|






































|
|
Direct Disciples of
Sri Ramakrishna
Short life and Teachings |
|
Introduction |
|
In India, since
time-immemorial spiritual knowledge has been imparted through
Guru-Shishya Parampara, this is only the tradition of
Teacher-Student or Master-Disciple hierarchy. The spiritual
teacher is an illumined soul who transfers the spiritual power to
a fit disciple who is capable of grasping it. The word “disciple”,
used in connection with Sri Ramakrishna, refers to one who had
been initiated and guided into spiritual life by Sri Ramakrishna
and who regarded him as his guru. His disciples were of two kinds:
the householders, and the young men, some of whom were later to
become monks.
For householders Sri Ramakrishna did not prescribe the hard path
of total renunciation. He wanted then to discharge their
obligations to their families. Their renunciation was to be
mental. But to the young men destined to be monks he pointed out
the steep path of renunciation, both external and internal. They
must take the vow of absolute continence and eschew all thought of
greed and lust. By the practice of continence, aspirants develop a
subtle nerve through which they understand the deeper mysteries of
God. For them self-control is final, imperative and absolute. The
Sannyasis are teachers of men, and their lives should be totally
free from blemish. They must not even look at a picture, which may
awaken their animal passions. The Master selected his future monks
from young men untouched by “woman and gold” and fit enough to be
cast in his spiritual mould. When teaching them the path of
renunciation and discrimination, he would not allow the
householders to be anywhere near them.
The monastic disciples of Sri Ramakrishna are his apostles who
represented him and carried his message throughout the world. They
lived the life of complete renunciation and selfless service – the
ideal for which Sri Ramakrishna stood for. When the Great Light
disappeared, the lamps that had been kindled by it began to shed
luster in innumerable places. Indeed each monastic disciple of the
Master became a centre of wide influence and was instrumented in
transforming hundreds of lives. Each one of them was a gigantic
spiritual personality – superb in character, unique in
achievement, and an asset to humanity. When considers this, one
wonders how so many almost superhuman characters could cluster
together at one and the same time. Truly Sri Ramakrishna was a
great jeweler, who could collect so many jewels and leave them as
a legacy to the world.
|
 |
|
Life and
Teachings of Swami Vivekananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Brahmananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Premananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Yogananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Niranjanananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Saradananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Shivananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Ramakrishnananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Abhedananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Adbhutananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Advaitananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Turiyananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Trigunatitananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Akhandananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Subodhananda
Life and Teachings of Swami Vijnanananda
|

Samadhi pitha where
direct disciples' of Sri Ramakrishna at Belur Math
|
| |
SWAMI VIVEKANANDA
(1863 - 1902) |
 |
Swami
Vivekananda is just another name for the phenomenon that
exploded on the Indian scene towards the end of the nineteenth
century and restored the self-confidence and self-respect of a
nation that had been badly mauled for millennia. Born on the
12th January 1863, of an intellectual but compassionate father
and a deeply religious mother, Narendranath – that was his
original name – got a good education and cultural training
under them. An innate desire for spiritual perfection brought
him into contact with Sri Ramakrishna in the early part of
1882. The next four and a half yeas – until the Mahasamadhi of
Sri Ramakrishna – were marked by turbulence and turmoil, the
direct result of the perfect Master chiseling and shaping the
perfect disciple, but ending in total submission of the latter
at the feet of the former. As per the specific direction of
his guru, Narendra along with the other young men who were his
co-disciples, took to monastic orders and founded a monastery
in his guru’s name at Baranagore (Calcutta) in 1886. Setting
out on pilgrimage, mostly as a wandering monk, he finally
arrived at Kanyakumari, the southernmost tip of the Indian
soil, sometime during 1892. There, while meditating on the
rock inside the sea, the mission of his life was revealed to
him. Then, things moved quickly. Setting sail for America on
the 31st May 1893 he created history at the World Parliament
of Religions held at Chicago during September of the same
year. After whirlwind tours in America and England, he
triumphantly returned to India via Colombo on the 15th January
1897. |
|
During the next
five years he literally shook the Indian nation to its
foundations, electrifying it to dynamic self-expression,
through his speeches and writings as also conversations. These
have been compiled and published in eight volumes, now
well-known as The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda. They
contain, as he himself once remarked, enough messages for a
millennia. He formally established the Ramakrishna Mission in
1897 and consecrated the newly built Belur math, the
Headquarters of the Ramakrishna Monastery, in 1899. He visited
the West again during 1899-1900. He shuffled off the mortal
coil on the 4th of July 1902. His was a multifaceted
personality – a prophet, a patriot, a monk, a yogi, a social
reformer, an educationist, an artist, a poet and a humanist –
all rolled into one. His dynamic life and message gave a new
direction to the resurgent India. His work is being continued
even today by the Ramakrishna Math and the Ramakrishna
Mission, the twin organizations that he established with the
motto: Atmano mokshartham jagaddhitaya cha, ‘For the sake of
self-realization and the good of mankind.’ The Math is unique
in that it has charted new avenues in Indian monasticism. The
Mission is an ideal service organization embodying the
teachings of practical Vedanta. |
|
|
|
|
TEACHINGS |
|
One way for
attaining bhakti is by repeating the name of God a number of
times. Mantras have effect – the mere repetition of words… To
obtain bhakti, seek the company of holy men who have bhakti
and read books like the Gita.
Our first duty is not to hate ourselves; because to advance we
must have faith in ourselves first and then in God. He who has
no faith in himself can never have faith in God.
Every duty is holy, and devotion to duty is the highest form
of worship of God.
Education is the manifestation of the perfection already in
man.
To me the very essence of education is concentration of mind,
not the collecting of facts.
That society is the greatest, where the highest truths become
practical.
Faith, faith, faith in ourselves, faith in God – this is the
secret of greatness… Have faith in yourselves, and stand up on
that faith and be strong; that is what we need.
The Hindus were bold, to their credit be it said, bold
thinkers in all heir ideas, so bold that one spark of their
though frightens the so-called bold thinkers of the West.
In my opinion, a race must first cultivate a great respect for
motherhood, through the sanctification and inviolability of
marriage.
Sita is the name in India for everything that is good, pure,
and holy; everything that in woman we call woman.
Renunciation and service are the twin ideals of India.
Intensify here in these channels and the rest will take care
of itself. |
 |
| |
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI BRAHMANANDA
(1863-1922) |
|
 |
Swami
Brahmananda, the ‘Spiritual Son’ of Sri Ramakrishna was the
first President of the Ramakrishna Order. Known as Rakhal
Chandra Ghosh in his premonastic days, he was born at Sikra, a
village near Calcutta, on the 21st January, 1863, of
aristocratic parents. During his High School days at Calcutta
he came into contact with Narendranath (Swami Vivekananda)
which developed into an intimate lifelong friendship. Even
from his childhood days he was given to devotional moods
bordering on mysticism, which naturally led to indifference to
studies. His father got him married at an early age to ward
off the religious pursuits from his mind and fix him up in the
world. Strange to say, this very tie of marriage brought him
to Sri Ramakrishna who at once recognized in him his
‘Spiritual Son’ as per the vision vouchsafed to him by the
Divine Mother. Thus started a course of spiritual intimacy and
intensive training under the loving care of the Guru, which
resulted in several exalted mystic moods and spiritual
experiences. After the passing away of Sri Ramakrishna, Rakhal,
along with Narendra and other brother-disciples, embraced
monastic life under the name ‘Swami Brahmananda’. He spent
several years as a wandering monk, visiting places of
pilgrimage and practicing severe austerities. A little before
the return of Swami Vivekananda from the West, he came back to
the Baranagore Math and started living there. After his return
and establishing the Ramakrishna Mission, Swami Vivekananda
made over the responsibility of running the organization, to
him remembering that Sri Ramakrishna had once remarked |
|
that Rakhal had
the capacity to rule a kingdom. His uncanny sense in solving
even knotty problems and spiritual eminence of Himalayan
heights took the organization to new levels of glory and
development. It was a long stewardship marked by work and
worship remarkably blended together. During his tenure as the
Head, he also guided many earnest spiritual seekers by taking
them under his protection, thus fulfilling Swami Vivekananda’s
prophetic remark that Swami Brahmananda was veritably a
spiritual dynamo. He passed away on the 10th April, 1922. |
|
|
|
|
TEACHINGS |
|
Initiation into
a mantra helps concentration of mind; otherwise your mind will
change and fluctuate.
The mind is susceptible to suggestions. It learns whatever you
teach it. If through discrimination you can impress upon it
the joy and fullness of life in the spirit and the folly of
worldly attachments, then your mind will devote itself more
and more of God.
The way of steadying and purifying the mind is to retire into
solitude, control all cravings and engage yourself in
contemplation and meditation.
Work and worship must go hand in hand… Why are you afraid of
work? Work for Him. You can overcome all disinclination for
work if you consider it as dedication of God. |
|

Temple of Swami Brahmananda at Belur Math |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI PREMANANDA
(1861 - 1918) |
|
 |
The name ‘Swami Premananda’ given to
Baburam by Swami Vivekananda at the time of accepting the
monastic orders, was a true reflection of his basic trait
universal love. Born to affluent parents on December 10, 1861,
Baburam completed his early schooling in his village of Antpur
(Bengal), came to Calcutta for higher education and joined the
Metropolitan Institution. There he had the privilege of having
Sri ‘M’ (Mahendranath Gupta), the celebrated author of The
Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna as his Headmaster and Rakhal (Swami
Brahmananda) as his class-mate. It was the latter who was
instrumental in taking Baburam to Sri Ramakrishna. Sri
Ramakrishna examined Baburam’s features in his own, rather
queer, way and was satisfied about his high spiritual
potentialities. Increased contacts with Sri Ramakrishna
intensified Baburam’s inherent spiritual thirst which had been
manifesting itself even from his childhood. After the passing
away of Sri Ramakrishna, Baburam, alongwith his
brother-disciples like Narendranath (Swami Vivekananda) and
Rakhal embraced the monastic life, becoming ‘Swami Premananda.’
He spent most of his life in the monasteries at Baranagore,
Alambazaar and Belur taking care of worship, internal
management and training of the new monastic recruits.His
innate motherly love endeared him to one and all. Many a young
man was reformed by his golden touch. During his later sojourn
in several parts of Bengal, especially in East Bengal (present
Bangladesh), he inspired the youth to be useful to the society
|
|
by voluntary service. Though a man of high
spiritual attainments, he was wont to hiding them very
reticent in giving expression to them. The deadly disease of
Kala Azar took him away on the 30th July, 1918. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
To follow the Master means to practise what
he taught; otherwise nobody can advance by just offering to
him a few flowers or through some momentary sentimental
outbursts.
Can one become a great devotee of God simply by dancing and
jumping or by quoting plentifully from the scriptures? What is
wanted is freedom from selfishness – freedom from egotism…
Mere talk will not do, this is an age of action.
Not mere theory; actualize it – there has been enough talk and
writing. Put the book aside and let your actions speak. This
is what the lives of the Master and Swamiji stand for.
The poor, the weak, the fallen, the ignorant – all these you
have to make your own. And yet I warn you, that is loving one
section of society you must not become hateful of the other,
the rich. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI YOGANANDA
(1861 - 1899) |
|
 |
Though counted among the disciples of Sri
Ramakrishna and guided by him, Swami Yogananda was the first
initiated disciple of Sri Sarada Devi, popularly known as the
‘Holy Mother.’ Like the Mother whom he served meticulously
with matchless devotion, his life was very unobtrusive for all
outward appearances but very deep in inner mystic experiences,
of which he sometimes gave a hint or two. Born in 1861 in an
orthodox Brahmin family which was in indigent circumstances
but had once been aristocratic and rich, Yogindra – the
premonastic name of the Swami – was by nature indrawn, gentle
and shy. The desire to pluck a nice flower in the Dakshineswar
garden brought him face to face with Sri Ramakrishna whom
Yogin mistook for a gardener working there! He got the flower
all right, but in the process, himself became a ‘flower plant’
to be tended by a great gardener of lives. Though married, the
world could never drag his mind down to worldliness. Just as
pure gold cannot be shaped into ornaments but has got to be
alloyed with a small quantity of other metals, Sri Ramakrishna
had to ‘alloy’ him with a bit of harshness to counter his too
gentle a personality that could not last in this mundane
world. But the disciple was not a goody-goody simpleton. He
could exercise his highly critical discernment even against
his own guru or leader (Swami Vivekananda) when he thought it
necessary. He was a good organizer. He had successfully
attracted and inspired many a young man to the monastic life.
He was extraordinarily devoted to the Holy Mother whom he
served till the last day of his life. His congenitally frail
constitution could not stand the rigours he chose to impose
upon himself resulting in a rather premature death on March
28, 1899. |
| |
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI NIRANJANANANDA
( D. 1904) |
|
 |
Nityaniranjan Ghosh, more commonly known as
Niranjan, was probably born in the village Rajarhat-Vishnupur
(Bengal), but lived in Calcutta with his uncle. Physically
well-built and majestic in appearance, he had somehow become
associated with a group of spiritualists who had found in him
a very good medium. Having heard about the great spiritual
power of Sri Ramakrishna, Niranjan came to Dakshineswar one
day. During this very first visit, the great Master told him,
‘My boy! If you think of ghosts and spooks, ghost and spook
will you become! But if you think of God, divine will be your
life. Which do your prefer?’ And this converted him from
spiritualism to spiritual life. Though frank and openhearted,
he was subject to loosing temper and consequently all sense of
proportions. Sri Ramakrishna took special care to help him
overcome this weakness. Niranjan was one of the few who served
the Master day and night during his last illness. After his
demise he took sannyasa along with others and become ‘Swami
Niranjanananda.’ He was mainly instrumental in getting the
major portion of the ashes of Sri Ramakrishna, to be later
interred at the new Math built by Swami Vivekananda. He had a
deep devotion for the Holy mother. Though tender at heart, he
could be fiercely stern in the face of hypocrisy. He breathed
his last on the 9th May, 1904 |
|
GO TOP |
| |
|
|
SWAMI
SARADANANDA
(1865 - 1925) |
|
 |
While in ecstacy Sri Ramakrishna’s
behaviour would often be mysterious. One day in such a mood,
he sat on the lap of a young man, Sharat Chandra by name, and
remarked, ‘I was testing how much weight he could bear.’ This
Sharat Chandra who was later known as ‘Swami Saradananda’
successfully bore the burden of running the Ramakrishna Math
and Mission as its (General) Secretary for nearly three
decades.
Sharat Chandra Chakravarti (b. 23rd December 1865) was born at
Calcutta in a rich and orthodox Brahmin family. He and Shashi,
who later became Swami Ramakrishnananda, were not only cousins
and family friends but also studied together at the
Metropolitan College of Calcutta.
The first contact of the two cousins with Sri Ramakrishna –
during October 1883 – was a turning point in their lives.
Friendship with Narendranath (Swami Vivekananda) gave a
further fillip to their spiritual and monastic aspirations.
Sharat, who was an adept in serving the sick, both by
temperament and by experience, was one of the few important
disciples of Sri Ramakrishna who |
|
nursed him during his fatal illness. After
his passing away, Sharat too joined the select band of
monastics under the leadership of Narendra and became ‘Swami
Saradananda.’
Like his other monastic brothers, Swami Saradananda also spent
a few years as an itinerant monk practicing severe
austerities. However, when Swami Vivekananda called him for
continuing his work in the West, Saradananda went to London
first and later to New York for the same. While he was proving
to be a great success in the West, especially due to his
spiritual attainments, he was recalled to India in 1898 by
Swami Vivekananda to take over the executive responsibility of
the Ramakrishna Math and Mission as its (General) Secretary in
which capacity he served till his last day.
The way he served Sri Sarada Devi, the Holy Mother, was a
model par excellance for anyone to emulate. In order to build
a residence for her at Calcutta which would also house the
office of the Udbodhan, the Bengali Monthly of the Ramakrishna
Order, he laboured hard. To repay the debts he had incurred in
doing so, he wrote the now monumental work Sri Ramakrishna
Lilaprasanga (‘Sri Ramakrishna, the Great Master’).
The Swami was as learned as he was spiritual. His courtesy and
gentleness were so overwhelming that even the rudest of men
would melt into submission. Equanimity and cool headedness,
even under very trying circumstances, were another remarkable
characteristic of his.
Soon after successfully convening the Ramakrishna Mission
Convention at Belur Math in 1926, he took ill and shuffled off
the mortal coil on the 19th August, 1927. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
Through selfless work the mind gets
purified. And when the mind becomes pure, there arise
knowledge and devotion in it. Whatever work stands in the way
of God-realization and increases discontent is bad work. You
should wholly discard it.
The Ramakrishna Mission does not like to express any opinion,
good or bad, about political discussions, for the Master did
not instruct us to do anything of the kind, and Swamiji asked
the Mission to keep itself aloof from such effort. That is why
the Mission has been all along engaging itself in spirituality
and service to humanity.
Now-a-days there are so many religious societies, but people
lose all interest in them after a few days. What is the reason
for this? The reason is our words are not in accord with out
thoughts. The first step in religion is to be sincere to the
core. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI SHIVANANDA
(1854 - 1934) |
|
 |
Swami Shivananda, the second Presidnet of
the Ramakrishna Order, was popularly known as ‘Mahapurush
Maharaj.’
Born probably in 1854 at Barasat of West Bengal, in a
respectable and deeply religious family, Tarak – that was his
original name – got a good education, both secular and
spiritual. When he was working in Calcutta in an English Firm,
he got an opportunity of seeing Sri Ramakrishna about whom he
had already heard. Later, when he met Sri Ramakrishna at
Dakshineswar, the later was pleasantly surprised to learn that
he was the son of Ramkanai Ghosal, his old friend. Needless to
say that Tarak had the full approval of his father for
becoming the disciple of Sri Ramakrishna.
Tarak was the first person to join the monastery at Baranagore
after the demise of the Master, and was christened ‘Swami
Shivananda’ while receiving the monastic orders. Though Tarak
had been married, he had successfully kept up the vow of
brahmacharya (celibacy). This made Swami Vivekananda remark in
later days that he was a ‘Mahapurush’. This name stuck and be
became known as ‘Mahapurush Maharaj’. Like his
brother-disciples, he also spent a few years as an itinerant
monk. But he had to settle down at the monastery in 1897 after
the triumphant return of Swami |
|
Vivekananda from the West. For some time he
was in Ceylon (Sri Lanka) also, preaching Vedanta at the
behest of Swami Vivekananda. He also took a leading part in
the first plague relief work of the Ramakrishna Mission in
1899. It was he who started the Ashrama at Varanasi.
But the most memorable part of his life was during his
stewardship of the Ramakrishna Organizations as the President
from 1922 to 1934, when he blessed a large number of people
with initiation and brought spiritual solace and comfort to
thousands of devotees. He passed away on the 20th February,
1934 after a protracted illness which, never alienated him
from his Lord whose presence he was constantly aware of. He
was one of the finest examples of the fact that the beauty and
sublimity of the inner life of a holy man can never be
described in words but can only be tangibly felt. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
Low thoughts will come and go. Don’t mind
them. Through His grace, as a result of constant practice you
will get strength. Devote your whole mind to japa, meditation,
worship and the study of the scriptures, whichever appeals to
you for the time being.
Mere mechanical japa does not help much. You must have love
for the Lord. But then, even mechanical japa has some results;
after all it is the Lord’s name that is being repeated.
Pray to the Lord for strength, knowledge and dispassion. Pray
to Him with all your heart for His grace and for devotion and
faith. It is not possible for everyone to practise hard
austerities, but then, through prayer everything is attained. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI RAMAKRISHNANANDA
(1863 - 1911) |
|
 |
It is said that Swami Vivekananda at the
time of Sannyasa wanted to take the name ‘Ramakrishnananda’
for himself, but gave it up in favour of Shashibhushan, who,
he thought, deserved it best. And, Shashi deserved it
eminently by dint of his devoted service to Sri Ramakrishna
especially during his last days. The way he served Sri
Ramakrishna when he was alive and the way he carried on his
worship through he relics after his Mahasamadhi were, to say
the least, exemplary.
Born on the 13th July, 1863 – the same year as Vivekananda –
in an orthodox Brahmin family of the Hoogly district of
Bengal. Shashi got a good education and an excellent training
during the early years which laid the foundation for a lofty
character. His very first visit – along with his cousin Sharat
(Swami Saradananda) – to Sri Ramakrishna forged strong links
with him, whom he accepted as the polestar of his life.
During the last illness of the Master, Shashi toiled day and
night to serve him and to look to his comforts. After his
demise, when the relics were gathered and established in the
shrine of the maiden monastery at |
|
Baranagore, it was Shashi who took upon
himself the responsibility of worshipping it as also take care
his monastic brothers who had been fired by an intense spirit
of renunciation. No mother would have served her children with
greater feeling and care than Shashi cared for them.
At the behest of Swami Vivekananda, Shashi – now Swami
Ramakrishnananda – came down to Madras to start a monastery
there. By his austere life, devoted service and immense
scholarship he was able to put the monastery on a solid
foundation though he had often to pass through fiery ordeals.
It was he who kindled the interest of the people in the then
princely State of Mysore, in the teachings of Sri Ramakrishna
and eventually start a Math at Bangalore also.
The Swami was a combination of intellectual scholarhip of the
highest level and devotion of the deepest type. In spite of
all his stern external discipline, he possessed a soft and
motherly heart.
The hard incessant work he did to consolidate the work of the
Math at Madras broke even his massive frame. He left the
mortal coil on 21st August 1911. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
What kind of devotion takes us to God? The
child’s devotion to the mother. Why does the baby go to the
mother? Because it has, reasoned out that the mother is the
best friend it has. And why do you go to God? Because you have
previously reasoned out hat God will help you and no one else
can. So, as the baby goes to the mother, you will go to God.
So long as we have no ideal to follow, we have to heed the
calls of our lower nature. A characterless man is a slave to
all worldly enjoyments.
You have been worshipping this god of your body for so many
lives; it is not easy to begin worship the true God all at
once. If you would raise your Self, you must crucify the body
and conquer the senses. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI ABHEDANANDA
(1866 - 1939) |
|
 |
Author of several exquisite Sanskrit hymns
on Sri Ramakrishna and Sri Sarada Devi – the most popular one
being ‘prakritim paramam’- Swami Abhedananda was a rare
combination of several talents like intellectual acumen,
devotional fervour and yogic introspection. He was a good
speaker and a prolific writer.
Known as Kaliprasad Chandra in his pre-monastic days, he was
born on the 2nd October 1866 in Calcutta to enlightened
parents, both to whom were deeply devoted to Mother Kali. Even
from his boyhood days, he was inclined towards the study of
Sanskrit. As he grew up he was drawn to the study of
philosophical works, both eastern and western. His desire to
become a yogi brought him to Sri Ramakrishna who immediately
recognized him as a disciple of his inner circle. He
progressed speedily in the inner life under the guidance of
the Master.
After the demise of the Master, Kali accepted Sannyasa along
with the other disciples and became ‘Swami Abhedananda.’ He
was given to much study and contemplation during the early
days of his monastic life earning for himself the nickname
‘Kali Tapasvi.’
When Swami Vivekananda wanted a proper assistant to continue
the work in the West, he naturally thought of Swami
Abhedananda. |
|
His very first discourse on Advaita Vedanta
delivered at London was an instant success. He later shifted
to New York. He toured and lectured very extensively in the
West (both U.S.A. and Europe) for a quarter of a century. His
lectures attracted the cream of Western intellects as also
earnest seekers of Truth. He returned to India in 1921 and
formed a ‘Ramakrishna Vedanta Society’ in Calcutta to carry on
his work in his own way. When he gave up the mortal coil on
the 8th September, 1939, the era of the direct Sanyasin
disciples of the Master came to an end. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
If you desire to have firm and unshakable
faith and devotion to the Lord, you should also take to
tapasya, hard austerities. Tapasya does not mean aimless
wandering hither and thither, it really means regular and
steadfast japa, meditation and self-control.
Why should you be afraid of doing work? If the mind is not
purified by work, one cannot attain true knowledge. Wherever
you go with your little mind, the mind will also accompany you
and abide with you. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI ADBHUTANANDA
(D. 1920) |
|
 |
Swami Vivekananda once declared that Latu
(the premonastic name of Swami Adbhutananda) was the greatest
miracle of Sri Ramakrishna. If an orphan servant boy who had
absolutely no knowledge of even the alphabets could rise to
such a state of sainthood that scholars of great book-learning
would sit at his feet and listen spellbound to his words of
wisdom, it was nothing short of a miracle that Sri Ramakrishna
brought about. Hence, the appropriateness of his name (adbuhta
= wonder).
The early life of the Swami is shrouded in mystery. Born in a
remote village of Bihar, and orphaned at a tender age, the boy
was later brought to Calcutta by his uncle. Good fortune
favoured him by getting him the job of a servant in the house
of Sri Ramachandra Datta, a great devotee of Sri Ramakrishna.
The religious atmosphere in the house helped unfold his
religious temperament. The frequent errands to Dakshineswar
brought him into close contact with Sri Ramakrishna who
graciously accepted him as a disciple. Later on, as Sri
Ramakrishna felt the need for an attendant, Latu started
living with him and serving him. Since the guru was all in all
for him, his service was exceptionally devoted. |
|
After the demise of the Master, Latu
embraced monastic life and became ‘Swami Adbhutananda.’ Though
he lived a mendicant’s life, he seldom moved away from
Dakshineswar, his holiest place of pilgrimage. Through hard
austerity and long bouts of meditation he was able to live
constantly in God.
He lived for an unusually long period of nine years at the
house of Balaram Bose, another great devotee of Sri
Ramakrishna. It was during this period that many earnest
seekers would meet him and get their doubts resolved.
He spent his last days at Varanasi where he breathed his last
on April 24, 1920. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
What is the use of prayer and meditation if
you have no dependence on Him? Everything else is useless if
you lack this.
It is a great sin to find fault with others. You will
invariably find that it is such people as never do a good act
themselves who easily see defects in others and energetically
spread rumours.
It is better to continue calling on the Lord devotedly than to
know, speak, and preach thousand and one religious cants and
shibboleths. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI ADVAITANANDA
(1828 - 1909) |
|
 |
The darkness of a crisis in life often acts
like the twilight before dawn leading to the effulgence of the
sun. When Gopal Chandra Ghosh of Sinthi (Calcutta) lost his
wife and was heartbroken, that very grief led him to Sri
Ramakrishna, seeking relief. The contact thus established
through a crisis ultimately led to glorious spiritual heights.
Gopalda – as he was endearingly called – was older than even
Sri Ramakrishna. Nevertheless, the attitude of reverence and
devotion he cherished towards Sri Ramakrishna, his guru, was
unflinching. It was his good luck that made him instrumental
in the birth of the future Ramakrishna Order of monks by
gifting a few pieces of ochre-coloured cloths of Sri
Ramakrishna who personally distributed them among Narendra,
Rakhal and others including Gopal himself, during his last
days at Cossipore.
Along with Tarak (Swami Shivananda), Gopalda was he first to
join the Baranagore monastery after the departure of the
Master from this world. The monastic name given to him was
‘Swami Advaitananda.’ He spent a few years at the monastery,
shifted to Varanasi for about five years and returned to the
newly established Math at Alambazar, and later at Belur.
His advanced age prevented him from taking active part in his
missionary activities of the new organization.
His personal cleanliness, neat and methodical ways of doing
any work, had been admired even by Sri Ramakrishna.
The Swami passed away on the 28th December, 1909 at the ripe
old age of eighty-one. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI TURIYANANDA
(1863 - 1922) |
|
 |
A few people, there are, who appear to life
in this world, but do not really belong here. Swami
Turiyananda was one of them. Born in a religious family, of
Brahmana parents, on the 3rd January, 1863 (just nine days
earlier to the advent of Swami Vivekananda), Harinath
Chattopadhyaya – that was his premonastic name – was given to
much orthodox observances even in his younger days. An innate
desire for liberation in this very life, kindled by the study
of Vedantic works brought him to Sri Ramakrishna. The Master
through his deep spiritual insight and all-encompassing love,
quickly won his heart. Not only that, he soon discovered and
destroyed two unhealthy trends in his personality – abhorrence
of womankind and excessive reliance on self-effort.
After accepting the monastic robes and vows, Harinath became
‘Swami Turiyananda.’ His orthodox mental makeup made him
undertake long and arduous journeys as an itinerant monk, and
practise severe austerities as also study of the scriptures.
Though he had great love and respect for Swami Vivekananda, he
was at first averse to active missionary work. But Swamiji’s
love melted his heart. He accompanied Swamiji to the United
States and worked there for about three years. The Shanti
Ashrama in California was practically his creation.
|
|
After returning to India he spent his days
mostly in austerity and in training the younger generation of
monks. His burning spirit of renunciation, deep faith in the
Divine Mother, and insight into the intricacies of the
scriptures left an indelible impression on everyone that came
into contact with him. His fortitude and the control he could
exercise over his body were astonishing.
He left the body on the 21st July, 1922. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
Never pride yourself in your having gained
control over the passions. If you do, they will at once raise
their heads. Ever pray to him, ‘O Lord, save me from them.’
Nothing short of complete self-surrender to Him will do. You
call Him the Inner controller (Antaryamin), omniscient,
omnipresent, and yet you are afraid to surrender yourself to
Him!
Never expect anything from anyone. But always give. Otherwise
a sense of dryness will overtake you. But you must not give
your mind to anyone. That you must give only to God.
Work done in the spirit of service can lead one as surely to
the goal as meditation and japa. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI TRIGUNATITANANDA
(1865 - 1914) |
 |
The depression brought about by the loss of
a gold watch led the young Sarada Prasanna to Dakshineswar
seeking peace. Master Mahashaya, the celebrated author of the
Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna who was his teacher, led him to his
future guru. The first visit itself forged strong links
between them. Fearing that his religious inclination and
frequent visits to the Saint of Dakshineswar might ultimately
induce him to become a monk, his relatives tried hard to
change is mind, taking recourse to, in the process, religious
rites and charms. But nothing worked. And, Sarada Prasanna
became ‘Swami Trigunatitananda.’
The Swami had a strong constitution and was a dare-devil.
During his itinerant days he had often been on the brink of
disaster and was miraculously saved. It is said that he once
underwent surgery for fistula without anaesthetics.
He never cared for his personal comforts but was ever eager to
serve others. The famous relief work he organized at Dinajpur
(now in Bangladesh) bears testimony to this.
At the behest of Swami Vivekananda, Swami Trigunatitananda
started the Udbodhan, the Bengal Monthly of the Ramakrishna
Order, and assiduously built it up.
When Swami Turiyananda returned to India from San Francisco,
it was Trigunatitananda who was entrusted with the
responsibility of organizing the Vedanta work there. It was he
who built the first Hindu Temple in the West.
|
|
The great life came to an abrupt end as a
result of a mad man’s act of throwing a bomb. He breathed his
last on the 10th January, 1914. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
People talk of finding out the proper kind
of guru. But that is not a reasonable position in all cases.
Whoever the guru may be, everything will progress nicely if
the disciple is earnest and sincere.
People of all castes can be initiated by a good guru who has
attained perfection. What caste can a true devotee or the
perfect soul have? When the individual sould merges in God
(like rivers in the sea), they can no more have any
individuality. So how can there be then, the distinction of
caste, as Brahmin, Shudra etc., belong to the body and never
to the soul? |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI AKHANDANANDA
(1864-1937) |
 |
‘I do not covet earthly kingdom, or heaven,
or even salvation. The only thing I desire is the removal of
the miseries of the afflicted!’ If these words of Prahlada,
the great devotee, could be found truly reflected in anyone’s
life, it was in the life of Swami Akhandananda, the third
President of the Ramakrishna Order. The Swami, known as
Gangadhar Ghatak before ordination into Sannyasa, was born on
the 30th September, 1864 in Calcutta. Even in his boyhood days
Gangadhar was deeply religious and orthodox to the point of
being dubbed as ‘oldish’ even by Sri Ramakrishna himself! As a
corrective measure Sri Ramakrishna introduced him to
Narendranath (Swami Vivekananda) who was, for all outwar
appearances, very heterodox, but inside him he had nothing but
God. This acquaintance matured into a deep a lifelong
friendship between them.
After the demise of the Master, Gangadhar, who took monastic
orders and became ‘Swami Akhandananda,’ led the unfettered
life of a wandering monk. For three years he roamed in the
Himalayas and visited Tibet also three times. Because of his
experience in the Himalayas, Swami Vivekananda took him as his
guide in his sojourn there.
Swami Vivekananda’s burning words to do something for the poor
and illiterate masses, inspired Swami Akhandananda to do some
good work for the education of |
|
poor children both in Khetri and in
Udaipur. Finally he started an orphanage in the village of
Sargacchi in the Murshidabad district of Bengal to where he
had gone to conduct famine relief work. He and the institution
grew up with each other.
On the death of Swami Shivananda, Swami Akhandananda was
elected as the third President of the Ramakrishna Order.
The Swami had a flair for learning languages, which brought
him into intimate contact with the people wherever he went.
His childlike simplicity endeared him to one and all. His
austerity and scholarship were a source of inspiration for
many.
He breathed his last on February 7, 1937. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
The spiritual path for the present age lies
through the harmony of all paths of earlier ages- harmony of
knowledge, devotion and selfless work. We must have all these
: We must have knowledge, devotion and service. It won’t do to
have only one.
In this age of Kali, one thing that counts is the Lord’s name.
Go on repeating His name. ….Just repeat His name for a hundred
and eight times; that will bear fruit in time. Try to increase
the number slowly.
No work should be considered degrading. All works are His.
Swamiji himself scoured the vessels. When you sweep the floor
or dress vegetables, think that you are doing His work. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI SUBODHANANDA
(1867-1932) |
|
 |
At the behest of Swami Vivekananda, but
most reluctantly, Swami Subodhananda rose to speak before a
gathering of monks and novices of the Math. And lo! There was
an earth-quake! (It was the earthquake of 1897). It was really
an ‘earth-shaking’ speech!
Whether the speech was ‘earth-shaking’ or not, the Swami could
certainly help even the lowliest in spirits, to shake off his
dejection. He was a wonderful combination of compassion, love,
childlike simplicity and profound spiritual wisdom.
His premonastic name was Subodh Chandra Ghosh. He was born in
Calcutta on the 8th November, 1867. His parents were deeply
religious by nature which automatically left its influence on
the son also.
Coming to know of Sri Ramakrishna through a Bengali book of
his teachings, Subodh lost no time in meeting the Saint of
Dakshineswar. Even during the first two visits, Sri
Ramakrishna gauged the spiritual potential of the boy and put
him into a deep meditation by mystic methods.
Subodh joined the Baranagore monastery along with the other
disciple of the Master and got name ‘Swami Subodhananda’ after
ordination. Because of his simple and childlike nature, he was
endearingly called ‘Khoka |
|
Maharaj’ (khoka=child) by his monastic
brothers. After much austerities and itinerant life, the Swami
settled down to a life of service to the suffering humanity.
He was very actively associated with many of the relief works
of the Ramakrishna Mission. He was extremely liberal in the
matter of initiation also, especially towards the weaker
sections of the society, whom he tried to help in all possible
ways.
The Swami passed away on the 2nd December 1932. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
Before the Lord enters the temple of anyone
of His children’s hearts, he fills it with devotion, faith and
love, just as a king sends different pieces of furniture and
vessels to a subject’s house which he intends to visit. Else,
where can the poor subject get all those things? The Lord
grants devotion, faith and love, just because He will come. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
SWAMI VIJNANANANDA
(1868-1938) |
 |
Sri Ramakrishna one day challenged a young
man to wrestle with him. The tall and hefty youth put him down
in no time. And the wonder of wonders: The young man soon felt
a power entering from Sri Ramakrishna’s body into his own,
making him completely powerless! That was how Hariprasanna had
one of his early encounters with the Master.
Born on the 28th October, 1868 in a respectable Brahmin family
at Belgharia (Calcutta), Hariprasanna Chattopadhyaya (the
pre-monastic name of Swami Vijnanananda) received a good
education from his parents. He became an engineer and rose to
the position of District Engineer at the erstwhile State of
United Provinces, before renouncing the world.
From his very first visit, Sri Ramakrishna spotted him out as
one belonging to the inner circle and a future monk. He took
particular care to instill in him the ideal of brahmacharya or
celibacy. His visits to Dakshineswar and contact with the
Master laid a firm foundation for his spiritual life
When the Master passed away, Hariprasanna who was still a
student at Patna, had a strange vision in which he saw Sri
Ramakrishna as if in flesh and blood, standing before him. |
|
Since he had lost his father early and had
to support his mother, he was obliged to take to government
service, but kept in touch with the disciples of the Master,
especially Narendra (Swami Vivekananda). Later – in 1896, to
be more precise – he gave up the world and joined the Math
then at Alambazar and became ‘Swami Vijnanananda’ after
ordination.
Since he was an engineer with good experience in building
construction, he was entrusted by Swami Vivekananda himself
with the task of building the Math campus as also preparing
suitable plans for a memorial temple of Sri Ramakrishna. So he
prepared it in consultation with a noted European architect of
Calcutta and Swamiji approved of the same. Due to the sudden
demise of Swamiji and lack of funds, the project had to wait
for a long time to be taken up. It was completed and dedicated
by Swami Vijnanananda himself on the 14th January, 1938.
A group of young men in Allahabad had formed themselves into
an association called ‘Brahmavadin Club’ with a view to
uplifting themselves morally and spiritually. They had done so
under the inspiration of a devotee of Sri Ramakrishna. This
devotee had left Allahabad in 1900. As luck would have it,
Swami Vijnanananda arrived at Allahabad in the same year as a
wandering monk. The young men who were delighted to have a
disciple of Sri Ramakrishna amongst them requested the Swmi to
live in the rented premises of their Club and guide them. The
Swami agreed and lived there for nearly ten years, spending
most of his time in austerity and study. He later on
established a permanent branch of the Ramakrishna Math at
Allahabad in 1910.
The Swami was a great scholar, not only in Sanskrit and
religio-philosophical works but also in astronomy and
astrology.
He was elected the President of the Ramakrishna Order in 1937
after the demise of Swami Akhandananda. He strove hard to
complete the construction of the temple of Sri Ramakrishna at
Belur Math, which he successfully did and dedicated in January
1938 as already indicated. He then returned to Allahabad and
passed away on the 25th April the same year. The body was
consigned to the sacred waters of the Triveni, at the
confluence of the rivers Ganga and Yamuna, and the invisible
Saraswati. |
| |
|
TEACHINGS |
|
One should not ask for anything from God,
but remain satisfied with whatever. He is pleased to give. If
you ask for anything He will give a gift which is like a
double-edged sword. Real welfare lies in using things
properly; wrong use of things beings misfortune.
Whatever situation one may be in, one can, to some degree,
serve the motherland, serve the common people, and above all,
serve God. Always have the good of the universe at heart and
let this become a part of your daily prayer.
One reason for the decadence of our country is that in the
name of religion, people put forward harmful theories, as a
result of which, people lose their faith in religion itself.
Simplicity, faithfulness and purity of heart are called for.
One who can detach his mind from material things will see the
light of God and his presence in everything. Worldly
attachment draws people away from God and scorch them in the
wild fire of the world. |
|
GO TOP |
|
|
|
|