His Divine Grace
AC Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila
Prabhupada, Founder Acharya of the International
Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON)
He had had a very difficult
crossing, suffering two heart attacks and once
arrived in New York he didn't know which way to
turn. After a difficult six months, preaching here
and there, his few followers rented a storefront and
apartment in Manhattan. Here, he would regularly
give lectures, kirtana and distribute
prasadam. People from all walks of life,
including hippies, were drawn here; in search of
that missing element from their lives and many
became part of 'Swamiji's' following.
As people became more serious,
Srila Prabhupada's followers used to hold regular
kirtanas in the parks. The lectures and Sunday
feast days became renowned. His young followers
eventually took initiation from Srila Prabhupada,
promising to follow the regulative principles and
chant 16 rounds of the Hare Krishna mantra
daily. He also reinstated the Back to Godhead
magazine.
In July 1966, Srila Prabhupada
established the International Society for Krishna
Consciousness — ISKCON. His aim was to use the
society to promote Krishna Consciousness throughout
the world. In 1967, he visited San Francisco and
started an ISKCON society there. He then sent his
disciples all over the world to spread Caitanya
Mahaprabhu's message and open new centres in
Montreal, Boston, London, Berlin, and other cities
in North America, India, and Europe. In India, three
magnificent temples were initially planned:
Vrindavana, the Krishna Balaram temple with all its
ancillary facilties; Bombay, a temple with an
educational and cultural centre; and in Mayapur, a
huge temple with a Vedic planetarium.
Srila Prabhupada produced all of
his books bar the three written in India within the
next eleven years. Srila Prabhupada slept little and
would spend the early morning hours writing. He
would write almost daily between 1:30 and 4:30 a.m.
He dictated his text, which his disciples then typed
and edited. Srila Prabhupada would translate the
original texts from Sanskrit or Bengali, word by
word, and gave a complete commentary.
His works include Bhagavad-gita
As It Is, the multi-volume Srimad-Bhagavatam,
the multivolume Caitanya-caritamrta, The
Nectar of Devotion, Krsna: The Supreme
Personality of Godhead, Teachings of Lord
Caitanya, Teachings of Lord Kapila, Teachings
of Queen Kunti, Sri Isopanisad, The Nectar of
Instruction, and dozens of small books.
His writings have been translated
into over fifty languages. The Bhaktivedanta Book
Trust, established in 1972 to publish the works of
His Divine Grace, has thus become the world's
largest publisher of books in the field of Indian
religion and philosophy.
Despite his heavy literary
schedule, Srila Prabhupada did not let his writing
stand in the way of his preaching. In just twelve
years, despite his advanced age, he circled the
globe fourteen times on lecture tours that took him
to six continents.
His days were filled with writing,
teaching his followers and the public, and with
guiding his growing society, until the day he
departed from this world. Before departing from this
world Srila Prabhupada gave many instructions to his
disciples to follow in his footsteps and to continue
the preaching and spreading of Krishna Consciousness
all over the world.
He departed this world on November
14 1977.
In the short time he spent in the
west, he preached continuously, established 108
temples, wrote more than sixty volumes of
transcendental literature, initiated five thousand
disciples, founded the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust,
began a scientific academy (the Bhaktivedanta
Institute) and other trusts related to ISKCON.
Srila Prabhupada was
an extraordinary author, teacher, and saint. He
managed to spread Krishna Consciousness all over the
world, through his writing and preaching. His
writings comprise of many volumes and are the basis
of Krishna consciousness not only for his disciples
but for his grand-disciples, affiliated members of
the disciplic succession, and for the public at
large. |