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The Life of Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura

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Introduction

 

The Life of Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura

 

About the year 1500 A.D., the incarnation of God Sri Krsna Caitanya

Mahaprabhu began the Hare Krishna Movement in Navadwipa, a city in the

Indian province of Bengal. This movement, based on the philosophy of ancient

Sanskrit texts of devotion to Krsna like the Bhagavad-gita and

Srimad-Bhagavatam, spread all over India within a short time. The movement

popularized sankirtana, the congregational chanting of the maha-mantra Hare

Krsna Hare Krsna Krsna Krsna Hare Hare Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare

Hare, as the most effective means of God realization for the present Age of

Kali, a time of rampant faithlessness, sin and materialism. After 1750 A.D.,

the influence of the Hare Krsna Movement seemed to wane. Many sects of

sahajiyas (cheap pseudodevotees) sprouted up, each claiming to be the true

purveyors of Vaisnava-dharma (the religion of Lord Visnu or Krsna). Because

of their bad character, the sahajiyas brought disrepute upon the pure

movement of love of God begun by Caitanya Mahaprabhu. In the 1800's, an

eternally perfect devotee of Krsna descended from the spiritual world to

the material world to revive the Hare Krsna Movement and to initiate its

expansion beyond the borders of India. This was Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura.

 

Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura was born on Sunday, Sept. 2, 1838 in Biranagara

(Ulagrama) in the Nadia district of Bengal. He was the seventh son of Raja

Krsnananda Datta, a great devotee of Lord Nityananda. He was also known as

the great grandson of Madana Mohana and the third son of his Godfather

Anandacandra. He would be known as daitya-kulera prahlada (Prahlada in the

family of demons). This was because Vaisnavism was not very much respected

in his family; on his mother's side, there was no respect for Vaisnavism at

all. He was named Kedaranatha Datta by his Godfather.

 

His childhood was spent at the mansion of his maternal grandfather Mustauphi

Mahasaya, in Biranagara. His environment at this time was very opulent. He

got

his elementary education at the primary school started by his grandmother.

Later he attended an English school in Krishnanagara, started by the King of

Nadia; he left that school when his older brother died unexpectedly of

cholera.

 

When he was 11 years old, his father passed away. Subsequently, the grant of

land that had been conferred upon his grandmother changed owners; at this

time

the family fell into a condition of poverty - their great wealth proved to

be

illusory. Still, Kedaranatha Datta passed over these difficulties with great

endurance.

 

His mother arranged a marriage for him when he was 12 (in the year 1850) to

the 5 year old daughter of Madhusudana Mitra Mahasaya, a resident of Rana

Ghata.

 

Around this time Kedaranatha's uncle Kasiprasada Ghosh Mahasaya Thakur, who

had mastered British education, came to Ulagrama after the death of his

maternal grandfather. He schooled young Kedaranatha at his home in Calcutta;

this was at first resisted by the boy's mother, but by the time he was 13 he

was allowed to go to the big city.

 

His uncle's house was situated in the Heduya district of central Calcutta.

Kasiprasada was the central figure of the literary circle of his time, being

the editor of the Hindu Intelligencer newspaper; many writers came to him to

learn the art of writing in correct English. Kedaranatha assisted

Kasiprasada

by judging manuscripts submitted to the newspaper. Kedaranatha studied

Kasiprasada's books and also frequented the public library. He attended

Calcutta's Hindu Charitable Institution high school and became an expert

English reader, speaker, and writer.

 

Kedaranatha became ill from the salty water of Calcutta. He returned to

Ulagrama and was treated by a Muslim soothsayer who predicted that the

village

of Biranagara would soon become pestilence-ridden and deserted. The Muslim

also predicted Kedaranatha would become recognized as a great devotee of

Lord

Krsna.

 

In the year 1856, when he was 18, Kedaranatha entered college in Calcutta.

He

started writing extensively in both English and Bengali; these essays were

published in local journals. He also lectured in both languages. He studied

English literature at this time extensively, and taught speechmaking to a

person who later became a well-known orator in the British Parliament.

Between

the years 1857-1858 he composed a two part English epic entitled "The

Poriade", which he planned to complete in 12 books. These two books

described

the life of Porus, who met Alexander the Great.

 

Dvijendranatha Thakur, the eldest son of Maharsi Devendranatha Tagore and

brother of the Nobel Prize winning poet Rabindranatha Tagore, was

Kedaranatha's best friend during these years. He assisted Kedaranatha in his

studies of Western religious literatures. Kedaranatha used to call

Dvijendranatha "baro dada", or big brother.

 

He was very taken by Christian theology, and found it more interesting than

Hindu monism. He would spend many hours comparing the writings of Channing,

Theodore Parker, Emerson and Newman. At the British-Indian Society he gave a

lecture on the evolution of matter through the material mode of goodness.

 

At the end of 1858 Kedaranatha returned to Biranagara and found that the

Muslim soothsayer's prediction about that place had come true: it was ruined

and deserted. Kedaranatha brought his mother and paternal grandmother with

him

from there to Calcutta. Soon after he went to Orissa to visit his paternal

grandfather, Rajavallabha Datta, formerly an important Calcutta gentleman

who

was now living as an ascetic in the Orissan countryside. His days were

coming

to a close, and he wanted Kedaranatha to be with him when he departed this

world. After receiving his grandfather's last instructions, he traveled to

all

the monasteries and temples in the state of Orissa.

 

Kedaranatha began to consider the question of the means of his livelihood.

He

was not interested in business, as he'd seen how the "necessary dishonesty"

of

the trade world had morally weakened the merchant class. He decided to

become

a school teacher. He established a school for English education in the

village

of Kendrapara near Chutigrama, in Orissa, thus becoming a pioneer in English

teaching in that state. He also could see the oppressive power wielded by

the

landowners of Chutigrama. After some time he went to Puri and passed a

teacher's examination; he got a teacher's post in a Cuttack school and later

became headmaster of a school in Bhadraka and then in Madinipura. His work

was

noted by the schoolboard authorities.

 

In Bhadraka, his first son Annada Prasada (Acyutananda) was born, in 1860.

He

published a book that year in English that described all the asramas and

temples in the state; this book received favorable mention in the work

called

"Orissa" by British historian Sir William Hunter. Hunter praised

Kedaranatha's

moral and religious character.

 

As the headmaster of the Medinipura high school, Kedaranatha studied many

popular Bengali religious sects, particularly their philosophies and

practices. He concluded they were all cheap. He came to understand that the

only real religion that had ever been established in Bengal was that of Sri

Caitanya Mahaprabhu; unfortunately, His movement was not well-represented.

Kedaranatha could not even get a copy of the 16th century Bengali biography

of

Lord Caitanya's activities on earth called Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, despite

searching in bookshops, libraries and monasteries all over Bengal.

 

Kedaranatha's first wife died, so in the town of Jakapura he married

Bhagyavati De. In 1861 Kedaranatha accepted the post of Deputy Magistrate in

the Government of Bengal. Then he became Collectorate Officer after seeing

the

corruption of the government workers. He established an organization called

the "Bhratr Samaja". He wrote an English book in 1863 called "Our Wants." At

this time he also constructed a home in Rana Ghata. Later in 1863 he stayed

at

Burdwan, where he composed two novel poems in Bengali: "Vijinagrama"

(deserted

village) and "Sannyasi." Volume 39 of the 1863 Calcutta Review praised these

poems, saying, "We hope the author will continue to give his countrymen the

benefit of his elegant and unassuming pen, which is quite free from those

objectionable licenses of thought and expression which abound in many dramas

recently published. The want of the day is the creation of a literature for

Hindu ladies, and we trust that many more educated natives will have the

good

sense to devote their time and abilities to the attainment of this most

desirable aim." The rhyme and style of these two poems were original; they

gave birth to a new way of writing poetry in the Bengali language.

 

In the year 1866 Kedaranatha took the position of Deputy Register with the

power of a Deputy Collector and Deputy Magistrate in the district of

Chapara.

He also became quite fluent in Persian and Urdu. In a placed called Saran in

Chapara, a clique of tea planters made unjust demands of him; he

successfully

opposed them. And while at Saran he visited the Gautam Asrama at Godana.

Desiring to establish a school for teaching nyaya-sastra, he delivered a

speech there (in 1866) which was well-received. The school was successfully

established, the foundation-stone being laid in 1883 by Sir Rivers Thomson,

after whom the school was named. Though Kedaranatha had no further part in

the

project after his speech, the talk he gave was instrumental in securing

public

aid for the school. Also in 1866 he translated the Balide Registry Manual

into

Urdu, which was circulated by the government throughout the United Provinces

of Agra and Oudh; this manual was used by the registration departments of

those areas.

 

Kedaranatha was transferred to Purniya from Chapara where he took charge of

the government and judicial departments; he was then transferred to

Dinajapur

(West Bengal) in 1868, becoming the Deputy Magistrate. At this time he

received copies of the Srimad Bhagavatam and Sri Caitanya-caritamrta from

Calcutta.

 

He read Caitanya-caritamrta repeatedly; his faith in Krishna developed until

he was absorbed in Krsna consciousness day and night. He incessantly

submitted

heartfelt prayers for the Lord's mercy. He came to understand the supreme

majesty and power of the one and only Absolute Personality of Godhead Sri

Krsna. He published a song about Lord Caitanya entitled Saccidananda-

premalankara. In 1869, while serving as deputy magistrate under the

government

of Bengal in Dinajapur, he delivered a speech in the form of a treatise he

had

written on the Srimad-Bhagavatam to a big congregation of many prominent men

of letters from many parts of India and England.

 

He was transferred to Camparana, during which time his second son, Radhika

Prasada, was born. In Camparana people used to worship a ghost in a banyan

tree which had the power to influence the mind of the local judge to decide

in

the favor of the worshiper. Kedaranatha engaged the father of Pandita

Ramabhai, a famous girl scholar, to read Srimad-Bhagavatam under the tree;

after 1 month, the tree crashed to the ground, and many people found faith

in

the Srimad-Bhagavatam.

 

>From Camparana he went to Puri which engladdened his heart no end because

the

holy city of Puri, the site of the famous Krishna temple of Jagannatha, was

where Caitanya Mahaprabhu had resided for 18 years as a sannyasi

(renunciate).

 

Near Puri, in the town of Kamanala, there lived a yogi named Bisakisena, who

would lean into a fire while sitting closeby, then return to an erect

sitting

posture. In this way he'd rock back and forth over the flames and would also

produce fire from his head. He had two companions going by the names Brahma

and Siva; Bisakisena himself claimed to be Maha Vishnu. Some wealthy

landowners of Orissa came under his sway and were providing funds for the

construction of a temple. They also sent him women with whom he engaged in

"rasa-lila" enjoyments. Bisakisena declared he'd drive the British rulers

out

of Orissa and make himself king. Such inflammatory statements were

circulated

all around Orissa. The British thought him a revolutionary, so the District

Governor of the National Government of Bengal drew up arrest orders; but

nobody in Orissa dared to act upon these orders, as they all feared the

yogi's

power.

 

Mr. Ravenshaw, district commissioner for Orissa, requested Kedaranatha to

bring Bisakisena to justice. Kedaranatha went personally to Bisakisena, who

showed some powers and informed Kedaranatha that he knew well who he was and

his mission. He warned Kedaranatha that since he (Bisakisena) was the Lord,

he'd better not interfere with him. Kedaranatha replied by acknowledging

Bisakisena's accomplishments in yoga and invited him to come to Puri where

he

could see the Jagannatha temple. Bisakisena haughtily said, "Why should I

come

to see Jagannatha? He's only a hunk of wood; I am the Supreme in person."

Instantly furious, Kedaranatha arrested the rogue, brought him to Puri and

threw him in jail, where he was guarded by 3 dozen Muslim constables and 72

policemen from Cuttack day and night. "Brahma" and "Siva" avoided arrest by

claiming they'd been forced by Bisakisena to do as they'd done; but Mr.

Taylor, subdivision officer at Kodar, later prosecuted them.

 

Kedaranatha tried Bisakisena in Puri. The trial lasted 18 days, during which

time thousands of people gathered outside the courtroom demanding

Bisakisena's

release. On 6th day of the trial Kedaranatha's second daughter Kadambini

(age

7) became seriously ill and nearly died; but within a day she had recovered.

Kedaranatha knew it was the power of the yogi at work. He remarked, "Yes,

let

us all die, but this rascal must be punished." The very next day in court

the

yogi announced he'd shown his power and would show much more; he suggested

that Kedaranatha should release him at once or face worse miseries. On the

last day of the trial Kedaranatha himself became ill from high fever and

suffered exactly as his daughter had done for one whole day. But Kedaranatha

pronounced the man guilty and sentenced him to 18 months for political

conspiracy. When Bisakisena was being readied for jailing, one Dr. Walter,

the

District Medical Officer, cut off all the yogi's long hair. The yogi kept

his

mystic power in his hair and hadn't eaten or drunk during the whole trial,

so

when his hair was shorn he fell to the floor like a dead man and had to be

taken by stretcher to jail. After 3 months he was moved to the central jail

at

Midnapura where he took poison and died in the year 1873.

 

In Puri, Kedaranatha studied the Srimad-Bhagavatam with the commentary of

Sridhara Swami, copied out in longhand the Sat-sandarbhas of Jiva Goswami

and

made a special study of Rupa Goswami's Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu.

 

Between the years 1874 and 1893, Kedaranatha spent much time in seclusion

chanting the holy name (though he still executed his worldly duties

perseveringly). He wrote several books in Sanskrit such as Tattva-sutra,

Datta-kaustubha and Tattva-viveka. He wrote many other books in Bengali such

as the Kalyana-kalpataru; in 1874 he composed Datta-kaustubha in Sanskrit.

 

While in Puri he established a Vaisnava discussion society known as the

Bhagavat-samsad in the Jagannatha-vallabha gardens, where the famous saint

Sri

Ramananda Raya stayed in meditation hundreds of years before. All the

prominent Vaisnavas joined this group except for Raghunatha dasa Babaji,

known

as Siddha Purusha. He thought that Kedaranatha was unauthorized, as he did

not

wear kanthi-mala (neckbeads) or tilaka (clay markings on 12 places of the

body). Moreover, he advised other Vaisnavas to avoid Kedaranatha's

association.

 

But soon thereafter Raghunatha dasa Babaji contracted a deathly illness.

Lord

Jagannatha appeared to him in a dream and told him to pray for the mercy of

Kedaranatha if he at all wanted release from the illness and death. He did

so;

Kedaranatha gave him special medicines and cured him. Raghunatha dasa Babaji

was blessed with a true awareness of Kedaranatha's spiritual position.

 

A well-known saint named Svarupa dasa Babaji did his worship at Satasana

near

the ocean in Puri. Svarupa showed much affection for Kedaranatha and gave

him

many profound instructions on the chanting of the holy name of Krishna.

 

A popular upstart holy man named Caran dasa Babaji preached and printed

books

advising a perverted style of kirtana (congregational chanting of the holy

names of God), advising that one should chant the Hare Krishna Mantra in

japa

and Nitai Gaura Radhe Syama Hare Krsna Hare Rama in kirtana. Kedaranatha

preached long and hard to him; after a long time Caran dasa Babaji came to

his

senses and begged forgiveness from Kedaranatha, admitting his fault in

spreading this nonsense fashion of chanting all over Bengal. Six months

later

Caran dasa went mad and died in great distress.

 

Kedaranatha became manager of the Jagannatha temple. He used his government

powers to establish strict regularity in the worship of the Deity. In the

Jagannatha temple courtyard he set up a Bhakti Mandapa, where daily

discourses

of Srimad Bhagavatam were held. Kedaranatha would spend long hours

discussing

Krsna and chanting the holy name, especially at the important sites of Sri

Caitanya's pastimes like the Tota Gopinatha temple, the tomb of Haridasa

Thakura, the Siddha Bakula tree and the Gambhira room. He made notes on the

Vedanta-sutra which were used by Sri Syamalala Goswami in the edition of the

Govinda Bhasya by Baladeva Vidyabhusana that he published.

 

Near the Jagannatha-vallabha gardens, in a large house adjacent to the

Narayana Chata Matha, on the 5th day of the dark fortnight of Magha in the

year 1874, the fourth son of Kedaranatha took birth. He was named Bimala

Prasada (and would later be known as Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati

Prabhupada, the spiritual master of Srila A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami

Prabhupada,

founder of the International Society for Krsna Consciousness). Two years

earlier, Kamala Prasada, his third son, had taken birth.

 

In 1874 Kedaranatha discovered the Raja (king) of Puri had misappropriated

80

thousand rupees for his own sense pleasures. This money belonged to the

temple, so Kedaranatha forced the Raja to pay for the offerings of food to

Lord Jagannatha that are made 52 times daily. This diminished the money

quickly. The raja was angry at Kedaranatha and therefore, with the help of

50

brahmin priests, began a yajna (fire sacrifice) meant for killing

Kedaranatha

which went on for 30 days; when the last oblations were offered into the

fire,

the king's own son and not Kedaranatha died.

 

Kedaranatha left Puri on special business, returning to Bengal where he

visited the holy towns of Navadwip, Santipura and Kalana. He was put in

charge

of the subdivision Mahisarekha in Haora. After that he was transferred to

Bhadraka. In August 1878 he was made head of the subdivision Naraila in the

Yashohan district.

 

While in Naraila he published two books on Krsna that became famous around

the

world: Sri Krsna-samhita and Kalyana-kalpataru. In a letter dated April 16,

1880, Dr. Reinhold Rost wrote to Kedaranatha: "By representing Krishna's

character and his worship in a more sublime and transcendental light than

has

hitherto been the custom to regard him, you have rendered an essential

service

to your co-religionists, and no one would have taken more delight in your

work

than my departed friend Goldstuecker, the sincerest and most zealous

advocate

the Hindus ever had in Europe."

 

In 1877 Varada Prasada was born, his fifth son; in 1878, Viraja Prasada, the

sixth son, was born: both appeared at Rana Ghata.

 

Kedaranatha took formal Vaisnava initiation from Bipin Bihari Goswami, who

was

descended from the Jahnava family of Baghnapara. At the same time, his

seventh

son, Lalita Prasada, appeared at Rana Ghata.

 

Within a few years after his initiation, Kedaranatha was awarded by the

Vaisnavas the title "Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura" in appreciation for his

tireless propagation of the philosophy of devotion (bhakti) to Sri Krsna.

 

In Naraila, many people had formally adopted Vaisnavism, but they were not

trained in scriptural conclusions and thus were easily misled by upstarts

who

exploited their devotional sentiments. Bhaktivinoda Thakura gave these

simple

devotees of Krsna shelter and instructed them in Vaisnava-siddhanta (the

essential truths of Vaisnavism) most exactingly. In 1881 Bhaktivinoda began

publishing the Sajjanatosani, his Vaisnava journal.

 

Bhaktivinoda Thakura had previously pilgrimaged to the holy cities of

Benares,

Prayaga, Mathura and Vrndavana in 1866. At the close of his stay in Naraila

he

desired to again see Vrndavana, the land of Krsna. He took three months for

this purpose. He met Srila Jagannatha dasa Babaji there, who moved every 6

months between Navadwipa (in Bengal) and Vrndavana. Bhaktivinoda Thakura

accepted Jagannatha dasa Babaji as his eternally worshipable siksa guru

(instructing spiritual master). During his pilgrimage at this time he dealt

with a gang of dacoits (highway robbers) known as the Kanjharas who robbed

and

killed many pilgrims; he gave evidence to the government and a commission

was

formed to wipe out this scourge.

 

>From Vrndavana he came to Calcutta and bought a house at 181 Maniktala

Street,

now called Ramasha Datta Street, near Bidana Park. He called the house

Bhakti-bhavan (place of devotion) and started daily worship of Sri

Giridhara.

He was appointed head of the subdivision of Barasat.

 

The well-known novelist Bankim Candra met Bhaktivinoda Thakura at Barasat.

Bankim Candra showed him a book he'd written about Krsna to Bhaktivinoda,

who

preached to Bankim Candra for four days, taking little food and hardly any

sleep; the result was Bankim Candra changed his ideas (which were mundane

speculations about Krsna) and his book to conform with the teachings of Sri

Caitanya. Bhaktivinoda Thakura used to say that knowledge is power.

 

During the last year of his stay at Barasat (1886), Bhaktivinoda Thakura

published an edition of the Bhagavad-gita with the Sanskrit commentary of

Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura, which he translated into Bengali (the

"Rasika-ranjana" translation). He had undertaken this task at the request of

Babu Sarada Carana Mitra, ex-judge of the Calcutta High Commission. Bankima

Candra wrote the preface, acknowledging his own indebtedness to Bhaktivinoda

Thakura; he noted that all Bengali readers would be indebted to Bhaktivinoda

for his saintly work.

 

>From Barasat, Bhaktivinoda Thakura was transferred to Sriramapur. At nearby

Saptagram he visited the residence of the great Vaisnava saint Uddharana

Datta

Thakura, a great associate of Lord Nityananda, who lived at the time of Sri

Caitanya in the 16th century AD. He visited the places of another great

Vaisnavas of that time, Abhirama Thakura, at Khanakula, and Vasu Ramananda,

at

Kulinagrama.

 

At Sriramapura he composed and published his masterly writing, Sri Caitanya

Siksamrta, Vaisnava-siddhanta-mala, Prema-pradipa and Manah-siksa. He was

also

publishing Sajjanatosani on a regular basis. In Calcutta he set up the Sri

Caitanya Yantra, a printing press at the Bhakti Bhavana, upon which he

printed

Maladhara's Sri Krsna-vijaya, his own Amnaya-sutra and the Caitanyopanisad

of

the Atharva Veda.

 

Finding the Caitanyopanisad was a difficult task. Hardly anyone in Bengal

had

heard of it. Bhaktivinoda Thakura traveled to many places in Bengal looking

for it; finally, one devoted Vaisnava pandita named Madhusudana dasa sent an

old copy he'd been keeping with him at Sambalapura to him. Bhaktivinoda

Thakura wrote a Sanskrit commentary on the book and called it Sri

Caitanya-caranamrta. Madhusudana dasa Mahasaya translated the verses into

Bengali; this translation was called Amrta-bindu. It was a sellout when

published.

 

In Calcutta Bhaktivinoda Thakura started the Sri Visva-Vaisnava Sabha,

dedicated to the preaching of pure bhakti as taught by Lord Caitanya. To

publicize the work of the society, Bhaktivinoda Thakura published a small

booklet entitled Visva-Vaisnava-kalpavi. Also he published his own edition

of

the Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, with his Amrta-prabhava Bhasya commentary. And

he

introduced the Caitanyabda or Caitanya-era calendar, and gave assistance to

the propagation of the Caitanya Panjika, which established the feast day of

Gaura Purnima, which is the day of Caitanya's appearance in the material

world. He lectured and gave readings on Vaisnava books in various religious

societies. In the Hindu Herald, an English periodical, he published a

detailed

account of Sri Caitanya's life.

 

In the year 1887 Bhaktivinoda Thakura resolved to quit government service

and

go to Vrndavana with Bhaktibhringa Mahasaya for the rest of his life. One

night in Tarakeswara, while on government service, he had a dream in which

Sri

Caitanya appeared to him and spoke, "You will certainly go to Vrndavana, but

first there is some service you must perform in Navadwipa. When will you do

that?" When the Lord disappeared, Bhaktivinoda awoke. On the advice of

Bhaktibhringa Mahasaya he thereupon applied for a transfer to Krishnanagara,

where the government headquarters for the Navadvip district is situated. He

turned down offers of big posts in Assam and Tripura. He even tried to

retire

at this time, but his application was not accepted. Finally, in December of

1887 he managed to trade posts with Babu Radha Madhava Vasu, Deputy

Magistrate

of Krishnanagara.

 

During his stay at Krishnanagara, Bhaktivinoda Thakura used to go to

Navadwipa

and search for the birthsite of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, the exact location

of

which had been lost in time. One night he was sitting on the roof of the

Rani

Dharmasala in Navadwipa chanting on his beads, when he spotted in the

distance

a very tall tala tree; near the tree was a small building that gave off a

remarkable effulgence. Soon afterwards, he went to the Krishnanagara

Collectory where he began to study some very old manuscripts of Caitanya

Bhagavata and Navadwipa Dhama Parikrama by Narahari Sarkar, and some old

maps

of the Navadwipa area. He went to the village of Ballaladibhi and spoke with

many elderly people there, and uncovered facts about the modern-day

Navadwipa.

In the year 1887 he discovered that the place he'd seen from the dharmasala

rooftop was in fact the birthplace of Mahaprabhu. This was confirmed by

Jagannatha dasa Babaji, the head of the Gaudiya Vaisnava community in

Navadwipa. A great festival was held there. Bhaktivinoda published the

Navadwipa Dhama Mahatmya, which elaborated the glories of the birthsite of

Sri

Caitanya. Also in 1887, Bhaktivinoda renovated the house of Jagannatha dasa

Babaji at Ravasghata. He took leave from office for two years and acquired a

plot of land at Sri Godadrumadwipa, or Svarupa Ganga. He built a retirement

house there called Surabhi Kunj.

 

In 1890 he established the "Nama Hatta" there. Sometimes Jagannatha dasa

Babaji would come there and have kirtana. Lord Nityananda had established

His

Nama Hatta at the same place and Bhaktivinoda considered himself the street

sweeper of the Nama Hatta of Nitai.

 

When the birthplace was uncovered, Bhaktivinoda and Jagannatha dasa Babaji

would worship Lord Caitanya there. Once one of Bhaktivinoda's sons

contracted

a skin disease and Jagannatha dasa Babaji told the boy to lie down at the

birthsite of Lord Caitanya for the night. He did so, and the next morning he

was cured.

 

In 1888 Bhaktivinoda took charge of the village of Netrakona in the district

of Mayamanasimha, because he could not keep good health in Krishnanagara and

had requested transfer to a more healthful region. From Netrakona he came to

Tangaila and from there he was transferred to the district of Vardhamana.

There he would hold kirtana with the devotees from a place called Amalajora,

headed by Ksetra Babu and Vipina Babu; they would sing poems like

Soka-satana

written by him.

 

He was put in charge of the Kalara subdivision in 1890, and from there would

often visit such holy places as Godadrumadwipa, Navadwipa, Capahati,

Samudragana, Cupi, Kasthasali, Idrakapura, Baghanapara, Pyariganga (the

place

of Nakula Brahmacari) and the place of Vrndavana dasa Thakura at Denura.

Soon

Bhaktivinoda Thakura was transferred for a few days to Ranighata, from where

he came to Dinajapura again. Sailaja Prasada was born there, his youngest

son.

In Dinajapura Bhaktivinoda wrote his Vidva-ranjana commentary and

translation

of the Bhagavad Gita; it was published in 1891 with the commentary of

Baladeva.

 

1891 was the year Bhaktivinoda Thakura took leave from the government

service

for two years. He desired to preach the chanting of the Hare Krsna

mahamantra.

>From his base at Svarupa Ganga he used to visit such places as Ghatala and

Ramajivana to lecture in clubs, societies and organizations. This he'd also

often do in Krishnanagara. In March of 1892 he traveled and preached with a

party of Vaisnavas in the Basirahata District. All the while he was writing

also. He opened many centers of Krishna worship (Nama Hatta) in different

districts of Bengal. The Nama Hatta became a self-sustaining success which

continued to spread even after his return to government service.

 

>From Basirahata he set out on his third trip to Vrndavana; he stopped off at

Amalajora to celebrate the Ekadasi day with Jagannatha dasa Babaji. In

Vrndavana, he visited all the forests and places of pastimes; he continued

to

give lectures and readings on Hari Nama in various places in Bengal when he

returned to Calcutta.

 

In February 1891 he gave a lecture on his investigation into the whereabouts

of the exact birthsite of Sri Caitanya; his audience included highly learned

men from all over Bengal, who became very enthusiastic at the news. Out of

this gathering the Sri Navadwipa Dhama Pracarini Sabha was formed for

spreading the glories of the Yogapitha (the birthsite). That year, on Gaura

Purnima, a big festival was held that witness the installation of Gaura-

Visnupriya Deities at the Yogapitha. All the learned pandits, having

deliberated fully on Bhaktivinoda Thakura's evidence, agreed that the

Yogapitha was the true birthsite of Mahaprabhu.

 

In 1892, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura published the book Vaisnava-siddhanta-

mala from his headquarters in Bengal. Later he printed individual chapters

of

Vaisnava-siddhanta-mala as separate booklets for public distribution. In

1900

he published Hari-nama-cintamani in Bengali poetic form.

 

In October 1894, at age 56, he retired from his post as Deputy Magistrate,

though this move was opposed by his family and the government authorities.

He

stayed at Svarupa Ganga to worship, lecture and revise his old writings.

Sometimes he went to Calcutta; there he begged door to door for funds to

construct a Yogapitha temple. In July 1896 Bhaktivinoda Thakura went to

Tripura at the request of the the king, who was a Vaisnava. He stayed in the

capital for 4 days and preached the chanting of the holy name of Krsna. His

lecture on the first day amazed all the local panditas; on the next two days

the royal family and general public thrilled to his talks on the pastimes of

Mahaprabhu.

 

Back in Svarupa Ganga, Bhaktivinoda Thakura printed a small booklet written

in

Sanskrit under the title Sri Gauranga-lila-smarana-mangala-stotram, with a

commentary by Srila Sitikantha Vacaspati of Nadia. The introduction in

English

was called "Caitanya Manaprabhu, His life and Precepts". This book found its

way into the library of the Royal Asiatic Society in London, the library of

McGill University in Canada and other respectable institutions. It was

reviewed in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society by Mr. F.W. Fraser, an

erudite British scholar.

 

In the rainy season of 1896, requested by the Maharaja of Tripura, he went

to

Darjilim and Karsiyam. In 1897 he went to many villages such as Medinipura

and

Sauri to preach.

 

Sisir Kumar Ghosh was the founder of the Amrta Bazar Patrika and the author

of

the Sri Amiya Nimai-carita. He had great respect for Bhaktivinoda Thakura;

he

also took up the preaching of the holy name throughout Calcutta and in many

villages in Bengal. He published the Sri Visnu Priya O Ananda Bazar Patrika

under the editorship of Bhaktivinoda. In one of his letters to Bhaktivinoda

he

wrote, "I have not seen the six Goswamis of Vrndavana but I consider you to

be

the seventh Goswami."

 

Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati had been residing at Puri as a strict renunciate

and

was engaged in worship at the Gandharvika Giridhari Matha, one of seven

mathas

near the samadhi tomb of Haridasa Thakura. Bhaktivinoda Thakura, desiring to

help his son, had the monastery cleaned and repaired when he came to Puri

himself at the beginning of the 20th century. After Bhaktisiddhanta

Saraswati

left Puri for Sri Navadwipa Mayapur, Bhaktivinoda Thakura constructed his

own

place of bhajana on the beach, calling it Bhakti Kuti; Krsnadasa Babaji,

Bhaktivinoda Thakura's devoted assistant and disciple, joined him there at

this time. He was his constant attendant up to the end of Bhaktivinoda

Thakura's life. He began solitary worship (bhajan) at this time; he had many

visitors at this place. Some of them simply wanted to disturb him, whereas

others were sincere and benefitted greatly from his spiritual inspiration.

 

In 1908, 3 months before Bhaktivinoda Thakura renounced the world, one of

his

sons who was working in a Calcutta government office came home to inform his

father that Sir William Duke, chief secretary to the government, was in

Calcutta. Bhaktivinoda Thakura had served under him as a magistrate.

Bhaktivinoda Thakura made an appointment to meet him the next day at the

government building. Sir William Duke greeted Bhaktivinoda Thakura on the

street outside the building and personally escorted him into his office.

With

folded hands, he asked forgiveness for having once planned to remove

Bhaktivinoda Thakura from his post of district magistrate; this was because

he

thought that if such qualified Indians held such important posts, the

British

would not last much longer in India. Formerly Sir William Duke used to visit

to Bhaktivinoda's house and would even take his meals there. Such

familiarity

between British nobility and the native people of India was uncommon. Now

that

Sir William was getting old, he wished to clear his conscience of guilty

feelings from the past, and so confessed to Bhaktivinoda Thakura that he'd

thought ill of him despite their close relationship. Bhaktivinoda Thakura

answered, "I considered you to be a good friend and a well-wisher all

along."

Pleased with Sir William, he gave him his blessings. Later Bhaktivinod

Thakura

admitted he was astonished that Duke wanted to harm him in some way.

 

In 1908 Bhaktivinoda Thakura took vesa (the dress of babaji, or renunciate)

at

Satasana in Puri. Until 1910 he would move between Calcutta and Puri, and

continued to write; but after that he stopped all activity and remained in

Puri, absorbed in the holy name of Krishna. He shut himself up and entered

samadhi, claiming paralysis. On June 23, 1914, just before noon at Puri,

Srila

Bhaktivinoda Thakura left his body. This day was also the disappearance day

of

Sri Gadadhara Pandita. Amidst sankirtana his remains were interred in

Godruma

after the next solstice; the summer solstice had just begun when he had left

his body.

 

About Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura, Sarada Carana Mitra, Calcutta High Court

Judge, wrote: "I knew Thakura Bhaktivinoda intimately as a friend and a

relation. Even under the pressure of official work as a magistrate in charge

of a heavy district he could always find time for devotional contemplation

and

service, and whenever I met him, our talk would turn in a few moments to the

subject of devotion, dvaitadvaita-vada philosophy and the saintly work that

lay before him. Service of God is the only thing he longed for and service

under the government, however honorable, was to him a clog."

 

In executing his government service, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura would wear

coat and pants to court, with double-size tulasi neckbeads and tilaka. He

was

very strong in his decisions; he would decide immediately. He did not allow

any humbug in his court; no upstart could stand before him. He would shave

his

head monthly.

 

He was always charitable to brahmanas, and equally befriended other castes.

He never showed pride, and his amiable disposition was a characteristic

feature of his life. He never accepted gifts from anyone; he even declined

all honors and titles offered by the government to him on the grounds that

they might stand against his holy mission of life. He was very strict in

moral principles, and avoided the luxurious life; he would not even chew

betel. He never allowed harmonium and he never had any debts. He disliked

theaters because they were frequented by public women.

 

He spoke Bengali, Sanskrit, English, Latin, Urdu, Persian and Oriya. He

started writing books at age 12, and continued turning out a profuse number

of volumes up until his departure from this world.

 

His schedule:

 

7:30-8:00 PM - take rest

10:00 PM - rise, light oil lamp, write

4:00 AM - take rest

4:30 - rise, wash hands and face, chant japa

7:00 - write letters

7:30 - read

8:30 - receive guests, or continue to read

9:30-9:45 - take rest

9:45 - morning bath, breakfast of half-quart milk, couple chapatis, fruit

9:55 - go to court in carriage

10:00 - court began.

1:00 PM - court finished. He'd come home and bathe and refresh.

2:00 PM - return to office.

5:00 PM - translate works from Sanskrit to Bengali

Then take evening bath and meal of rice, couple of chapatis, half-quart of

milk.

 

He always consulted a pocket watch, and kept time very punctually.

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