Guest guest Posted March 12, 1999 Report Share Posted March 12, 1999 At 18:34 12/03/99 +0100, COM: Mahanidhi (das) HKS (Lund - S) wrote: >And that is our position, isn't it? This is about us, low >born sudras with the pile of bad habits and qualities. And >we are trying now to develop some brahminical qualities, aren't >we? Why remain in the described category: "The shameless husbands >of lowborn sudra women live exactly like animals, and therefore >they have no good behavior, cleanliness or regulated life." ??? >I think it is all fine with the idea that we are supposed to >become brahmanas and, finally, Vaisnavas. In some life time, at >least, perhaps... Thank you very much, Mahanidhi Prabhu, for your thoughtful answer. Indeed we are aspiring to become Vaisnavas and in this way we gradually develop all divine qualities. >Isn't what ISKCON is all about, after all? That's what we preach >all the time to the people, at least: "Don't miss the purpose of >the human life! Elevate yourself". We also preach sometimes "Stay high forever! Become transcendental and blissful! Lord Caitanya rejected the idea of varnasrama!" (just read the letter of Prtha dd, which was posted here) >I find it a paradox that ISKCON devotees (who were till recently >engaging themselves in all kind of low class and sinful activities, >perhaps even worse than low class "vedic" sudras) to be in the >situation to be now confused over - "it's difficult to understand >how a sudra by guna and karma can adopt the guna and karma of a >brahmana, as specified by Srila Prabhupada." ISKCON is a land of paradoxes. Although you didn't specified, you pointed on me here. Oh boy. First of all not "all kinds". And if you consider the washing pots for the Deities and my other actions which I performed trying to become a devotee during last 9 years, as a low class and sinful activities, I don't mind. And "it's difficult..." is not my question either. I said that I'm confused because I have doubts how it will work in ISKCON. For present, I see a dominatnt conception that varnas should be stable within a society. This view is supported by many instructions, which recommend one to stay in his own varna and discharge his own duties and to be satisfied by doing so. Such system creates stable society, but it leads to creating a caste system. Even if it will be a Daiva Varnasrama, when varna is given by qualities and educatiion, still if varna is given for the lifetime, it would create numerous problems and conflicts. I consider also another idea of changable varnas, when varnas are specified mostly by activities, which one performs. People can change their varnas forth and back. It creates rather democratic society, but the importance of varnas gradually disappears, and the word "prescribed duties" becomes something vague. So what intriques me is not sadhana, by which sudra develops brahmana qualities (there are enough instructions in Prabhupada's books), but how this change is occured on practical side in society. I'm sorry that I didn't specified it before. I'm curious, is there such case when one's varna was changed without being transcendentaly situated. As far as I read the books, varnas never changed. >Just look at yourself. I looked in the mirror and didn't find anything worthy of your attention. Or you mean I should look on my true ego, the soul. Oh, to do so I have to wait for some time. >Well, as you did (are doing) it, so other sudras can also. No >kidding. Really? Wow! The only thing is that I'm not a sudra even. I'm unemployed and freelancer. Your humble servant, bhakta Oleg. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 13, 1999 Report Share Posted March 13, 1999 > > >I find it a paradox that ISKCON devotees (who were till recently engaging > >themselves in all kind of low class and sinful activities, perhaps even > >worse than low class "vedic" sudras) to be in the situation to be now > >confused over - "it's difficult to understand how a sudra by guna and > >karma can adopt the guna and karma of a brahmana, as specified by Srila > >Prabhupada." > > ISKCON is a land of paradoxes. Although you didn't specified, > you pointed on me here. Oh boy. First of all not "all kinds". And if you > consider the washing pots for the Deities and my other actions which I > performed trying to become a devotee during last 9 years, as a low class > and sinful activities, I don't mind. > Certainly I meant it in general, that practically all of us (few exceptions perhaps are there) who joined ISKCON on some way and who started with practicing bhakti-yoga, were previously engaging ourselves in different sinful activities. Acting as low class sudras. I am not discovering America here, am I? And if there would be need to point on somebody specifically, then I would point on myself. But there is no need. If you find yourself fitting in the "box", fine. Welcome. The point is that we are the examples of sudras becoming brahmanas and Vaisnavas, some less gradually, some more gradually,... Washing pots for the Deities is devotional service, and not some "sinful activity." Why I have to be saying this here anyway? > And "it's difficult..." is not my question either. I said that I'm > confused because I have doubts how it will work in ISKCON. I quoted not you, but: "According to the devotees who presented this question, it's difficult to understand how a sudra by...." > For present, I > see a dominatnt conception that varnas should be stable within a society. > This view is supported by many instructions, which recommend one to stay > in his own varna and discharge his own duties and to be satisfied by doing > so. Such system creates stable society, but it leads to creating a caste > system. Even if it will be a Daiva Varnasrama, when varna is given by > qualities and educatiion, still if varna is given for the lifetime, it > would create numerous problems and conflicts. I consider also another idea > of changable varnas, when varnas are specified mostly by activities, which > one performs. People can change their varnas forth and back. It creates > rather democratic society, but the importance of varnas gradually > disappears, and the word "prescribed duties" becomes something vague. > I remember an interesting (and humorous) reply by Srila Prabhupada when he was read to the article from the news-papers. It was in Bombay, as I recall, the morning after Srila Prabhupada had given the class on some big pandal gathering. The lady reporter criticized Prabhupada in her article. A devotee was reading to Srila Prabhupada who would give his remarks. At one moment there was something like this (from my memory, a several years old): Reporter: "And Swamiji is preaching that everybody should become a sadhu. Then who will work? Who will be producing the food for the society if everybody becomes a sadhu and does no work at all? Then the whole society will break down" Then Prabhupada interrupted the reading: "Not EVERYBODY will become sadhu. That will never be. YOU will never become a sadhu. So don't worry." So, yes. There is no need to worry that there will be chaos in the society, that varnasrama dharma will lose its importance, and so on, if low class sudras start becoming and acting as qualified brahmans. Will not happen anyway so lightly, unfortunately. But some individuals might be willing and be able to make it. So, who on the earth has the right to say, "No, your sudra varna is defined and fixed for the life. First you must die if you want to become a brahmana". Wouldn't this actually be the asuric varnasrama, the cast system that does not allow qualified persons to advance? Daiva varnasrama dharma does not say "given for the life time", does it? > So what intriques me is not sadhana, by which sudra develops brahmana > qualities (there are enough instructions in Prabhupada's books), but how > this change is occured on practical side in society. > I'm sorry that I didn't specified it before. I'm curious, > is there such case when one's varna was changed without being > transcendentaly situated. As far as I read the books, varnas > never changed. As I understand, the actual point of varnasrama dharma system is to facilitate everybody with the possibility for advancing in the life, towards the fulfillment of the purpose of the human life - knowing the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Brahman. That is what actually mean to be a "brahmana", be it a "sudra" (like Vidura) or a "ksatriya" (like Yudistira), or whomever - one who knows Brahman. And this is what Srila Prabhupada is emphasizing here: <<"Thus even a born sudra is expected to become a brahmana; that is the meaning of human life. Everyone should improve himself. Krsna says in Bhagavad-gita (4.13), catur-varnyam maya srstam guna-karma-vibhagasah: "According to the three modes of material nature and the work ascribed to them, four divisions of human society were created by Me." Even if one is by qualification a sudra, he must try to improve his position and become a brahmana. No one should try to check a person, no matter what his present position is, from coming to the platform of a brahmana or a Vaisnava. Actually, one must come to the platform of a Vaisnava. Then he automatically becomes a brahmana.>> Now, the vast majority perhaps will not be able to change their particular set of gunas (that, in turn, determine the varna), from ignorance and passion to goodness, so they may advance within that particular varna. Less gradually. But what is the use of such varnasrama dharma that will check somebody who has obtained the human form of life from improving himself, from reaching the highest platform of the life, if he is willing and able to do it even within one life time??? I for sure would not sign myself to such system that will tell me "Next life time perhaps, dear. Now you got to be a low class sudra the rest of life." As far as "practical side", again, what would be the "practical" problem in low class sudras becoming high class brahmanas?? Are we afraid of loosing "nice" Kali-yuga for Satya-yuga? > > >Just look at yourself. > > I looked in the mirror and didn't find anything worthy of your > attention. Or you mean I should look on my true ego, the soul. > Oh, to do so I have to wait for some time. > I mean, if you (or anybody else) happen to find yourself (or himself) making the advancement from low class sudra platform toward brahminical platform, and if you (or anybody else) wonder how it can be that an another sudra may possibly become a brahmana, then the obvious answer would be: "Just like you (or anybody else) happens to be succeeding in this regard." > >Well, as you did (are doing) it, so other sudras can also. No > >kidding. > > Really? Wow! The only thing is that I'm not a sudra even. I'm unemployed > and freelancer. > OK. Whatever you find that fits to you and your qualities and activities, I don't bother. Be it. If you are not a sudra even, and if you think that varnas are fixed for everybody for the whole life-time, then it makes life easier and more simple for you, doesn't it? You don't have to get mental over wether you gonna do anything about improving yourself and becoming a brahmana, or a sudra even. ys mnd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 1999 Report Share Posted March 14, 1999 > I'm curious, > is there such case when one's varna was changed without being > transcendentaly situated. As far as I read the books, varnas > never changed. Vishvamitra, though born as a king became a most powerful brahmana by performing prolonged austerities and penances. Dronacarya and Asvatthama took up the occupation of a kshatriya inspite of being brahmanas. Parashurama though born as a brahmana acted as a kshatriya to rid the world of demoniac kshatriyas. Yudhisthira Maharaja though being the king of the world was often accused of acting more like a brahminical sage than a warrior. ys Anantarupa das Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 1999 Report Share Posted March 14, 1999 At 20:14 13/03/99 +0100, COM: Mahanidhi (das) HKS (Lund - S) wrote: >Certainly I meant it in general, that practically all of us (few >exceptions perhaps are there) who joined ISKCON on some way and >who started with practicing bhakti-yoga, were previously engaging >ourselves in different sinful activities. Acting as low >class sudras. I am not discovering America here, am I? >And if there would be need to point on somebody specifically, >then I would point on myself. But there is no need. If you >find yourself fitting in the "box", fine. Welcome. ))) Sorry, it's probably just misunderstanding with word "recently". "Recently" has many meanings. >The point is that we are the examples of sudras becoming brahmanas >and Vaisnavas, some less gradually, some more gradually,... Yes, since by definition we are born as sudras in Kali yuga, so everyone has to advance... Now I get it. >Washing pots for the Deities is devotional service, and not some >"sinful activity." Why I have to be saying this here anyway? I don't know. >I remember an interesting (and humorous) reply by Srila >Prabhupada when he was read to the article from the news-papers. >It was in Bombay, as I recall, the morning after Srila Prabhupada >had given the class on some big pandal gathering. The lady reporter >criticized Prabhupada in her article. A devotee was reading to >Srila Prabhupada who would give his remarks. At one moment there was >something like this (from my memory, a several years old): > >Reporter: "And Swamiji is preaching that everybody should become > a sadhu. Then who will work? Who will be producing the > food for the society if everybody becomes a sadhu > and does no work at all? Then the whole society will > break down" > >Then Prabhupada interrupted the reading: > "Not EVERYBODY will become sadhu. That will never be. > YOU will never become a sadhu. So don't worry." > > > >So, yes. There is no need to worry that there will be chaos in the >society, that varnasrama dharma will lose its importance, and so >on, if low class sudras start becoming and acting as qualified >brahmans. Will not happen anyway so lightly, unfortunately. But >some individuals might be willing and be able to make it. So, who on >the earth has the right to say, "No, your sudra varna is defined >and fixed for the life. First you must die if you want to become a >brahmana". Wouldn't this actually be the asuric varnasrama, the >cast system that does not allow qualified persons to advance? >Daiva varnasrama dharma does not say "given for the life time", does >it? We don't have a complete definition of Daiva varnasrama. We have many Prabhupada's instructions and essays, written of devotees, but there is no yet "Varnasrama Bible". Everyone understands varnasrama as he wants, so we have no complete unity there. At least here, in this conference, we discuss these topics and I hope that gradually to mutual consent. >As I understand, the actual point of varnasrama dharma system is >to facilitate everybody with the possibility for advancing in >the life, towards the fulfillment of the purpose of the human >life - knowing the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Brahman. >That is what actually mean to be a "brahmana", be it a "sudra" >(like Vidura) or a "ksatriya" (like Yudistira), or whomever - >one who knows Brahman. And this is what Srila Prabhupada is >emphasizing here: > > ><<"Thus even a born sudra is expected to become a > brahmana; that is the meaning of human life. Everyone should > improve himself. Krsna says in Bhagavad-gita (4.13), catur-varnyam > maya srstam guna-karma-vibhagasah: "According to the three modes of >material nature and the work ascribed to them, four divisions of > human society were created by Me." Even if one is by qualification > a sudra, he must try to improve his position and become a brahmana. > No one should try to check a person, no matter what his present > position is, from coming to the platform of a brahmana or a > Vaisnava. Actually, one must come to the platform of a Vaisnava. > Then he automatically becomes a brahmana.>> > > >Now, the vast majority perhaps will not be able to change their >particular set of gunas (that, in turn, determine the varna), from >ignorance and passion to goodness, so they may advance within that >particular varna. Less gradually. I agree. It's interesting what Manu-smriti advises to sudras. It says that sudras should always try to serve brahmanas. Then sudras will become in eyes of the Lord as good as brahmanas. >But what is the use of such varnasrama dharma that will check >somebody who has obtained the human form of life from improving >himself, from reaching the highest platform of the life, if he >is willing and able to do it even within one life time??? I for >sure would not sign myself to such system that will tell me "Next >life time perhaps, dear. Now you got to be a low class sudra the >rest of life." Such system existed before Kali yuga, and it wasn't asuric, just circumstanses were different. Nowadays, if we want to build Daiva varnasrama, it cannot be based on the birth basis. And varnas cannot be fixed for lifetime or given as legacy. I would eagerly accept a varna of sudra, if I would then get an apportunity to advance and educate myself to another status (vaisya, ksatriya or brahmana or qualified sudra), where I would be happy and most productive. >As far as "practical side", again, what would be the "practical" >problem in low class sudras becoming high class brahmanas?? As I understood, you don't know the answer. So I. But once varnasrama system would be implemented, and when the varnas and asramas would be formed, there will arise this problem, I assure you. The change of varnas is not a single move in chess game. It requires change of life style, change of specific duties, change of traditions, change of social recognition. And this change cannot exist on free-jump basis: "Ok, today I'm sudra, tomorrow I'm brahmana, then I'm vaisya and in Friday I'm again sudra". There should exist some social procedure, am I not right? And this change should not be fashion, "Everyone, promote your social status! RUSH!" Then the result will be... You may guess. So I think the answer on "is it possible to change your varna in Daiva varnasrama society" is "yes", but "how it should be done properly in social terms?" is still missing a complete answer. >Are we afraid of loosing "nice" Kali-yuga for Satya-yuga? These words I don't understand. What do you mean? >> I looked in the mirror and didn't find anything worthy of your >> attention. Or you mean I should look on my true ego, the soul. >> Oh, to do so I have to wait for some time. >> >I mean, if you (or anybody else) happen to find yourself (or himself) >making the advancement from low class sudra platform toward brahminical >platform, and if you (or anybody else) wonder how it can be that >an another sudra may possibly become a brahmana, then the obvious >answer would be: "Just like you (or anybody else) happens to be >succeeding in this regard." I was just testing your patience. And I was joking of course. Please forgive my uncontrolled tongue. >> Really? Wow! The only thing is that I'm not a sudra even. I'm unemployed >> and freelancer. >> > >OK. Whatever you find that fits to you and your qualities and >activities, I don't bother. Be it. The problem is that I don't want to stay unemployed and freelancer. >If you are not a sudra even, and if you think that varnas are fixed >for everybody for the whole life-time, then it makes life easier and >more simple for you, doesn't it? No, it doesn't. I want to live in varnasrama. And I don't think that varnas should be fixed for the lifetime. >You don't have to get mental over wether you gonna do anything about >improving yourself and becoming a brahmana, or a sudra even. Hey, it's the anti-varnasrama preaching! No kidding. yhs bh Oleg. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 1999 Report Share Posted March 14, 1999 At 06:28 14/03/99 +0530, Anantarupa Prabhu wrote: >Vishvamitra, though born as a king became a most powerful brahmana by >performing prolonged austerities and penances. Dronacarya and Asvatthama >took up the occupation of a kshatriya inspite of being brahmanas. >Parashurama though born as a brahmana acted as a kshatriya to rid the world >of demoniac kshatriyas. Yudhisthira Maharaja though being the king of the >world was often accused of acting more like a brahminical sage than a >warrior. I know all these examples, but there never was a change of varnas occured. They were all considered on their original varnas, although they acted in another manner. Otherwise why would Duryodhana chastise Vidura, calling him a sudra? A change of varna wasn't recognized in society, and seems there was no need, nor it was incouraged. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 1999 Report Share Posted March 14, 1999 > > > I know all these examples, but there never was a change of varnas occured. > They were all considered on their original varnas, although they acted > in another manner. Otherwise why would Duryodhana chastise Vidura, > calling him a sudra? A change of varna wasn't recognized in society, > and seems there was no need, nor it was incouraged. Please bear in mind it was a different age. Temple worship was the dharma yuga. Life span was 1000 years. People did take birth in higher varnas. In the Kali Yuga none of this is true, so taking examples literally can be confusing. You have to look at the principles behind it. In Kali, everyone is born sudra or less. Varna therefore has to be considered by qualification, not by birth. Most devotees were born mlecchas and yavannas, yet Srila Prabhupada gave them all the opportunity to advance. It seems like this Lord Chaitanya/Ramananda Roy conversation is confusing. Sometimes it is seen that Lord Chaitanya rejected VAD. That isn't how Srila Prabhupada saw it. "So this Krsna consciousness movement is that it is giving immediate lift to everyone to come to the transcendental platform, brahma-bhuyaya kalpate. But general state is varnasrama-dharma. Therefore Caitanya Mahaprabhu, when he was discussing with Ramananda Raya, he first of all said, "What is the aim of life?" Caitanya Mahaprabhu (was) asking. So Ramananda Raya replied that "First of all to begin this varnasrama dharma." So Caitanya Mahaprabhu said, eho bahya, age kaha ara: "Yes, this is all right. But this is external. If you know something better, please tell me." So in this way, step by step, Caitanya Mahaprabhu... This varna, asrama, dharma, karma-tyaga, karma-sannyasa, and karma-misra-bhakti, jnana-misra-bhakti -- everything was described by Ramananda Raya, and Caitanya Mahaprabhu not rejected. He said, "It is all right, but if you know something better..." Then at last, when Ramananda said... (aside:) Stop it. When Ramananda said that, quoting one verse from Srimad-Bhagavatam, sthane sthitah sruti-gatam tanu-van-manobhih, that it doesn't matter what you are. You remain in your post. Sthane sthitah sruti-gatam. Through the oral reception if you hear about Krsna, then you become perfect. That is the statement. >>> Ref. VedaBase => Srimad-Bhagavatam 7.6.1 -- Madras, January 2, 1976 So VAD wasn't rejected as wrong, it was only seen as partial. It is a means not an end. Just like we may have a car to go places. We can go to the bar, or go to the temple. Social organisation gives us the tools to move. So everyone should always be trying to be a brahman, trying to go to the temple. VAD has to do with attention, what we are doing. Being a Vaisnava has to do with intention, why we are doing it. The intention is the most important thing, that is consciousness. So even if we are a sudra by material qualification, we still are trying to be Krsna conscious. Therefore a Vaisnava is equal to a brahman from a consciousnesss perspective, even though from a varna perspective, the occupational duty is not that of a brahman. Not that we just sit in the comfort of the car and listen to the stereo system and drink from our cup we keep in the cupholder. No. Drive to the temple. Even if by attention, by material qualification, we are a brahman, if we aren't trying to be Krsna conscious, intention, then we may not be a Vaisnava. Vaisnavism is not an alternative to VAD. It is like an additional dimension. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 1999 Report Share Posted March 14, 1999 On 13 Mar 1999, Mahanidhi das wrote: > > Washing pots for the Deities is devotional service, and not some > "sinful activity." Isn't it: washing the Deities pots while hearing, chanting, remembering, etc. the Lord, is devotional service? "It is not that everyone becomes purified by entering the Ganges. Everything, spiritual and material , depends on one's mental condition." S.B. 10.10.4. People "acting" like brahmanas or sannyasis through their outward appearances, even engaged in so many seemingly directly spiritual activities, may not be doing devotional service at all. Same with sudras, vaisyas, ksatriyas. > As I understand, the actual point of varnasrama dharma system is > to facilitate everybody with the possibility for advancing in > the life, towards the fulfillment of the purpose of the human > life - knowing the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Brahman. > That is what actually mean to be a "brahmana", be it a "sudra" > (like Vidura) or a "ksatriya" (like Yudistira), or whomever - > one who knows Brahman. And this is what Srila Prabhupada is > emphasizing here: > > > <<"Thus even a born sudra is expected to become a > brahmana; that is the meaning of human life. Everyone should > improve himself. This is a very good explanation. Thank you very much! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 1999 Report Share Posted March 14, 1999 On 14 Mar 1999, Oleg Demtchenko wrote: > So I think the answer on "is it possible to change your varna > in Daiva varnasrama society" is "yes", but "how it should > be done properly in social terms?" is still missing a complete answer. "Foul means of livelihood means deviation from one's occupational duty. There are prescribed duties for everyone, such the brahmana, ksatriya, vaishya and sudra, but anyone of them who deviates from his prescribed duty and declares another's duty to be his own is following a foul and improper duty." S.B. 1.14.3. Room Conversation Mayapur, February 14, 1977 Prabhupada: Everywhere, wherever, Mayapura or anywhere. Question is that here it is clearly said, sve sve karmany abhiratah. Brahmana has his duty, ksatriya has his duty, vaisya has his duty, sudra has his duty. And if he performs his duty nicely, then he also becomes perfect. So why artificially he should be called a brahmana? Let them do, according to sastra, the work of sudra, or vaisya. He'll get the perfect. Perfection is not checked. But why artificially he should be made a brahmana or he should be made a sannyasi and fall down and become a ludicrous? That is the point. Better let him live in his position and become perfect. That's good. That looks very nice. And that is possible. That is possible. Varnasramacaravata purusena parah puman visnur aradhyate. Visnu, Lord Visnu, can be worshiped if you perfectly follow the rules and regulation of four varnas and four asramas. Here it is also said, sve sve karmani. You work as a perfect brahmana or a perfect ksatriya, perfect sudra; you get perfection. The perfection is available in your natural life. Why should artificially you become unnatural and fall down and become ludicrous? Perfection is not checked. Satsvarupa: But in most of our temples, the duties are either Deity worship, brahmana... Prabhupada: Brahmanas are available. Why you are bothering about this? Brahmanas are also available, sudras are also available. Why sudra should be artificially become a brahmana? Satsvarupa: If in our society we say, "Srila Prabhupada wants some to be sudra..." Prabhupada: No, no, no. I don't want. I want everyone to become Vaisnava. But because he's a sudra, it is not possible to bring him immediately to the platform of brahmana, or Vaisnava. Therefore falling down. Therefore system must be. But even if he remains a sudra, he's a Vaisnava. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 1999 Report Share Posted March 14, 1999 > I know all these examples, but there never was a change of varnas occured. > They were all considered on their original varnas, although they acted in > another manner. Well, then you may consider, what are we actually concerned about. If a person both *acts* in a particular varna and possess the *qualities* of that varna (guna and karma). What more is really needed in order to recognize and accept that person as such (a brahmana or a ksatriya...)? The "appropriate" birth? The right color of the skin (black skin means sudra, "golden" means brahmana...)? We are not concerned about some "rubber-stamp" varnasrama divisions and birth certificates. In the Bhagavad-gita, Krsna does not really gives stress to that, but to *guna* and *karma*. >From the point of birth Vidura was considered as sudra. But that was *all*, and nothing more than that, that would make him a low class sudra. And everybody accepted him as a highly qualified brahmana. Everybody but rascals like Duryodhana. Anyway, what is actually that "original varna" that you are speaking about? > Otherwise why would Duryodhana chastise Vidura, calling > him a sudra? Srila Prabhupada did comment on that: "Saint Vidura was so honorable that his character was looked up to by all respectable persons. But Duryodhana was so foolish that he dared to insult Vidura. This was due to his bad association with Sakuni, his maternal uncle, as well as with his friend Karna, who always encouraged Duryodhana in his nefarious acts." We do not really accept Duryodhana's blasphemies of the great personalities, like Vidura, as a kind of a "bookmark", do we? > A change of varna wasn't recognized in society, and seems > there was no need, nor it was incouraged. I feel this to be a kind of a blind street. Ajamila, who was born as a brahmana, lost all his brahminical qualities and degraded himself to the activities of the most sinful sudra. He ceased to be a brahmana, he was not accepted, nor recognized, nor honored as such by any sane personality. That is what is actual. Any other point of view that would suggest otherwise, would be superficial and of no practical meaning. Vidura was born as a sudra. But by all his qualities and activities he was a brahmana, and he was recognized and accepted as such by all sages and great personalities. Again, that is what is actual and what counts really. Not some Duryodhana's point of vision, or some theoretical consideration that would be rather obstructive than constructive for the development for both individual and the society. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 1999 Report Share Posted March 14, 1999 At 08:38 14/03/99 -0500, COM: Madhava Gosh (das) ACBSP (New Vrindavan - USA) wrote: >Please bear in mind it was a different age. I know. >Temple worship was the dharma yuga. I'm sorry, Madhava Gosh Prabhu, but this I know also. I was just saying that there was no cases of changing varnas in previous times, and I've got that objection that many great personalities acted not according with their varna. But still there was no formal change of varna. Anyway, thanks for the quote. I liked reading that. >Vaisnavism is not an alternative to VAD. It is like an additional dimension. Hey, it's really sounds great!!!! It can be used for headlines: "Visitors from another world - vaisnavas, living in two dimentions- ISKCON and VAD." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 1999 Report Share Posted March 14, 1999 At 10:05 14/03/99 -0500, WWW: Janesvara (Dasa) ACBSP (Syracuse - USA) wrote: >> So I think the answer on "is it possible to change your varna >> in Daiva varnasrama society" is "yes", but "how it should >> be done properly in social terms?" is still missing a complete answer. > > >"Foul means of livelihood means deviation from one's occupational duty. So to not deviate from our duties, we need to undergo a process of changing varnas. Or you wanted to say "Next lifetime" ? Thanks for the quote. I read this room conversation before, and I so liked it that I've translated it into Russian and read it to my friends. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 1999 Report Share Posted March 15, 1999 > > > > Washing pots for the Deities is devotional service, and not some "sinful > > activity." > > > Isn't it: washing the Deities pots while hearing, chanting, remembering, > etc. the Lord, is devotional service? > Simply manually serving the Lord is called "dasyam", and it is devotional service in itself. Sravanam, kirtanam, Visnu smaranam, and so on, are another forms of devotional service. I do not see the reason to not consider dasyam, or any of these 9 forms, to not be devotional service for itself, provided that it is done with the proper motive. > "It is not that everyone becomes purified by entering the Ganges. > Everything, spiritual and material , depends on one's mental condition." > S.B. 10.10.4. > > People "acting" like brahmanas or sannyasis through their outward > appearances, even engaged in so many seemingly directly spiritual > activities, may not be doing devotional service at all. Same with sudras, > vaisyas, ksatriyas. > Yes. But to be in the proper mental condition while performing one's service does not have to mean that hearing, chanting, remembering, etc. has to be there going on simultaneously. Arjuna was concentrated on shooting his arrows on the enemies. At that time, in the midst of the war going on, he did not have time to perform kirtanam, listen to classes, meditate on the Lord... Washing pots may not require that concentration, though, but there are plenty of services that one better absorbs himself in and just forget (for the time being) all about chanting and meditating. I remember a devotee who was supposed to get trained into a particular service in the BBT. He thought that the Holy Name got to be always vibrating on his lips, that he got to have his walkmen with bhajans and classes always in his pocket... Well, he couldn't make together the service, it was all lousy and useless, and nobody benefited from nor was happy about his constant kirtanam that simply disturbed everybody around. ys mnd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 1999 Report Share Posted March 15, 1999 The change of varnas is not a single > move in chess game. It requires change of life style, change > of specific duties, change of traditions, change of social > recognition. Forgive me but I think you are simplifying things a bit here. Many of these changes will be very gradual. In my family I have seen a similar evolution. My Uncle for instance was born into a middle class family, his father was a fireman and his mother a housewife. His other sisters married into the lower middle class, and live typical disfunctional western lives. Early on it appears he decided he was going to rise above this, and dedicated himself to his studies. he taught himself classical Spanish guitar, read the classics widely and eventualy graduated from University with honours, and is now a leading economist in the Bank of England, helping to set economic policy around the world. He does not mix with his blood family anymore, and has married into a very high class family. All these changes were very gradual over many years. It is not that one has to make a sudden change. For anyone to rise to a higher platform takes some work, and plenty of time, so the changes that take place are gradual. In society we see this all the time. As Janesvara Prabhu pointed out, Srila Prabhupada was not particularly into the changing of Varna, but that whatever varna one is naturaly sitated in, just add Krishna Consciousness, then one transcends varna and becomes vaisnava. Just being a brahmana is not in itself transcendental. There are many 'so called' brahmin families in India who follow the rules and regulations of brahminical life, but are not devotees of Lord Krishna, and hence Vaisnavas. I think that there needs to be two distinct ways in which varnasrama is introduced. One is for our children, who have not yet been spoiled by impersonal 'slaughterhouse' education, and the other is for those who *have* been 'spoiled' by it, namely some of us and others who grew up without proper training. When we join the temple we do undergo a very gradual transformation. Sometimes this can *appear* to be rapid, due to some persons who impersonate advanced devotees, (Jayatirtha comes to mind), and of course it can be rapid for those who realy are serious, but for most, it is very gradual. Because our society is made up of people going through gradual change, there appears to be a lot of disorder, devotees changing service etc. The reason for the chaos is because the society does not actively plan for this change with a concerted and organised varnasrama training, it just goes on at random as devotees get dissatisfied in any particular service. What we should have is a sort of 'department of employment that works to recognise the inherent varna traits and retrain devotees to utilise them, as well as to provide training for those who aspire to rise themselves to a higher standard. For the children we need to provide institutions that are designed to monitor them individualy to find their varnic traits early on, then provide them with a spiritual and material training, that fits their particular leanings. In Mayapur gurukula they have found that you just cannot train a child in a brahminical way, if he does not have that tendency. So far ISKCON has not managed to create a school with teachers who are specificaly trained to recognise character, though psychology and astrology, which is what is needed. To do this requires a refocus of ISKCON's goals, (in my opinion). And this change cannot exist on free-jump basis: > "Ok, today I'm sudra, tomorrow I'm brahmana, then I'm vaisya > and in Friday I'm again sudra". There should exist some > social procedure, am I not right? And this change should > not be fashion, "Everyone, promote your social status! RUSH!" > Then the result will be... You may guess. I cant imagine that anyone would really suggest this. Of course anything is possible. What does Srila Prabhupada require of each of his followers? That they rack their brains to find ways of spreading Krishna Consciousness. That means using ones intelligence and not rushing into anything. Varnasrama is such a complex social structure, that it cannot possibly be decided in a meeting or two. We need the entire society to refocus. Probabaly we should set up several research centers (varnasrama colleges) to simultaneously tackle every single detail of what it takes to implement varnashrama, and a society that has the will to make changes, as and when significant progress has been made to ascertain the steps required. > > So I think the answer on "is it possible to change your varna > in Daiva varnasrama society" is "yes", but "how it should > be done properly in social terms?" is still missing a complete answer. The answer is to focus on Srila Prabhupadas instructions, and implement them in such a way that the progress is constantly moinitored, and policy adjusted to fit the practical results, by a body of people who are dedicated and have the backing and resources to make it work. This statement posted by Janesvara Prabhu, really sums it up: Satsvarupa: If in our society we say, "Srila Prabhupada wants some to be sudra..." Prabhupada: No, no, no. I don't want. I want everyone to become Vaisnava. But because he's a sudra, it is not possible to bring him immediately to the platform of brahmana, or Vaisnava. Therefore falling down. Therefore system must be. But even if he remains a sudra, he's a Vaisnava." What is that system that Prabhupada states 'must be'? As I have been absent from the conference for several months I have probably stated really obvious things here that you have already worked through, and if so, sorry. YS Samba das Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 1999 Report Share Posted March 15, 1999 On 15 Mar 1999, Mahanidhi das wrote: > Simply manually serving the Lord is called "dasyam", and it is > devotional service in itself. Sravanam, kirtanam, Visnu smaranam, > and so on, are another forms of devotional service. I do not > see the reason to not consider dasyam, or any of these 9 forms, > to not be devotional service for itself, provided that it is > done with the proper motive. Yes, you are right. My words may have implied something different. The defining thing is the "motive", which seems to be more of a developed character of a person - one of sincerity. It may not appear from the outside. > > "It is not that everyone becomes purified by entering the Ganges. > > Everything, spiritual and material , depends on one's mental condition." > > S.B. 10.10.4. > > People "acting" like brahmanas or sannyasis through their outward > > appearances, even engaged in so many seemingly directly spiritual > > activities, may not be doing devotional service at all. Same with sudras, > > vaisyas, ksatriyas. > Yes. But to be in the proper mental condition while performing > one's service does not have to mean that hearing, chanting, remembering, > etc. has to be there going on simultaneously. Arjuna was concentrated > on shooting his arrows on the enemies. At that time, in the midst > of the war going on, he did not have time to perform kirtanam, listen > to classes, meditate on the Lord... Generally, I agree, but Krsna told him to, "Always remember me in the form of Krsna and at the same time perform your prescribed duty of fighting." (tasmat sarvesu kalesu, etc. A nice verse.) But, yes, you are right. A devotee prostitute is probably not offering her prayers and chanting at all times during her "duties". She is a devotee in her heart and she engages her body in her duty as given by nature. This goes for everyone(?). > Washing pots may not require that concentration, though, but there > are plenty of services that one better absorbs himself in and > just forget (for the time being) all about chanting and meditating. > I remember a devotee who was supposed to get trained into a particular > service in the BBT. He thought that the Holy Name got to be always > vibrating on his lips, that he got to have his walkmen with bhajans > and classes always in his pocket... Well, he couldn't make together > the service, it was all lousy and useless, and nobody benefited from > nor was happy about his constant kirtanam that simply disturbed everybody > around. I have told the story before of Devakinandana of NV who didn't chant rounds, or attend mangalarotik and would sleep long hours. When Srila Prabhupada was told this he said, "Maybe he's tired." He also invited him to be the cow protector in Vrindavan. It would seem sufficient that he was just serving Krsna's cows so nicely. Surely this would purify him gradually. One interesting question is: how long will Krsna wait for us to become devotees and return to Him? I think I heard Srila Prabhupada say that when we return home it is like a second that has gone by and Krsna says, "Oh? you were gone somewhere? You are welcome here always." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 1999 Report Share Posted March 15, 1999 At 08:09 15/03/99 +0100, COM: Mahanidhi (das) HKS (Lund - S) wrote: >Washing pots may not require that concentration, though, but there >are plenty of services that one better absorbs himself in and >just forget (for the time being) all about chanting and meditating. >I remember a devotee who was supposed to get trained into a particular >service in the BBT. He thought that the Holy Name got to be always >vibrating on his lips, that he got to have his walkmen with bhajans >and classes always in his pocket... Well, he couldn't make together >the service, it was all lousy and useless, and nobody benefited from >nor was happy about his constant kirtanam that simply disturbed everybody >around. First of all, it's not healthy to walk with walkman all day long. Such constant pressure on organ of hearing can seriously damage it. And about combining service and hearing, I think it should be figured out individually. When I washed pots in Deity department, I ususally turned on the stereo with lectures, so my hands were doing the job, while my mind was immersed in lecture. I liked it, and usually there were no problems with other devotees. But in the case of BBT work as editor, proofreader or translator it's another thing. There was an interesting story about Prabhupada, which I heard on one class. There was one little enterprise near NY, where devotees were producing insense sticks. Prabhupada was very pleased by activity, which was performed by devotees, 'cause they always were listing tape with lectures, combining with work. But once they stopped this practice, Srila Prabhupada disliked it and said something like it was just a usual karmi job. yhs, Oleg. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 1999 Report Share Posted March 16, 1999 > > I have told the story before of Devakinandana of NV who didn't chant > rounds, or attend mangalarotik and would sleep long hours. When Srila > Prabhupada was told this he said, "Maybe he's tired." He also invited him > to be the cow protector in Vrindavan. It would seem sufficient that he was > just serving Krsna's cows so nicely. Surely this would purify him > gradually. > In the Srimad Bhagavatam there are given exemples of devotess for each of these nine activities of devotional service, who attained perfection by simply being fully engaged in only one of these nine devotional activities. So, yes, even just one form of devotional service would be sufficient. Howewer, we are never recomended to do so, but to engaged ourselves in all of them, becouse of our incompetence to absorb ourself in only one type of these devotioanl activities. > One interesting question is: how long will Krsna wait for us to become > devotees and return to Him? Some related sentences from the purport to BG 13.23: "It is said that the Supersoul, who is always with the individual soul, is the representation of the Supreme Lord." "The fact is that every individual living entity is eternally part and parcel of the Supreme Lord, and both of them are very intimately related as friends." "As long as he is conditioned by the material energy, the Supreme Lord, as his friend, the Supersoul, stays with him just to get him to return to the spiritual energy." > I think I heard Srila Prabhupada say that when > we return home it is like a second that has gone by and Krsna says, "Oh? > you were gone somewhere? You are welcome here always." Yes, I just don't have the Folio to search for the references. ys mnd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 1999 Report Share Posted March 16, 1999 > > First of all, it's not healthy to walk with walkman all day long. Such > constant pressure on organ of hearing can seriously damage it. And about > combining service and hearing, I think it should be figured out > individually. When I washed pots in Deity department, I ususally turned on > the stereo with lectures, so my hands were doing the job, while my mind > was immersed in lecture. I liked it, and usually there were no problems > with other devotees. But in the case of BBT work as editor, proofreader or > translator it's another thing. Yes, for the type of services that do not require full concentration it is perfectly fine to be listening to some class along, to have one's mind absorbed in something else instead of wondering all over the Universe. Otherwise, if the service gets lousy because of not being concentrated on it, what is the big use of such listening. But absorbing mind in Krsna's service, when it is required so, is as good as absorbing it in Krsna's personal form or name. At least, that's what I was thought in all those years spent in the temple. ys mnd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 1999 Report Share Posted March 16, 1999 > > > Yes, you are right. My words may have implied something different. The > defining thing is the "motive", which seems to be more of a developed > character of a person - one of sincerity. It may not appear from the outside. > Attention and intention. How well we perform our duties and what those duties are is our attention. The motivation is intention - why we are doing them. Attention is VAD, intention has to do with Vaisnavism. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 1999 Report Share Posted March 16, 1999 On 16 Mar 1999, Madhava Gosh wrote: > Attention and intention. How well we perform our duties and what those duties > are > is our attention. The motivation is intention - why we are doing them. > Attention > is VAD, intention has to do with Vaisnavism. Very nice. I can see from this that VAD encompasses everything so well and so clearly. All duties/occupations/jobs, that humans find themselves engaged in are as the result of the modes of material nature which we have acquired from our previous activities and the modes are under the direction of the Lord. We need to be attentive: to recognize our nature, accept our natural occupation, dedicate ourselves to it because the Lord prescribed it for us and injected into it the ability to purify us to the stage of Vaisnava. We need the right intentions: to do our job for the Lord without expecting result/fruits, i.e., false ego, followers, glorifiers, riches, etc. The intention is that it is our constitutional position. This makes VAD so nice, like Srila Prabhupada would describe it. Any varna can become Vaisnava - which is the goal. How long will it take? One second or 1 million births. That, I believe, is up to the Lord. I don't think we can expedite. I've thought about it for years and always come to the same conclusion - we cannot expedite. It would give no meaning to karma - the Lord's ultimate plan to bring all jivas back home. Krsna can expedite, if he so desires. We don't have to worry about it. Ya see?! This conference EDUCATES. So nice. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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