Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 ---------- Forwarded Message ---------- June 5, 2006 Dear New Vrindavan community and ISKCON family worldwide, Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to Srila Prabhupad. My name is Jason Friggens, and I have been living at New Vrindavan for a little more than eight months now. I first met devotees last summer at the Rainbow Gathering in the Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia. First of all, I would like to offer gratitude to everyone who has played even the smallest goal in furthering the Krishna Consciousness movement. I cannot even begin to fully realize how crucial the message of this movement is for us fallen conditioned souls. Really, I am not qualified to talk about it, so please give me your blessings that Krishna may enable me to better grasp its gravity and pass it on to others. There is nothing more important to humanity than this. With this being said, I would like to bring your attention to an emergency situation. It has to do with our culture, our everyday lifestyle. As many of you know, we are living in a time when the “civilization” of this world is madly chasing after sense gratification of all kinds, and so the mainstream culture is now one of such insatiable, feverish consumerism that it blinds its members of the suffering being inflicted upon the earth and all her inhabitants in order to conveniently and efficiently support this system. This culture is so powerful that it has a strong hold even on ISKCON communities such as New Vrindavan. I will now cite examples in hope that we will be able to better be a blessing to the whole world by reducing the suffering of living entities and avoid much negative collective karma. Food is one of the most basic needs in community living. Today, most of the world’s grains, fruits, and vegetables are grown by methods using machinery and chemicals that degrade the soil (the food’s food) and are extremely toxic to the earth’s various natural systems and her inhabitants. The food produced by these methods often look more appealing (bigger, brighter apples and lettuce with no trace of incest nibbling), but are generally less tasty and nutritious, and even poisonous. After all, there is a reason why insects and other “pests” avoid these foods. We should follow their example for our own sake and that of the earth’s health. Milk and other dairy products are also very central to Krishna and the devotees’ daily diets. Let us now ponder where this milk comes from. At New Vrindavan, we have been milking one cow for three years now. The vast majority of the milk and other dairy products consumed by New Vrindavan residents and visitors is bought on a weekly basis at Sam’s Club because of the low cost, but it has been shown that the reason Sam’s Club and its infamous brother, Wal Mart corporation are able to sell at such low prices is because of their record of employee and resource exploitation worldwide. But this is a small offshoot of the main point I’m trying to make here. Regardless of where the milk is bought, almost if not all commercial dairies treat their cows in ways that would make many people lose their appetite for milk if they witnessed the process first hand. After a short life of being shot up with hormones that make their udders nearly burst to produce an unnaturally huge amount of polluted milk, these matajis are then slaughtered for meat. This is the milk that we daily offer to Radha-Vrindavan Chandra. Even if these cows receive spiritual benefit by merit of their milk being offered to the Deities, wouldn’t it be much more pleasing to the Lord and to our conscience to purchase cows and bulls to save them from these horrible dairy and meat industries and allow them to live better lives with us, giving them a chance to do service for Radha-Vrindavan Chandra by plowing fields, pulling oxcarts, providing manure (and milk in more natural quantities and flavors) in an atmosphere of love and respect? Besides the chemicals and mistreatment that go into the food and milk that we buy, there is also the compounding effect of the fossil fuels (with all their ghastly related pollution, industry, corporations, and wars) that go into transporting our food from distant places like California and South America. Volumes could be written and have been written on the subject of the hellish effects of fossil fuels. The next issue I will address is electricity. This is a particularly poignant topic for me, being a native of West Virginia, since electricity is produced almost exclusively from coal (the state of West Virginia, in which New Vrindavan is located, is one of the top providers of coal in the country). As a testimony, there is an all-pervasive and constant mechanical drone that can be heard at New Vrindavan 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, from a coal mine located on the next ridge over from the temple. The coal mining industry, along with the power plants which burn the coal for conversion into electricity, poison the land, water, air, and all the earth’s inhabitants with numerous deadly chemicals. And in parts of our very own West Virginia (yes, I know, Krishna’s West Virginia), which I witnessed first-hand a year ago, the most violent, diabolical form of mining is taking place- it’s called Mountain Top Removal. In this method, after the timber is stripped from whole mountain ridges and sides, layer by layer of the mountains are blasted away from the top to the bottom, thousands of vertical feet. The layers of coal are extracted and the rest of the mountain is dumped into the valleys (“valley fill”), permanently burying the streams with the huge layers of rubble that were once mountains. I visited a man in southern West Virginia last summer who refused to sell the land that he and his family have lived on for generations to a major coal company. The coal beneath his home was worth 600 million dollars to the coal barons. Over the past few years as land around him has been sold off, the view from his home has been transformed into something that superficially resembles part of the canyonlands of Utah or Arizona- a promontory falling away to a horizon of vast wastelands- literally miles of mountains vanishing before our eyes. Because of his stubbornness to sell the land, cronies of the coal company have committed over 100 acts of intimidation and vandalism to his family and property, including killing his dog and a failed attempt on his own life. Things like this are happening all the time. And we rarely realize that as we wastefully consume all sorts of resources, we are individually playing a tiny part in creating this collective nightmare which is causing so much suffering to so many living beings. Here at New Vrindavan, we spend about ten thousand dollars a year just for the electricity needed to run an aerator for the sewage system and to pump water from the stream below us up to a holding container. There is a much more beautiful way of life than this. In light of the gloomy but real picture I have painted, I beg ISKCON in general, and New Vrindavan in particular, to seriously begin to radically change the direction of its collective lifestyle towards sustainability and self-sufficiency. We have the ability to grow our own food organically, milk our own cows, build our dwellings from local materials, and free ourselves from the dependency of fossil fuels. We just need to desire it enough. All of these environmental offences that I have been describing could be brought to almost nil within our community, if we dedicate ourselves to serving Krishna in this way. And better yet, with Krishna’s grace, we could be an example, inspiration, and agent of change for countless others living in Kali’s age of industrialism and consumerism. For our existing “farm communities”, I see no other sane alternative. Srila Prabhupad understood this issue much more profoundly than myself, and that is why he gave so many implicit instructions on this matter. For there to be any semblance of a livable future for souls born on earth in the coming generations, we must change. Given the knowledge of the horrible consequences brought on by being addicted to this technological, industrial culture of convenience and consumerism, along with the instructions of Srila Prabhupad, what possible excuse could anyone offer to stop us from moving toward sustainability and self-sufficiency with all speed? It may be true that for the devotee there is no reaction for activities performed in Krishna’s service, but for the sake of sinners like me, I beg you to be an example and an agent of mercy. I, along with the majority of the world’s population, am not a devotee of the Lord, though I aspire to be. And until that glorious day when I become completely purified in devotional service by the mercy of Guru and Krishna, I am to some extent bound by collective vikarmic activity in the form of countless gross crimes against the earth and her inhabitants simply by existing within this Kali culture of degradation. Therefore, with the belief that the law of karma is real, I feel that I must warn others of this emergency situation. If this New Vrindavan community doesn’t soon wake from its slumber and promptly get on the fast track to simple, local, self-sufficient living, then it is my duty to search for a community that is, for the benefit of my own spiritual life and that of others. Therefore, I would like to make a general inquiry to the ISKCON world at large: Does anyone know of any communities out there that are seriously working toward this lifestyle of self-sufficiency who might welcome me, in the scenario that I am not empowered to inspire New Vrindavan to do so? You can reach me by e-mail at jfriggens <jfriggens >. I beg for the opportunity to live in a community in harmony with the natural laws and to play a part in enhancing this Golden Age of Kali for the benefit of the earth and all her inhabitants, by the grace of Lord Caitanya and His associates. Please pray for New Vrindavan and grace me with your blessings. Hari Bol! Your servant, Jason Friggens (Text PAMHO:11709808) ----- ------- End of Forwarded Message ------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rukmini-Devi dasi Posted June 9, 2006 Report Share Posted June 9, 2006 New Vrndavan is not the only temple/devotee community using such products as huge coporation milk products. What happened to Srila Prabhupada's plan that the temples would use milk from Iskcon's cows? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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