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Adbhutananda

Adbhutananda (died 1920), born Rakhturam, was a direct monastic disciple of Ramakrishna, a Yogi of nineteenth century Bengal. He is familiarly known as Latu Maharaj among the followers of Ramakrishna.[1] Adbhutananda was the first monastic disciple to come to Ramakrishna.[2] While most of Ramakrishna's direct disciples came from the Bengali intelligentsia, Adbhutananda's lack of formal education made him unique amongst them.[3][4] He was a servant boy of a devotee of Ramakrishna, and he later became his monastic disciple. Though unlettered, Adbhutananda was considered as a monk with great spiritual insight by Ramakrishna's followers, and Vivekananda regarded him as "the greatest miracle of Ramakrishna".[5][6]

Adbhutananda
(Latu Maharaj)
Personal
Born
Rakhturam

Died24 April 1920
ReligionHinduism
Organization
PhilosophyAdvaita Vedanta
Religious career
GuruRamakrishna

Biography edit

Early life edit

Adbhutananda was born in North-Eastern India in the Chhapra district of Bihar, around the middle of the nineteenth century.[6] He was given the name Rakhturam, meaning "child who is protected by Lord Rama". His parents were poor, humble villagers. Both his father and mother died before Rakhturam was five years old and he was left in the care of an uncle who was affectionate towards him.[7]

Growing up in the village, Rakhturam led a carefree life, tending cows and sheep in the fields. In later years, he said, "I used to wander freely with the cowherd boys. How simple and guileless they were! You can't have real joy unless you are like that."[8] Poverty forced Rakhturam and his uncle to travel to Calcutta in search of a livelihood. Rakhturam came in contact with Ramachandra Datta, a householder devotee of Ramakrishna, and he joined as his servant.[9] As a servant, Rakhturam was considered energetic and faithful. Rakhturam became known as "Latu" in his new Calcutta surroundings, and he was called by that name thereafter.[9]

Meetings with Ramakrishna edit

Ramakrishna lived at the Dakshineswar Kāli Temple, a few miles north of Calcutta, on the eastern bank of the Ganges. Ram Chandra Datta, Latu's employer, was one of the first householder disciples to visit Ramakrishna. Datta loved to speak about Ramakrishna and his sayings and Latu heard about Ramakrishna from him and was attracted by Ramakrishna's teachings,[10] It is reported that inspired by the teachings of Ramakrishna, he was often found lying covered with his blanket, quietly wiping tears from his eyes thinking of God.[11] Latu waited eagerly for an opportunity to meet Ramakrishna, and he met Ramakrishna on a Sunday in 1879 or 1880.

When Ramakrishna saw Latu, he reportedly said to Ramchandra that Latu had "holy signs in him." and it is reported that when Ramakrishna touched him, Latu entered an ecstatic state, "tears trickled from his eyes and his lips began to quiver with emotion" and he gradually returned to normal state of consciousness.[11] Latu began to visit Ramakrishna regularly, and he lost the enthusiasm with which he worked before at Datta's house. In June 1881, he joined Ramakrishna at Dakshineswar as his personal attendant and helper.[12] He also used to help Sarada Devi in her chores.[13]

With Ramakrishna in Dakshineswar edit

At Dakshineswar Latu began a life of rigorous spiritual discipline under Ramakrishna's guidance, and also continued his service as his servant to him. His day began, first seeing Ramakrishna and saluting him. As Latu had received no formal schooling, Ramakrishna hoped that he might acquire at least a rudimentary education, so he tried to teach him the Bengali alphabets himself. However, Latu's Bihari accent was different from that of a Bengali, and he could not read even the first vowel correctly.[14] Ramakrishna corrected him repeatedly with much amusement, and the experiment was later discontinued.[15] According to Saradananda, Ramakrishna's monastic disciple Latu was seen "praying and meditating the whole night and sleeping during the day. His life was a literal example of the teaching of the Gita:'In that which is night to all beings, the man of self-control is awake; and where all beings are awake, there is night for the sage who sees (2.69)."[16]

At Shyampukur and Cossipore edit

In the middle of 1885 Ramakrishna's throat became sore, which later developed into throat cancer. To conveniently treat him, the devotees moved Ramakrishna from Dakshineswar to Shyampukur, in North Calcutta. Latu, being his personal attendant went with him. He later moved on with Ramakrishna to Cossipore on 11 December 1885. He took care of nursing Ramakrishna during his final days, reminiscing about which Latu said, "Serving the Master was our worship. We didn't need any other spiritual disciplines."[17] Latu received an ochre cloth and rosary from Ramakrishna.[18] After Ramakrishna's death on 16 August 1886, Latu went on a pilgrimage visiting Vrindaban, Varanasi, Ayodhya with Sarada Devi, and other lay and monastic disciples of Ramakrishna.[19]

At Calcutta edit

 
Adbhutananda with Girish Chandra Ghosh, Mahendranath Gupta and other disciples and devotees of Ramakrishna

After Ramakrishna's passing away, Narendra (Vivekananda) and some of the other disciples established the first Ramakrishna monastery at Baranagore in an old, dilapidated house. Here some of the disciples including Naren took their monastic vows and were engaged in the study of the scriptures, practicing meditation and austerity.[20] Latu joined them later in 1887 and accepted the monastic vows. Vivekananda gave him the monastic name Adbhutananda, meaning, "He who finds bliss in the wonderful nature of the Atman."[21] According to his brother monks, Adbhutananda led a very austere life at the monastery practicing meditation and japa. He led the life of a wandering monk around the Calcutta area, unattached to people and places. Sometimes he stayed at the home of other householder devotees, but most often was found living simply on the bank of the Ganges. Sometimes he stayed at Alambazar Math and Belur Math.[22] He also went on several pilgrimages to North India with his brother disciples including Vivekananda.[23] In 1903 he moved to the house of Balaram Bose, a householder devotee of Ramakrishna and stayed there till 1912. Here he was visited by people from different walks of life—judges, doctors, teachers, learned monks, and householders for spiritual instructions.[24][25]

At Varanasi edit

In October 1912 Adbhutananda left Balaram's house for Varanasi, never to return again.[26] Here he first stayed at Ramakrishna Advaita Ashrama and later at different locations. As was characteristic of him, he was so often absorbed in meditation that he rarely had fixed time for meals. In Varanasi, he continued to teach and people visited him for spiritual instructions.[27]

Last days edit

During his last days, according to his devotees, Adbhutananda seemed to be gradually withdrawing from the world. He spoke occasionally with people, and when he spoke it was generally of spiritual matters. As reported by this disciples, his body, which had once been remarkably strong, had been gradually weakened by age and years of intense spiritual disciplines and his indifference towards the physical world.[28] During the last few years he suffered from diabetes and minor physical ailments. During the last year of his life he developed a blister on this leg, which developed into gangrene.[29] He was visited by his brother disciples—Turiyananda and Saradananda.[29] Eventually the gangrene worsened and the doctors operated several times on successive days, but were unsuccessful. Adbhutananda died in the holy city of Varanasi at 12:10 p.m on Saturday, 24 April 1920.[30] Regarding his death, Turiyananda wrote in a letter to Josephine MacLeod, an American devotee of Vivekananda, "He showed no signs of pain during his illness. But the wonder of all wonders was that after this death when his body was placed in a sitting position to conform with some of the funeral rites, we found him looking so beautiful, so serene, so full of peace and bliss. His face beamed with light and an intelligence unspeakable, as if he were taking leave from his friends for the last time with an exhortation of affectionate benediction."[30]

Teachings and sayings edit

Adbhutananda, being illiterate, did not write any books; his teachings and discourses have been recorded by his disciples and devotees. Swami Adbhutananda taught that "the true being in man is ever free, ever pure, and remains ever untouched by good or evil. Good and evil have no absolute reality. They exist only so long as man identifies himself with the ego, the false self. When the ego is completely annihilated, man is freed from the false knowledge of duality or relativity--of good and evil."[31] His other teachings were,

  • What is the use of prayer and meditation if there is no dependence on Him? Everything else is useless if this is lacking.
  • It is a great sin to find fault with others. Those who do never do a good act themselves, who easily see defects in others and energetically spread rumors.
  • It is better to continue calling on the Lord devotedly than to know, speak, and preach thousand and one religious cants and shibboleths.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Christopher Isherwood (1945). Vedanta for the Western World. Vedanta Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-87481-000-4.
  2. ^ "Swami Adbhutananda". Prabuddha Bharata. Advaita Ashrama: 259. 1972.
  3. ^ Swami Chetanananda (1998). "Swami Adbhutananda". God Lived with Them. Advaita Ashrama. p. 393.
  4. ^ Mukherjee, Jayasree (May 2004). . Prabuddha Bharata. Archived from the original on 24 September 2008. Retrieved 22 September 2008. An analysis of the class composition of the early admirers and followers of Ramakrishna reveals that most of them came from the Western-educated middle class of the Bengali society, Latu (later Adbhutananda) or Rasik Hadi being exceptions.
  5. ^ Swami Gambhirananda (1967). The Apostles of Sri Ramakrishna. p. 271.
  6. ^ a b Sen, Amiya P. (June 2006). "Sri Ramakrishna, the Kathamrita and the Calcutta middle classes: an old problematic revisited". Postcolonial Studies. 9 (2): 165–177. doi:10.1080/13688790600657835. S2CID 144046925.
  7. ^ God Lived with them, p.395
  8. ^ Sri Latu Maharajer Smritikatha. p. 491.
  9. ^ a b God Lived with Them, p.396
  10. ^ Sri Latu Maharajer Smritikatha. p. 27. The first teaching he heard was, "God sees into the mind of a man, without concern for what he is or where he is. He who yarns for God and wants none other than God--to such a man God reveals Himself. One should call on Him with a simple and innocent heart. Without sincere longing, none can see God. One should pray to Him in solitude and weep for him; only then will he bestow his mercy."
  11. ^ a b God Lived with Them, p.397
  12. ^ God Lived with Them, p.400
  13. ^ God Lived with Them, p.433
  14. ^ Prabhavananda, Swami (1991). "The Salt of the Earth". The Sermon on the Mount According to Vedanta. Vedanta Press. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-87481-050-9.
  15. ^ God lived with them, pp.401-402
  16. ^ God Lived with Them, p.404
  17. ^ God lived with them, p.411
  18. ^ God lived with them, p.412
  19. ^ God lived with them, p.413
  20. ^ God lived with them, p.414
  21. ^ God lived with them, p.415
  22. ^ God lived with them, p.417
  23. ^ God lived with them, p.422
  24. ^ God Lived with Them, p.428
  25. ^ Prabhavananda, Swami (1991). "The Salt of the Earth". The Sermon on the Mount According to Vedanta. Vedanta Press. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-87481-050-9. One day, several young monks came across a difficult passage in the Upanishads, the ancient scriptures of the Hindus. They could not understand it, although they referred to a number of commentaries. Finally, they asked Adbhutananda for an explanation. As he did not know Sanskrit, the young monks phrased the passage in this vernacular. Adbhutananda thought for a moment; then he said, "I've got it!" Using a simple illustration, he explained the passage to them, and they found wonderful meaninging it.
  26. ^ God Lived with Them, p.434
  27. ^ God Lived with Them, p.435
  28. ^ God Lived with Them, p.436
  29. ^ a b God Lived with Them, p.437
  30. ^ a b God Lived with Them, p.438
  31. ^ Fitzgerald, Astrid (2001). "Ignorance, Suffering and the Ego". Being Consciousness Bliss. SteinerBooks. p. 161. ISBN 978-0-9701097-8-1.

Further reading edit

  • Nityajnanananda, Swami. (PDF). Prabuddha Bharata. 114 (1). Advaita Ashrama. ISSN 0032-6178. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 January 2009.
  • Swami Chetanananda (1980). Swami Adbhutananda : His teachings and reminiscences. Vedanta Society of St. Louis.
  • Swami Chetanananda (1980). How a Shepherd Boy Became a Saint. Vedanta Society of St. Louis. ISBN 978-0-916356-59-0.
  • Swami Gambhirananda (1967). The Apostles of Shri Ramakrishna. Advaita Ashrama.

External links edit

  • Works by or about Latu Maharaj at Internet Archive
  • Spiritual Talks of Swami Adbhutananda
  • Swami Adbhutananda Biography
  • Articles by Adbhutananda

adbhutananda, died, 1920, born, rakhturam, direct, monastic, disciple, ramakrishna, yogi, nineteenth, century, bengal, familiarly, known, latu, maharaj, among, followers, ramakrishna, first, monastic, disciple, come, ramakrishna, while, most, ramakrishna, dire. Adbhutananda died 1920 born Rakhturam was a direct monastic disciple of Ramakrishna a Yogi of nineteenth century Bengal He is familiarly known as Latu Maharaj among the followers of Ramakrishna 1 Adbhutananda was the first monastic disciple to come to Ramakrishna 2 While most of Ramakrishna s direct disciples came from the Bengali intelligentsia Adbhutananda s lack of formal education made him unique amongst them 3 4 He was a servant boy of a devotee of Ramakrishna and he later became his monastic disciple Though unlettered Adbhutananda was considered as a monk with great spiritual insight by Ramakrishna s followers and Vivekananda regarded him as the greatest miracle of Ramakrishna 5 6 Adbhutananda Latu Maharaj PersonalBornRakhturamChhapra Bihar IndiaDied24 April 1920Benaras IndiaReligionHinduismOrganizationPhilosophyAdvaita VedantaReligious careerGuruRamakrishna Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Meetings with Ramakrishna 1 3 With Ramakrishna in Dakshineswar 1 4 At Shyampukur and Cossipore 1 5 At Calcutta 1 6 At Varanasi 1 6 1 Last days 2 Teachings and sayings 3 Notes 4 Further reading 5 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Adbhutananda was born in North Eastern India in the Chhapra district of Bihar around the middle of the nineteenth century 6 He was given the name Rakhturam meaning child who is protected by Lord Rama His parents were poor humble villagers Both his father and mother died before Rakhturam was five years old and he was left in the care of an uncle who was affectionate towards him 7 Growing up in the village Rakhturam led a carefree life tending cows and sheep in the fields In later years he said I used to wander freely with the cowherd boys How simple and guileless they were You can t have real joy unless you are like that 8 Poverty forced Rakhturam and his uncle to travel to Calcutta in search of a livelihood Rakhturam came in contact with Ramachandra Datta a householder devotee of Ramakrishna and he joined as his servant 9 As a servant Rakhturam was considered energetic and faithful Rakhturam became known as Latu in his new Calcutta surroundings and he was called by that name thereafter 9 Meetings with Ramakrishna edit Ramakrishna lived at the Dakshineswar Kali Temple a few miles north of Calcutta on the eastern bank of the Ganges Ram Chandra Datta Latu s employer was one of the first householder disciples to visit Ramakrishna Datta loved to speak about Ramakrishna and his sayings and Latu heard about Ramakrishna from him and was attracted by Ramakrishna s teachings 10 It is reported that inspired by the teachings of Ramakrishna he was often found lying covered with his blanket quietly wiping tears from his eyes thinking of God 11 Latu waited eagerly for an opportunity to meet Ramakrishna and he met Ramakrishna on a Sunday in 1879 or 1880 When Ramakrishna saw Latu he reportedly said to Ramchandra that Latu had holy signs in him and it is reported that when Ramakrishna touched him Latu entered an ecstatic state tears trickled from his eyes and his lips began to quiver with emotion and he gradually returned to normal state of consciousness 11 Latu began to visit Ramakrishna regularly and he lost the enthusiasm with which he worked before at Datta s house In June 1881 he joined Ramakrishna at Dakshineswar as his personal attendant and helper 12 He also used to help Sarada Devi in her chores 13 With Ramakrishna in Dakshineswar edit At Dakshineswar Latu began a life of rigorous spiritual discipline under Ramakrishna s guidance and also continued his service as his servant to him His day began first seeing Ramakrishna and saluting him As Latu had received no formal schooling Ramakrishna hoped that he might acquire at least a rudimentary education so he tried to teach him the Bengali alphabets himself However Latu s Bihari accent was different from that of a Bengali and he could not read even the first vowel correctly 14 Ramakrishna corrected him repeatedly with much amusement and the experiment was later discontinued 15 According to Saradananda Ramakrishna s monastic disciple Latu was seen praying and meditating the whole night and sleeping during the day His life was a literal example of the teaching of the Gita In that which is night to all beings the man of self control is awake and where all beings are awake there is night for the sage who sees 2 69 16 At Shyampukur and Cossipore edit In the middle of 1885 Ramakrishna s throat became sore which later developed into throat cancer To conveniently treat him the devotees moved Ramakrishna from Dakshineswar to Shyampukur in North Calcutta Latu being his personal attendant went with him He later moved on with Ramakrishna to Cossipore on 11 December 1885 He took care of nursing Ramakrishna during his final days reminiscing about which Latu said Serving the Master was our worship We didn t need any other spiritual disciplines 17 Latu received an ochre cloth and rosary from Ramakrishna 18 After Ramakrishna s death on 16 August 1886 Latu went on a pilgrimage visiting Vrindaban Varanasi Ayodhya with Sarada Devi and other lay and monastic disciples of Ramakrishna 19 At Calcutta edit nbsp Adbhutananda with Girish Chandra Ghosh Mahendranath Gupta and other disciples and devotees of Ramakrishna After Ramakrishna s passing away Narendra Vivekananda and some of the other disciples established the first Ramakrishna monastery at Baranagore in an old dilapidated house Here some of the disciples including Naren took their monastic vows and were engaged in the study of the scriptures practicing meditation and austerity 20 Latu joined them later in 1887 and accepted the monastic vows Vivekananda gave him the monastic name Adbhutananda meaning He who finds bliss in the wonderful nature of the Atman 21 According to his brother monks Adbhutananda led a very austere life at the monastery practicing meditation and japa He led the life of a wandering monk around the Calcutta area unattached to people and places Sometimes he stayed at the home of other householder devotees but most often was found living simply on the bank of the Ganges Sometimes he stayed at Alambazar Math and Belur Math 22 He also went on several pilgrimages to North India with his brother disciples including Vivekananda 23 In 1903 he moved to the house of Balaram Bose a householder devotee of Ramakrishna and stayed there till 1912 Here he was visited by people from different walks of life judges doctors teachers learned monks and householders for spiritual instructions 24 25 At Varanasi edit In October 1912 Adbhutananda left Balaram s house for Varanasi never to return again 26 Here he first stayed at Ramakrishna Advaita Ashrama and later at different locations As was characteristic of him he was so often absorbed in meditation that he rarely had fixed time for meals In Varanasi he continued to teach and people visited him for spiritual instructions 27 Last days edit During his last days according to his devotees Adbhutananda seemed to be gradually withdrawing from the world He spoke occasionally with people and when he spoke it was generally of spiritual matters As reported by this disciples his body which had once been remarkably strong had been gradually weakened by age and years of intense spiritual disciplines and his indifference towards the physical world 28 During the last few years he suffered from diabetes and minor physical ailments During the last year of his life he developed a blister on this leg which developed into gangrene 29 He was visited by his brother disciples Turiyananda and Saradananda 29 Eventually the gangrene worsened and the doctors operated several times on successive days but were unsuccessful Adbhutananda died in the holy city of Varanasi at 12 10 p m on Saturday 24 April 1920 30 Regarding his death Turiyananda wrote in a letter to Josephine MacLeod an American devotee of Vivekananda He showed no signs of pain during his illness But the wonder of all wonders was that after this death when his body was placed in a sitting position to conform with some of the funeral rites we found him looking so beautiful so serene so full of peace and bliss His face beamed with light and an intelligence unspeakable as if he were taking leave from his friends for the last time with an exhortation of affectionate benediction 30 Teachings and sayings editAdbhutananda being illiterate did not write any books his teachings and discourses have been recorded by his disciples and devotees Swami Adbhutananda taught that the true being in man is ever free ever pure and remains ever untouched by good or evil Good and evil have no absolute reality They exist only so long as man identifies himself with the ego the false self When the ego is completely annihilated man is freed from the false knowledge of duality or relativity of good and evil 31 His other teachings were What is the use of prayer and meditation if there is no dependence on Him Everything else is useless if this is lacking It is a great sin to find fault with others Those who do never do a good act themselves who easily see defects in others and energetically spread rumors It is better to continue calling on the Lord devotedly than to know speak and preach thousand and one religious cants and shibboleths Notes edit Christopher Isherwood 1945 Vedanta for the Western World Vedanta Press p 155 ISBN 978 0 87481 000 4 Swami Adbhutananda Prabuddha Bharata Advaita Ashrama 259 1972 Swami Chetanananda 1998 Swami Adbhutananda God Lived with Them Advaita Ashrama p 393 Mukherjee Jayasree May 2004 Sri Ramakrishna s Impact on Contemporary Indian Society Prabuddha Bharata Archived from the original on 24 September 2008 Retrieved 22 September 2008 An analysis of the class composition of the early admirers and followers of Ramakrishna reveals that most of them came from the Western educated middle class of the Bengali society Latu later Adbhutananda or Rasik Hadi being exceptions Swami Gambhirananda 1967 The Apostles of Sri Ramakrishna p 271 a b Sen Amiya P June 2006 Sri Ramakrishna the Kathamrita and the Calcutta middle classes an old problematic revisited Postcolonial Studies 9 2 165 177 doi 10 1080 13688790600657835 S2CID 144046925 God Lived with them p 395 Sri Latu Maharajer Smritikatha p 491 a b God Lived with Them p 396 Sri Latu Maharajer Smritikatha p 27 The first teaching he heard was God sees into the mind of a man without concern for what he is or where he is He who yarns for God and wants none other than God to such a man God reveals Himself One should call on Him with a simple and innocent heart Without sincere longing none can see God One should pray to Him in solitude and weep for him only then will he bestow his mercy a b God Lived with Them p 397 God Lived with Them p 400 God Lived with Them p 433 Prabhavananda Swami 1991 The Salt of the Earth The Sermon on the Mount According to Vedanta Vedanta Press p 36 ISBN 978 0 87481 050 9 God lived with them pp 401 402 God Lived with Them p 404 God lived with them p 411 God lived with them p 412 God lived with them p 413 God lived with them p 414 God lived with them p 415 God lived with them p 417 God lived with them p 422 God Lived with Them p 428 Prabhavananda Swami 1991 The Salt of the Earth The Sermon on the Mount According to Vedanta Vedanta Press p 36 ISBN 978 0 87481 050 9 One day several young monks came across a difficult passage in the Upanishads the ancient scriptures of the Hindus They could not understand it although they referred to a number of commentaries Finally they asked Adbhutananda for an explanation As he did not know Sanskrit the young monks phrased the passage in this vernacular Adbhutananda thought for a moment then he said I ve got it Using a simple illustration he explained the passage to them and they found wonderful meaninging it God Lived with Them p 434 God Lived with Them p 435 God Lived with Them p 436 a b God Lived with Them p 437 a b God Lived with Them p 438 Fitzgerald Astrid 2001 Ignorance Suffering and the Ego Being Consciousness Bliss SteinerBooks p 161 ISBN 978 0 9701097 8 1 Further reading editNityajnanananda Swami The Uniqueness of Swami Adbhutananda PDF Prabuddha Bharata 114 1 Advaita Ashrama ISSN 0032 6178 Archived from the original PDF on 17 January 2009 Swami Chetanananda 1980 Swami Adbhutananda His teachings and reminiscences Vedanta Society of St Louis Swami Chetanananda 1980 How a Shepherd Boy Became a Saint Vedanta Society of St Louis ISBN 978 0 916356 59 0 Swami Gambhirananda 1967 The Apostles of Shri Ramakrishna Advaita Ashrama External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Swami Adbhutananda Works by or about Latu Maharaj at Internet Archive Spiritual Talks of Swami Adbhutananda Swami Adbhutananda Biography Articles by Adbhutananda Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adbhutananda amp oldid 1142849729, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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