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Announcement – Christmas – New Year Retreat for Seekers from Abroad

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Retreat Application Accommodation Application

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We are happy to announce that The Divine Life Society is holding its 21st annual Christmas‑New Year Retreat from December 24, 2016 to January 1, 2017 at its International Headquarters, Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh, India. Spiritual seekers from abroad are cordially invited to this retreat, which includes daily spiritual talks in English, meditation sessions (one guided), evening satsang and an optional hatha yoga class.

Each year there is a spiritual theme which is discussed from different perspectives by senior swamis. The uniqueness of each perspective combined with the continuity of one theme creates a powerful spiritual atmosphere conducive to spiritual growth.

The retreat is also an ideal opportunity to experience an Ashram atmosphere steeped in the spiritual vibrations of saints and sages who have been meditating on the banks of the Ganges for millennia. Usually there is an attendance of 60 to 75 participants from more than 20 countries around the world. We have found that the participants not only benefit from the program, but also from their time together with like‑minded people.

The retreat is held in the new Swami Sivananda Auditorium building. The building includes a yoga hall, a meeting‑cum‑meditation hall and a dining hall, each with a beautiful view of the Ganges River. The attached residential rooms are double occupancy with bath.

For twenty years we have been inspired by the coming together of sincere spiritual seekers from around the world and the heartfelt participation of our senior swamis in our annual Christmas-New Year Retreat. This Christmas-New Year Retreat seems to beckon us to reach for something more, something higher, above all to a awaken and manifest our Divine Nature.

 The Christmas Retreat in its totality is an opportunity to manifest our Divinity through gentle discipline, silence, contemplation, devotion and a heightened awareness of the benefit of selfless service. It is an opportunity to leave behind the distractions of the outer world and dedicate our time and energy to the eternal questions: Who am I? and Why am I here?

The proposed CHRISTMAS RETREAT programme is as follows:

(1)  Prior to Dec. 24: It is recommended that participants arrive at least a day or two before December 24th to recover from jet lag.*

(2)  Dec. 24 night: Christmas Eve Programme

(3)  Dec. 25:  Christmas luncheon and afternoon Tea and Orientation Meeting for the formal Seven Day Retreat

(4)  Dec. 26—January 1 noon: Special Seven Day Retreat. For the benefit of all, a commitment to full participation in the retreat program is expected. Seva (service) is part of the retreat, so please be alert to what is needed and join one or more of the seva groups.  It is highly recommended that participants avoid shopping and sightseeing during the seven day retreat period.

5.00   to    6.00 a.m.      Morning Meditation

6.00   to    7.00 a.m.      Hatha Yoga or Chanting in the Temple (both optional)

7.00   to    8.00 a.m.      Breakfast

9.15   to  10.00 a.m.      Opening Prayers and Meditation

10.00 to  12.00 noon   Spiritual Discourses with tea break

12.15 to    1.00 p.m.      Lunch

1.00   to    5.30 p.m.      Spiritual Activities Offered: spiritual discussion groups, spiritual videos,

Hatha yoga, contemplative Ganga walk, meditation at Gurudev’s Kutir etc.

5.45   to    6.45 p.m.      Guided Meditation (Meditative silence to be maintained till breakfast. If
                                               communication is necessary, please speak very softly)                             

7.00   to    7.30 p.m.      Supper

7.30   to    9.30 p.m.      Night Satsang (Dec. 31st New Year’s Programme until midnight)

(5) January 2nd onwards:  If participants have permission to remain in the ashram for a few days after January 1st, the ashram expects them to continue to attend morning meditation and night Satsang and to observe a monastic decorum.

If you are interested in the retreat kindly fill out the Application Form for the Christmas-New Year Retreat as well as the Application for Accommodation in the Ashram and send them to Swami Amritarupananda, amritarupananda78@yahoo.com. If you have any questions, kindly write to Swami Amritarupananda.

*Please note that the retreat proper is from December 24th until January 1st. However, if you would like to help with the set-up and/or participate in the Christmas Eve program, either in the choir or some other art form, you could come up to week or so earlier. Please let us know if you are a trained musician or dancer etc. because that little extra talent always adds something special to the Christmas Eve program. (If you do come to the Ashram before the retreat, the ashram expects that you will also attend both the daily morning meditation as well as the night satsang.)


DLS – Branch Conferences, Sadhana Shibirs and Meetings

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ANNOUNCEMENT

DIVINE LIFE SOCIETY, JALANDHAR BRANCH

SADHANA SHIVIR – 5th to 6th May 2016

By the grace of Most Worshipful Gurudev H.H.Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj, under the aegis of Swami Chidananda Birth Centenary Celebrations, the Divine Life Society, Jalandhar Branch will be holding a Sadhana Shivir and Annual Day celebrations of the Om Divya Prem Mandir on 5th and 6th of May, 2016. Senior monks from Headquarters Ashram and other Institutions shall grace the occasion. Devotees from all the Branches of the Divine Life Society are cordially invited to participate in the programme.

For further information, please contact:‑

Sri Virender Pratap ,

Divine Life Society – Jalandhar Branch,

Phone No: 98889 87192

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ANNOUNCEMENT

SWAMI CHIDANANDA CENTENARY CELEBRATION

U.S.A. JUNE 3RD-5TH, 2016

By the Grace of Worshipful Gurudev Sri Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj, under the auspices of the Swami Chidananda Birth Centenary Celebrations, devotees of The Divine Life Society in U.S.A. are organizing a 3-day Spiritual Retreat on the life and teachings of Swami Chidanandaji Maharaj. The Retreat will be at the Bon Secours Spiritual Retreat Centre in Mariotsville, Maryland, in the midst of large pastures and woodlands with spectacular views of the Maryland countryside, from 3rd to 5th June 2016.

This Retreat will offer an opportunity for in-depth study and sharing of the wisdom teachings of H.H. Sri Swami Chidanandaji Maharaj, and will be graced by representatives of the Divine Life Society and other spiritual organizations. The programme will include meditation followed by Hatha Yoga classes, Kirtan and media presentations.

Enrollment application and all other Retreat information can be had from www.chidanandacentenaryUSA.org. For further particulars please contact by email:  chidanandacentenaryusa@gmail.com.

 

—The Divine Life Society

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATION

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Download FEBRUARY E-Magazine for Inaugural address
by Bharat Ratna Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam

INAUGURATION OF CHIDANANDA CENTENARY CHARITABLE DISPENSARY AT VILLAGE GAHAM, ANGUL (ODISHA) E-Magazine(March) Page-24

SWAMI CHIDANANDA VANAPRASTHA ASHRAM AT BHONGIRPALLE VILLAGE, SHABAD – HYDERABAD (A.P.)

COMMENCEMENT OF SWAMI CHIDANANDA CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS AT VADODARA, GUJARAT E-Magazine(July) Page-28

SWAMI CHIDANANDA MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP EnglishHindi

WHAT YOU SHOULD LEARN FROM CHIDANANDA’S LIFE

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATION ORGANISING COMMITTEE AND DLS BRANCH MEET- EnglishHindi

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES EnglishHindi

SWAMI CHIDANANDA VIDYARTHI CHETANA SHIVIR BY DLS BHUBANESWAR BRANCH & FREE EYE OPERATION CAMP BY SWAMI SIVANANDA KALYAN SAMITI, ANGUL EnglishHindi

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – FEBRUARY EnglishHindi

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – MARCH EnglishHindi

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – APRIL EnglishHindi

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – MAY EnglishHindi

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – JUNE EnglishHindi

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – JULY English – 1  2  3 Hindi – 1  2

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – AUGUST English - 1  2  Hindi - 1  2

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – SEPTEMBER English   Hindi


CLICK THE IMAGE FOR THE PROGRAMME DETAIL

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – OCTOBER English  Hindi 

SWAMI CHIDANANDA BIRTH CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS STATE LEVEL PROGRAMMES – NOVEMBER English - 1  2  Hindi - 1  2

Bhagabat Katha

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Photos Taken During Bhagabat Katha at Viswanath Temple from 1st to 7th April 2016.

Sri Ramanavami Photos, Audios & Videos

Sri Hanuman Jayanti 2016

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Photos Taken during Sri Hanuman Jayanti Celebration at Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh-Himalayas

Vedic Chanting

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Photos Taken during Vedic Chanting at Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh-Himalayas

94th Birth Anniversary

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Photos Taken during 94th Birth Anniversary of H.H. Sri Swami Krishnanandaji Maharaj at Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh-Himalayas


83rd Basic Yoga Course

Significance of Ramnavami

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by Swami Sivananda

Om Sri Ram Jai Ram Jai Jai Ram

SALUTATIONS to Lord Rama, an Incarnation of Lord Vishnu, who is measureless, who is of the nature of pure Consciousness and bliss, who is the consort of Sita, Master of Sri Hanuman, and the Lord of the three worlds, who took His birth at His own will in order to establish righteousness, destroy the wicked and protect His devotees.

Ramnavami or the birthday of Lord Rama falls on the 9th day of the bright fortnight of the month of Chaitra (March-April).

Rama was the Lord Hari Himself, incarnate on earth for the destruction of Ravana. He was well accomplished, beautiful and endowed with royal marks. His glory and prowess were unlimited. He was peerless on earth. He was free from malice. He was gentle. He was the protector of all His people. He always addressed them in gentle words. He never used any harsh words even when somebody provoked Him. He held sway over the whole world.

Let Sri Rama be your ideal. Ideals are remembered and adored for the purpose of adopting them in your own life. The Ramnavmi celebration or the Vasanta Navaratri every year is an opportune period for us to saturate ourselves with the spirit of Lord Rama. We love and adore our ideals because we express thereby our yearning to unite with them. In our worship of God it is implied that we should be virtuous, good and perfect even as God is. Hence the wise instruction: “One should become divine in order to be able to worship God”. One cannot be a real worshipper of Lord Rama unless one makes an honest attempt to grow in the virtues that the Lord represents. On the other hand, worship of Lord Rama is itself the surest means to develop such virtues.

One who approaches Sri Rama with love and worshipfulness becomes large-hearted, pure in spirit, good-natured and dispassionate in thought, word and deed. A true devotee of Lord Rama is His representative, with His power and His knowledge.

Lord Rama was the prince of the Ikshvaku race. He was virtuous and of manly strength. He was the Lord of the mind and the senses. Brave and valiant, He was yet gentle and modest. He was a sage in counsel, kind and sweet in speech, and most courteous and handsome in appearance. He was the master of all the divine weapons, and a great warrior. Ever devoted to the good and prosperity of His kingdom and His subjects, He was a defender of the weak and the protector of the righteous. Endowed with numerous wondrous powers of the mind, He was well versed in all sciences—in military science as well as the science of the Self.

Deep and unfathomed like the ocean, firm and steadfast like the Himalayan mountains, valiant like Lord Vishnu, He was the joy of Kaushalya. Though fierce like fire on the battlefield, He was calm like the cool breeze of the Mandara Hills, patient like Mother Earth, bounteous like the god of wealth and righteous like the lord of justice himself. In the pains and the griefs of His people, His heart swiftly sympathised with the sufferers. In the festive scenes which held them in joy, He like a father, shared their joys. By His honour and heroism, as well as by His gentleness and love for His subjects, He greatly endeared Himself to the hearts of His people. Such a great person was the Lord Rama!

Lord Rama was the best of men with a sterling character. He was the very image of love. He was an ideal son, an ideal brother, an ideal husband, an ideal friend and an ideal king. He can be taken to embody all the highest ideals of man. He led the ideal life of a householder to teach the tenets of righteousness to humanity. He ruled His people so well that it came to be known as Ram-Rajya, which meant the rule of righteousness, the rule which bestows happiness and prosperity on all.

The noblest lesson embodied in the Ramayana is the supreme importance of righteousness in the life of every human being. Righteousness is the spiritual spark of life. Cultivation of righteousness is the process of unfoldment of the latent divinity in man. The glorious incarnation of the Supreme Being in the form of Lord Rama has exemplified the path of righteousness. Let mankind follow His footsteps and practise the ideals cherished by Him, for it is only thus that there can be everlasting peace, prosperity and welfare in this world.

None but the righteous can be truly happy. None but he who has the correct sense of duty and the will for its implementation can be said to live worthily. One must be imbued with a definite conviction about the supremacy of moral principles, ethical values and spiritual ideals. These ought to guide one’s day-to-day actions and serve as powerful means for the culture of the human personality. That is the purpose of life. That is the way to Self-realisation. That is the message and the mission of Lord Rama’s fife on earth.

To a devotee, Sri Rama is not simply a good and a great person, but God Himself. Rama was the son of King Dasaratha of Ayodhya, but He is also the divine omnipresent, omnipotent and omniscient God. The destruction of the ten-headed Ravana signifies the annihilation of the mind or the ten senses. Worship of Lord Rama is worship of the all-pervading Godhead Himself. Read the prayers offered by Mandothari and Brahma in the Yuddha Kanda of the Ramayana. They refer to Rama as the one Creator of the universe, the God of all, the Ruler of the universe.

Devotion to God is not a simple emotion. It is the result of intense dispassion and purity of heart and attitude. You should strive your utmost to possess the good qualities that are extolled in the Ramayana and exemplified in the life of Lord Rama. Otherwise, emotion may rise up in you temporarily to a kind of ecstasy, but you will not experience divine consciousness thereby. Devotion is a fruit which ripens gradually through the processes of self-restraint and virtue. Without intense dispassion there can be no real Sadhana for Self-realisation. Only after detachment from the world of things, is it possible to attain the Supreme Godhead. Remember this.

Devotion has absolutely nothing to do with age, caste, creed, position or sex. Generally, the worldly-minded people say: “We will practise meditation and devotion when we retire from service.” This is a serious mistake. How can you do serious Sadhana after squeezing out all your energy in working? How will you be able to practise the strict Yogic discipline in your old age? Is there any certainty in life? No, the spiritual seeds of discipline and devotion must be sown in you while you are young, while your heart is tender and untainted. Then only will it strike a deep root, blossom forth and bear fruit when you become old and retire. Only then can you bravely face the god of death and meet him with a smile!

I shall tell you the means of attaining the final release from the great cycle of births and deaths. Devotion to Lord Rama is a great purifier of the heart. From devotion arises knowledge. From knowledge comes the realisation of the pure Self. Knowing this perfectly, one goes to the Supreme Abode and merges in the Supreme Self.

Without first developing devotion to Rama who is the Self, who lives in the hearts of all beings, who is all bliss and who is peerless, how can man cross the ocean of worldly life which has sorrow, pain and misery for its waves?

Do thou therefore worship Lord Rama who is Vishnu and the consort of Sita who is Lakshmi. Abandon all foolishness and enmity. Take to the service of Lord Rama.

The Lord is extremely fond of those who have surrendered themselves to Him. He has given this promise in the Ramayana: “To anyone who once takes shelter under Me and solicits ‘I am Thine’, I bestow fearlessness from all beings. This is My vow”.

Even a great sinner who is full of evil qualities and who is fond of other people’s wealth, is freed from all kinds of faults that pertain to worldly life if only he remembers the Lord always. He attains purity and goes to the supreme abode of the Lord.

The Name of Lord Rama is the greatest purifier of the heart. It wipes away all one’s sins. Not only this, but it wipes away the sinful tendencies as well. The Name is sweeter than the sweetest of objects. It is the haven of peace. It is the very life of pure souls. It is the purifier of all purifying agencies. It quenches the consuming fire of worldly desires. It awakens the knowledge of God. It bathes the aspirant in the, ocean of divine bliss. Glory to Sri Rama and His Name!

O Devotee! recite His Name, sing His glory and serve His Lotus Feet. Enthrone in your heart Lord Rama of dark hue, whose image is reflected in the heart of Lord Shiva. Blessed is the pious soul who uninterruptedly drinks the nectar of Sri Rama’s Name which has been churned out of the ocean of the Vedas, which removes the impurities of the Kali Yuga or the iron age, which lives constantly on the lips of Lord Shiva, which is a sovereign remedy or unfailing specific to cure the disease of worldly existence and which is the life of Mother Sita.

Ram-Nam burns ignorance, passion and sin. With or without knowledge, correctly or incorrectly, when the word “Rama” is pronounced it showers a rain of good upon the devotee. Sri Rama is Brahman who takes one across the ocean of worldly existence. Rama is one in across whom the Yogis sport, that is, the Self within.

Lord Shiva tells His consort Parvati: “This Ram-Nam is equal to the Lord’s thousand Names, or repetition of the Mantra a thousand times”.

I call this the anti-gossip tonic. When you find that you are wasting your time in gossip, repeat His Name several times. You can make up for the time lost, and the mind will be slowly weaned away from the habit of gossiping.

Sri Rama is also a wish-fulfilling tree. He will bestow upon you whatever you want! Just read what Lord Shiva further says:

“The seat of all good things, the destroyer of all impurities of this age of darkness, purer than purity itself, the food for the journey of aspirants on the path to salvation, their only resting place, the very life-breath of virtuous men, is the Divine Name of Sri Rama. So say the sages”.

On the auspicious Ramnavmi day take a firm resolve that you will repeat Ram-Nam with every breath and that you will endeavour to lead a righteous life.

Ramnavmi is one of the most important festivals of the Vaishnava sect of the Hindus. However, even those who adore Lord Shiva celebrate the occasion. Some observe a strict fast on the day. Temples are decorated and the image of Lord Rama is richly adorned. The holy Ramayana is read in the temples. At Ayodhya, the birthplace of Sri Rama, a big fair is held on this day.

In South India the Sri Ramnavmi Utsavam is celebrated for nine days with great fervour and devotion. Those talented in the art of story-telling narrate the thrilling episodes of the Ramayana. The Kirtanists chant the holy Name of Rama and celebrate the wedding of Rama with Sita on this great day. It is an extremely colourful ceremony, highly inspiring and instructive, too.

At the Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh, Ramnavmi is celebrated for nine days as follows:

Spiritual seekers do as much Japa as possible. The sacred Mantras Om Sri Ramaya Namah or Om Sri Ram Jai Ram Jai Jai Ram are chanted.

Devotees read the whole of the Ramayana, either the Sanskrit version of Sage Valmiki or the Hindi version of Saint Tulsidas, during these nine days.

Those who cannot recite the entire epic may read this single verse which contains in a nutshell the story of the Ramayana: “Formerly, Sri Rama went to the forests, where Rishis did penance, and killed the illusive deer. Sita was carried away and Jatayu was killed. Rama met Sugriva, killed Vali and crossed the ocean. The city of Lanka was burnt by Hanuman. The demons, Ravana and Kumbhakarna, were then killed. Thus is recited the holy Ramayana”.

Devotees greet one another with “Sri Ram” or “Jai Ram-ji-ki”.

Those who have adopted Lord Rama as their favourite Deity observe a fast, taking only milk and fruit for all the nine days. Some fast only on the Ramnavmi day itself

On the final or Ramnavmi day, there is a grand worship of Lord Rama in the gorgeously decorated temple. All the Vedic rituals including Laksharchana are performed.

A havan is also performed.

From four in the morning to late at night, there is Ram and Ram alone everywhere!

Leaflets, booklets and books relating to Lord Rama are distributed.

Special meetings are held in the evening at which discourses on the life and teachings of the Lord are delivered.

Earnest seekers take resolves to accelerate their spiritual progress.

O beloved seekers! time is fleeting. Know the value of time. Time is most precious. Utilise every second profitably. Do not procrastinate. Abandon all idle gossiping. Forget the past. Live every moment of your life for the realisation of the divine ideal and goal. Unfold your latent faculties. Grow, evolve and become a superhuman or a dynamic Yogi. Struggle hard and reach the goal of life.

May you all attain the final beatitude of life through intense devotion towards Lord Rama! May you live immersed in the ecstasy of divine love! May Sri Rama who is as effulgent as a million suns and who is adored by the gods and devotees, protect you all! May the blessings of Lord Rama be upon you all!

Avangas Chanting

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Photos taken during the Avangas chanting in Samadhi Mandir – Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh-Himalayas.

Sri Adi Sankaracharya Jayanti-Photos

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Photos taken during Sri Adi Sankaracharya Jayanti at Sri Viswanath Temple- Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh-Himalayas.

Sri Sankaracharya Jayanti

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Sri Jagadguru Adi Sankaracharya
By Swami Sivananda

Introduction

Chaos pervaded all through India in the matter of religion and philosophy. Sect after sect, such as Charvakas, Lokayathikas, Kapalikas, Shaktas, Sankhyas, Buddhas and Madhyamikas sprang up. The number of religions rose as high as seventy-two. There was fight amongst sects. There was no peace anywhere. Chaos and confusion reigned supreme. There was superstition and bigotry. Darkness prevailed over the once happy land of Rishis, sages and Yogins. The once glorious land of the Aryans was in a miserable state. Such was the state of the country at the time which just preceded the Avatara (incarnation) of Sankaracharya.

The existence of Vedic Dharma in India today is due to Sankara. The forces opposed to Vedic religion were more numerous and powerful at the time of Sankara than they are today. Still, single-handed, within a very short time, Sankara overpowered them all and restored the Vedic Dharrna and Advaita Vedanta to its pristine purity in the land. The weapon he used was pure knowledge and spirituality. The previous Avataras, like Rama and Krishna, used physical forces because the obstacles to Dharma in those days arose from the physical obstructions and molestations of the Asuras (demons). The menace to Dharma in the Kali age (age of destruction) arose from obstacles that were more internal than external, more mental than physical. The seeds of Adharma (unrighteousness) were then working in the minds of almost everyone. Hence the evil had to be combated purely by the weapon of knowledge and self-purification. It was in order to forge this weapon and wield it with efficacy that Sankara took birth in the Brahmin Varna (caste) and entered the Sannyasa (renunciate) order early in life. The previous Avataras like Rama and Krishna took birth in the Kshatriya Varna (warrior caste), because in their days they had to wield military weapons in the restoration of Dharma.

All are no doubt aware of the very important position assigned to Sankaracharya in the history of Indian philosophy. It can be affirmed, without any fear of contradiction, that Bharata Varsha would have ceased to be Bharata Varsha several centuries ago and would never have survived the murderous sword, the devastating fire and the religious intolerance of the successive invaders, if Sankara had not lived the life he lived and taught the lessons he taught. And those lessons are still pulsating in every cell and in every protoplasm of the true aspirant and the true Hindu.

Birth

Sankara was born in a very poor family in the year 788 A.D. in a village named Kaladi, six miles to the east of Alwaye, Kerala. Kaladi is a railway station, on the Kochi-Shoranur rail link. Sankara was a Nambudiri Brahmin. Rajasekhara, a Zamindar (a rich landlord), built a Siva temple in Kaladi and formed an Agrahara for Brahmins who were in the service of the temple. Vidyadhiraja was doing Puja (worship) in the temple. He had only a son named Sivaguru. Sivaguru studied the Shastras and married at the proper age. He had no child. He and his wife Aryamba prayed to Lord Siva to bless them with a son. A son was born to them in the Vasanta Ritu or the spring season at noon, in the auspicious Abhijit Muhurta and under the constellation Ardhra. This son was Sankara.

Sivaguru died when Sankara was seven years old. Sankara had none to look after his education. His mother was an extraordinary woman. She took special care to educate her son in all the Shastras. Sankara’s Upanayana or thread ceremony was performed in his seventh year, after the death of his father. Sankara exhibited extraordinary intelligence in his boyhood. When he was only sixteen, he became a master of all the philosophies and theologies. He began to write commentaries on the Gita, the Upanishads and the Brahma Sutras when he was only sixteen years old. What a great marvel!

Sankara’s mother was consulting astrologers about horoscopes of suitable girls for her son’s marriage. But Sankara had a firm resolve to renounce the world and become a Sannyasin. Sankara’s mother was very much grieved that there would be no one to perform her funeral rites after her death. Sankara gave full assurance to his mother that he would always be ready to serve her at the death-bed and perform the usual funeral rites. Even then his mother was not satisfied.

One day, Sankara and his mother went to take bath in the river. Sankara plunged into the water and felt that a crocodile was dragging him by the foot. He shouted out to his mother at the top of his voice: “O dear mother! A crocodile is dragging me down. I am lost. Let me die peacefully as a Sannyasin. Let me have the satisfaction of dying as a Sannyasin. Give me your permission now. Let me take Apath-sannyasa”.

The mother immediately allowed him to take Sannyasa. Sankara took Apath-sannyasa (the adoption of Sannyasa when death is near) at once. The crocodile let him go unharmed. Sankara came out of the water as a nominal Sannyasin. He again repeated his promise to his mother. He left her under the care of his relatives and gave away his little property to them. He then proceeded to find out a Guru with a view to get himself formally initiated into the sacred order of Sannyasa.

In Search of a Guru

Sankara met Swami Govindapada Acharya in a hermitage in Badrikashram (Badrinath) in the Himalayas and he prostrated at the teacher’s feet. Govinda asked Sankara who he was. Sankara replied: “O revered Guru! I am neither fire nor air nor earth nor water-none of these, but the Immortal Atma (Self) that is hidden in all names and forms”. He also said in the end: “I am the son of Sivaguru, a Brahmin of Kerala. My father died in my childhood. I was brought up by my mother. I have studied the Vedas and the Shastras under a teacher. I took Apath-sannyasa when a crocodile caught my foot while I was taking bath in the river. Kindly initiate me formally into the holy order of Sannyasa”.

Swami Govinda was very much pleased with the truthful narration given by Sankara. Having initiated him and invested him with the robe of a Sannyasin, Swami Govinda taught him the philosophy of Advaita which he himself had learnt from his Guru-Gaudapada Acharya. Sankara learnt all the philosophical tenets from his Guru Govindapada. Govinda asked Sankara to go to Kashi. Sankara proceeded to Kashi where he wrote all his famous commentaries on the Brahma Sutras, the Upanishads and the Gita and successfully met all the criticisms levelled against them. He then began to propagate his philosophy. Sankara had the greatest esteem for his Guru Govindapada and his Parama Guru or the teacher’s teacher, Gaudapada.

Sankara’s Digvijaya

Sankara’s philosophical conquests are unique in the world. He had his triumphant tour all over India. He met the leaders of different schools of thought. He convinced them by arguments and established the supremacy and truth of the religion that he expounded in his commentaries. He went to all the celebrated seats of learning. He challenged the learned men to discussion, argued with them and converted them to his opinions and views. He defeated Bhatta Bhaskara and condemned his Bhashya (commentary) on the Vedanta Sutras. He then met Dandi and Mayura and taught them his philosophy. He then defeated in argument Harsha, author of Khandana Khanda Kadya, Abhinavagupta, Murari Misra, Udayanacharya, Dharmagupta, Kumarila and Prabhakara.

Sankara then proceeded to Mahishmati. Mandana Misra was the chief Pundit of the court of Mahishmati. Mandana was brought up in the Karma Mimamsa faith and so he had intense hatred for the Sannyasins. He was performing a Sraaddha ceremony when Sankara somehow dropped down there. Immediately Mandana Misra became very furious. An ugly conversation was started when the Brahmins, who were present there for dinner, interposed and pacified Mandana Misra. Then Sankara challenged Mandana to a religious controversy. Mandana agreed. Bharati who was the wife of Mandana Misra and who possessed scholarly erudition was appointed as the umpire. It was agreed beforehand that Sankara, if defeated, would become a householder and marry; and that Mandana, if defeated, would become a Sannyasin and receive the robe of a Sannyasin from the hands of his own wife. The controversy began in right earnest and continued for days without any interruption. Bharati did not sit and listen to their controversy. She threw two garlands, one each over the shoulders of each of the disputants, and said: “He whose garland begins to fade first should consider himself defeated”. She left the place and began attending to her household duties. The controversy went on for seventeen days. The garland of Mandana Misra began to fade first. Mandana Misra accepted his defeat and offered to become a Sannyasin and follow Sankara.

Bharati was an Avatara of Sarasvati, the Goddess of Learning. Once the sage Durvasa chanted the Vedas before Brahma and his wife in a big assembly. Durvasa committed a small mistake. Sarasvati laughed at it. Durvasa became enraged and gave a curse that she would take birth in the world. Hence Sarasvati had to take birth as Bharati.

Bharati now interposed and said to Sankara: “I am the other half of Mandana. You have defeated only one half of Mandana. Let us have a controversy”. Sankara objected to have controversy with a woman. Bharati quoted instances wherein there had been controversies with women. Sankara then agreed and this controversy also went on uninterruptedly for seventeen days. Bharati passed from one Shastra to another. At last she found out that she could not defeat Sankara. She decided to defeat him by means of the science of Kama Shastra.

Sankara asked Bharati to give him an interval of one month for his preparation to hold controversy with her in the science of Kama Shastra. She agreed. Sankara went to Kashi. He separated his astral body from his physical body by means of his Yogic powers and left his physical body in the hole of a big tree and asked his disciples to take care of that physical body. He then entered into the dead body of Raja Amaruka which was about to be cremated. The Raja rose up and all the people rejoiced at the astounding incident.

The ministers and queens soon found out that the revived Raja was a different person, with different qualities and thought. They realised that the soul of a great Mahatma had entered the body of their Raja. Therefore, messengers were sent out to search for a human body hidden somewhere in lonely forests and caves and to burn it when found. They thought that if they did so, the new Raja might remain with them for a long time.

Sankara was acquiring all the experience of love with his queens. Maya is very powerful. In the midst, of those queens, Sankara entirely forgot all about his promises to his disciples about his going back to them. The disciples began to search for him. They heard about the miraculous resurrection of Raja Amaruka. They immediately proceeded to the city and had an interview with the Raja. They sang a few philosophical songs which at once revived the memory of Sankara. The disciples immediately repaired to the place where the physical body of Sankara was kept hidden. By that time the messengers of the queen had found out the physical body and had just begun to set fire to it. The soul of Sankara just then entered his own body. Sankara prayed to Lord Hari to help him. There was a shower of rain immediately and that extinguished the flames.

Then Sankara returned to the residence of Mandana Misra. He resumed the old controversy and answered all the questions raised by Bharati satisfactorily. Mandana Misra gave all his property as a gift to Sri Sankara and Mandana was made to distribute it to the poor and the deserving. He then became a disciple of Sankara. Sankara initiated him into the holy order of Sannyasa and gave him the name of ‘Sureswara Acharya’. Sureswara Acharya was the first Sannyasin who took charge of the Sringeri Mutt. Bharati also accompanied Sankara to Sringeri and there she is worshipped even today.

Sankara ascended the seat of omniscience after inviting Vedic scholars from all parts of India and answering their numerous questions. Sankara, by vanquishing all the religious opponents of his day-and they belonged to no less than seventy-two different schools-and establishing the superiority of the Vedic Dharma, had become the Jagadguru of all.

Sankara’s success over the other religious sects was so complete that none of them have since been able to raise their head in the land. Most of them have disappeared altogether. After Sankara’s time, although a few Acharyas have appeared, none of them have been able to vanquish those who differed from them as Sankara did and establish unquestioned supremacy.

Mother’s Funeral Rites

Sankara received news that his mother was seriously ailing. He left his disciples and proceeded to Kaladi alone. His mother was then bedridden. Sankara touched her feet in reverence. He praised Lord Hari. Hari’s messengers came. Sankara’s mother gave up her physical body and went along with those messengers to the abode of Hari.

Sankara encountered serious difficulties in performing the funeral rites of his mother. Usually, Sannyasins do not perform any of the rites or ceremonies which are enjoined on the householders. The Nambudiri Brahmins were all against Sankara. Sankara’s relatives also did not help him. They did not come forward to assist him even in carrying the dead body to the place of cremation and refused to give fire for igniting the funeral pyre. At last Sankara determined to perform the funeral rites all alone. As he could not carry the entire dead body, he cut it into pieces and removed the pieces one by one to the backyard of the house. He then made a pyre there of stems of plantain trees and set fire to it by his Yogic power. Sankara wanted to teach the Nambudiris a lesson. He then made the local chief issue an edict that a corner should be set apart in each Illam or house of the Nambudiri Brahmins to burn the dead of the family and that they should cut the dead body into parts and then burn the same. This practice continues even today amongst Nambudiri Brahmins.

Sankara then returned to Sringeri. From there he went out on a tour through the eastern coast with a large number of followers. He preached his Advaita philosphy wherever he went. He established the Govardhana Mutt at Puri. He went to Kancheepuram and attacked the Shaktas. He purified the temples. He won over to his side the rulers of the Chola and the Pandya kingdoms. He went to Ujjain and put down the atrocities of the Bhairavas who were shedding human blood. He then proceeded to Dwaraka and established a Mutt there. He then travelled along the course of the Ganges and held religious controversies with great personages.

Sankara’s End

Sankara proceeded to Kamarup-the present Guwahati-in Assam and held a controversy with Abhinava Gupta, the Shakta commentator, and won victory over him. Abhinava felt his defeat very keenly. He made Sankara suffer from a severe form of piles through black magic. Padmapada removed the evil effects of the black magic. Sankara became quite alright. He went to the Himalayas, built a Mutt at Joshi and a temple at Badri. He then proceeded to Kedarnath higher up in the Himalayas. He became one with the Linga in 820 A.D. in his thirty-second year.

Sringeri Mutt

In the north-west of the State of Mysore, nestling in the beautiful foot-hills of the Western Ghats, surrounded by virgin forests, lies the village of Sringeri and here Sankara established his first Mutt. The river Tunga-a branch of the river Tungabhadra-runs through the valley closely touching the walls of the temple; and its pure and limpid waters are as famous for drinking purposes as the waters of the Ganges are for bath (Ganga Snanam, Tunga Panam). Sringeri is a place of great sanctity and its beauty has to be seen to be appreciated. The Mutt is ‘still going strong’ as the phrase goes. The homage paid to the Mutt by countless aspirants and devotees is as much due to the greatness of illustrious men like Vidyaranya who have been at its head ever since its foundation as to the renown of the founder himself.

It may not be out of place to mention here that it took thirty years for the well-known Sanskrit professor Max Muller to translate the commentary on the Rig Veda, written by Vidyaranya, also known as Sayana. The learned professor, in his preface, says that not a single day passed in the thirty years without his devoting at least ten minutes on the translation. There is also a little interesting incident that when the manuscript was found to be illegible in some places, he got an authorised transcription from the first original still preserved in the Sringeri Mutt, through the influence of the then Maharaja of Mysore.

The famous holy shrine of Sri Sarada is an equal source of attraction to the devotees. Many are the Mutts and monasteries in India where holy men or their successors sit, and where Hindus from all parts of India gather, but none so great or so famous as Sringeri, the original seat of Adi Sankaracharya. The Sringeri Peetha is one of the oldest monasteries of the world flourishing for over twelve centuries now. It is the first of the four seats of learning established by Sankaracharya, the other three being Puri, Dwaraka and Joshi Mutt, each one of them representing one of the four Vedas of the Hindus.

Sankara placed his four eminent disciples (Sureswara Acharya, Padmapada, Hastamalaka and Trotakacharya) in charge of the Sringeri Mutt, Jagannath Mutt, Dwaraka Mutt and Joshi Mutt respectively. The most famous Sannyasin in the succession of Gurus of the Sringeri Mutt was, of course, Vidyaranya, the great commentator on the Vedas and the father of the dynasty of Vijayanagar. He was the Dewan of Vijayanagaram. He became a Sannyasin about 1331 A.D. The eleven Sannyasins before Vidyaranya were Sankaracharya, Viswarupa, Nityabodhaghana, Jnanaghana, Jnanottama, Jnana Giri, Simha Girisvara, Isvara Tirtha, Narasimha Tirtha, Vidya Sankara Tirtha and Bharati Krishna Tirtha.

The historic and sacred pontifical throne of the Sringeri Mutt is known as Vyakhyana Simhasana or seat of learning. Tradition has it that this seat was given to the great Sankara by Sarasvati, the Goddess of Learning, in appreciation of the philosopher’s vast scholarly erudition. Thirty-five Acharyas had sat on the pontifical throne before his present holiness in regular and uninterrupted succession.

Dasanami Sannyasins

Sankara organized ten definite orders of Sannyasins under the name ‘Dasanamis’ who add, at the end of their names, any one of the following ten suffixes: Sarasvati, Bharati, Puri (Sringeri Mutt); Tirtha, Asrama (Dwaraka Mutt); Giri, Parvata and Sagar (Joshi Mutt); Vana and Aranya (Govardhana Mutt).

The Paramahamsa represents the highest of these grades. It is possible to become a Paramahamsa by a long course of Vedantic study, meditation and Self- realisation. The Ativarnashramis are beyond caste and order of life. They dine with all classes of people. Sankara’s Sannyasins are to be found all over India.

Some Anecdotes

Sankara was going along the street one day with his pupils to take bath in the Ganges when he met a Chandala who was also passing along the street with his dogs by his side. The disciples of Sankara shouted and asked the Chandala to clear off the road. The Chandala asked Sankara: “O, venerable Guru! You are a preacher of Advaita Vedanta and yet you make a great difference between man and man. How can this be consistent with your teaching of Advaitism? Is Advaita only a theory?”. Sankara was very much struck by the intelligent query of the Chandala. He thought within himself, “Lord Siva has assumed this form just to teach me a lesson”. He composed then and there five Slokas called the ‘Manisha Panchaka’. Every Sloka ends thus: “He who learnt to look on the phenomena in the light of Advaita is my true Guru, be he a Chandala or be he a Brahmin”.

In Kashi, a student was cramming the Sutras in Sanskrit grammar. He was repeating again and again “Dukrin karane, Dukrin karane….”. Sankara heard it and was struck by the perseverance of the boy. He immediately sang a small poem, the famous Bhaja Govindam song, in order to teach the uselessness of such studies in the matter of the liberation of the soul. The meaning of the song is: “Worship Govinda, worship Govinda, worship Govinda, O fool! When you are about to die, the repetition of these Sanskrit Sutras will not save you”.

Once some mischief-mongers offered meat and liquor to Sankara. Sankara touched those items with his right hand. The meat turned into apples and the liquor into milk.

A Kapalika came to Sankara and begged for his head as a gift. Sankara consented and asked the Kapalika to take his head when he was alone and absorbed in meditation. The Kapalika was just aiming with a big sword to sever the head of Sankara. Padmapada, the devoted disciple of Sankara came, caught hold of the arm of the Kapalika and killed him with his knife. Padmapada was a worshipper of Lord Narasimha. Lord Narasimha entered the body of Padmapada and killed the Kapalika.

Sankara’s Philosophy

Sankara wrote Bhashyas or commentaries on the Brahma Sutras, the Upanishads and the Gita. The Bhashya on the Brahma Sutras is called Sareerik Bhasya. Sankara wrote commentaries on Sanat Sujatiya and Sahasranama Adhyaya. It is usually said, “For learning logic and metaphysics, go to Sankara’s commentaries; for gaining practical knowledge, which unfolds and strengthens devotion, go to his works such as Viveka Chudamani, Atma Bodha, Aparoksha Anubhuti, Ananda Lahari, Atma-Anatma Viveka, Drik-Drishya Viveka and Upadesa Sahasri”. Sankara wrote innumerable original works in verses which are matchless in sweetness, melody and thought.

Sankara’s supreme Brahman is Nirguna (without the Gunas), Nirakara (formless), Nirvisesha (without attributes) and Akarta (non-agent). He is above all needs and desires. Sankara says, “This Atman is self-evident. This Atman or Self is not established by proofs of the existence of the Self. It is not possible to deny this Atman, for it is the very essence of he who denies it. The Atman is the basis of all kinds of knowledge. The Self is within, the Self is without, the Self is before and the Self is behind. The Self is on the right hand, the Self is on the left, the Self is above and the Self is below”.

Satyam-Jnanam-Anantam-Anandam are not separate attributes. They form the very essence of Brahman. Brahman cannot be described, because description implies distinction. Brahman cannot be distinguished from any other than He.

The objective world-the world of names and forms-has no independent existence. The Atman alone has real existence. The world is only Vyavaharika or phenomenal.

Sankara was the exponent of the Kevala Advaita philosophy. His teachings can be summed up in the following words:

Brahma Satyam Jagat Mithya
Jeevo Brahmaiva Na Aparah

Brahman alone is real, this world is unreal; the Jiva is identical with Brahman.

Sankara preached Vivarta Vada. Just as the snake is superimposed on the rope, this world and this body are superimposed on Brahman or the Supreme Self. If you get a knowledge of the rope, the illusion of the snake will vanish. Even so, if you get a knowledge of Brahman, the illusion of the body and the world will vanish.

Sankara is the foremost among the master-minds and the giant souls which Mother India has produced. He was the expounder of the Advaita philosophy. Sankara was a giant metaphysician, a practical philosopher, an infallible logician, a dynamic personality and a stupendous moral and spiritual force. His grasping and elucidating powers knew no bounds. He was a fully developed Yogi, Jnani and Bhakta. He was a Karma Yogin of no mean order. He was a powerful magnet.

There is not one branch of knowledge which Sankara has left unexplored and which has not received the touch, polish and finish of his superhuman intellect. For Sankara and his works, we have a very high reverence. The loftiness, calmness and firmness of his mind, the impartiality with which he deals with various questions, his clearness of expression-all these make us revere the philosopher more and more. His teachings will continue to live as long as the sun shines.

Sankara’s scholarly erudition and his masterly way of exposition of intricate philosophical problems have won the admiration of all the philosophical schools of the world at the present moment. Sankara was an intellectual genius, a profound philosopher, an able propagandist, a matchless preacher, a gifted poet and a great religious reformer. Perhaps, never in the history of any literature, a stupendous writer like him has been found. Even the Western scholars of the present day pay their homage and respects to him. Of all the ancient systems, that of Sankaracharya will be found to be the most congenial and the most easy of acceptance to the modern mind.

Stamp Releasing Photos-Videos

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Photos and videos taken during the Celebration on 21st May 2016 – Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh-Himalayas.

 

The President & Board of Management Members of The Divine Life Society, Shivanandanagar, Rishikesh request your gracious presence on the occasion of the release of Commemorative Postage Stamp on Swami Chidanandaji Maharaj under the aegis of Department of Posts, Govt. of India by Honourable Sri K.K. Paul H.E. The Governor of Uttarakhand on Saturday, the 21st May 2016 at Swami Sivananda Satsang Bhavan(Auditorium) The Divine Life Society, Sivananda Ashram Shivanandanagar, RIshikesh.

PROGRAMME

15:55 Guests arrive at the Auditorium and occupy their seats.
15:58 Dignitaries arrive at the Auditorium gate and are conducted to the Dais.
16:00 H.E. The Governor of Uttarakhand Arrives at the Auditorium gate and is received by the Chief Post Master General, Uttarakhand, General Secretary of The Divine Life Society and Chairman, Centenary Celebration Committee. H.E. The Governor is conducted to his seat on the Dais.
16:02 National Anthem
16:04 Lighting of the Lamp by H.E. The Governor
16:06 H.H. Sri Swami Vimalananda, President of The Divine Life Society welcomes H.E. The Governor and other dignitaries by presenting bouquet and delivers welcome address.
16:15 Introductory speech by Sri Swami Padmanabhanandaji, General Secretary of The Divine Life Society.
16:23 Sri Swami Padmanabhanandaji requests the Chief Post Master General to address the audience.
16:25 Address by the Chief Post Master General
16:30 The Chief Post Master General requests and assists H.E. The Governor to release the Commemorative Postage Stamp on Swami Chidananda and present the first copy of the Stamp Album for the release.
  • H.E. The Governor releases the Commemorative Postage Stamp and First Day Cover
  • Presentation of the first copy of the Stamp Album to H.E. The Governor by the Chief Post Master General.
16:35 Address by H.E. The Governor
16:42 Vote of thanks by Swami Advaitananda, Chairman, Swami Chidananda Birth Centenary Celebration Committee
16:50 National Anthem

Gurudev’s Sannyasa Diksha Celebration June 1st 2016

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Humanity’s Gain From Sivananda’s Sannyasa

WORLD’S GREAT GOD­REALISED SANNYASI

(His Holiness Sri Swami Ramdas, Anandashram Kanhangad)

Sri Swami Sivananda Saraswati is a God­realised personality. He can be looked upon as one of the spiritual leaders of the age, because he has been a world figure sending out his spiritual messages to all parts of the earth for the guidance of thousands of seekers after truth.

Ramdas has heard of and seen hundreds of Divine Life Societies started in different parts of India and abroad. They all help to awaken the ignorant to the awareness of their spiritual nature and also to inspire them to serve the poor and the distressed fellow beings. This work has been done in the name of and as inspired by Sri Swami Sivananda Saraswati. Look at the wonder! A Saint, a Sannyasin, who is somewhere in the Himalayas, has been responsible for such vast and extensive activities for the amelioration of the conditions of unhappy humanity and for bringing light and peace to millions!

SWAMI SIVANANDA ­

PERSONIFIED SYNTHESIS OF DYNAMISM AND RENUNCIA­TION

(Sri Swami Chidananda)

The lives of great men are like so many lights removing the darkness that besets the highway of human progress. Their lofty actions are sources of perennial inspiration, not only to the people of their own immediate times, but for human beings in times to come as well. Their lives and actions serve to vivify the present and to supply perennial vitality to the future, Everything about them is so invested with unique power that during their life­time, as well as for long many years afterwards, their every word, act and example continue to exert a powerful influence over the lives of men and to carry a persistent message to all humanity.

The glorious Sannyasa Diksha anniversary that we have the privilege and joy to worshipfully celebrate this day (1st June), and which marks the supreme occasion of H.H. Satgurudev Swami Sivanandaji’s renunciation of a secular life and his entry into the holy order of Sannyasa, Commemorates one such lofty and significant action in the Master’s life which is filled profusely with such exemplary and inspiring acts.

A BLEND OF TWO TRENDS

I deem in a rare joy and a great privilege to be provided this sacred opportunity of paying my homage to Sri Satgurudev, in whom I see a unique and amazing confluence of two trends, viz., of renunciation and all the inwardness and detachment that it connotes, as well as the thrilling dynamism with all the outwardly expressed vigour of activity and active, sympathetic interest in human beings and their lives, implied by It. These two trends, seemingly so much mutually exclusive and far apart, would lead us to suppose our revered Gurudev to be a mixture of contradictions.

But, no rather, it is precisely to teach us that true renunciation and dynamism are not contradictory, and to bring home to us the lofty lesson that all inspired, altruistic activity for the common weal and welfare of mankind at large is actually based upon and springs forth from a whole and genuine renunciation of one’s self­centered life, and that is why our revered Master has taken to this ancient order and lived his noble life of unceasing good works and innumerable services unto all classes and sections of present­day humanity all over the world.

SIGNIFICANCE OF RENUNCIATION

His renunciation represents, as it were, a fertile seed out of which has sprung forth the great tree of his later Sannyasa life, full of the flowers, fruits and the shade­giving foliage of a many­sided Lokasangraha or selfless service unto humanity upon the physical, mental, moral and spiritual fields of modern man’s life. The Master’s act of Tyaga (renunciation) and Sannyasa carries the message: “0 Man! Give up thy little ‘I’ and thy petty, selfish life, and let thy selfless life flower into cosmic love, world­brotherhood and service unto all. Give up thy little self and give thyself, in body, mind and spirit, to the whole world. To renounce is, verily, to offer thyself as a gift unto the noble cause of human welfare.” His Holiness’ act of renunciation and Sannyasa, done thirty­five years ago, has served during these years as an incontrovertible proof­positive that this ancient tradition of holy Bharatavarsha, that this ancient heritage received from our seers and sages, is not a negative lapsing into a selfish and careless quiescence (as it is sometimes thoughtlessly misconstrued) or an unfeeling retreat from realities, but, on the contrary, it is an utmost, positive step, pregnant with the possibilities of unlimited human welfare and containing within it the seeds of selfless service of the most glorious type.

FRUIT OF RENUNCIATION

It is a step by which man breaks out through the barriers of his little, limited and narrow life of selfishness and attachments, and soars high into the empyrean of world­consciousness, cosmic love and vision of world oneness. It transports him into the field of world­service of Loka­Seva. This is the dynamic structure of genuine renunciation and true Sannyas. It is vibrant with love and compassion, dynamic with worshipful service and divinely pervaded by Karma Yoga in the spirit of the Gospel of the Bhagavad Gita.

Such has been the exemplary Sannyasa life of our holy Gurudev Sivanandaji Maharaj and such was the significance of his Tyaga done full three and a half decades ago. The giving up of his secular life has come to mean the bestowal of lofty example of new divine life to countless thousands of people in this present age of restlessness and tension. His renunciation and Sannyasa has been blessedness not merely to him as the renouncer, but blessedness to countless thousands who have now come to receive the rare fruits of his renunciation.

The cultural genius of Bharatavarsha, her wondrous heritage of Yoga and Vedanta, and the ideals of Sanatana Dharma, received a tremendous fillip and became infused with new life through the fact of Swami Sivanandaji’s great renunciation and through the wave of spiritual forces released thereby. To those who could perceive it, it was an act according to the Divine plan. In the building of the New India within the set­up of this memorable and significant nuclear age, his renunciation was a constructive feature that has proved prolific and richly fertile in that it has showered the incomparable wealth from the treasure­house of India’s ethical and spiritual culture like bounteous life­giving rain to an impoverished world where all higher values and nobler ideals had been seared and scorched by the consuming flames of destructive, materialistic trends and God­denying ideologies,

POWER THAT TRANSFORMS

The power that sprang out of his renunciation has outspread into the world of today, reached, into all points of the compass and, penetrating all lands and homes, has brought new life, hope, solace, light, strength, joy and inspiration to literally countless millions of souls throughout the modern world. Thus, the “loss” (if it can be termed as such at all) of one little family became the blessed reward for the entire universal family of mankind. Truly and factually, the great event, the anniversary of which we are celebrating here, constitutes a divine gift unto humanity. It is a heavenly bestowal. Saint Sivananda’s renunciation and Sannyasa can rightly be said an offering by God of divine manna to appease the spiritual hunger of His soul­famished children in this crucial century.

To us all, fortunate ones of this age, our Master’s glorious Sannyasa has, indeed, become synonymous with world­awakening. That almost unknown act which young Dr. Kuppuswamy did thirty five years ago to become Swami Sivananda, at Rishikesh, was like unto a seed that contained the latent potency of bursting into a great and tremendous tree, towering high over the present­day scene, to waft the breeze of Yoga and Vedanta and a divine life of spiritualized human activity on earth. His renunciation and Sannyasa have become transformed into the spirit of the new age, the spirit of divine life.

SPIRITUAL BROTHERHOOD

Thus his Sannyasa has come to pervade the modern world in the form of a divine urge, a divine impulse, towards virtue, goodness and godliness. It has taken a concrete shape as this great institution (Divine Life Society), from where this lofty message of service, selflessness, purity, devotion and worshipful living radiate everywhere today. We, the devout votaries of the Master’s gospel of divine life who now sit at his feet and bask in the radiance of his holy presence, are directly the products of his renunciation and its powerful, creative dynamism. We are living witnesses to its positivism and potency. The worldwide spiritual brotherhood that has sprung up under his benign leadership and noble inspiration is the visible result and fruit.

His Sannyasa has transformed itself into a spiritual force that holds within itself the hope and promise of the future world­welfare and world­order, based upon a divine life of love, compassion, virtue and goodness. This solitary act of his Sannyasa has become a swelling flood of self­giving that marks the stream of this saint’s dedicated life through the better part of the past half century. By this, he proclaims the grand idea that renunciation is not to be a single act at some momentous occasion but that it should characterize your entire life and marks every thought, word and act throughout your life.

KEY TO PEACE AND HAPPINESS

You must literally live renunciation. This is the way of all attainment. This is the key to true and lasting happiness and peace. This is the secret of world­-welfare and universal happiness. In renunciation lies the end of all strife and hatred. In renunciation lies the source of true peace and progress. This Sri Gurudev’s life proclaims. By his life, the modern Maharshi has given to the present and future humanity the new law of welfare saying “0″ man, know ye that renunciation is the law of life. Renunciation is the path that leads to friendliness, co-­operation and unity. Renounce selfishness, greed, hatred and egoism. Embrace love, humility, contentment and charity. You will have Rama Rajya or the Kingdom of Heaven here upon earth, right now”.

May the world respond to this loving Call! May the Master’s radiant life inspire one and all! May this anniversary mark the dawn of a new day in the life of modern man, wherein the spirit of renunciation and self-giving would replace greed and selfishness and bring happiness and joy into the lives of all!


Sannyasa Diksha Anniversary Photos-Video

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Photos-Videos during the Sannyasa Diksha Celebration of Sri Gurudev on 1st June 2016

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Ganga Dussehra Photos-Videos

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Photos-Videos during the Ganga Dussehra Celebration at Vishwanath Ghat, Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh-Himalayas on 14th June 2016

Ganga Dussehra Video

GANGA DUSSEHRA

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by Swami Sivananda

The Ganga came out of the Supreme Being. She entered the feet of Lord Hari and reached Vaikuntha. She issued from Go­Loka and passed through the regions of Vishnu, Brahma, Siva, Dhruva, Chandra, Surya, Tapa, Jana and Maha, and reached Indra­Loka and flowed as Mandakini. From the celestial regions it was brought to the earth by the rigorous penance of Bhagiratha. It came about like this.

THE CURSE OF KAPILA

In the days of yore, there lived a great king, Sagara. He was one of the mighty monarchs in the Solar race. The incarnation of Lord Rama was in this race. The monarch performed one hundred Asvamedha sacrifices aspiring for Indrahood, kingship of the Devas. In the hundredth sacrifice, the sacrificial horse was stolen away by Indra for fear of being dethroned. by the aspirant. Tied to a post, the horse was left within the premises of Rishi Kapila’s Ashram.

All the sons of Sagara, sixty thousand in number, set out in search of the horse. As soon as they found the horse in front of the sage’s Ashram, they mistook the sage unhesitatingly for the thief, and began to wage war with him. The innocent sage, aroused by their thoughtless actions, cursed them all and burnt them to ashes.

BHAGIRATHA’S PENANCE

Time rolled on. Kings after kings ruled and died. Long after this lamentable incident, there arose another illustrious king, Bhagiratha, in the same family. He shuddered at the pitiable fate of his forefathers, and was extremely anxious to perform the necessary obsequies and religious rites levied by the scriptures. He consulted great Rishis and was advised to invoke Mother Ganga, who only could wash off the powerful curse of Rishi Kapila and satisfactorily fulfil his desire. Bhagiratha did great Tapas with all severities. Pleased with his penance, Mother Ganga appeared before him, and directed him to seek the help of somebody who could check Her flow, as otherwise the whole earth would be submerged in Her waters.

LORD SIVA RECEIVES THE GANGA

Again Bhagiratha sat doing rigorous penance for a full hundred years. It is needless to say that Lord Siva, the protector of all His devotees, was immensely pleased with the king and readily accepted to check and control Ganga through His matted locks. With surge, fury and foam, Ganga began to descend from celestial regions. Flashes of lightning, thunders from clouds, and the uncontrollable flow seemed as if a deluge was about to devour the whole world. But, Lord Siva coolly received Her in His matted locks and let Her drip over Him. This is the Ganga Saptami Day.

THROUGH RISHI JAHNU’S EARS

Taking Her course into the interior of the Himalayas, Ganga was about to wash away Rishi Jahnu’s Ashram. Sage Jahnu was naturally more powerful than Her and simply sipped the water. Bhagiratha was much disappointed. He did again severe penance to please Rishi Jahnu. At last, the sage let the Ganga through his ears. Flowing from this outlet, Ganga flowed with entire modesty and all­embracing filial love and motherly affection. By Her Divine Grace, She uplifted all the sixty thousand princes to the Highest Abode of immortal bliss. This day is celebrated as the most sanctifying Ganga Dussehra.

GANGA SAPTAMI AND GANGA DUSSEHRA..

Ganga Saptami and Ganga Dussehra are observed in Northern India. Ganga Saptami generally falls during the last week of April. Ganga Dussehra falls on the tenth day of the bright half of the month of Jyeshta and celebrates the flowing of the holy Ganga at the request of Raja Bhagiratha. This is an important bathing day. A big Mela is held in Haridwar from this day until the full moon, the fifteenth of Jyeshta. This is attended by large number of people from the Punjab and Uttar Pradesh.

Narada Bhakti Sutras – Lectures

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Videos taken during 100 Days Special Programe (from 16th June to 24th Sep 2016) for Sri Swami Chidananda Birth Centenary Celebration at Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh-Himalayas.

Narada Bhakti Sutras by Sri Hita Ambarish Maharaj

16th-June-2016

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Srimad Bhagavat Saptah Katha

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Videos taken during 100 Days Special Programe (from 16th June to 24th Sep 2016) for Sri Swami Chidananda Birth Centenary Celebration at Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh-Himalayas.

Srimad Bhagavat Saptah Katha by Mahamandaleswar Sri Rajendra Dasji Maharaj, Vrindavan

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