Guest guest Posted December 4, 2004 Report Share Posted December 4, 2004 Dear ISKCON, Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to Srila Prabhupada. I don't want to take on a huge topic in this letter, but let me make a few partial statements. Maybe later I can add them. You, dear institution, are such a complex entity that there is little I can say that everyone will accept as fact. I know your history, especially of the early days, and that's always fun to describe. Prabhupada compared your birth to the appearance of Lord Varaha from Lord Brahma's nostril. He was small and then grew quickly. You first appeared in Srila Prabhupada's mind and then grew quickly in America, attracting dozens, then hundreds, then thousands of young men and women, Prabhupada was the magnet that drew us-Prabhupada with his Hare Krsna mantra, krsna-prasadam, and knowledge of Krsna. It's safe to say, therefore, that you are a spiritual entity. Lord Krsna has appeared in you just as much as He has appeared in His other forms in Kali-yuga. The complexity comes when we start describing the wrongs that have occurred in ISKCON in the name of ISKCON. Are you, ISKCON, Vaikuntha or even a sample of Vaikuntha? Some say that the original ISKCON, Prabhupada's movement, no longer exists. They think we are left with only a corrupt outer shell. Others say that whoever criticizes ISKCON is a demon. In other words, some equate you with the Krsna consciousness movement, the flow of Lord Caitanya's sankirtana, and that you will always remain victorious despite all appearances to the contrary. Others don't agree. They say that you are not the representative of pure Krsna consciousness, but an institutionalized, GBC-governed entity that moves along from year to year veering sometimes to the left and sometimes to the right, but not often resolving its problems. I said at the beginning of this letter that I wasn't going to bite off more than I could chew and try to cut through the various opinions. What's prompting me to write this letter today is that I just received a letter in which someone attempted to describe my own relationship with ISKCON. This person said that I seem to have major disagreements with the authorities of this movement. The letter implied that if I actually followed my own inclinations, I might leave ISKCON entirely. The person who wrote this letter is himself disgusted with ISKCON and has left in search of better association. That letter makes me want to address my own connection to you, ISKCON, Prabhupada's movement. First, I do believe that you are still Prabhupada's movement. I don't think that I am just playing it safe in my lack of criticism of this movement. The person who wrote me criticized me for being apathetic toward the wrongs in ISKCON and suggested that if I were a real witness in truth, I would speak out against those wrongs. I have included a response to that: let me correct my own wrongs. That includes not getting entangled in what I may see as wrong behaviour of ISKCON. It's a quiet method of reform; it's nonpolitical, and it's what I can do best. You are still Prabhupada's movement. I don't think the saying "ISKCON, with all thy faults, I love thee" is outmoded. If I can say it deeply despite the wrongs and by being persistently loyal, then it's the best position I can take. What are these wrongs? You know the charges. We went wrong in drastic ways after Srila Prabhupada's disappearance. The top leadership gets the blame for that. Some say there has been no reform of the basic wrong attitudes which drive devotees away--manipulative power-hungry leaders, branding as heretics devotees who have differing opinions, offending Gaudiya Vaisnavas from other camps, and so on. ISKCON, with all they faults I love thee. I have seen and felt how beautiful it is to be in a temple, gathering together with your members to see the Deities at mangala arati, or at an afternoon arati with only a few devotees present and late sunlight streaming through the window. I've seen the preaching drive in your members as they risk their lives to distribute Prabhupada's books and maintain you in unsettled places in this material world. Sentimental? You could say so, but such a skeptic would think that devotion to Krsna was sentimental. Remember that sensational "true crime" book, Monkey on a Stick? The thing that horrified an ISKCON member on looking through that book was how they had distorted the quality of ISKCON life. The authors had distorted the facts and were even often mistaken. They did have the police records-who killed whom, who misappropriated funds, who misled devotees, who fell down--but even in those cases, their description of what it was like for the average temple devotee was bogus and based on no experience. The author couldn't see into the devotees' hearts and he couldn't understand Krsna's statement that even if a devotee commits abominable behavior, he is still rightly situated. They don't know how precious and rare it is for someone in this world to render sincere service to Srila Prabhupada and Krsna in this movement. It's true that one can render sincere service to Krsna and it is probably possible to render service to Prabhupada outside of ISKCON. But if it can be done outside of ISKCON, why can't it be done inside ISKCON? If there are sincere persons both within and without ISKCON, then I choose to be within. That's where Prabhupada wants me to be as far as I know. If ISKCON were devoid of sincere devotees and has actually become corrupt, then who could follow it and say that it was what Prabhupada wanted? But I would be very, very afraid of deciding that ISKCON was so corrupt that Prabhupada would no longer want me to serve here. When I meet up with Prabhupada again, how can I say "But Prabhupada, I thought ISKCON was completely bogus and that we should leave?" His voice echoes in his mind: "Who said? Who is that rascal?" I admit that I fail to face up to all of ISKCON's faults. I feel too protective and loyal. I don't want to make waves. Besides, it's not my nature to find faults and then proclaim them. People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. I am guilty of not being an all-out reformer, and thus I'm implicated in ISKCON's wrongs by default. I also admit to failing in the second half of the expression, "ISKCON, with all thy faults-I love thee". If I loved you, ISKCON, I would be more active and would try to make myself a more worthy member. If I loved you more, I would see the spiritual world in the movement as it exists in this confederation of temples, the ISKCON that publishes Back to Godhead magazine, the ISKCON that goes on Navadvipa and Vrindavana parikrama, and yes, the ISKCON that blows its own horn, sometimes in a superficial way, in the ISKCON World Review. The ISKCON of the businessman devotee cashing in on the market of devotional items, the ISKCON that also sells pure bhakti. Many, many ISKCON devotees love Srila Prabhupada and serve him with their body, mind, and words. I don't think that this can be matched anywhere else in the world. That is what attracts me and binds me to ISKCON. One devotee was telling me how her co-workers discovered that she was a Hare Krsna. She told them that she sometimes meditates by chanting mantras. One of her colleagues queried her further, "What mantras do you chant?" She took a chance, smiled, and said, "Hare Krsna Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare,/ Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare." Her associate exclaimed, "You mean you are with those people who drive around singing from a truck?" (He was referring to the flatbed truck the New York devotees use to perform harinama.) The devotee blurted out, "Yes, the very ones!" George Harrison said something similar when he aligned himself with the devotees. He said that when it is time to be counted, he would prefer to stand with the devotees rather than with the nondevotees. I think like that to, that I want to be counted among the very ones, the Prabhupada fanatics, the devotees with all their faults-of ISKCON. "ISKCON, with all thy faults, please accept me." EXTRACT FROM CHURNING THE MILK OCEAN, circa 1993, by Satsvarupa Maharaja Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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