Guest guest Posted December 21, 1999 Report Share Posted December 21, 1999 > > Did you know that ISKCON devotees are known as the most proud and > unfriendly > > individuals amongst the religious people? > > > > Ys. Sraddha dd > > This is a very sad true. Sometimes I feel embarrased to go out and preach > because many many devotees burn the faith of karmis before it arise, > because of being so proud. > > and because of this proud, many nice devotees get tired of ISKCON and > leave... but they are accused of leaving for sense gratification, but I > know some of them that left and are hardly serving on other religious > comunities. > > ys, Sridhari dd Dear Sraddha and Sridhari and all other Prabhus! Interesting my wife and I just recently met some Oshomembers. Afterwards I said to my wife:" Always when I met them, I found very peaceful and senstive persons". Then my wife (a devotee since 15 years as SKTL and TP) said," yes they are and the hare krsnas are mostly so dogmatically and allknowing." I joined Iskcon in 1993 after some years of expierence in different groups of religion and esoteric. Sometimes I wondered why I´m not leaving Iskcon because of so many horrible accusations and absurd preaching towards others. As a preacher and on sankirtan I met many people on esotericfares, interfaithmeetings and so on. But never I found so hardhearted people among them, as one can see in Iskcon or in dogmatic groups of any religion. Every Sankirtandevotees know the heavy christians. Often I heard from people who think that devotees are a bit like sudden attackers. My main questions is, where did this mentality of proud and dogmatismen came from? Have you ever ask yourself this question? It seems to me that often good, openhearted people join and after a while they (MANY NOT ALL) became as described. Is this all due to cleansing, so that the black stuff comes in front for a while or what? I would be happy to hear some thoughts. ys Nigraha das Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 1999 Report Share Posted December 22, 1999 > > My main questions is, where did this mentality of proud and dogmatismen > came from? > Have you ever ask yourself this question? Here is an oversimplification: The first disciple to move in with Srila Prabhupada was Kirtanananda. He was the first to take sannyasa, and was the only sannyasa for 3 years, during the very formative stages of the movement. Srila Prabhupada was a wonderful being, older, mostly out of reach of the expectations of most of the neophyte devotees, but Kirtanananda was an example that may have seemed more reachable. Whatever actions great men perform, common men follow. And for 3 long years, Kirtanananda stood as the example of what a new devotee might see as platform to aspire to. Naturally, others of same ilk would be atracted to what he was doing, or worse yet, innocents would see that example and be swayed by it. He was a great cook and a powerful preacher, with megastrong sadhana. Srila Prabhupada showed him a lot of affection. He had been on the Columbia University debating team, so debate was his strong point, and he used it. On the surface he seemed to have it all going on. However, under the surface he was a misogynist. That combined with his example of debating, has set much of the tone for ISKCON, right from the beginning. The GHQ are his siksa disciples, and are carrying on his vani, even though his vapu is behind bars (did I get the vani /vapu thing right - sometimes I mix then up). As most of my devote life has been in New Vrindaban, these ongoing skirmishes with misogyny have been a normal part of life for me. It was a little disillusoning to go through all the pain of having Kirtanananda removed, only to see his teachings so deeply infected in the larger ISKCON society. Sort of like having a liver fail due to hepatitis C, having a new one transplanted in, only to see that also infected with the HCV virons still circulating in the blood. If you have some understanding of how viruses work, that might make some sense to you, if not, don't worry about it, take too long to explain it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 1999 Report Share Posted December 22, 1999 Madhava Gosh Dasa wrote: >However, under the surface he was a misogynist. That combined with his example >of debating, has set much of the tone for ISKCON, right from the beginning. The >GHQ are his siksa disciples, and are carrying on his vani Under-the-surface phenomena are not limited to the sinister, are they? Or, in other words, illusion is illusion wherever it may repose. Whoever those scapegoat GHQ alumni happen to be, I must question Madhava Gosh Prabhu's material or spiritual credentials for having so definitively declared "the GHQ" to be "carrying on [Kirtananda's] vani, or in a word, to be "misogynists," (a real-life word with clearly demonic meaning). Srila Prabhupada writes in Bg that to call a thief a thief is truthfulness but to call an innocent man a thief is a great offense. So I also wonder if Madhava Gosh Prabhu is qualified to explain to us whether it is also a great (or "moderate"? "minor"?) offense to call an innocent man a misogynist? And I humbly yet certainly wonder if he can very thoroughly and accurately describe to us the symptoms of a misogynist, according to the three-fold authority of guru-sadhu-sastra, or even if he can provide references from Vedabase. Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly ask Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which misogyny is defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had to say about misogyny. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 1999 Report Share Posted December 22, 1999 At 12:07 -0500 12/22/1999, COM: Guru-Krsna (das) HDG (Alachua, FL - USA) wrote: > >Srila Prabhupada writes in Bg that to call a thief a thief is truthfulness >but to call an innocent man a thief is a great offense. So I also wonder if >Madhava Gosh Prabhu is qualified to explain to us whether it is also a great >(or "moderate"? "minor"?) offense to call an innocent man a misogynist? Below are the characteristics of a misogynist. I'm sure that the learned members of this forum will have no problem quoting examples from sastra of men who meet at least some of these descriptions. For example, the humiliation of Draupadi seems to be an example of #8. The Twenty-six Characteristics of a Misogynist compiled by Mahanidhi dasa 1. He thinks that his masculinity depends on dominating women. 2. He feels powerful by subjugating women. 3. His emotional security depends on women being controlled. 4. He wants to insure that women are less powerful than he. 5. He controls women by destroying their self-confidence. 6. He is unnecessarily critical of women. 7. He intimidates women by finding faults with them. 8. He humiliates women in public and devalues their opinions. 9. He sees encounters with or about women as a battle to be won. 10. He must always win in a discussion with or about women. 11. He blames women for failings that are not related to them. 12. He blames women for his own failings and shortcomings. 13. He accuses women of being too sensitive if they get upset with him. 14. He will confuse issues by changing the subject. 15. He will confuse issues by denial or word jugglery. 16. He will confuse issues by acting as if nothing happened after it did. 17. He belittles or ignores women's accomplishments. 18. He denies her feelings and makes her wrong for feeling them. 19. He is condescending, taunting, jeering, or angry toward her. 20. He is hostile, aggressive, contemptuous, or cruel to her. 21. He makes derogatory comments about women in general. 22. He wants to punish women when they displease him. 23. He has no remorse or guilt for the pain he causes women. 24. He is in anxiety about women and meditates on them. 25. He forces women not to do things that they re qualified to do. 26. He selectively quotes authorities to substantiate his position. Misogyny is a mental disorder that requires therapy. If someone you know has some or all of the above symptoms, humbly request that person to find qualified treatment for their condition. >Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. So, just because Srila Prabhupada does not explain in his books how to diagnose the need for a root canal or how to perform it, are we to conclude that root canals don't exist? Wouldn't a more reasonable explanation be that *everything we need for our spiritual lives* are to be found in his books? After all, even Srila Prabhupada responded to disciples' requests for medical advice by telling them to see a doctor and reminded them that he was their *guru* not their doctor. So it seems that you're once again reading more into Prabhupada's books than he intended. Ys, Madhusudani dasi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 1999 Report Share Posted December 22, 1999 > Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly ask > Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's > books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which misogyny is > defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had > to say about misogyny. Prabhupada also did not define, explain, discuss, denounce phedophili. This is not a good argument. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 1999 Report Share Posted December 22, 1999 > > Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly ask > Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's > books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which misogyny is > defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had > to say about misogyny. That's not at all true. Everything is not there. You are again asking for grapes that grows on a mango tree, and when not supplied such, you would conclude "See, there is no such thing as grapes". - Mahanidhi das Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 1999 Report Share Posted December 22, 1999 > Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly ask > Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's > books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which misogyny is > defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had > to say about misogyny. "There was a Russian animated short movie for children, entitled "The Magical Glasses." I saw it for the "good night" TV program several times when I was small. It's about a young owl chick, whose grandfather owl is so wise that the animals come to him from all over the forest and ask him to settle their conflicts. The old owl would then pull out his glasses first, clean them, put them on, and listen to the complaints. The animals always went away satisfied, offering all respects to the owl." "The young owl thought the magic surely sat in his grandpa's glasses. So one day he stole them away and rushed to the forest, telling everyone: "I have magical glasses, whoever needs advice, come and I will help you!" He gets a few conflicts to settle (with glasses on), fails miserably and even gets beaten up a few times, but his faith in the glasses is unbreakable. His final mistake lands him in serious trouble -- he almost gets eaten up by a wolf. He manages to escape, but breaks the glasses on the way. He comes back to his grandfather, completely crushed and scared that now the grandpa will lose all his power. But the grandpa consoles him with words of wisdom... which sat not in his glasses of course, but in his experience, intelligence and heart." "If we, all devotees collectively, would now get our grandpa's glasses broken -- if all the Vedabases were lost, all the books, all the memorized quotes -- how would we set about resolving our difficulties, now that we have been practicing Krsna consciousness and searching for Krsna for a number of years?" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 1999 Report Share Posted December 23, 1999 Madhava Gosh Dasa wrote: >However, under the surface he was a misogynist. That combined with his example >of debating, has set much of the tone for ISKCON, right from the beginning. The >GHQ are his siksa disciples, and are carrying on his vani Under-the-surface phenomena are not limited to the sinister, are they? Or, in other words, illusion is illusion wherever it may repose. Whoever those scapegoat GHQ alumni happen to be, I must question Madhava Gosh Prabhu's material or spiritual credentials for having so definitively declared "the GHQ" to be "carrying on [Kirtananda's] vani, or in a word, to be "misogynists," (a real-life word with clearly demonic meaning). Srila Prabhupada writes in Bg that to call a thief a thief is truthfulness but to call an innocent man a thief is a great offense. So I also wonder if Madhava Gosh Prabhu is qualified to explain to us whether it is also a great (or "moderate"? "minor"?) offense to call an innocent man a misogynist? And I humbly yet certainly wonder if he can very thoroughly and accurately describe to us the symptoms of a misogynist, according to the three-fold authority of guru-sadhu-sastra, or even if he can provide references from Vedabase. Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly ask Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which misogyny is defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had to say about misogyny. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 1999 Report Share Posted December 23, 1999 > > > Under-the-surface phenomena are not limited to the sinister, are they? Or, > in other words, illusion is illusion wherever it may repose. Whoever those > scapegoat GHQ alumni happen to be, I must question Madhava Gosh Prabhu's > material or spiritual credentials for having so definitively declared "the > GHQ" to be "carrying on [Kirtananda's] vani, or in a word, to be > "misogynists," (a real-life word with clearly demonic meaning). Things equal to the same thing are equal to each other. > > Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly ask > Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's books > (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which misogyny is defined, > explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had to say > about misogyny. Bhakta yoga is based on love. I will take the trouble to draw it out for you, right after you direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which internet is defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had to say about internet.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 1999 Report Share Posted December 23, 1999 > Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly ask > Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's > books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which misogyny is > defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had > to say about misogyny. what kind of logic is this?! Prabhupada gave us spiritual knowledge and had nothing to do with some mundane terminology. though it does not mean that such terminology or whatever else could not be used. ys bh. didzis Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 1999 Report Share Posted December 23, 1999 > However, under the surface he was a misogynist. That combined with his > example of debating, has set much of the tone for ISKCON, right from the > beginning. The GHQ are his siksa disciples, and are carrying on his vani, > even though his vapu is behind bars (did I get the vani /vapu thing right > - sometimes I mix then up). > > As most of my devote life has been in New Vrindaban, these ongoing > skirmishes with misogyny have been a normal part of life for me. It was a > little disillusoning to go through all the pain of having Kirtanananda > removed, only to see his teachings so deeply infected in the larger > ISKCON society. You must have had closer association with Kirtananda's vani and vapu than most devotees, GHQ included. Sorry to get personal, but weren't you ever a supporter or fan (if not exactly a siksa disciple) of Kirtananda at ANY stage of all your years on New Vrndavana? Please answer truthfully. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 24, 1999 Report Share Posted December 24, 1999 > > You must have had closer association with Kirtananda's vani and vapu than > most devotees, GHQ included. > Sorry to get personal, but weren't you ever a supporter or fan (if not > exactly a siksa disciple) of Kirtananda at ANY stage of all your years on > New Vrndavana? Please answer truthfully. Yes, certainly. The direct instruction from Srila Prabhupada was to follow Kirtanananda. He was the sannyasa, the community leader, the total package on all the conditioning for acceptance of authority in spiritual life. He was the paragon of sadhana, extremely austere, he had had intimate association with Srila Prabhupada, he was a dynamic and hard working leader who was creating a revolutionery community in the belly of the beast. Of course I supported him. Most of the demonizing of Kirtananada that has gone on is out right myth, incorrect. Lots of it is deeply rooted in the struggle of other sannyasis (Ramesvara to name one) to usurp him as the premier devoee in ISKCON. There was a long deliberete campaign to discredit him, right from the start, most based on half truths and innuendo. Most of what you (and I am using you generically) think about Kirtananada is wrong. However, my support for him was not without qualifications, it was not across the board on all topics in all situations, and it earned me a reputation as a complainer, who was not given access to the inner circle. I don't want him back in NV in management, I think he is exactly where he needs to be, prison, where he is making the progress he needs to be making at this time. I did leave NV for about a year and a half, from late 1985 until the end of 1986, when he was at the peak of his power and popularity, due to my eventual disillusionment with his policies and the policies of his inner circle. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 25, 1999 Report Share Posted December 25, 1999 Madhava Gosh Dasa wrote: >However, under the surface he was a misogynist. That combined with his example >of debating, has set much of the tone for ISKCON, right from the beginning. The >GHQ are his siksa disciples, and are carrying on his vani Under-the-surface phenomena are not limited to the sinister, are they? Or, in other words, illusion is illusion wherever it may repose. Whoever those scapegoat GHQ alumni happen to be, I must question Madhava Gosh Prabhu's material or spiritual credentials for having so definitively declared "the GHQ" to be "carrying on [Kirtananda's] vani, or in a word, to be "misogynists," (a real-life word with clearly demonic meaning). Srila Prabhupada writes in Bg that to call a thief a thief is truthfulness but to call an innocent man a thief is a great offense. So I also wonder if Madhava Gosh Prabhu is qualified to explain to us whether it is also a great (or "moderate"? "minor"?) offense to call an innocent man a misogynist? And I humbly yet certainly wonder if he can very thoroughly and accurately describe to us the symptoms of a misogynist, according to the three-fold authority of guru-sadhu-sastra, or even if he can provide references from Vedabase. Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly ask Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which misogyny is defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had to say about misogyny. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 1999 Report Share Posted December 26, 1999 On 23 Dec 1999, Didzis Melbiksis wrote: > > Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly ask > > Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila Prabhupada's > > books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which misogyny is > > defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever Srila Prabhupada had > > to say about misogyny. > > what kind of logic is this?! Prabhupada gave us spiritual knowledge and had > nothing to do with some mundane terminology. though it does not mean that > such terminology or whatever else could not be used. > > ys bh. didzis Good. So let's stick with the spiritual knowledge and avoid the mundane terminology, esepcially when that terminology is directed at practitioners of the spiritual process! Please? .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 1999 Report Share Posted December 26, 1999 > > Peophilia is obviously illict sex and is thereby discussed all throughout > SP's teachings. > And so is with misogyny. It is a form of a frustrated desire to have sex with all those women that one can't posses. Iccha-dvesa... desire and hate. It is a perverted form of sexuality typical for the "strict" practitioners of some religious belief. For them a woman as the object of all enjoyment becomes thus a woman who is the cause of all (their) miseries in the world... Then they focus their attention on these women, hating them and having as their life "mission" to get the women "in order" (read: "vedic"). - Mahanidhi das Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 1999 Report Share Posted December 26, 1999 > On 22 Dec 1999, Trayimaya das wrote: > > > > Srila Prabhupada said that everything is there in his books. I humbly > > > ask Madhava Gosh Prabhu to direct us to the portions of Srila > > > Prabhupada's books (or his lectures, conversations, letters) in which > > > misogyny is defined, explained, discussed, denounced, or whatever > > > Srila Prabhupada had to say about misogyny. > > > > Prabhupada also did not define, explain, discuss, denounce phedophili. > > > > This is not a good argument. > > Peophilia is obviously illict sex and is thereby discussed all throughout > SP's teachings. Misogony is a mental disorder, a disease, also discussed throughout SP´s teaching. So the argument is still not good. your servant Trayimaya dasa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 1999 Report Share Posted December 26, 1999 > Good. So let's stick with the spiritual knowledge and avoid the mundane > terminology you want us to start speaking sanskrit or what? "mundane terminology" covers too much of our modern language to avoid it completely. mauna vrata could be a good choice maybe for you , but sorry prabhu, not for me... >, esepcially when that terminology is directed at practitioners > of the spiritual process! Please? practitioners are not trancendental to material world with all its paraphernalia (no matter how mundane it is), so what's wrong with that? ys bh. didzis Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 1999 Report Share Posted December 26, 1999 On 26 Dec 1999, Prema Bhakti wrote: > > > > Peophilia is obviously illict sex and is thereby discussed all throughout > > SP's teachings. > > > > And so is with misogyny. It is a form of a frustrated desire to have > sex with all those women that one can't posses. Iccha-dvesa... desire > and hate. It is a perverted form of sexuality typical for the "strict" > practitioners of some religious belief. For them a woman as > the object of all enjoyment becomes thus a woman who is the cause of > all (their) miseries in the world... Then they focus their attention > on these women, hating them and having as their life "mission" > to get the women "in order" (read: "vedic"). My dictionary gives a much simpler definition: "one who hates or distrusts women." Interestingly, SP quotes Canakya as saying "Never trust a woman," but he but has never described him as a misogynist. So if we limit the definition to "woman-hater," then it makes quite things simple enough. But to call a sincere practitioner of Krsna consciousness a misogynists then becomes a very grave accusation, and *aparadha* if not so. .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 1999 Report Share Posted December 26, 1999 On 26 Dec 1999, Prema Bhakti wrote: > > > > SP didn't waste time writing about insignificant things. Perhaps that's > > why you cannot find vast expositions on this buzz word: "misogyny." > > > One can say just the same about this buzz word: pedophilia. > You know, it's some insignificant thing.. waste of time to > bother and talk about... Prabhupada didn't elaborate in his > writings about teachers raping the kids in the gurukula.. That's right. It's not very significant as a specific subject of study. It's obviously illicit sex and therefore abominable. We should hear and chant krsna-katha, not about illict sex. If we want to hear and chant about illicit sex, then why limit ourselves to pedophilia within ISKCON? .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 1999 Report Share Posted December 26, 1999 On 26 Dec 1999, Didzis Melbiksis wrote: > > Good. So let's stick with the spiritual knowledge and avoid the mundane > > terminology > > you want us to start speaking sanskrit or what? "mundane terminology" > covers too much of our modern language to avoid it completely. mauna vrata > could be a good choice maybe for you , but sorry prabhu, not for me... I didn't say "avoid completely," I said "avoid." I choose to avoid. > >, esepcially when that terminology is directed at practitioners > > of the spiritual process! Please? > > practitioners are not trancendental to material world with all its > paraphernalia (no matter how mundane it is), so what's wrong with that? What may be wrong is that it may well contravene Vaisnava etiquette. .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 1999 Report Share Posted December 27, 1999 > > > SP didn't waste time writing about insignificant things. Perhaps that's why > you cannot find vast expositions on this buzz word: "misogyny." > > . Yes, I agree, you consider misogyny insignificant. You have made that quite obvious. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 1999 Report Share Posted December 27, 1999 On 26 Dec 1999, Madhava Gosh wrote: > Yes, I agree, you consider misogyny insignificant. You have made >that quite obvious. Yes, it's a rather insignificant topic, in and of itself, it seems. Why be so concerned about "women-haters," when there are also "men-haters," "this-haters,that-haters,them-there-haters," and "them-there-super-haters," all lurking in the shadows as well? And what is the remedy for curing all of these haters? Are we more concerned to change the hearts of these various haters or simply to vilify them? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 1999 Report Share Posted December 27, 1999 > > That's right. It's not very significant as a specific subject of study. > It's obviously illicit sex and therefore abominable. We should hear and > chant krsna-katha, not about illict sex. If we want to hear and chant > about illicit sex, then why limit ourselves to pedophilia within ISKCON? Subject of study!! We have the biggest problem in ISKCON so far, pedophilic sexual and other abuse of hundreds of children. Those abusers were hearing and chanting krsna-katha. They were devotees. Present your suggestion to GBC: "Just chant and hear Krishna-katha". No need for all those meetings. Life is simple. ys Trayimaya dasa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 1999 Report Share Posted December 27, 1999 > > My dictionary gives a much simpler definition: "one who hates or distrusts > women." > That's right. But we ought to search for the philosophical understanding of the phenomenas elswhere. Your dictionary will simply define the terms, that's all. But you can also safely stick to this naked definition as given in your English dictionary, and don't ask for further elaboration based on shastra. Shastras cover up also such things as pedophilaia and misogyny, though not explicitly. First you insist in some elaboration based on shastra, and then when you start getting some hints, you come up with "Oh, no, we should not chant and hear about such abonimable things but krsna-katha". > But to call a > sincere practitioner of Krsna consciousness a misogynists then becomes a > very grave accusation, and *aparadha* if not so. > Yes. Very grave. Though not so much grave as calling sincere practitioners of Krsna consciousness "prostitutes" and "hores" and "purvapakshins" and " femi-nazies" and "feminizes" and so on and so on. Oh, yes, this must be just GHQies practicing seriously their hearing and chanting pure krsna-katha. Just don't say they are tinged with any misogyny (what's this buzzy misogyny anyway?? it's not to be explicitly found in shastra, so who bothers anyway). What they indeed are (but they quite bother not to be exposed in public as such, oh, just see). - Mahanidhi das Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 1999 Report Share Posted December 27, 1999 > Are we more concerned to change the > hearts of these various haters or simply to vilify them? They vilify themselves everytime they click away on the keyboard, it takes no effort on my part. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.