The International Society for Krishna Consciousness has potential
as a peaceful extra-governmental force for this kind of change,
nationally and internationally. In 1966, Srila Prabhupada included
in ISKCON’s articles of incorporation a far-reaching statement of
the movement’s purposes. Among them: “To bring the members closer
together for the purpose of teaching a simpler, more natural way of
life.”
Srila Prabhupada did not, however, recommend high-pressure
lobbying. Instead, he emphasized the establishment of
self-sufficient agrarian communities. “If these farm projects are
successful,” he wrote to a disciple in 1975, “then all this
industry will be closed. We do not have to make propaganda, but
automatically people will not want [it].” Srila Prabhupada also
envisioned gardenlike towns that would be more habitable than
today’s cities and suburbs.
People want a secure and satisfying way of life. If they can be
shown attractive alternatives to life in industrial society, they
will make the right choices. In the long run, this is more
effective than organizing campaigns to curb toxic emissions from
factories.
Most environmental problems, such as global warming, are so
expansive that even national governments are unable to confront
them alone. Coordinated efforts by many nations—indeed, all
nations—seem to be required.
The United Nations, therefore, is becoming more active in
environmental issues and related causes, such as sustainable
economic growth. Some propose giving the Security Council a mandate
to deal with environmental problems. Others have suggested creating
a separate UN Ecological Council, with powers like those of the
Security Council.3
With help from the UN, many assume, the magnitude of the world’s
environmental crisis will compel nations to cooperate. But
environmental issues may simply become another source of dispute
and conflict. We already see this happening. Developing countries
often resist calls from developed ones to slow industrial growth
for the sake of the environment. A country may even resort to
environmental warfare, as Iraq did by burning hundreds of oil wells
during the Gulf War of 1991.
So, despite collective efforts on all levels, the environmental
crisis deepens. The number of extinctions and endangered species
increases. Rain forests and other kinds of forests continue to be
lost. Large-scale mechanized agriculture, operating with chemical
pesticides and fertilizers, degrades more and more of the earth’s
arable lands. Mountains of trash keep piling up in the developed
nations of the world, as recycling efforts fail, partly because of
lack of a market for recycled materials. No really safe ways to
dispose of toxic and nuclear waste have yet been found. Despite
decades of government regulation, levels of water pollution and air
pollution remain intolerably high.
Further, the problems of global warming and ozone depletion have
compelled nations to conclude that drastic measures are required.
But governments appear to lack the will to institute such measures.
For example, in 1992 heads of the world’s nations met in Rio de
Janeiro at an environmental summit meeting. They watered down the
centerpiece of the conference, a treaty on global warming. They
also struck down rules that would have mandated lower emissions of
carbon dioxide. They met again in 1997, but again little was
accomplished.
Most collective attempts to cope with pollution rely on
end-of-the-pipeline control and treatment rather than prevention.
This approach has not, however, succeeded. A way has to be found,
it seems, to stop pollution at its source, but this has proved
almost impossible. One difficulty is that most individual and
collective attempts fail to recognize the philosophical dimensions
of the problem. Our environmental crisis has its roots in incorrect
and imperfect conceptions of the self and the universe. When we
understand our true spiritual nature, our unlimited urge to consume
things and to produce things for consumption can be curbed. The
natural result will be a better environment in which to pursue
spiritual growth instead of excessive economic growth.
(Divine Nature book. DN 3:2. BBT 1998.)
“We shall call our society ISKCON." Prabhupada had laughed
playfully when he first coined the acronym.
He had initiated the legal work of incorporation that spring, while
still living on the Bowery. But even before its legal beginning, he
had been talking about his “International Society for Krishna
Consciousness," and so it had appeared in letters to India and in
The Village Voice. A friend had suggested a title that would sound
more familiar to Westerners, “International Society for God
Consciousness," but Prabhupada had insisted: “Krishna
Consciousness." “God" was a vague term, whereas “Krishna" was exact
and scientific; “God consciousness" was spiritually weaker, less
personal. And if Westerners didn't know that Krishna was God, then
the International Society for Krishna Consciousness would tell
them, by spreading His glories “in every town and village."
“Krishna consciousness" was Prabhupada's own rendering of a phrase
from Srila Rupa Gosvami's Padyavali, written in the sixteenth
century. Krishna-bhakti-rasa-bhavita: “to be absorbed in the mellow
taste of executing devotional service to Krishna."
But to register ISKCON legally as a nonprofit, tax-exempt religion
required money and a lawyer. Carl Yeargens had already gained some
experience in forming religious, political, and social welfare
groups, and when he had met Prabhupada on the Bowery he had agreed
to help. He had contacted his lawyer, Stephen Goldsmith.
Stephen Goldsmith, a young Jewish lawyer with a wife and two
children and an office on Park Avenue, was interested in spiritual
movements. When Carl told him about Prabhupada's plans, he was
immediately fascinated by the idea of setting up a religious
corporation for an Indian swami. He visited Prabhupada at 26 Second
Avenue, and they discussed incorporation, tax exemption,
Prabhupada's immigration status, and Krishna consciousness. Mr.
Goldsmith visited Prabhupada several times. Once he brought his
children, who liked the “soup" the Swami cooked. He began attending
the evening lectures, where he was often the only nonhippie member
of the congregation. One evening, having completed all the legal
groundwork and being ready to complete the procedures for
incorporation, Mr. Goldsmith came to Prabhupada's lecture and
kirtana to get signatures from the trustees for the new
society.
July 11
Prabhupada is lecturing.
Mr. Goldsmith, wearing slacks and a shirt and tie, sits on the
floor near the door, listening earnestly to the lecture, despite
the distracting noises from the neighborhood. Prabhupada has been
explaining how scholars mislead innocent people with nondevotional
interpretations of the Bhagavad-gita, and now, in recognition of
the attorney's respectable presence, and as if to catch Mr.
Goldsmith's attention better, he introduces him into the subject of
the talk.
I will give you a practical example of how things are
misinterpreted. Just like our president, Mr. Goldsmith, he knows
that expert lawyers, by interpretation, can do so many things. When
I was in Calcutta, there was a rent tax passed by the government,
and some expert lawyer changed the whole thing by his
interpretation. The government had to reenact a whole law because
their purpose was foiled by the interpretation of this lawyer. So
we are not out for foiling the purpose of Krishna, for which the
Bhagavad-gita was spoken. But unauthorized persons are trying to
foil the purpose of Krishna. Therefore, that is unauthorized.
All right, Mr. Goldsmith, you can ask anything.
Mr. Goldsmith stands, and to the surprise of the people gathered,
he makes a short announcement asking for signers on an
incorporation document for the Swami's new religious movement.
Prabhupada: They are present here. You can take the addresses
now.
Mr. Goldsmith: I can take them now, yes.
Prabhupada: Yes, you can. Bill, you can give your address. And
Raphael, you can give yours. And Don… Roy… Mr. Greene.
As the meeting breaks up, those called on to sign as trustees come
forward, standing around in the little storefront, waiting to leaf
cursorily through the pages the lawyer has produced from his thin
attache, and to sign as he directs. Yet not a soul among them is
committed to Krishna consciousness.
Mr. Goldsmith meets his quota of signers—a handful of sympathizers
with enough reverence toward the Swami to want to help him. The
first trustees, who will hold office for a year, “until the first
annual meeting of the corporation," are Michael Grant (who puts
down his name and address without ever reading the document),
Mike's girl friend Jan, and James Greene. No one seriously intends
to undertake any formal duties as trustee of the religious society,
but they are happy to help the Swami by signing his fledgling
society into legal existence.
According to law, a second group of trustees will assume office for
the second year. They are Paul Gardiner, Roy, and Don. The trustees
for the third year are Carl Yeargens, Bill Epstein, and
Raphael.
None of them know exactly what the half a dozen, legal-sized typed
pages mean, except that “Swamiji is forming a society."
Why?
For tax exemption, in case someone gives a big donation, and for
other benefits an official religious society might receive.
But these purposes hardly seem urgent or even relevant to the
present situation. Who's going to make donations? Except maybe for
Mr. Goldsmith, who has any money?
But Prabhupada is planning for the future, and he's planning for
much more than just tax exemptions. He is trying to serve his
spiritual predecessors and fulfill the scriptural prediction of a
spiritual movement that is to flourish for ten thousand years in
the midst of the Age of Kali. Within the vast Kali Age (a period
which is to last 432,000 years), the 1960s are but an insignificant
moment.
The Vedas describe that the time of the universe revolves through a
cycle of four “seasons," or yugas, and Kali-yuga is the worst of
times, in which all spiritual qualities of men diminish until
humanity is finally reduced to a bestial civilization, devoid of
human decency. However, the Vedic literature foretells a golden age
of spiritual life, beginning after the advent of Lord Caitanya and
lasting for ten thousand years—an eddy that runs against the
current of Kali-yuga. With a vision that soars off to the end of
the millennium and beyond, yet with his two feet solidly on the
ground of Second Avenue, Prabhupada has begun an International
Society for Krishna Consciousness. He has many practical
responsibilities: paying the rent, incorporating his society, and
paving the way for a thriving worldwide congregation of devotees.
Yet he doesn't see his humble beginning as limiting the greater
scope of his divine mission. He knows that everything depends on
Krishna, so whether he succeeds or fails is up to the Supreme. He
has only to try.
The purposes stated within ISKCON's articles of incorporation
reveal Prabhupada's thinking. They were seven points, similar to
those given in the Prospectus for the League of Devotees he formed
in Jhansi, India, in 1953. That attempt had been unsuccessful, yet
his purposes remained unchanged.
Seven Purposes of the International Society for Krishna
Consciousness:
(a)To systematically propagate spiritual knowledge to society at
large and to educate all peoples in the techniques of spiritual
life in order to check the imbalance of values in life and to
achieve real unity and peace in the world.
(b)To propagate a consciousness of Krishna, as it is revealed in
the Bhagavad Gita and Srimad Bhagwatam.
(c)To bring the members of the Society together with each other and
nearer to Krishna, the prime entity, thus to develop the idea
within the members, and humanity at large, that each soul is part
and parcel of the quality of Godhead (Krishna).
(d)To teach and encourage the sankirtan movement, congregational
chanting of the holy name of God as revealed in the teachings of
Lord Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu.
(e)To erect for the members and for society at large, a holy place
of transcendental pastimes, dedicated to the Personality of
Krishna.
(f)To bring the members closer together for the purpose of teaching
a simpler and more natural way of life.
(g)With a view towards achieving the aforementioned Purposes, to
publish and distribute periodicals, magazines, books and other
writings.
Regardless of what ISKCON's charter members thought of the
society's purposes, Prabhupada saw them as imminent realities. As
Mr. Ruben, the subway conductor who had met Prabhupada on a
Manhattan park bench in 1965, had noted: “He seemed to know that he
would have temples filled up with devotees. “There are temples and
books,' he said. “They are existing, they are there, but the time
is separating us from them.'"
The first purpose mentioned in the charter was propagation.
“Preaching" was the word Prabhupada most often used. For him,
preaching had a much broader significance than mere sermonizing.
Preaching meant glorious, selfless adventures on behalf of the
Supreme Lord. Lord Caitanya had preached by walking all over
southern India and causing thousands of people to chant and dance
with Him in ecstasy. Lord Krishna had preached the Bhagavad-gita
while standing with Arjuna in his chariot on the battlefield of
Kurukshetra. Lord Buddha had preached, Lord Jesus had preached, and
all pure devotees preach.
ISKCON's preaching would achieve what the League of Nations and the
United Nations had failed to achieve—“real unity and peace in the
world." ISKCON workers would bring peace to a world deeply
afflicted by materialism and strife. They would “systematically
propagate spiritual knowledge," knowledge of the nonsectarian
science of God. It was not that a new religion was being born in
July of 1966; rather, the eternal preaching of Godhead, known as
sankirtana, was being transplanted from East to West.
The society's members would join together, and by hearing the
teachings of Bhagavad-gita and Srimad-Bhagavatam and by chanting
the Hare Krishna mantra, they would come to realize that each was a
spirit soul, eternally related to Krishna, the Supreme Personality
of Godhead. They would then preach this to “humanity at large,"
especially through sankirtana, the chanting of the holy name of
God.
ISKCON would also erect “a holy place of transcendental pastimes
dedicated to the Personality of Krishna." Was this something beyond
the storefront? Yes, certainly. He never thought small: “He seemed
to know that he would have temples filled up with devotees."
He wanted ISKCON to demonstrate “a simple, more natural way of
life." Such a life (Prabhupada thought of the villages of India,
where people lived just as Krishna had lived) was most conducive to
developing Krishna consciousness.
And all six of these purposes would be achieved by the seventh:
ISKCON would publish and distribute literature. This was the
special instruction Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura had
given to Srila Prabhupada. He had specifically told him one day in
1932 at Radha-kunda in Vrindavana, “If you ever get any money,
publish books."
Certainly none of the signers saw any immediate shape to the
Swami's dream, yet these seven purposes were not simply theistic
rhetoric invented to convince a few New York State government
officials. Prabhupada meant to enact every item in the charter.
Of course, he was now working in extremely limited circumstances.
“The principal place of worship, located at 26 Second Avenue, in
the city, county, and state of New York," was the sole headquarters
for the International Society for Krishna Consciousness. Yet
Prabhupada insisted that he was not living at 26 Second Avenue, New
York City. His vision was transcendental. His Guru Maharaja had
gone out from the traditional holy places of spiritual meditation
to preach in cities like Calcutta, Bombay, and Delhi. And yet
Prabhupada would say that his spiritual master had not really been
living in any of those cities, but was always in Vaikuntha, the
spiritual world, because of his absorption in devotional
service.
Similarly, the place of worship, 26 Second Avenue, was not a New
York storefront, a former curiosity shop. The storefront and the
apartment had been spiritualized and were now a transcendental
haven. “Society at large" could come here, the whole world could
take shelter here, regardless of race or religion. Plain, small,
and impoverished as it was, Prabhupada regarded the storefront as
“a holy place of transcendental pastimes, dedicated to the
Personality of Krishna." It was a world headquarters, a publishing
house, a sacred place of pilgrimage, and a center from which an
army of devotees could issue forth and chant the holy names of God
in all the streets in the world. The entire universe could receive
Krishna consciousness from the International Society for Krishna
Consciousness, which was beginning here.
(Satswarup dasa Goswami. Prabhupada-lilamrita. Ch 18. Breaking
Ground.)
Srila Prabhupada would often say of his devotional service in
India, “Vrindavana is my residence, Bombay is my office, and
Mayapur is where I worship the Supreme Personality of Godhead."
Bombay is the biggest commercial city in India. Prabhupada's
“business" was pure devotional service to Krishna, and in Bombay he
dealt more with the managerial aspects of Krishna consciousness in
India. He had incorporated ISKCON in India with the main branch in
Bombay. All other branches of ISKCON in India, therefore, were
legally part of the Bombay incorporation. In Bombay, Prabhupada had
cultivated more lawyers and businessmen as life members and earned
more friends of his Society than in any other city in India. So
whenever he was in Bombay, he often sought legal advice, not just
about the Bombay center but also about his other affairs in
India.
Since Bombay was a modern city with professional and office
facilities on a level with many Western cities, Prabhupada wanted
to locate the Indian division of his Book Trust there, for printing
Hindi translations of his books as well as English versions for the
Indian market. Bombay, unlike Vrindavana and Mayapur, was not a
dhama but a bustling, wealthy city. ISKCON's biggest donors lived
there. Although Srila Prabhupada's demeanor was entirely
transcendental in Bombay, and his activities were often the same as
elsewhere—speaking on Bhagavad-gita and Srimad-Bhagavatam and
worshiping the Deity—nevertheless, Prabhupada called it his office.
And though it was his office, he wanted a temple there.
“Mayapur," Prabhupada said, “is where I worship the Supreme
Personality of Godhead." Prabhupada conceived of a temple to be
built in Mayapur that would be the grandest of all temples in his
movement. He and his devotees would worship the Supreme Lord there
in such a magnificent style that the whole world would be attracted
to Prabhupada's place of worship, the Mayapur Chandrodaya
Mandir.
According to the Srimad-Bhagavatam, the prescribed worship for this
age is sankirtana, the chanting of the holy names of God.
Sankirtana worship emanated from Mayapur, the original dhama of
Lord Caitanya. “In the age of Kali," states Srimad-Bhagavatam,
“Lord Krishna appears in a golden form, as Lord Caitanya, and His
activity is to chant Hare Krishna. People with sufficient
intelligence will worship Him in this form." Srila Prabhupada
wanted to make the most wonderful worship of Caitanya Mahaprabhu in
His birthplace and thus completely fulfill the predictions of the
previous acaryas, who foresaw a great Vedic city rising from the
plains of Navadvipa.
Mayapur could also be considered Prabhupada's place of worship
because his spiritual master, Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati, had
preached extensively there and because his samadhi was there. Since
Srila Prabhupada's entire preaching mission was in the service of
his spiritual master, he worshiped his spiritual master through
preaching in Mayapur. Mayapur was the origin and symbol of
preaching Krishna consciousness, because there Lord Caitanya and
Nityananda actually began the sankirtana move ment that Prabhupada
was now carrying all over the world.
Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu wanted to preach the sankirtana movement of
love of Krishna throughout the entire world, and therefore during
His presence He inspired the sankirtana movement. Specifically, He
sent Rupa Gosvami to Vrindavana and Nityananda to Bengal and
personally went to South India. In this way He kindly left the task
of preaching His cult in the rest of the world to the International
Society for Krishna Consciousness.
Vrindavana is Prabhupada's residence. Religious people in India as
well as religious scholars in the West saw Prabhupada as a
Vaishnava sadhu—from Vrindavana. When he began his preaching in New
York City, he would often introduce himself as “coming from
Vrindavana." “Here I am now sitting in New York," he once said,
“the world's greatest city, but my heart is always hankering after
that Vrindavana. I shall be very happy to return to my Vrindavana,
that sacred place."
The people of Vrindavana also thought of Prabhupada as their
hometown success. Upon retiring from family life in 1954,
Prabhupada had gone to live in Vrindavana, first at a temple near
Kesi-ghata and then at the Radha-Damodara temple. After taking
sannyasa in 1959, he had continued to reside in Vrindavana and,
when not living there, to reserve his two rooms at
Radha-Damodara.
Vrindavana is the home of Krishna consciousness, the place of
Krishna's childhood pastimes, the place where the six Gosvamis,
sent by Lord Caitanya, had excavated holy places, written
transcendental literature, and built temples. Any devotee could
feel at home there, and thousands of Vrindavana's residents carried
bead bags, chanted Hare Krishna, and wore the Vaishnava tilaka and
dress. Vrindavana belonged to Radha and Krishna, and this was still
acknowledged by the residents of the present-day Vrindavana.
Ultimately, Vrindavana is revealed only to the pure devotee.
Vrindavana is the eternal residence of all spiritual souls in their
eternal relationship with Krishna. The Vrindavana in India is a
transcendental replica of Goloka Vrindavana, the eternal planet
where Krishna resides in the spiritual world. The pure devotees
aspire to attain to Goloka Vrindavana after finishing their life in
this world, and Prabhupada, therefore, as a pure devotee of
Krishna, naturally felt at home in Vrindavana. He sometimes said
that if he were to become very ill, he would prefer not to go to a
hospital but to simply go to Vrindavana and there pass his last
days. To spread the glories of Vrindavana, Prabhupada had left
Vrindavana, but like a traveler away from home, he always thought
of returning.
(Satswarup dasa Goswami. Prabhupada-lilamrita. SPL44 - Let there be
a temple.)