 p 47 a b Smith 2004 pp 186 187 Broo 2006 p 39 Broo 2006 pp 39 40 a b Shinn 2004 p xviii Basham 1983 p 174 Dwyer amp Cole 2007 p 5 Ketola 2008 p 6 Sherbow 2004 pp 140 141 a b Sardella 2019 p 83 Dwyer amp Cole 2013 p 12 a b Kazmin 1998 a b Newsweek 2006 a b c d e Pandey 2020 Popham 1998 Brekke 2019 p 84 sfn error no target CITEREFBrekke2019 help Dwyer amp Cole 2013 pp 35 37 Nesti 2000 p 151 Rose 2020 p 755 Dwyer amp Cole 2013 pp 6 7 Vellely 1998 sfn error no target CITEREFVellely1998 help Dwyer amp Cole 2013 pp 26 28 Sardella 2012 p 247 sfn error no target CITEREFSardella2012 help a b Knott 1997 Ivanenko 2008 p 43 IANS 2018 a b Modi 2021b India Govt Mint 2021 Gabbard 2015 New York Times 1977 Dwyer amp Cole 2013 p 38 a b Silva da Silveira 2014 Bromley amp Shinn 1989 p 199 McCarthy 2013 Shinn amp Bromley 1987 p 124 Hanz 2023 Pandey 2021 Banerjee 2022 Jaisinghani 2015 Smullen 2018 a b c Ketola 2008 p 8 Patel 2018 pp 179 181 Ketola 2008 p 9 IMDb 1996 Jenkins 2017 PrabhupadaMemories TheTVDB Times of India September 13 2021 sfn error no target CITEREFTimes of India September 13 2021 help Tompkins Square Park 1966 Sardella 2019 pp 85 86 Scottish Church College 2023 Basan 2023 Pandey 2019 SourcesAcademic and documentary Anderson John 1986 The Hare Krishna Movement in the USSR Religion in Communist Lands 14 3 Puebla Institute 316 317 doi 10 1080 09637498608431277 ISBN 978 0945102038 Anuttama Dasa Mukunda Goswami 2004 On Staying in ISKCON Personal Story IV in Bryant Edwin F Ekstrand Maria L eds The Hare Krishna Movement The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant New York Columbia University Press pp 404 415 ISBN 978 0231122566 Asher Catherine ed 1995 Reference Encyclopaedia India 2001 vol 1 Columbia MO South Asia Publications ISBN 9780945921424 Baird Robert D 15 October 1986 Neville Robert C ed Swami Bhaktivedanta and the Bhagavadgita As It is Modern Indian Interpreters of the Bhagavadgita SUNY Series in Religious Studies Albany NY State University of New York Press pp 200 221 ISBN 9780887062971 Baird Robert D 1987 Coward Harold G ed The Response of Swami Bhaktivedanta Modern Indian Responses to Religious Pluralism Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 9780887065729 Baird Robert D 1988 ISKCON and the Struggle for Legitimation Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library 70 3 70 157 170 doi 10 7227 BJRL 70 3 13 ISSN 0301 102X Basham Arthur L 1983 Gelberg Steven J ed Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Five Distinguished Scholars on the Krishna Movement in the West Grove Press pp 162 195 ISBN 9780394624549 Beck Guy L 2007 Rosen Steven J ed Gaudiya Vaishnavism and ISKCON An Anthology of Scholarly Perspectives Vrindavana Rasbhiharilal and Sons pp 459 472 ISBN 9788184030297 Beckford James A 1985 Cult Controversies The Societal Response to the New Religious Movements London New York Tavistock Publications doi 10 1177 144078338602200319 ISBN 9780422796309 Berg Travis Vande Kniss Fred 2008 ISKCON and Immigrants The Rise Decline and Rise Again of a New Religious Movement The Sociological Quarterly 49 1 79 104 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 2007 00107 x Bhat N Suman 2005 Torch Bearers of Krishna Cult Sura Books ISBN 9788174785428 Bromley David G Shinn Larry eds 1989 Krishna Consciousness in the West First ed Lewisburg PA Associated University Presses ISBN 9780838751442 Bromley David G Shupe Anson D 1981 Strange Gods The Great American Cult Scare Boston MA Beacon Press ISBN 9780807032565 Broo Mans 2006 Bhaktivedanta Swami s rhetoric of violence Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis 19 38 50 doi 10 30674 scripta 67299 Brooks Charles R 1989 The Hare Krishnas in India Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691000312 Brown Cheever 2020 Asian Religious Responses to Darwinism Evolutionary Theories in Middle Eastern South Asian and East Asian Cultural Contexts Springer Nature ISBN 9783030373405 Brown Sara Black 2021 From Meditation to Bliss Achieving the Heights of Progressive Spiritual Energy through Kirtan Singing in American Gaudiya Vaishnava Hinduism Religions 12 8 600 doi 10 3390 rel12080600 Bryant Edwin Ekstrand Maria eds 2004 The Hare Krishna Movement The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231122566 Bryant Edwin ed 2007 Krishna A Sourcebook PDF Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 514891 6 Krishna The Beautiful Legend of God Srimad Bhagavata Puraṇa Book X translated by Bryant Edwin Penguin Book Classics 2003 ISBN 978 0140447996 Burr Angela 1984 I am Not My Body New Delhi Vikas Publishing House Pvt Ltd ISBN 9780706922967 Burt Angela 2020 Knott Kim Francis M eds An Uncertain Future The Crisis of Succession in the International Society for Krishna Consciousness Innovation Violence and Paralysis How do Minority Religions Cope with Uncertainty London Routledge pp 88 90 doi 10 4324 9781315595542 ISBN 9781315595542 Burt Angela 2023 Hare Krishna in the Twenty First Century Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781009079150 Cargonja H 2022 Realisations Arrangements and Ecstasies Narratives of Religious Experience in the Hare Kṛṣṇa Movement Journal of Hindu Studies 15 2 121 47 doi 10 1093 jhs hiac005 Castleman Harry Podrazik Walter J 1976 All Together Now The First Complete Beatles Discography 1961 1975 Ballantine Books ISBN 9780345256805 Chatterjee Debayudh 2013 After Inner Moonlight Ginsberg s Involvement with the Hare Krishna Movement The Web Log of the Jadavpur University Society for American Studies Chryssides George D 1999 Exploring New Religions Continuum ISBN 9780826459596 Cox Harvey 1983 Gelberg Steven J ed Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Five Distinguished Scholars on the Krishna Movement in the West Grove Press pp 21 60 ISBN 9780394624549 Daner Francine Jeanne 1976 The American Children of Krsna A Study of the Hare Krsna Movement Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 9780030135460 Davis Richard N 2015 The Bhagavad Gita A Biography New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691139968 De Backer Luc 2016 Conversion and Ritualisation an Analysis of How Westerners Enter the International Society for Krishna Consciousness and Assimilate its Values and Practices PDF Ann Arbor a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Deadwyler William 1989 Patterns in ISKCON Historical Self Perception in Bromley David G Shinn Larry eds Krishna Consciousness in the West First ed Lewisburg PA Associated University Presses ISBN 9780838751442 Desai Krishnakant Awatramami Sunil Madhu Pandit Das 2004 The No Change in ISKCON Paradigm in Bryant Edwin Ekstrand Maria eds The Hare Krishna Movement The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant New York Columbia University Press pp 194 213 ISBN 978 0231122566 Doyle Robert A 1991 3 Easter Mysteries Alexandria VA Time Life Books pp 114 142 ISBN 9780809465040 Dwyer Graham Cole Richard J eds 2013 Hare Krishna in the Modern World United Kingdom Arktos Media ISBN 978 1907166471 Dwyer Graham Cole Richard J eds 2007 The Hare Krishna Movement Forty Years of Chant and Change London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1845114077 Dwyer Graham 2010 Krishna Prasadam The Transformative Power of Sanctified Food in the Krishna Consciousness Movement Religions of South Asia 4 1 London Equinox Publishing doi 10 1558 rosa v4i1 89 eISSN 1751 2697 ISSN 1751 2689 Eck Diana L 1979 Kṛṣṇa Consciousness in Historical Perspective Back to Godhead magazine vol 14 no 10 The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust Emmott D H 1965 Alexander Duff and the Foundation of Modern Education in India British Journal of Educational Studies 13 2 160 169 doi 10 1080 00071005 1965 9973133 Fahy John 2014 Between Heaven and a Hard Place Inhabiting the Space Between an Enchanted Past and a Utopian Future The Unfamiliar and Anthropological Journal 4 1 doi 10 2218 unfamiliar v4i1 1113 Fahy John 2019 Becoming Vaishnava in an Ideal Vedic City Berghahn Books doi 10 2307 j ctv1dwq1d0 ISBN 9781789206104 Farkas Judit 2021 Eco Valley or New Vraja Dham Competing Emic Interpretations of the Hungarian Krishna Valley Religions 12 8 622 doi 10 3390 rel12080622 Gallagher Eugene V Willsky Ciollo Lydia 15 February 2021 New Religions Emerging Faiths and Religious Cultures in the Modern World in 2 vols ABC CLIO ISBN 9781440862366 Gallagher Eugene V 2004 The New Religious Movements Experience in America The American Religious Experience Westport CT London Greenwood Press ISBN 9780313328077 Gelberg Steven J 1989 Bromley David G Shinn Larry eds Krishna Consciousness in the West First ed Lewisburg PA Associated University Presses ISBN 9780838751442 Getz Marshall J 2002 Subhas Chandra Bose A Biography Jefferson McFarland ISBN 9780786480678 Goldberg Philip 2013 American Veda From Emerson and the Beatles to Yoga and Meditation How Indian Spirituality Changed the West New York Harmony Publishing ISBN 978 0385521352 Gupta Akshay 2021 Constructing a Hindu Black Theology Journal of Hindu Christian Studies 34 50 doi 10 7825 2164 6279 1796 Gupta Akshay 2022 Is a Guru as Good as God A Vedantic Perspective Journal of Dharma Studies 5 2 3 1 13 doi 10 1007 s42240 022 00126 5 Gupta Ravi M 2005 Book Review of The Hare Krishna Movement The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant ISKCON Communications Journal 11 Gupta Ravi M 2007 Flood Gavin ed The Chaitanya Vaiṣṇava Vedanta of Jiva Gosvami When knowledge meets devotion Routledge Hindu Studies New York Routledge ISBN 9780415405485 Gupta Ravi M 2010 He is our Master Jesus in the Thought of Swami Prabhupada Journal of Hindu Christian Studies 23 1 7 doi 10 7825 2164 6279 1459 Gupta Ravi M Valpey Kenneth 2016 The Bhagavata Purana Selected Readings New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231542340 Haddon Malcolm 2013 Anthropological proselytism Reflexive questions for a Hare Krishna ethnography The Australian Journal of Anthropology 24 3 250 269 doi 10 1111 taja 12050 Hopkins Thomas J 1983 Gelberg Steven J ed Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Five Distinguished Scholars on the Krishna Movement in the West Grove Press pp 101 161 ISBN 9780394624549 Hopkins Thomas J 1989 The Social and Religious Background for Transmission of Gaudiya Vaishnavism to the West in Bromley David G Shinn Larry D eds Krishna Consciousness in the West Lewisburg Bucknell University Press pp 35 54 ISBN 0 8387 5144 X Hopkins Thomas J 2007 ISKCON s Search for Self Identity in Dwyer Graham Cole Richard J eds The Hare Krishna Movement Forty Years of Chant and Change London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1845114077 Hume Robert Ernest 1921 Thirteen Principal Upanishads England Oxford University Press Ingalls Daniel H H 1968 Singer Milton ed Krishna Myths Rites and Attitudes Chicago University of Chicago Press Ivanenko S I 2008 Vaishnava tradition in Russia history and current state Teaching and 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Slogans to Mantras Social Protest and Religious Conversion in the Late Vietnam War Era Syracuse NY Syracuse University Press ISBN 9780815629238 Ketola Kimmo 2008 The Founder of the Hare Krishnas as Seen by Devotees A Cognitive Study of Religious Charisma Numen vol 120 Leiden Brill ISBN 9789047433262 King Anna S 2012a Krishna s Cows ISKCON s Animal Theology and Practice Journal of Animal Ethics 2 2 University of Illinois Press 179 204 doi 10 5406 janimalethics 2 2 0179 King Anna S 2012b Krishna s prasadam Eating our way back to Godhead Material Religion The Journal of Objects Art and Belief 8 4 440 465 doi 10 2752 175183412X13522006994773 Klostermaier Klaus K July September 1991 Bhakti Ahimsa and Ecology Journal of Dharma 16 3 246 254 ISSN 0253 7222 Klostermaier Klaus K 1998 Hinduism A Beginner s Guide Oneworld Publications ISBN 9781851685387 Klostermaier Klaus K 2000 Hinduism A Short History Oxford UK Oneworld p 342 ISBN 9781851682133 Klostermaier Klaus K 2007 A Survey of Hinduism 3rd 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Transplant Journal of Vaishnava Studies 13 1 Lavezzoli Peter 2006 The Dawn of Indian Music in the West New York London Continuum ISBN 9780826418159 Lestar Tamas Bohm Steffen 2020 Ecospirituality and sustainability transitions agency towards degrowth Religion State and Society 48 1 56 73 doi 10 1080 09637494 2019 1702410 hdl 10871 40735 Lestar Tamas 2018 Disconnecting from Technology on Hare Krishna Farms Human Geography 11 3 43 56 doi 10 1177 194277861801100304 Lewis James P 2005 Vasan Mildred ed Cults A Reference Handbook Contemporary world issues 2 ed Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 9781851096183 Long Bruce J 1 July 1978 A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada Sri Caitanya caritamrta Journal of Asian and African Studies 13 3 Los Angeles The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust 6362 17 volumes doi 10 1163 156852178x00197 inactive 9 April 2024 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of April 2024 link Lorenz Ekkehard 2004 Race Monarchy and Gender Bhaktivedanta Swami s Social Experiment in Bryant Edwin F Ekstrand Maria L eds The Hare Krishna Movement The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant New York Columbia University Press pp 347 390 ISBN 978 0231122566 Lucia Amanda 2014 Innovative Gurus Tradition and Change in Contemporary Hinduism International Journal of Hindu Studies 18 2 Springer 221 263 doi 10 1007 s11407 014 9159 5 Luzny Dusan 2023 Hare Krishna in the Czech Republic after Thirty Years Success or Failure Interdisciplinary Journal for Religion and Transformation in Contemporary Society 9 1 Brill Publishers 46 63 doi 10 30965 23642807 bja10073 Marzo 1986 Amnestia Internacional Boletin Informativo PDF vol IX 3 McCray Melvin R 9 February 1983 The Two Lives of John Favors 72 A former political activist becomes a monk in the Hare Krishna movement Princeton Alumni Weekly vol 83 Trustees of Princeton University Mehta Uday 1993 Modern Godmen In India A Sociological Approach Bombay Popular Prakashan ISBN 9788171547081 Melton Gordon J 1989 The Attitudes of Americans Toward Hinduism from 1883 to 1983 with special references to the International Society for Krishna Consciousness in Bromley David G Shinn Larry eds Krishna Consciousness in the West First ed Lewisburg PA Associated University Presses ISBN 9780838751442 Melton Gordon J Moore Robert L 1982 The Cult Experience A Response to New Religious Pluralism New York The Pilgrim Press ISBN 9780829806199 Melton Gordon J 1992 Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America Garland Reference Library of Social Science New York London Garland Publishing ISBN 9780824090364 Melton Gordon J 2007 Hare Krishna Encyclopaedia Britannica retrieved 6 February 2024 Melton Gordon J 1991 Religious Leaders of America A Biographical Guide to Founders and Leaders of Religious Bodies Churches and Spiritual Groups in North America Detroit London Gale Research ISBN 9780810349216 Badman Keith Miles Barry 2001 The Beatles Diary Volume 1 The Beatles Years London Omnibus Press ISBN 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Patrick 1998 The Early Upanisads Annotated Text and Translation United Kingdom Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195124354 Pandey B K 2008 Encyclopaedia of Indian philosophers New Delhi Anmol Publications ISBN 9788126135240 Patel Sachichi 2018 Book Review for Swami in a Strange Land Journal of Dharma Studies 1 1 179 181 doi 10 1007 s42240 018 0013 5 Patnaik U 2003 Food Stocks and Hunger The Causes of Agrarian Distress Social Scientist 31 7 8 15 41 doi 10 2307 3518306 JSTOR 3518306 Penprase Bryan E 5 May 2017 The Power of Stars Springer p 137 ISBN 9783319525976 Poling Tommy H Kenny Frank 1986 The Hare Krishna Character Type A Study of the Sensate Personality Studies in Religion and Society Lewiston NY Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 9780889468597 Princeton University Spiritual Warrior Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Bhakti Tirtha Swami John E Favors 72 Princeton University Retrieved 10 April 2024 Rahul Peter Das March April 1998 Vedic in the Terminology of Prabhupada and His Followers Journal of Vaiṣṇava Studies 6 2 141 159 Ravindra Svarupa Dasa 1985 The Devotee and the Deity Living a Personalistic Theology in Waghorne Joanne Punzo Cutler Norman eds Gods of Flesh Gods of Stone The Embodiment of Divinity in India Chambersburg Anima Publications ISBN 9780890120378 Reis John 1975 God is not dead he just changed clothes A Study of the International Society for Consciousness Kṛṣṇa thesis Madison WI University of Wisconsin span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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