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A New Calling: Freelance Priests

Hindu Clerics Go Solo to Lead Off-Site Rituals and

Meet Needs of Region's Indian Population

 

By Karin Brulliard

The Washington Post

Washington D.C., U.S.

March 26, 2008

 

On a dark Sunday morning in a slumbering Ellicott City

neighborhood, Bhaskar Sastry, freelance Hindu priest,

drove down a private drive toward his 6 a.m.

assignment. A stone-front colonial came into view, its

porch light revealing a large family waiting in the

drizzle, parkas over their vibrant silk saris and kurta

pajamas. It was move-in day, but they could not proceed

without Sastry.

 

Soon Sastry, 44, was cracking a white pumpkin on the

stoop and chanting prayers to a Hindu goddess, his deep

voice piercing the pre-dawn silence. Once inside, he sat

cross-legged on the floor and adorned an altar with fruits

and flowers. He lit a fire in a roasting pan -- modest

enough to abide by fire codes -- and led mantras

beseeching deities to ward off evil and bless the new

home.

 

It was just another day in the life of Sastry -- and,

increasingly, in the wildly diverse Washington suburbs,

where in some places Hindu rituals seem as ordinary as

cookouts and kickball.

 

As the region's Indian population swells, so soars the

demand for Hindu ceremonies -- baby-naming services,

engagements, blessings for new cars -- that are

traditionally performed outside the many priest-staffed

temples that dot the area. So, for eight years, Sastry has

kept busy as one of the region's few freelance Hindu

priests. He navigates suburbs where Indians have bought

houses, bringing ancient Hindu rites to modern

American landscapes.

 

" Driving, driving, driving. Our work, a little bit difficult.

Driving, a little bit tiring, " Sastry said as he steered his

sky-blue BMW -- license plate PRIEST-B -- around the

Capital Beltway from his Ashburn home to the Ellicott

City housewarming, a ceremony considered most

auspicious if performed before sunrise. " But this is a

respected thing, " he said.

 

Freelance priests are bountiful in India, but just seven

serve one of the Washington region's largest ethnic

communities. Census data from 2006 indicate that

105,000 Indians live in the area, about 60 percent of

whom are immigrants; most have settled in Fairfax,

Loudoun, Montgomery and Howard counties. To those

who regularly call upon them, Sastry and his

counterparts become trusted family priests, akin to

family doctors or accountants.

 

Unlike the traveling preachers of the American frontier,

Sastry does not proselytize. The affable priest is booked

-- months in advance -- purely for his expertise in the

elaborate ceremonies and Sanskrit mantras he studied in

his native India. Sastry calls his work " community

service. " His clients say it is crucial in a nation where

second-generation immigrants have little interest in

Hindu religious careers.

 

" He knows it in and out and can guide us, " said

Lakshminarayana Peri, 37, a software engineer who was

a guest on a recent Saturday at a prayer ceremony, or

puja, at a townhouse in Stone Ridge, a Loudoun

subdivision. As he spoke, Sastry's recitations resonated

from a nearby room. " He takes the time. "

 

The hosts were Perraju and Laxmi Vadrevu, who book

Sastry every few months. On this night, they were

holding an all-occasion rite said to bring prosperity and

fulfillment. The ceremony marked the upcoming

birthday of their son, Aditya, and their second year in

the house.

 

There were no freelance priests in the region when the

Vadrevus arrived 12 years ago, so the couple would

conduct ceremonies using recordings of chants brought

from India. That involved frequent hits of the " pause "

button, making for a functional but " less fulfilling "

experience, Laxmi Vadrevu said. Sastry, whom they call

a friend, changed that.

 

" He has the best voice, " said Laxmi Vadrevu, 35. " It's

perfect. "

 

" Some priests will do the prayer like a business. If you

do puja like a business, you cannot impress the gods, "

said Perraju Vadrevu, 44. " Sastry is really a good guy. "

 

Aditya, 13, said it is " pretty fun having the puja, "

although he confessed that during a long ceremony, he

sometimes steps out to play video games.

 

For two hours, the Vadrevus sat before the altar as

Sastry chanted, cracked coconuts and bathed a statue of

a deity in a mixture of milk, yogurt, honey, sugar and

ghee (clarified butter). Three dozen relatives and guests,

most of whom were also Sastry's clients, filed in and

out.

 

Sastry, whose first language is Telugu, grew up in a

village in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, the

youngest of 13 children born into a long line of priests.

Starting at age 11, he spent eight years learning the

vedas, or sacred Hindu texts, eight hours a day. He

worked at a temple in New Delhi until a Lanham temple

recruited him in 1995. It was " software time, " Sastry

said, and Indian technology workers were pouring into

the Washington region.

 

By 2000, temple priests could not keep up with the

demand for off-site rituals and weddings. So Sastry and

a colleague, Venkatrama Sastrigal, struck out on their

own to become the region's first freelance priests.

Clients find them by word of mouth or on their Web

site, http://www.vedicpriest.com. Sastry performs about

25 ceremonies a month, which he schedules after

consulting astrological charts for auspicious dates.

 

Some elements of ceremonies must be adapted to the

surroundings. In the United States, unlike in India, it is

fairly impossible to get a cow to lead through the home

during a housewarming ritual. Mango leaves are rare, so

bitter leaves take their place on altars. Keeping in mind

the wood frames of American houses, Sastry starts small

fires in pans of sand.

 

" From Home Depot, " he said in Ellicott City, explaining

where he buys the sand. " Very easy! "

 

Sastry declined to discuss his fees, saying the payment is

up to the devotees. Clients said they typically pay $150

to $200 for a ritual of a few hours. They also pay his

expenses, including mileage -- " IRS rate, " he said,

chuckling. It is enough for a tidy townhouse and a yearly

vacation with his wife and two sons, 11-year-old

Vignesh and 8-year-old Pavan. Last year, they hit

Disney World.

 

" Money is not important. Only that kids go the good

road, the good way. That's it, " said Sastry, who plans to

apply for U.S. citizenship next year.

 

When not working, Sastry spends time saying prayers

before an altar fashioned out of his kitchen pantry, its

shelves holding fresh flowers, golden lamps and framed

pictures of deities. He helps with housework, picks up

staples at Costco and ferries the boys to school and tae

kwon do.

 

" He's an Indian priest, " Vignesh said of his father one

evening after demonstrating the Indian drumming he and

his brother study. He shrugged. " Most of my friends

know that. They don't really care. "

 

When the Ellicott City housewarming ended at 9:30

a.m., there was no time to chat. Sastry had a 10:30 a.m.

ceremony and another ritual in the evening, both in

Fairfax County.

 

He pulled on his red raincoat, accepted a zip-locked bag

of fried Indian snacks and headed for the car.

 

Zipping south on Interstate 95, he fielded calls from

clients on his cell phone.

 

" Good traveling, " Sastry said, once the calls were over.

" Good puja. "

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-

dyn/content/article/2008/03/25/AR2008032502694_2.ht

ml?hpid=topnews

or

http://tinyurl.com/2vshnq

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seems like a plan. maybe I will do the same when I retire *smile*

msbauju <msbauju wrote: A New Calling: Freelance Priests

Hindu Clerics Go Solo to Lead Off-Site Rituals and

Meet Needs of Region's Indian Population

 

By Karin Brulliard

The Washington Post

Washington D.C., U.S.

March 26, 2008

 

On a dark Sunday morning in a slumbering Ellicott City

neighborhood, Bhaskar Sastry, freelance Hindu priest,

drove down a private drive toward his 6 a.m.

assignment. A stone-front colonial came into view, its

porch light revealing a large family waiting in the

drizzle, parkas over their vibrant silk saris and kurta

pajamas. It was move-in day, but they could not proceed

without Sastry.

 

Soon Sastry, 44, was cracking a white pumpkin on the

stoop and chanting prayers to a Hindu goddess, his deep

voice piercing the pre-dawn silence. Once inside, he sat

cross-legged on the floor and adorned an altar with fruits

and flowers. He lit a fire in a roasting pan -- modest

enough to abide by fire codes -- and led mantras

beseeching deities to ward off evil and bless the new

home.

 

It was just another day in the life of Sastry -- and,

increasingly, in the wildly diverse Washington suburbs,

where in some places Hindu rituals seem as ordinary as

cookouts and kickball.

 

As the region's Indian population swells, so soars the

demand for Hindu ceremonies -- baby-naming services,

engagements, blessings for new cars -- that are

traditionally performed outside the many priest-staffed

temples that dot the area. So, for eight years, Sastry has

kept busy as one of the region's few freelance Hindu

priests. He navigates suburbs where Indians have bought

houses, bringing ancient Hindu rites to modern

American landscapes.

 

" Driving, driving, driving. Our work, a little bit difficult.

Driving, a little bit tiring, " Sastry said as he steered his

sky-blue BMW -- license plate PRIEST-B -- around the

Capital Beltway from his Ashburn home to the Ellicott

City housewarming, a ceremony considered most

auspicious if performed before sunrise. " But this is a

respected thing, " he said.

 

Freelance priests are bountiful in India, but just seven

serve one of the Washington region's largest ethnic

communities. Census data from 2006 indicate that

105,000 Indians live in the area, about 60 percent of

whom are immigrants; most have settled in Fairfax,

Loudoun, Montgomery and Howard counties. To those

who regularly call upon them, Sastry and his

counterparts become trusted family priests, akin to

family doctors or accountants.

 

Unlike the traveling preachers of the American frontier,

Sastry does not proselytize. The affable priest is booked

-- months in advance -- purely for his expertise in the

elaborate ceremonies and Sanskrit mantras he studied in

his native India. Sastry calls his work " community

service. " His clients say it is crucial in a nation where

second-generation immigrants have little interest in

Hindu religious careers.

 

" He knows it in and out and can guide us, " said

Lakshminarayana Peri, 37, a software engineer who was

a guest on a recent Saturday at a prayer ceremony, or

puja, at a townhouse in Stone Ridge, a Loudoun

subdivision. As he spoke, Sastry's recitations resonated

from a nearby room. " He takes the time. "

 

The hosts were Perraju and Laxmi Vadrevu, who book

Sastry every few months. On this night, they were

holding an all-occasion rite said to bring prosperity and

fulfillment. The ceremony marked the upcoming

birthday of their son, Aditya, and their second year in

the house.

 

There were no freelance priests in the region when the

Vadrevus arrived 12 years ago, so the couple would

conduct ceremonies using recordings of chants brought

from India. That involved frequent hits of the " pause "

button, making for a functional but " less fulfilling "

experience, Laxmi Vadrevu said. Sastry, whom they call

a friend, changed that.

 

" He has the best voice, " said Laxmi Vadrevu, 35. " It's

perfect. "

 

" Some priests will do the prayer like a business. If you

do puja like a business, you cannot impress the gods, "

said Perraju Vadrevu, 44. " Sastry is really a good guy. "

 

Aditya, 13, said it is " pretty fun having the puja, "

although he confessed that during a long ceremony, he

sometimes steps out to play video games.

 

For two hours, the Vadrevus sat before the altar as

Sastry chanted, cracked coconuts and bathed a statue of

a deity in a mixture of milk, yogurt, honey, sugar and

ghee (clarified butter). Three dozen relatives and guests,

most of whom were also Sastry's clients, filed in and

out.

 

Sastry, whose first language is Telugu, grew up in a

village in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, the

youngest of 13 children born into a long line of priests.

Starting at age 11, he spent eight years learning the

vedas, or sacred Hindu texts, eight hours a day. He

worked at a temple in New Delhi until a Lanham temple

recruited him in 1995. It was " software time, " Sastry

said, and Indian technology workers were pouring into

the Washington region.

 

By 2000, temple priests could not keep up with the

demand for off-site rituals and weddings. So Sastry and

a colleague, Venkatrama Sastrigal, struck out on their

own to become the region's first freelance priests.

Clients find them by word of mouth or on their Web

site, http://www.vedicpriest.com. Sastry performs about

25 ceremonies a month, which he schedules after

consulting astrological charts for auspicious dates.

 

Some elements of ceremonies must be adapted to the

surroundings. In the United States, unlike in India, it is

fairly impossible to get a cow to lead through the home

during a housewarming ritual. Mango leaves are rare, so

bitter leaves take their place on altars. Keeping in mind

the wood frames of American houses, Sastry starts small

fires in pans of sand.

 

" From Home Depot, " he said in Ellicott City, explaining

where he buys the sand. " Very easy! "

 

Sastry declined to discuss his fees, saying the payment is

up to the devotees. Clients said they typically pay $150

to $200 for a ritual of a few hours. They also pay his

expenses, including mileage -- " IRS rate, " he said,

chuckling. It is enough for a tidy townhouse and a yearly

vacation with his wife and two sons, 11-year-old

Vignesh and 8-year-old Pavan. Last year, they hit

Disney World.

 

" Money is not important. Only that kids go the good

road, the good way. That's it, " said Sastry, who plans to

apply for U.S. citizenship next year.

 

When not working, Sastry spends time saying prayers

before an altar fashioned out of his kitchen pantry, its

shelves holding fresh flowers, golden lamps and framed

pictures of deities. He helps with housework, picks up

staples at Costco and ferries the boys to school and tae

kwon do.

 

" He's an Indian priest, " Vignesh said of his father one

evening after demonstrating the Indian drumming he and

his brother study. He shrugged. " Most of my friends

know that. They don't really care. "

 

When the Ellicott City housewarming ended at 9:30

a.m., there was no time to chat. Sastry had a 10:30 a.m.

ceremony and another ritual in the evening, both in

Fairfax County.

 

He pulled on his red raincoat, accepted a zip-locked bag

of fried Indian snacks and headed for the car.

 

Zipping south on Interstate 95, he fielded calls from

clients on his cell phone.

 

" Good traveling, " Sastry said, once the calls were over.

" Good puja. "

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-

dyn/content/article/2008/03/25/AR2008032502694_2.ht

ml?hpid=topnews

or

http://tinyurl.com/2vshnq

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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