Guest guest Posted December 21, 2001 Report Share Posted December 21, 2001 Haribol Maharaj, Long time, very long time, no hear. This is Raghunatha Anudasa--former Vrindavan Gurukuli. Just wanted to say hari bol since I came across your name here on the net. Raghunatha Anudasa Here's the latest on the writing side from me. I thought you might like it. There's a little surprise in the end about the Himalaya's. Himalayan Christmas Gift Written By Maddy Brinkman Story By John 'Raghu' Giuffre Raghu (AT) ROOPA (DOT) org That time of year when dads get to spend money blew into town faster this year. I had been up to the hills and cut a tree for the living room. The usual stocking hung above the fireplace. In a few years, they would become my son's acne-fertilizer. But not yet. I carefully climbed the stairs without a sound. The house still smelled of baking: pies, cookies, bread. I love the smell of fresh baking. There is something very homely about baking. From the top of the stairs, the living room looked ready. There was a satisfactory clutter of odd shapes under the tree. Tomorrow there would be a space. But not yet. Upstairs, I pulled myself up through a trapdoor into the attic. My son had asked me to surprise him this year. No playstation. No bike. Nothing. Just a smile when I asked him what he wanted: "Surprise me." there was snow in the forecast. But none yet. I rummaged around the attic. The dust made me sneeze and I cursed the few sharp objects I bumped into. Where was that damn light switch? There it is. Light. 40 watts. I looked at the cobwebbed storage space and my hopes fled. After combing the malls and variety stores, what did I think I was going to find in my attic. A broken pool stick? Some moth-eaten ski pants? That would be a surprise. And not a good one. It was cold up here. I kept expecting a rat to pounce. I'll just poke around and leave quickly. It was time for bed. I moved to the pool table stacked high with National Geo. mags. No National Geo. this year. I crossed the tricycle and my leg caught, launching me into the corner. I clutched at the old clothes rack and it came down on top of me. I lay in the dust laughing. I have got to be as clumsy as the abominable snowman. I turned over and looked around the corner. The light barely made it this far. I pushed the clothes rack off me and dusted off the old trunk. It was an old battered trunk that had been my grandfathers. I had kept it because I was too lazy to lug it down for a yard sale. I had opened it years ago. It was full of books, papers, charts of stuff and some orange cloaks. There were also some small nature paintings. I ran a finger through the layer of dust on the trunk top. I opened it and the hinges squeaked. Yup. Papers and a cloak. I picked up one of the books. The pages had warped and yellowed with age. I tried to open it and half of the pages fell out. They looked like diary pages, though the ink was faded. I bent down for a better look. It was in German. I realized it had been 3 years since I last spoke German. But here, I read it in sheer disbelief. November 27th 1789 We finally made it to the valley by sundown after a week of camping and hiking. I feel I have made solid friendships with our pack-mules. The monks here seem friendly. My interpreter told them I was here to map and paint the area. Mapping pays the bills, but it is painting that makes them worth paying. The monks understand. The Himalayas are beautiful and need to be shared with other 'red faces.' I don't know what I think about that. I told my interpreter to tell them they had no noses and that their eyes were small but he discouraged this line of friendship. One of the monks brought me some soup. He says it will help me acclimatize. I'm looking forward to some sleep. November 28th 1789 I managed to sleep in, in spite of the early prayers. Breakfast took some getting use to. We sat on the floor and the food was spicy. I'll be regretting it more later. I'm going to strike out this morning on my own. I had not expected this much lush greenery this high up in the mountains. November 29th 1789 This place is incredible. The sheer vastness of the mountain range is breathtaking. Humbling. The monks warned me not to shout while in the gorges for fear of causing an avalanche. I was just trying out the echo. I made some charcoal sketches of the local flora and fauna. Lots of deer here. Surprisingly friendly. Last night I sat around a fire with the local children for dinner. They all decided to take turns telling me stories. I understood what they were telling me. Not exactly their words of course but their meaning was lucid. Their pure excitement and joy of life was clear and they communicated that. Joy is pretty universal. I felt very peaceful, just sitting in the middle of their life. They had let me be a part of them for the evening. November 30th 1789 Just got up from a nap. I had been up early to watch the monks do their morning services. The main shrine resounded like a beehive with their murmurous chants. The monks are completely bald and wear dark orange robes. Some robes are more faded than others. I have never seen such an array of bald heads. Not all were perfectly round. Some were oval. Others were square and there was the odd coconut protruding back head. Happy faces, grave faces and yes, I caught a couple of sleeping faces. The abbot wears a long fancy hat-looks almost Greek. I will see if I can sketch him while I'm here. I found out the name of the monk who brought me the soup. His name is Sunta Ram. I can't seem to get rid of him. He is very curious and shadows me trying to help me do things I am not trying to do. My interpreter says 'Sunta' means saint. Ram was a very energetic saint. December 1st 1789 Sunta Ram has decided I must learn to meditate and will not be dissuaded. I couldn't get painting until late afternoon. We are expecting a caravan to come up from Kullu with supplies. So far, I haven't needed paint or charcoal but I do need some toilet cloth. I have a cloth merchant that keeps me in supply. He makes me rolls of cloth six inches wide and I take it on my excursions. The natives do something with a mug of water to clean themselves when they go. But it can't be good hygiene. As a result, my cloth merchant makes me toilet cloth and thinks Germans are filthy. December 7th 1789 Sunta Ram took me up to the waterfalls. The icy water falls two fifty meters into a rock pool. The spray creates multiple rainbows. I sketched the beginnings of a waterfall series I want to paint. I can't wait to get home and show off some of these painting. I have never painted like this before. Colors, life, beauty. Sunta Ram continues his mission to teach me meditation. I had my interpreter ask him to stop but it is useless. He has decided I need discipline. As if sleeping on the floor and having diarrhea isn't enough. December 8th 1789 The caravan arrived. The children were fascinated with the supplies. I lit up some gunpowder for them and they danced around with glee. One of them ran off with my new spectacles and it took me an hour to get them off him. I swear they like monkeys. Sunta Ram thought the whole thing was hilarious and told me I should just stay up here forever. He thinks I have a way with the kids. My interpreter told me Sunta Ram thinks that when I am with the children I am not sad. December 9th 1789 Woke up to a commotion in the monastery courtyard. The kids had gotten into my supplies and taken my toilet cloth. It lined the courtyard like festoons. A group of them were on the roof throwing them off into the air to unravel. Some of it had been fashioned into tails for their kites. They make some beautiful kites. When I had been shouting out of my window at them for fifteen minutes, Sunta Ram showed up. Everyone was laughing about it. I complained about the inconvenience this was going to cause and he took me by the hand and led me down to the courtyard. "Look how happy they are." He told me. And something I took to mean that I had forgotten how to be happy. I made a face and he slapped me on the back. He gathered the children in a corner of the courtyard and gave them sticks. For the next hour the kids drove around and raced each other on their new 'horses.' "You see?" Sunta Ram said. "A child is happy inside. A stick is a horse and he is happy. When you grow older, the happiness inside goes and we look everywhere outside to find it. But it is not outside." He then repeated that I needed to spend more time with the children. December 18th 1789 I haven't been able to paint in a week. I haven't even been able to sketch anything. It seems forced now. I have been feeling beautiful. Looking outward to arbitrarily capture beauty seems pointless. What I keep inside me is only what my mind can remember. Sunta Ram and I took the children out for the day. We gave one boy a tree and told him it was his kingdom. Rule well, we told him. Another boy was given charge of the river. He promptly set up tax and charged everyone a round stone to swim. Then the deer found their queen in one of the youngest girls. She ruled and protected them from the enemy Tree King. Before we came home, all the children teamed up and threw me in the river. It was freezing. They think I smell bad because they never see me bathe. The water made me aware of how much of me there was alive to feel that cold water everywhere. I was very wide-awake. The kids were rolling on the ground at my indignation. I chased them all around for a bit and then sat down laughing. A bit of cold, for all that fun was definitely worth it. Sunta Ram let me wear his orange-robe for the walk back to the monastery. It keeps falling off. I have not developed my robe technique I guess. I have been dubbed: "Suntlaal" for the walk home. 'Laal' means red in their language. So, I am the red saint. I guess they don't have a word for pink. I think they see my white skin as pink. It must be rather funny sight. Their eyes were as wide as guavas when I took my wet shirt off when I got out. The pink man has a pink torso -- how funny and surprising. December 19th 1789 I had a sleepy grin on my face as I lay in bed last night. I was exhausted after the day running with the children. Exhausted and content. The last shout of "Goodbed Suntlaal" floated through the window. I tried to teach them how to say 'goodnight' and 'go to bed' in English and they came up with their own version. They did the same thing with 'see you tomorrow'. They wound me up with 'threemorrow', 'fourmorrow', "see you fivemorrow." It was silly but I liked it. They were helping me. I'm feeling free and happy, unexplainably. They need so little. I realized that back in Germany we sometimes forget that in order for our children to be happy we just have to get out of the way and let them be kids. December 24th 1789 I haven't seen the children today. I have been down in the shrine room with Sunta Ram and the other monks making kites for the children. Tomorrow is a festival. We will be honoring a saint. Sunta Ram said his name is Isa. According to legend, a young saint came hundreds of years ago from the west. He would go from village to village telling stories to children. He was always surrounded by children. I can see why. December 25th 1789 Today was one of the happiest and saddest day of my life. In the morning, the monks insisted I put on one of their dark orange robes. We then took the children out to the forest to feed the deer. While we were out there, the little girl who was queen of the deer pointed at the abbot's hat, pointed at me, and then giggled. I snuck up, grabbed the abbot's hat, put it on, and danced a little jig. The little girl was almost choking she was laughing so much. It is a good thing too because I later found out that it was very disrespectful of me. Initially the monks had tried to look outraged but the girl laughed so much that even the abbot broke into laughter. I had only meant a bit of mischief but custom prohibited the abbot from wearing the hat again. I was told I could keep it. When we got back, we passed out the kites we had made for them. Instantly the sky was alive with forty-five odd kites. I was surrounded by shrieks of glee and shiny eyes. This is heaven. Then an old woman came out of the monastery. I didn't even realize that she must have been the only woman there. She walked over to one of the younger boys and led him back into the monastery. All the children and turned. They watched. The kites tangled and fell. No one spoke. And I realized with a shock something that was obvious but had not struck me before. I turned to Sunta Ram and asked about the other boys in a whisper. "No. They don't have family. That is why they stay here. That is why we make kites every year. And they fly." Yes they fly. And I knew I had to go. I had to go home to Germany. There are so many children. So many children who need to fly. December 25th 1790 After a year of gathering and making toys, I was able to spread festive cheer to the children of Hamburg. It is invigorating to bring them something. I have been wearing Sunta Ram's orange robes and the abbot's hat. The children love it although their parents might be a little spooked. I tell them my name is Nicholas. Sunta Nicholas. I tell them I come from way up in the Himalayas where it is very cold. I tell them of the carefree children and the deer and the rainbows and the river and the kites. And I tell them the toys are sent by all the monks who work to make them. And I promise to bring them more presents next year if they are well behaved. Some of the parents tell them to stay away from me. Next year I may have to sneak their gifts to them. In honor of the young saint Isa and Jesus, the kids must feel joy. They must all fly. Fly like kites. I closed, put down the diary pages and picked up the orange robe. Under it lay a dusty painting of a little girl laughing uncontrollably. The painting was signed 'Klaus.' "He's Santa?! We're related to Santa Klaus?!" I had a surprise for Junior all right. Tomorrow was going to be Christmas proper. Other writings by Raghu www.ROOPA.org C March 2001 ISKCON.India (AT) pamho (DOT) net [iSKCON.India (AT) pamho (DOT) net] On Behalf Of Mahavishnu Swami (ACBSP) (Bangladesh / Nepal) Thursday, December 13, 2001 8:05 AM Ananda Tirtha (das) PVS (Mayapur Gurukula, SRPV - IN); Vidvan Gauranga (das) JPS (Mayapur - IN); FFL (Food For Life) Cc: Bhakti Vikasa Swami; Jayadvaita Swami; Basu Ghosh (das) ACBSP (Baroda - IN); Jasomatinandan (das) ACBSP (Gujarat - IN); Tattvavit (das) ACBSP (NE-BBT); Bhadra Balaram (das) JPS (Mayapur - IN); GBC Unmoderated; India (Continental Committee) Open (Forum); (Temple) Presidents In light of this, what to make of all the earthquake relief? Dear Priyavrata Prabhu, Maharajas,Prabhus, Please accept my humble obeisances!All Glories to Srila Prabhupada!Hare Krishna!All Glories to Srila Prabhupada! My comment was really out of context.Actually I was just trying to reach Priyavrata Prabhu to get advice from him about setting up separate FFL departments in some African Temples.As he had discontinued his PAMHO subscription I thought I could reach him via the FFL conference.My mistake.Sorry if I may have created some confusion. Your servant,Mahavishnu Swami. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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