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Thursday November 15 6:41 AM ET

Obituaries in the News

By The Associated Press,

 

WAILUA, Hawaii (AP) - Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami, an American

who became an international Hindu leader and was publisher of

Hinduism Today magazine, died Monday at his home on Kauai. He was 74.

 

The guru, known as Gurudeva, was the successor to the guru Yogaswami

of Sri Lanka and was the spiritual leader for 2.5 million Tamil

people.

 

He died in the presence of 23 members of his monastic order after a

self-imposed 32-day fast. Last month he had been diagnosed with

incurable intestinal cancer.

 

Gurudeva lived a quiet life, but was active in the community and

helped promote anti-drug programs for youths.

 

His designated successor, Satguru Bodhinatha Veylanswami, was

installed as guru of the Hindu religious community, or ashram,

Gurudeva led. The ashram is formally known as Kauai Aadheenam.

 

Born in Oakland, Calif., Gurudeva studied dance and starred with the

San Francisco Ballet at age 19.

 

A year later, he gave up dancing and went to India and Sri Lanka for

spiritual training. He was given his name and was ordained by his

mentor, Yogaswami, a Saivite Hindu guru.

 

Gurudeva formed the first Hindu temple in the United States in San

Francisco in 1957. In 1970, he moved to Kauai to establish a

monastery and temple.

 

Bahee

www.americanhindu.net

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>From :

Hindu Press International <hpi.list

 

Date :

Tue, 13 Nov 2001 03:50:19 -1000

 

Attachment : gurudeva.jpg (26k)

 

HINDU PRESS INTERNATIONAL

 

A daily news summary for breaking news sent via e-mail and posted on

the web for media, educators, researchers, writers, religious

leaders worldwide and Hinduism Today magazine rs, courtesy

of Hinduism Today editorial staff

 

Visit our archives at http://www.HinduismToday.com/hpi/

 

November 13, 2001

Second message for today containing the full text of the press

release of Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami's Maha Samadhi plus an

photograph

 

 

Today's Stories:

1. Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami, World Hindu Leader, Passes Away

at 74

 

1. Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami, World Hindu Leader, Passes Away

at 74, Source: http://www.gurudeva.dynip.com/~htoday/press_releases/

 

KAUAI, HAWAII, USA, November 13, 2001: Satguru Sivaya

Subramuniyaswami, one of Hinduism's foremost and globally prominent

spiritual teachers, a prolific author and publisher of Hinduism Today

magazine, attained Maha Samadhi, "Great Union," today at age 74 at

his ashram home on the tropical island of Kauai, Hawaii, USA. A

spokesperson for the ashram said the Hindu master discovered on

October 9, soon after he returned from a 30-day pilgrimage to Europe

with 72 devotees, that he had advanced intestinal cancer. The disease

was diagnosed when Subramuniyaswami was hospitalized for severe

anemia. A battery of tests revealed the cancer and that it had

metastasized to other parts of his body. Three medical teams of

radiologists and oncologists in Hawaii, Washington State and

California all concurred that even the most aggressive treatment

regimens would prove ineffective, and estimated he had just a few

months to live. The popular Satguru went into seclusion and after

several days of meditation declared he would accept no treatment

beyond palliative measures. He also made the decision to follow the

Indian yogic practice, called Prayopavesa in Sanskrit scripture, to

abstain from nourishment and take water only from that day on. His

doctors endorsed and fully supported his decision. He died on the

32nd day of his self-declared fast, passing on quietly at 11:54 pm on

November 12, 2001, surrounded by his 23 monastics.

 

News of his impending passage was first released to the Hindu world on

October 16. Immediately temples, ashrams and devotees around the

world began the "Mrityunjaya Yajna," a worship ceremony traditionally

offered prior to the passing of a great saint. The yajna was

performed across the USA, Europe, India, Malaysia, Australia, Fiji

and New Zealand. In the Hindu tradition, a saint's passing is

considered an extremely auspicious and exalted event, signalling the

completion of his mission on Earth and his return to the great inner

heaven worlds whence he was sent by God and the Gods to help mankind.

Nearly a hundred devotees from all over the world flew to the remote

island of Kauai to be nearby during the passage. The suddenness of

the events stunned the 2.5 million Tamils of Sri Lanka, for whom

Subramuniyaswami, the successor of Lanka's great guru Yogaswami, is

their hereditary spiritual leader.

 

An outpouring of appreciation came from the local Kauai island

residents who, though not Hindus, had over the decades of his

residence there developed a fondness and profound appreciation of

Subramuniyaswami, whom they called "Gurudeva," the affectionate title

he was most known by. They valued his spiritual presence and his

generously given guidance and advice on local island matters.

 

Before his passing, Subramuniyaswami consoled his sorrowful monks,

telling them, "Don't be sad, soon I will be with you 24 hours a day,

working with you all from the inner planes." Bereaved devotees

arriving at the island ashram heard the same message, and by the time

of the Great Departure, a profound peace had descended upon the

ashram and all connected with it.

 

At Subramuniyaswami's request, he was cremated the same day, at

Borthwick Kauai Mortuary in Koloa, Kauai, where a simple memorial

service was held. In accordance with his directions, his ashes will

be ceremonially interred tomorrow morning in a meditation crypt

behind the sanctum sanctorum of the ashram's Siva Nataraja temple.

His designated successor, Satguru Bodhinatha Veylanswami, 59, was

installed immediately as guru of the ashram, formally known as Kauai

Aadheenam.

 

As is traditional, the passage of a saint is not accompanied by the

Hindu rituals of mourning. The release from the mortal coils at the

time of the saint's choosing is regarded as an auspicious event, one

to be met with gratitude for his life and not sorrow for his passage.

 

When notified of the Satguru's passing, Sita Ram Goel, one of India's

most influential Hindu writers and thinkers, wrote, "He has done

great work for Hinduism, and the recent reawakening of the Hindu mind

carries his stamp." Ma Yoga Shakti, renowned teacher and Hinduism

Today's Hindu of the Year for 2000, said, "For more than five

decades, Subramuniyaswami, a highly enlightened soul of the West -- a

Hanuman of today, a reincarnation of Siva Himself -- has watered the

roots of Hinduism with great zeal, faith, enthusiasm and whole-

heartedness." Sri Shivarudra Balayogi Maharaj of India said, "By his

life and by his teaching, Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami has helped

make Hinduism an even greater gift to humanity." Swami Agnivesh of

the Arya Samaj wrote, "Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami, our Gurudev,

is a great spiritual asset for humankind. I still carry with me the

warmth of his affectionate hug and his very kind words."

 

The American Swami

Few in the Hindu world would not recognize the tall, white-haired

American who had gained prominence over the decades for his practical

and clear-minded books replete with explanations of everything Hindu,

from the most basic beliefs and daily practices to the loftiest

refined philosophy and yoga techniques. He was equally famous as

founder and publisher of Hinduism Today, which evolved over 21 years

from a simple newsletter to an award-winning, international, full-

color magazine, respected for its authoritative reporting on Hindu

events, institutions, personalities, issues and controversies around

the world. Among his innovative projects are the creation of Iraivan

Temple on Kauai, the first all-stone, hand-carved granite Agamic

temple ever built in the West, the founding of Hindu Heritage

Endowment to perpetually fund worthy Hindu institutions and his

participation in numerous international conferences on religion,

peace and interfaith harmony.

 

In 1986, the World Religious Parliament in New Delhi honored him as

one of the five Hindu spiritual leaders outside of India who had most

dynamically promoted Hinduism in the past 25 years. Among his other

honors are being named one of 25 "presidents" of religion at the 1996

Parliament of the World Religions held in Chicago, and receiving the

U Thant Peace Award while attending the Millennium Peace Summit of

World Religious and Spiritual Leaders held at the United Nations in

August, 2000. This award was previously given to the Dalai Lama,

Nelson Mandela, Mikhail Gorbachev, Pope John Paul and Mother Teresa.

On August 25, 2000, he addressed 1,200 spiritual leaders during the

UN events in New York.

 

Subramuniyaswami was a study in elegance, grace and radiant

spirituality. People would instinctively make way when he walked

through a public area, immediately conscious that a saint was

present. Total strangers who had no idea who he was would approach

him with reverence, anxious to meet this unusual being with the

silken white hair. He was a large man, six-foot two inches tall, with

deep hazel eyes. He maintained throughout much of his life the

chiseled body he had developed in his youth as an accomplished ballet

dancer. Even in his seventies he would occasionally dance for

devotees, who would be astounded by his strength and grace of

movement. He had a keen yet unpretentious sense of presentation, and

when moving about in public was always impeccably groomed and

fashionably dressed. His devotees loved his sense of fun, maintained

even upon his death bed, for when asked by a monk if they could get

anything for him, he replied, "Well, yes, a new body."

 

A Mystic's Life, Decade by Decade

Subramuniyaswami as born on January 5, 1927, in Oakland, California,

and grew up near Lake Tahoe. He was orphaned by age 11 and raised by

a family with deep connections to India. In his teenage years he was

trained in classical Eastern and Western dance and in the disciplines

of yoga, becoming the premier danseur of the San Francisco Ballet by

age 19. Increasingly drawn to a spiritual life, he renounced his

career at its height and sailed to India and Sri Lanka in 1947, on

the first ship to sail to India following World War II. There he

intensified his spiritual training under renowned yogis. In 1948, in

the mountain caves of Jalani in central Sri Lanka, he fasted and

meditated until he burst into enlightenment. Soon after that God

Realization at just 21 years old, he met his satguru, Sage Yogaswami,

in Jaffna, Sri Lanka. This was the single most respected Saivite

Hindu guru for the people of Sri Lanka. The 72-year-old sage gave him

his Hindu name, Subramuniya, and initiated him into the holy orders

of sannyasa, or renunciate monasticism. Yogaswami then ordained the

young mystic into his lineage with a tremendous slap on the back,

saying, "This will be heard in America! Now go 'round the world and

roar like a lion. You will build palaces (e.g., temples) and feed

thousands." While still in Sri Lanka, Gurudeva introduced the nation

to the circular saw, worked with leading Buddhist elders and founded

Saiva Siddhanta Church, the world's first Hindu church, now active in

many nations, and the Sri Subramuniya Ashram in the township of

Alaveddy, just north of Jaffna.

 

Occasionally people inquired about the spelling of his name, which

differs slightly from the South Indian form. He explained that the

name Subramuniya is a Tamil spelling of the Sanskrit Subhramunya (not

be be confused with Subramanya). It is formed from subhra

meaning, "light; intuition," and muni, "silent sage." Ya

means "restraint; religious meditation." Thus Subramuniya means a

self-restrained soul who remains silent, or when he speaks, speaks

out from intuition.

 

Gurudeva returned to America in 1950 where he went into a reclusive

phase of deep contemplation and developed the spiritual techniques

imparted to him in Sri Lanka, from which he wrote his first

book, "Raja Yoga." This profound masterpiece remains the core of his

teachings. Yogaswami had told him not to teach until he reached the

age of 30, so it was in 1957 that he founded Himalayan Academy, now

with thousands of students, and opened America's first Hindu temple,

on Sacramento Street in San Francisco. In 1960 he initiated his first

monastic disciples and opened centers in Reno and Virginia City,

Nevada, and other areas of California. During this time he welcomed

Hindu swamis coming for the first time to America, including Swami

Chinmayananda, whom he extensively assisted in setting up his Chinmaya

Mission in California.

 

Subramuniyaswami developed an effective method of teaching through

"Innersearch" travel-study programs, which he conducted periodically

to different parts of the world until two months before his passing.

Among the most outstanding of these programs was his 1969 pilgrimage

to India with 65 devotees, then the largest group from America ever

to come to India. Similar spiritual journeys took him and hundreds of

devotees to dozens of nations, where he would typically meet with

political and spiritual leaders, master craftsmen, Zen and Hindu

abbots and yogis. In recent years his Innersearch tours focused on

connecting with the Tamil Saivite communities around the

globe, which he nurtured from Kauai.

 

In the 1970s he brought his followers and organization entirely into

Hinduism, and established Kauai Aadheenam, a monastery-temple complex

in the South Indian tradition on Kauai, Hawaii, USA. His was the

first major Saivite Hindu theological center outside the Indian

subcontinent. In 1975 he founded the San Marga Iraivan Temple, and in

1979 he began publishing his famed Hinduism Today magazine. He

developed a large printing facility in Virginia City, Nevada, and

produced tens of thousands of his books and courses for the general

market, writing about Indian spiritual practices long before they

became popular.

 

It was during this decade that large numbers of Hindus began to

emigrate from India to the United States and Europe, encouraged by

new immigration laws passed by President John F. Kennedy. Once here,

they often found themselves cut off from the guidance of Hindu

leaders in India. Subramuniyaswami sought to fill the gap by

inspiring dozens of groups to build temples and perpetuate Hinduism

in their new countries. Often he would gift the temple founders an

icon of Lord Ganesha, the Hindu God invoked at the start of any

project, with instructions to immediately begin His worship. He made

himself available to the founders when they encountered difficulties,

and counseled them on how to integrate with the local American

community. He helped major institutions like the Chinmaya Mission and

Sringeri Peetham to put roots down in America, and lent his monks and

legal staff to the Hindu cause. In many cases, he would assign one of

his own devotees to work closely with the temple until it was firmly

established. Thus were dozens of temples built under his direct

guidance or indirect influence in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles,

Canada, England, Germany, Denmark, Australia, Fiji, New Zealand and

elsewhere.

 

In the 80s, often as part of his Innersearch programs, he conducted

Hindu renaissance tours, meeting hundreds of thousands of Hindus in

India and Sri Lanka, to whom he spread a message of courage,

regenerating pride of heritage. In 1983 he traveled throughout Sri

Lanka with a few of his monastics, visiting hundreds of villages,

giving powerful talks in all parts of the country, even the remote

tea plantations of central Lanka. Over 300,000 Hindus came to his

discourses, which called for Hindus to have pride in their heritage

and to cling to their faith despite efforts of other religions to

make inroads and converts. During that Innersearch, Gurudeva was

paraded through towns and villages in the ancient way, seldom seen

today. White hand-woven cloth was laid before him to form a path on

which he would walk to each meeting, each temple rite, each lecture.

Sometimes these would go for miles, with devotees crowded on both

sides of the roadway, chanting and offering flower petals beneath his

long-striding feet. In Tuticorin, deep in the south of India, city

elder and staunch Saiva Siddhantin, A. P. C. Veerabhagu, lead

Gurudeva and his 50-plus devotees from the West through the streets

in a marvelous procession of chariots and horse-drawn carriages that

could have happened a thousand years ago. Hundreds of thousands of

Saivites turned out that morning to welcome the sage from America,

and he was led for miles through the city streets with hundreds of

women with baskets full of flowers standing on the tops of each

building raining tons of flowers on the great guru below who had given

Saivite Hinduism back its pride of place among the religions of the

world. During this same journey, he was given awards from all the

major spiritual centers in South India, which he visited in person.

He also arranged for India's greatest Bharata Natyam dancer, Kumari

Swarnamukhi, to dance in the 1,000-pillared hall at Chidambaram

Temple in Tamil Nadu. Her performance was the first in hundreds of

years and marked the return of the sacred dancers to the temples from

which they had been banned for so long.

 

Also in the 1980s Gurudeva founded a branch monastery in Mauritius,

whose government had invited him to revive a languishing Hindu

faith. "Please come to our country," wrote one Mauritian at the

time, "but do not just feed us rice. Teach us how to grow rice. Teach

us our ancient heritage."

 

Always an accomplished publisher, Subramuniyaswami came in on the

ground floor with desktop publishing, adopting the Apple computer in

1985, then in its infancy, and instructing his monks to create a

state-of-the-art system. Engineers from Apple came to Kauai to marvel

at the setup. Apple even sent a team of documentary filmmakers to the

monastery to show their employees the world's first functional

publishing network, amazingly created by Gurudeva's monastics. He

enjoyed the technology and proficiently used it for his work. This

super-efficient system supercharged his prolific outreach through

scriptures, books, pamphlets, art, lessons and later through CDs and

the world's foremost Hindu websites.

 

Subramuniyaswami had come by this time to be well-known throughout

the world as an articulate, insightful and forceful exponent of the

Hindu faith. In the late 1980s and the 1990s, in historic gatherings

of spiritual and parliamentary leaders, he represented Hinduism to

discuss mankind's future at the seminal Global Forum of Political and

Spiritual Leaders‹at Oxford in 1988, Moscow in 1990, and Brazil in

1992. In 1986, the World Religious Parliament in New Delhi honored

him as one of the five Hindu spiritual leaders outside of India who

had most dynamically promoted Hinduism in the past 25 years. In 1993

he was elected one of three Presidents of Hinduism at the 100th

anniversary of the Parliament of World Religions in Chicago. It was

in 1994 that he founded Hindu Heritage Endowment to provide permanent

income for Hindu swamis, temples and orphanages worldwide and created

a stunning 3,000-page illustrated trilogy of sourcebooks on Saivism.

The last volume, titled Living with Siva, Hinduism's Contemporary

Culture, arrived from the printers in Malaysia shortly before his

passing.

 

What He Taught

Subramuniyaswami taught the traditional Saivite Hindu path to

enlightenment, a path that leads the soul from simple service to

worshipful devotion to God, from the disciplines of meditation and

yoga to the direct knowing of Divinity within. His insights into the

nature of consciousness provide a key for quieting the external mind

and revealing to aspirants their deeper states of being, which are

eternally perfect, full of light, love, serenity and wisdom. He urges

all seekers to live a life of ahimsa, nonhurtfulness towards nature,

people and creatures, an ethic which includes vegetarianism. From his

ashram in Hawaii, Subramuniyaswami continued to follow his own guru's

instruction to bring Saivism to the Western world by teaching others

to "know thy Self by thyself" and thus "see God Siva everywhere."

 

His Monastic Order and the Future

Foundational to all of his work is the Kauai Aadheenam and its

resident Saiva Siddhanta Yoga Order. This group of 14 initiated

swamis with lifetime vows and ten brahmachari, celibate monks in

training, come from six countries and include both men born into the

Hindu religion and those who converted or adopted Hinduism, Asians

and Westerners. Made strong by decades of Subramuniyaswami's strict

and hands-on personal guidance, all of his work will be carried

forward and flourish in the future under the guidance of his

senior-most swami and designated successor, Satguru Bodhinatha

Veylanswami, age 59, a disciple for 35 years.

 

This is an advaitic (non-dualist) Saiva Siddhanta order, a living

stream of the ancient Nandinatha Sampradaya. This lineage is bound by

certain common elements of philosophy including a belief in both the

transcendent and immanent nature of God, the value of temple worship

and the need to work through all karmas before liberation from

rebirth may be obtained. It teaches the principle philosophical

doctrines of the Hindu religion, including reincarnation, karma and

dharma, vegetarianism, noninjury toward all beings, the importance of

the yamas and niyamas, the need for purity and personal encounter

with the Divine, gained through the several yogas and through

penance, pilgrimage and daily worship. Natha gurus refuse to

recognize caste distinctions in spiritual pursuits and initiate from

the lowest to the highest, according to spiritual worthiness. Swamis

of the Nandinatha lineage are often known as "market-place swamis,"

for they have historically lived among the people, rather than in

remote areas, and interacted freely with all regardless of social

status.

 

Publications

Throughout his life, Subramuniyaswami sought to establish, stabilize

and advance Hinduism throughout the world. Leading swamis of India

marveled at his ability to explain the most complex principles in a

uniquely lucid and straightforward English, perhaps the central part

of his written legacy, for until him the English representations of

Hinduism were mostly Victorian in style or academic and awkward.

Swami Chidananda Saraswati, President of the Divine Life Society,

Rishikesh, India, said, "All the Hindus of our global Hindu

brotherhood are verily indebted to Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami for

his super compendium of books on Hinduism so carefully compiled,

classified, carefully arranged, edited and published. Today it can be

unhesitatingly proclaimed that he is a genius of Hinduism. He has put

millions under a deep debt of gratitude by his unprecedented literary

work."

 

His trilogy, "Dancing with Siva,Living with Siva" and "Merging

with Siva" are his foremost books. Each has been through several

printings. All three are popular around the world for their easy

readability, and are used in American universities for Hindu courses

of study and comparative religion classes. "Dancing with Siva" is a

modern Hindu catechism and resource book in question and answer

format on the basics of Hinduism. Central to "Living with Siva" are

his lengthy explanations of the traditional restraints and

observances of Hinduism and his 365 guidelines for Hindu living, of

which 115-year-old Swami Bua of New York recently commented, "These

guidelines unfold one after the other with stunning simplicity. There

are instructions for everybody, for every situation -- for men,

women, parents, husbands, wives, businessmen, politicians,

scientists -- none is forgotten or left out."

 

In the 365 sutras, Subramuniyaswami addressed many controversial

issues of our day, one of which came into play at the end of his own

life. Hindu tradition has always provided for fasting under strict

community regulation as a means of accelerating one's departure from

the body in the case of terminal illness. Upon hearing his medical

prognosis, he meditated upon the path ahead and considering the

severity of his condition decided to fast to death, a practice called

prayopavesa in Sanskrit. He explained this tradition in his final

book, printed just days before his Mahasamadhi, Living with Siva: "To

leave the body in the right frame of mind, in the right

consciousness, through the highest possible chakra, is a key to

spiritual progress. The seers did not want unrelenting pain and

hopelessness to be the only possibilities facing a soul whose body

was failing, whose only experience was pain without reprieve. So they

prescribed a kindly way, a reasonable way, especially for the pain-

riddled, disabled elderly and the terminally diseased, to choose a

righteous release. What wonderful wisdom. No killer drugs. No

violence. No involvement of another human being, with all the karmic

entanglements that inevitably produces. No life-support systems. No

loss of the family wealth for prolonged health care or into the

hands of unscrupulous doctors. No lapsing into unconscious coma. No

loss of dignity. No unbearable anguish. And no sudden or impulsive

decision‹instead, a quiet, slow, natural exit from the body, coupled

with spiritual practices, with mantras and tantras, with scriptural

readings, deep meditation, reflection and listening to favorite

religious songs, with joyous release, with all affairs settled, with

full self-awareness and with recognition and support from friends and

relations."

 

The third book, "Merging with Siva," is on mystical Hinduism,

Subramuniyaswami's speciality. It is a summation of his yogic and

metaphysical insights gained through over 50 years of meditation and

inner practices. This master work, which is a kind of handbook for

seekers of light and serious aspirants wishing to follow the path

toward illumination and spiritual liberation, covers a wide range of

subjects including karma, the aura, the fourteen chakras or psychic

force centers of the body, understanding and transcending the various

states of mind and the methods to attain samadhi, or God Realization.

 

In addition to the trilogy, Subramuniyaswami produced "Loving

Ganesha," a work on Hinduism's favorite God; "Lemurian Scrolls,"

which explores the origins of mankind on Earth; "Weaver's Wisdom,"

the best English translation of the ancient Tamil ethical

scripture, "Tirukural;Saiva Dharma Sastras," an administrative

manual on his organization which has served to guide other Hindu

organizations in their efforts to transplant Hinduism on Western soil;

as well as dozens of pamphlets, posters and handouts. In response to a

request from the Hindus of Fiji, he prepared a children's course,

Saivite Hindu Religion, now taught to thousands of children around

the world.

 

One book in particular, "How to Become a Hindu," published in 2000,

encapsulated one entire aspect of Subramuniyaswami's mission: clear

and ethical religious conversion. Unlike many other Hindu teachers in

America, he was adverse to hiding or minimizing the Hindu origins of

his teachings. He insisted that his devotees be boldly and proudly

Hindus, and if they were not born into the faith, that they sincerely

convert to Hinduism if they wanted to follow him, including legally

changing their name to a Hindu name. The book was well received in

India, where people referred to it as "How to Become a Better Hindu."

The Shankaracharya of Puri, one of Hinduism's foremost leaders, said

it "will provide immense help to those who wish to enter the Hindu

fold, and also to the younger generation of Hindus." The book also

has greatly assisted with intermarriage of Hindus with those outside

their faith.

 

Subramuniyaswami enjoyed promoting his books, and in the course of his

travels for other events he would take time out to have book signings

at local book stores such as Borders and Barnes and Noble. These were

always wonderfully entertaining and informal events which allowed

people genuinely interested in his teachings an opportunity for a

personal encounter with the famed guru. The store would turn into a

temporary temple as devotees and readers piled flowers at Gurudeva's

feet. His helpers quickly learned that bookstores rarely stocked

enough books for the relatively large numbers who would come, and

compensated by bringing dozens of extra copies. At the end of the

evening, Subramuniyaswami would joke with the store's staff, "Well,

do I get the job?"

 

Subramuniyaswami founded Hinduism Today magazine in 1979 to fulfill

six purposes: 1) To foster Hindu solidarity as a unity in diversity

among all sects and lineages; 2) To inform and inspire Hindus

worldwide and people interested in Hinduism; 3) To dispel myths,

illusions and misinformation about Hinduism; 4) To protect, preserve

and promote the sacred Vedas and the Hindu religion; 5) To nurture

and monitor the ongoing spiritual Hindu renaissance; 6) To publish a

resource for Hindu leaders and educators who promote Sanatana Dharma.

The magazine is supplemented with a daily e-mailed summary of Hindu

news appearing in the world press called Hindu Press International.

The magazine is by far the most sophisticated Hindu periodical and

the only one which deals with all denominations of Hinduism and all

countries in which Hindus live. With a studied aversion to politics,

the magazine has successfully kept Hindus and non-Hindus alike

appraised of a wide range of issues, people and institutions. Its

website, along with that for Subramuniyaswami's teachings and a

section for general Hindu information, is by far the largest resource

on Hinduism on the Internet (start at www.himalayanacademy.com). A

unique part of his website is "A Daily Chronicle of Kauai's Hindu

Monstery," at which his answers to questions sent in by e-mail were

posted in both audio and transcriptions. Hundreds of such sessions

are archived there (see http://www.gurudeva.org/)

 

Ma Yoga Shakti, renowned teacher and Hinduism Today's Hindu of the

Year for 2000, said, "We are very proud of Hinduism Today. For more

than three decades, Subramuniyaswami, a highly enlightened soul of

the West -- a Hanuman of today, a reincarnation of Siva Himself --

has watered the roots of Hinduism with great zeal, faith, enthusiasm

and whole-heartedness." Sri Chinmoy, famed for his peace efforts

worldwide, said, "a uniquely powerful and beautiful international

magazine. Gurudeva has energized, inspired and united Hindus

throughout the world with his dynamic approach to an ancient faith."

Ram Swarup, perhaps India's most outstanding Hindu thinker, wrote,

"Hinduism Today presents Hinduism's new global face. It takes a

strategic lead in the effort to overcome the problem of self-

alienation and growing illiteracy among the Hindus of their heritage.

It is easily the best magazine Hindus have."

 

Iraivan Temple

The Iraivan Temple, now under construction at Kauai Aadheenam, was

conceived shortly after Subramuniyaswami had a powerful vision of God

Siva walking on the Aadheenam land in 1975. To permanently capture

the power of this great vision, he commissioned the construction of a

large temple to be entirely made of hand-carved granite. The land was

prepared for fifteen years, money raised, and India's greatest living

architect, V. Ganapathi Sthapati, was hired to design the edifice in

the thousand-year-old Chola style. The actual carving commenced in

1990 at a work site in Bangalore, India, a ceremony blessed by the

presence of Sri Sri Sri Trichyswami and Sri Sri Sri

Balagangadharanathaswami, the two foremost spiritual gurus of

Karnataka State, who so loved Gurudeva's vision of a temple carved in

India and erected in America that they gave him 11 acres of land and

supported every phase of the work as though it was their own temple

being built. On the arid desert lands, Gurudeva founded an entire

village for the project. Homes were erected for the 75 carvers and

their families, wells were dug, kitchens assembled, blacksmith

facilities were built along with enormous sheds to protect the stone

sculptors from the Indian sun. A Malaysian family, devotees of

Gurudeva, Jiva Rajasankara, with his wife and sons, were brought to

Bangalore to supervise the workers. The family oversees even today the

stones which are quarried, carved and trial-fitted, then shipped to

Kauai where starting in May, 2001, a team of seven master stone

carvers from India arrived to begin assembly. They are presently on

the sixth course of the temple; the work is expected to take several

more years to complete. At the time of Gurudeva's passing, they had

just completed the floor of the inner sanctum. This is the first all-

stone temple ever built in the Western Hemisphere, and one for which

Subramuniyaswami has insisted upon the most careful craftsmanship. He

directed the carvers to do everything by hand, and even when

efficiency experts urged him to permit hydraulic tools to speed up

the time-consuming and expensive project, he said no, telling them

that by having it done in the old way we would be passing along the

ancient, hands-only craft to one more generation. The entire temple,

which is taking hundreds of man years to complete, is being produced

in the same way that great carvers like Michelangelo and Rubin did

their masterpieces, with a simple hammer and an array of chisels.

Enshrined in the temple will be a 700-pound single-pointed quartz

crystal, possibly the largest in the world, to represent God Siva in

His transcendent state.

 

Special Issues

Subramuniyaswami actively opposed deceptive and coercive

proselytization methods by other religions in India and other parts

of the world. He put his concerns directly before leaders of other

faiths in public forums and in private. He also raised these

controversies at various international conferences and demanded

standards be established for "ethical conversion." At the moment when

Nepal changed from a monarchy to a democracy in 1990, his influence

was instrumental in countering veiled threats to foreign aid that

would be held back from this needy nation should Nepal declare itself

"Hindu." As a result, Nepal remains the only officially Hindu nation

in the world.

 

In the 1990s Subramuniyaswami became aware of the pervasive use of

corporal punishment in the homes and schools of Hindus. He

immediately began a campaign to "Stop the War in the Home" (see

source for this talk at end) and to change the policies of schools.

He directed his own followers in many nations to stop hitting or

abusing, even verbally, their children under any circumstances, and

instructed them to begin teaching nonviolent methods of positive

discipline within their local community. For this, he partnered

with Dr. Jane Nelsen, one of the great voices of enlightened

discipline for children. She visited him on Kauai and together they

worked out programs in Hindu communities around the world. This

campaign, which is paralleled in other parts of the world among

people of other faiths, is bearing fruit, with dozens of schools in

India now forbidding corporal punishment, and thousands of Hindu

parents reconsidering their own methods of child rearing.

 

When he addressed the 1,200 delegates to the Millennium Peace Summit

of World Religious and Spiritual Leaders at the United Nations in

August, 2000, he said in part, "To stop the wars in the world, our

best long-term solution is to stop the war in the home. It is here

that hatred begins, that animosities with those who are different

from us are nurtured, that battered children learn to solve their

problems with violence. This is true of every religious community."

 

Within his own tradition of Saiva Siddhanta, Subramuniyaswami worked

throughout his life to create "pure Saivites," as he said shortly

before his passing. He accomplished this both through his

publications and through his personal teaching. Relying upon his own

intuition and profound mystical powers, he clarified and purified all

of the Saivite teachings of his tradition, discarding that which

could not be substantiated through his own inner experience. His

staff researched thousands of topics and consulted regularly with

hundreds of scholars, linguists, historians, theologians and other

experts, all of whom enthusiastically assisted this great spiritual

leader. He never engaged in theological dispute with other sects of

Hinduism, but rather encouraged each to be true to their own

traditions and philosophy. For decades he worked to create a Hindu

solidarity by encouraging all shared beliefs and practices, rather

than emphasizing areas of disagreement. As a result, spiritual

leaders of all traditions embraced him and counted him a friend and

ally. There has never been a guru so beloved by other gurus, nor one

so fond of a brother swami. Over the years hundreds were either

visited by him in their ashrams or found their way to his ashram in

the Pacific Ocean.

 

Influence

In addition to his work within the global Hinduism, Subramuniyaswami

also had special relations with a number of communities including the

Sri Lankan Tamils, the Saivites of Mauritius, Malaysia and Fiji and

his fellow Kauaians.

 

In South India, these theological centers, known as aadheenams,

perform many functions. They found and manage temples, hold endowment

investments and land, train swamis and priests, maintain libraries,

support pundits, arbitrate theological issues, give spiritual

counseling and teach. They have the authority to clarify and

reinterpret scripture and to revise customary practices of their

communities. They also deal with worldly matters and are called upon

to settle disputes in the community, to advise politicians, even

to help arrange marriages. Subramuniyaswami was called upon to

perform all these functions in these various communities.

 

By far his greatest efforts and most focused energy went toward the

2.5 million Sri Lankan Tamils, especially after a disastrous civil

war struck the country in 1983. Just prior to its onset he toured the

country, addressing hundreds of thousands of Tamils. After 1983,

Tamil refugees poured out of Sri Lanka and made their way to Canada,

America, Germany, England, Australia and dozens of other countries.

He founded the first Refugee Relief Fund for Sri Lankans in 1985,

collecting money in the West and sending it to the war-torn region of

Jaffna. He established and maintained contact with each of these

communities, advised them on how to adjust to their circumstances and

to remain staunch Saivite Hindus. In his last Innersearch travel-

study program, he visited many of these communities in Europe, and

celebrated with them their successful adaptation to their new homes.

In Denmark in August of 2001 he laid the foundation stone for an

Amman temple and visited other temple communities in Sweden, Norway,

Germany and the UK.

 

No group of Hindus counted Gurudeva their champion more than the noble

Saivite temple priests. Most especially he encouraged and defended the

Sivacharya priests of South India, who are traditionally attached to

the aadheenams. He helped restore the dignity of this priesthood and

encouraged young men born in the priest families to follow in the

profession of their fathers instead of opting for higher-paying but

totally secular jobs. He instructed the trustees of these temples

outside of India he helped get started to treat their priests with

respect, pay them decent wages and provide proper living facilities.

He encouraged priests to start their own temples, which a few have

done in Canada and Europe. He has always considered the status and

well-being of the Hindu priesthood to be the most accurate measure of

the well-being of Hinduism in general, and his successor and monks

will continue to champion the cause of Hindu priests around the

world. The priests in turn assisted Subramuniyaswami's mission at

every turn, for example, by sending young Sivachariya priests to

train his monks in temple worship, a training heretofore never

imparted to anyone outside their caste.

 

Subramuniyaswami first visited Malaysia in June of 1980 with two of

his swamis, and then again in January, 1981, traveling with 33

devotees for an Innersearch program which included India and Sri

Lanka. Over the next few years, Hindus attracted to

Subramuniyaswami's teachings started the country's very first classes

in Hinduism, held after-hours at public schools. These classes and

the widespread distribution of Hinduism Today magazine had a huge

impact on Hindus in Malaysia, a Muslim nation where Hindus are just

10% of the population. Gurudeva's dedicated members in this country

disseminated clear Hindu teachings to the youth and instilled a pride

in Hindu religion as a result. He sent one of his monastics to teach

classes all over the country. In 1986 the first Hindu youth camps in

Malaysia were conducted by his devotees, which inspired all the other

Hindu organizations to also hold youth camps. More recently, he's

advocated abolishing corporal punishment in the homes and schools,

directing his devotees to teach classes for other Hindu parents in

nonviolent means of parenting and to change school policies regarding

corporal punishment of students. At a national level, the cumulative

impact of his work has been a dramatic increase in the pride of

Hindus. One person said, "He has breathed new life into Hinduism for

the Hindus of Malaysia." Today three of Gurudeva's swamis are from

Malaysia.

 

Manon Mardemootoo, a long-standing devotee of Subramuniyaswami and a

prominent attorney, offered this summary of Subramuniyaswami's work

in the island nation of Mauritius:

 

"Subramuniyaswami came to Mauritius in the 1980s at the request of

Hindu elders who were worried about the high rate of conversion from

the Hindu fold. In January, 1982, he spent an entire month there

traveling from village to village with one of his swamis. Then

Gurudeva sent a French-speaking monk who at one time was holding 25

classes around the island. He conveyed Subramuniyaswami's teachings

on the three worlds, the story of our soul, our great God and Gods,

the pillars of Hinduism, karma, dharma, etc., all of which gave us a

glimpse of our incomparable heritage, the greatness of Hinduism and

the oneness of mankind. He removed misconceptions in the Tamil

Saivite community. Many of us came to understand that Sivaratri was

not a festival of our Hindi-speaking brothers only, nor was Ganesha

Chaturti a purely Maurati festival, but rather both were major

festivals for all Hindus.

 

"The establishment of Subramuniyaswami's mission was made official by

the Saiva Siddhanta Church Act passed in Parliament in July, 1988. He

instituted the printing of a local edition of Hinduism Today in 1986

on the island and set up a monastery on a 12-acre parcel at Riviere

du Rempart. Hundreds of people would come for the weekly homas held

at that time. Today the major part of this land has been dedicated to

a spiritual park, a present of Subramuniyaswami to the people of

Mauritius and the only one of its nature in the country. It is now

regularly visited by pilgrims from the world over. The Spiritual Park

was created at a cost of several million rupees, all donated by local

Hindus. The most elaborate part of it is the Ganesha Mandapam, with

its nine-foot tall Pancha Mukha Ganapati. As well, equally large

granite icons of Lord Murugan, in His form as the six-faced Arumugam,

and Lord Siva, in the form of Dakshinamurthi, the silent teacher,

also grace the spiritual park.

 

"We have had a regular flow of monastics from our headquarters in

Hawaii, Kauai Aadheenam, to the monastery. They created the Spiritual

Park and held retreats and seminars for thousands of youth around the

island. Subramuniyaswami advised his family members to use ayurvedic

medicine and adopt a healthy diet, including raw sugar, brown rice

and brown bread. As well he encouraged the wearing of Hindu dress at

home, temples and during festivals. Several Mauritians have completed

a six-month training at our headquarters in Kauai, where we presently

have a Mauritian monk, Sadhaka Tyaganatha, hailing from the same

village of Rempart, who is one of the Aadheenam's foremost priests.

 

"Since 1999, Subramuniyaswami has been training our members in

positive discipline, the concept of education without violence at

home and school and the only way to completely eradicate violence

from our society. Gurudeva will be remembered for the sense of

discipline in spiritual life and excellence at work which he

instilled among his members and the need to pursue daily sadhanas for

spiritual progress and peaceful living in the spirit of ahimsa in all

aspects of life. This is the present sadhana of members, to take

these teachings into the public and make it a living reality.

Subramuniyaswami succeeded in creating a sense of self-respect and a

new-found identity among the Hindus of Mauritius.

 

"He will also be remembered for two meetings to promote community

harmony. The first was with Hindu leaders to strengthen the ties

within the Hindu community. Then in 1995, under the auspices of the

municipal Council of Port Louis, he met with religious leaders of all

faiths to strengthen the bonds of friendship, respect and harmony

among the people of Mauritius. Today, in significant part because of

Subramuniyaswami's contribution, Mauritius is cited everywhere,

including on the floor of the United Nations, as an example of

peaceful coexistence in a multi-racial, multi-religious nation."

 

Over his 52 years of ministry, Subramuniyaswami has helped the Hindus

of England, Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, Trinidad, Guyana, Canada,

New Zealand, Australia, Fiji, Singapore, and many more countries.

Indeed, there is probably not a corner of the Hindu world which has

not been impacted by his work.

 

Even though Subramuniyaswami's Kauai Aadheenam is located outside of

India and in a largely non-Hindu community, still he found himself

performing the traditional functions of an aadheenam for the local

community. He was a key member of "Vision Kauai," a group of

community leaders including politicians, business people and

spiritual individuals wanting to create a positive future for the

island's community. He worked monthly with the mayor of Kauai, with

county council members, the university provost, the superintendent of

schools, business and agricultural leaders, to bring a unity to the

ethnically diverse island of 55,000 and to offer his vision for

a secure, drug-free future for the children. It was a message he

carried forward on local TV and radio programs, at Rotary Club

breakfasts to which he was invited to speak, and in person. He would

from time to time be sought out for advice by community leaders on

the important issues facing the island. Hundreds of residents, well-

to-do and not so well-to-do alike, counted him as their easily

approachable friend and counselor, remaining only remotely aware of

his stature in the Hindu world. He was, in fact, Kauai's most

renowned citizen, the only one with an extensive global impact. This

was recognized in formal ways by the governor of the state, the mayor

and county council. Indeed, the outpouring of gratitude and

appreciation from island residents upon his passing was at times as

deep and as heartfelt as for those of his close disciples.

 

"Just before his passing," said the monastery spokesperson, "He asked

devotees worldwide to carry his work and institutions forward with

unstinting vigor, to keep one another strong on the spiritual path,

to work diligently on their personal spiritual disciplines and to

live every moment in harmony and love for all peoples. His monks,

forged in the fires of his wisdom and love, are well-prepared to keep

his mission potent and effective. Equally, his family devotees are

pure, one-minded and deeply committed. These two communities will

continue the work together: building the Iraivan Temple, managing the

Spiritual Park in Mauritius, shepherding souls on the Saivite path of

enlightenment, continuing the many publications, teaching children

their Saivite Hindu religion, preserving traditional culture and art,

protecting Hindu priests and the indigenous faiths of the world,

contributing to our local Kauai community, guiding the future of

Hinduism around the globe and working to reduce violence, child-

beating and spouse abuse."

 

Website for extensive further information and high-resolution photos

suitable for publication:

http://www.gurudeva.dynip.com/~htoday/press_releases/

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