Yogananda History Ebook Size
Yogananda History Ebook Size
Yogananda History Ebook Size
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History, Life, Mission
Introduction
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Jai Guru,
and jai "Yogananda-Harmony"
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IN D EX
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Chapter 1
Yogananda’s Childhood
1893-1902
He is born and lives in Gorakpur (to age 8). Here little Mukunda
receives a mystical letter from God.
1902
He visits Ichapur (“at the age of 8”). An important moment, as
here he has a vision of God as Light, described in the
Autobiography of a Yogi.
1902-1904
He lives in Lahore (age 8 to 11). Here Divine Mother lovingly
answers Mukunda’s prayers, bringing him two desired kites (see
Autobiography of a Yogi).
5
1904-1906
He lives in Bareilly (age 11 to 12). Here Yogananda loses his
mother who died in Calcutta, during wedding preparations for her
eldest son, Ananta (see Autobiography of a Yogi).
From 1906
He lives in Calcutta (from age 12)
~~~
As a Youth in India
1908
At the age of 15, Mukunda establishes his first ashram: the
Sadhana Mandir in Calcutta. His favorite activity is meeting
saints: Swami Pranabananda (with 2 bodies), the blissful Master
Mahasaya, the impressive Tiger Swami, the levitating Bhaduri
Mahasaya, the scientist J. Chandra Bose, and others.
1909
His ashram is moved next to Tulsi Bose’s home. It includes a
“Saraswati Library”. (In 1910 moved elsewhere.)
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1910
Mukunda meets his guru, Swami Sri Yukteswar. College begins in
Calcutta, at least nominally- he is hardly present.
1913
”Studies” continue in Serampore.
He meets Rabrindranath Tagore for the first time, “shortly after he
received the Nobel Prize”.
1915
Mukunda receives his university degree.
In July his guru initiates him in the ancient Swami order, giving
him the spiritual name, Swami Yogananda Giri.
1916
Yogananda re-starts the ashram at Tulsi’s home. Here he accepts
the first boys for school training.
Yogananda discovers the principles of the Yogoda-exercises,
which later become his energization exercises.
From August to November he visits Japan.
1917
Yogananda founds the Yogoda Satsanga Society.
He also starts a school in Dihika (Bengal).
1918
The school is transferred to Ranchi (Bihar).
1920
Still in India, Yogananda's publishes his first book:
“Dharmavijnana” (Wisdom of Dharma)- later called Science of
Religion.
Two years after founding the Ranchi school, he once again meets
the Nobel-prize poet, Rabrindranath Tagore, and discusses schools
with him.
In Ranchi, he receives an invitation from America, to participate in
a “Congress for Religious Liberals”.
7
In Calcutta, on July 25, the supreme Guru Mahavatar Babaji
blesses him for his mission in the West.
~~~
In America
1920
In September 19, Yogananda arrives in Boston.
Dr. Lewis becomes Yogananda’s first American Kriya-disciple.
For three years, from 1920-1923, Swami Yogananda lives and
teaches in Boston.
1922
In June, he establishes his first American teaching center at
N.Waltham, MA.
1923
Yogananda publishes his book of poetry, Songs of the Soul.
He also publishes his first written lessons: YOGODA
INTRODUCTION
Yogananda's starts his transcontinental lecture tours. He lectures in
the major cities, in the greatest halls, of America. Thousands hear
him everywhere.
He lectured in Worcester, MA (November 5), New York
(November 24, for 4 months)
8
1924
Yogananda publishes his book Science of Religion, and also his
Scientific Healing Affirmations.
May 1: He begins month-long classes in Philadelphia, PA. Here
the well-known symphony conductor Leopold Stokowski becomes
his student.
August 11: Yogananda begins a series of classes in Denver.
The famous horticulturist Luther Burbank becomes Yogananda’s
student.
He meets Tara Mata, his editor-in-chief.
In September, Yogananda visits Alaska, traveling in a steamer.
1925
Yogananda publishes his YOGODA COURSE.
In July, he meets his most highly advanced woman disciple, Sister
Gyanamata.
October 25: Yogananda establishes his headquarters at Los
Angeles, Mount Washington.
There at Mt. Washington, he tries to establish a “how-to-live”
school.
Yogananda in this year begins to publish his magazine: He named
it variously: East-West (1925 to 1936) and (1945 to 1947); Inner
Culture (1937 to 1944); Self Realization Magazine (1948 to 1969);
Self-Realization (1970 to present). The magazine features amongst
other articles his commentaries on the Second Coming of Christ
(from 1932), on the Bhagavad Gita (from 1932), and on the
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (from 1937).
He meets Kamala Silva (see photo, with her mother).
1925-33
Yogananda continues to lecture to thousands, all over America.
His fame spreads.
George Eastman, inventor of Kodak camera, becomes
Yogananda’s friend and student.
9
1926
Yogananda publishes his ADVANCED COURSE IN
PRACTICAL METAPHYSICS.
Clara Clemens Gabrilowitsch, the daughter of Mark Twain,
becomes Yogananda’s disciple.
1927
On January 24, President Coolidge receives Yogananda at the
White House.
1929
Yogananda meets the famous opera singer Amelita Galli Curci,
who becomes his disciple.
Durga Ma becomes his disciple.
He publishes Whispers from Eternity.
Dhirananda betrays him, even fighting against him in a lawsuit.
Yogananda decides to visit Mexico, giving lectures and meeting
Mexico’s president, Portes Gil.
1930
Yogananda publishes his SUPER ADVANCED COURSE
1931
Daya Mata becomes Yogananda’s disciple. With her arrival
Yogananda’s monastic order starts.
Yogananda also meets Yogacharya Oliver Black.
1932
On January 10, Yogananda meets Rajarsi Janakananda, his most
advanced disciple and successor.
Yogananda publishes his Metaphysical Meditations.
He organizes a "Summer School" at Mount Washington.
In May, East/West publishes names of famous students of
Yogananda:
Amelita Galli-Curci; Luther Burbank; Luigi von Kunits, Conductor
of the New Symphony Orchestra of Toronto, Canada; Huston Ray,
brilliant pianist; Countess Ilya Tolstoy; Homer Samuels,
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distinguished pianist; Vladimir Rosing, eminent tenor and director
of the American Opera Co.; Clara Clemens Gabrilowitsch; Maria
Carreras, famous pianist; George Liebling, pianist-composer; R. J.
Cromie, Owner-publisher "Vancouver Sun"; Louis van Norman,
Commercial Attach, U. S. Dept. of Commerce; Douglas Grant Diff
Ainslie, English poet and author; Alfred Himan, editor "Singing";
Rev. Dr. Arthur Porter, pastor, Salem Congregational Church,
York, England.
1932-35
1932 Ananda Mata joins the monastic life.
From 1934 Yogananda withdraws from “campaigning” in
America, and stays mostly at Mount Washington. Hard times
begin, eating mostly self-grown tomatoes.
In 1934 Yogananda publishes his ADVANCED SUPER COSMIC
SCIENCE COURSE.
Until 1934, he had used the Indian name Yogoda Satsanga for his
organization, also in America. From 1934 on he calls it Self-
Realization Fellowship. In 1935 Yogananda registers Self-
Realization Fellowship as an official church.
~~~
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Europe, Middle East, North Africa
1935
On June 9, Yogananda sails from the USA back to India. On his
way, he stops in Europe, visiting by car England (lecturing in
London, visiting Stonehenge), Scotland, France, Belgium, Holland,
Germany (visiting the Bavarian stigmatist Therese Neumann),
Switzerland, Italy (Venice, pilgrimage to St. Francis of Assisi, and
lecturing in Rome), Greece (visiting Athenian temples), Israel
(pilgrimage to Jesus’ places), and Egypt (visiting ancient
pyramids).
~~~
In India
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saint, Mahatma Gandhi.
Then Yogananda travels to Calcutta, seeing family and friends.
In Serampore, he meets his guru Sri Yukteswar again, after 15
years.
The next visit is to his school in Ranchi.
In October and November 1935, in South India, he visits in
Mysore (meeting Sir C. V. Raman, the Indian Nobel Prize
physicist), Bangalore, Hyderabad, Madras, Arunachala (meeting
Ramana Maharishi). He gives many lectures.
In December, Yogananda meets the great woman saint,
Anandamoyee Ma in Calcutta, and later again in his school at
Ranchi.
In late December 1935, the day after Sri Yukteswar’s Winter
Solstice Festival, Yogananda receives from his guru the highest
spiritual title "Paramhansa."
1936
In January, Yogananda visits the Kumbha Mela in Allahabad.
Afterwards he travels to Agra (Taj Mahal), Brindaban (Swami
Keshabananda, and ancient temples), Delhi, Meerut (once his
brother Ananta’s home), Bareilly (visiting a boyhood friend),
Gorakhpur (his birthplace), and Benares (Vishvanath temple,
Lahiri Mahasaya’s home).
In early March, back in Calcutta, a telegram calls him to Puri: there
Sri Yukteswar entered Mahasamadhi on March 9.
In June, back in Bombay, Yogananda witnesses the resurrection of
Sri Yukteswar.
~~~
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Back in America
1936
In September 1936 Yogananda returns England for a few weeks,
lecturing there again, and arrives in late October in New York.
In late 1936 he is back at Mt. Washington.
1936
Returning from India, Yogananda is given the beautiful Encinitas
hermitage as a gift from his most advanced disciple, Rajarsi
Janakananda. A period of writing begins for Yogananda.
1938
Yogananda publishes his Cosmic Chants.
He also publishes his PRAECEPTA LESSONS.
The Golden Lotus Temple of All Religions is constructed at
Encinitas: the first temple to carry the name “of All Religions.” It
slips into the ocean in 1942.
Yogananda dedicates the Self-Realization Church of All Religions
in Washington, DC.
1939
The YSS headquarter is established in Dakshineswar, India.
Brother Bhaktananda becomes Yogananda's disciple.
1941
Yogananda founds a Yoga University at Mount Washington,
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which is later discontinued because of lack of interest from the
public.
1942
He dedicates a Self-Realization Church of All Religions in
Hollywood.
In the early 40ies Yogananda starts a “World-Brotherhood
Colony” at Encinitas, inviting families to live there. It was
discontinued due to lack of interest from the public.
1943
Yogananda dedicates a Self-Realization Church of All Religions in
San Diego.
1944
He publishes his Attributes of Success, now called Laws of
Success.
1945
Mrinalini Mata becomes his disciple.
1946
Yogananda publishes his main and most famous book, the
Autobiography of a Yogi.
Uma Mata, Brother Bimalananda and Mukti Mata become his
disciple.
1947
He dedicates a Self-Realization Church of All Religions in Long
Beach.
1948
Yogananda dedicates a Self-Realization Church of All Religions in
Phoenix.
Yogananda experiences his great samadhi. "I will always be in that
state now, but nobody will know."
Swami Kriyananda becomes his disciple.
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1949
The Lake Shrine property is donated to Yogananda, which he
dedicates as a shrine in August 1950.
Yogananda publishes his guru's book, The Holy Science.
On November 1, he greets India's Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru
in San Francisco.
Brother Anandamoy joins the SRF monastery (he met Yogananda
in 1948)
Peggy Deitz, Yogananda's later chauffeur, becomes a disciple.
1950-52
Yogananda spends much time in seclusion, in his desert retreat
Twenty-Nine Palms, to complete his writings, especially his
Bhagavad Gita commentaries.
1950
Roy Eugene Davis becomes Yogananda's disciple.
1951
He dedicates the India Center in Hollywood.
~~~
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1952- Mahasamadi
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Chapter 2
Ancient Rome, during the time when Christ was born, counted
already one million inhabitants. Compare that to Los Angeles: in
1860 it was a home for only a handful of 4500 souls- not much
more than a village. 13 years before Yogananda's birth, in 1880,
Los Angeles ("the Benares of America") was still a relatively small
town of about 12,000. But America was growing dynamically. It
was a young culture, full of vigor. Yogananda loved its pioneering
spirit: "Eventually? Eventually? Why not now!" With that
expansive spirit, he knew his message could grow.
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because of the fantastic view, for which the mountain was well-
known.
It was that very view which inspired real estate agents to build a
stately hotel on top of Mount Washington, 940 feet high. Their
problem was that there was no road, no way to get up there. And
the hill was quite steep. So a cable car had to be built first, which
was inaugurated in 1909. At the same time a road was carved out
of the mountainside, which led to the top. Of course in those days
cars were relatively rare, and were not built for mountains at all.
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structure was constructed by "Meyer & Holler,"
the same company which in 1927 also built Mr.
Grauman's famous Chinese Theatre in LA. (A
truly exotic building, especially for those early
years, as one sees on the photo.
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Tennis was a most popular sport at the turn of the Century. Thus
two tennis courts soon graced the property. Tournaments of
famous players were held there. Yogananda later used to play there
too, even quite well, as he was an extremely fast runner.
The hotel, after its opening in 1910, soon turned out to be a huge
success: it became a favorite hangout spot for the rich. Mt.
Washington became an exclusive and highly desirable hilltop
residential site. It offered a fine dining room, with food cooked by
gourmet cooks. Yogananda later became a worthy heir to that fine
kitchen: he was a marvelous cook himself, inventing many tasty
recipes and finding new ways of cooking, slicing, preparing.
Everything in the hotel was of high quality: velvet carpets, brass
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beds, furniture of oak and walnut. On weekends usually all rooms
were rented out.
The building lots on Mount Washington, too, got a big boost: they
sold increasingly well. Beautiful and costly homes began to spring
up all over the mountain, where not a single house had been seen
just a few years ago.
Most of all there was one fascinating reason why the Mt.
Washington Hotel became so attractive: The 18 hotel rooms were
being used by celebrities, such as..... lo and behold... Charley
Chaplin, who always stayed at the hotel while making a film at the
Sycamore Grove studios. Other stars of screen and sport also took
rooms there. It became a gathering spot of the famous. Small
wonder that people flocked in like birds. Did Yogananda know that
his beloved headquarters once housed a Charley Chaplin, and all
those other stars? Well, he must have known. Did he care? Did the
nuns have fun at the thought that some movie star had once
occupied their room?
But alas, Mount Washington's early glory was soon put to a rough
test: hard times began. The film stars left the Sycamore Grove
Park, moving to Edendale, and then to Hollywood: it had a
devastating effect on the Mt. Washington Hotel. Once the stars had
left, less and less visitors came to pay Mt. Washington a visit.
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Another problem was that the automobile was coming within the
financial scope of increasing numbers of people. Car owners soon
discovered the pleasure of traveling to more distant destinations.
Mount Washington Hotel became more and more forgotten.
In January 1919 the Mt. Washington cable car was actually closed
down. With great effort the inhabitants tried to keep it going. But
to no avail. The whole Mt. Washington mountaintop was now
without any public transportation. Monastic life on Mt.
Washington thus began quite involuntarily: without service by the
cable cars, the entire top of Mt. Washington was completely
isolated from the outside world. Automobiles could still drive up
the steep dirt road, but it often defied the capabilities of those early
vehicles. And without a car, Mount Washington could only be
climbed by a hefty walk.
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Just then, in January 1925, as if by divine timing, Yogananda
arrived in Los Angeles. (In 1924, Yogananda had started his
maiden cross-country lecture “campaign”, after having stayed in
Boston for his first three years in America.) Looking for a place for
his headquarters, he finally found and bought the Mt. Washington
Hotel. At that time it was full of vagrants, many of the windows
had been broken. The place had become almost a wilderness. (The
cover picture of this book is just there at that moment.) It had its
good side, however: Yogananda acquired the hotel for a very
reasonable price, $45.000. Of course the help of Divine Mother's
loving hand was involved! The story of how he obtained it is
beautifully described by Swami Kriyananda in "The New Path."
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Interestingly, the Mount Washington headquarters and
Yogananda’s magazine “East-West” were born together: they are
twins, so to speak. In the very first issue of East-West, Nov. Dec.
1925, Yogananda announced the formal opening of his
headquarters in October 25, 1925. Actually, and maybe
significantly, he had named it: "Mount Washington Educational
Center"—Headquarters of Sat-Sanga and Yogoda.
25
Let's digress here for a moment. Trying to grasp the main
directions of Yogananda’s work throughout his life, one may see
the following phases:
26
course, not a change of direction concerning the monastic life,
which he tried to strengthen in every possible way. It was a parallel
vision. He wrote in 1946: “Dear Father, bless us with the physical
power by which we can control constructively atoms and the forces
behind it, bless us that we establish the temple of atomic control in
the souls of men, and in Self-Realization, and in our Golden World
City.”
27
Yogananda stated that he has meditated on every spot of the Mount
Washington grounds. And indeed the meditative visitor easily feels
his vibrations alive and present there. It certainly remains a blessed
pilgrimage spot. One wonders how many divine ecstasies have
happened on these sacred grounds.
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- Yogananda’s long financial struggles to pay off the two
mortgages on the Mt. Washington property, and Rajarsi’s timely
help in 1932, paying off the entire sum.
- The yearly long blissful Christmas meditations at Mount
Washington, where Christ appeared many times, starting in 1931.
- The birth of the monastic order at Mount Washington in 1931 and
Yogananda’s “Summer School”
programs in 1932.
- The addition of the Wishing Well
(1934), and the Temple of Leaves;
- The tomato planting on the Mount
Washington grounds, during times of
financial hardship.
- The many famous people (musicians,
stars, politicians, spiritual teachers) who
honored Mt. Washington with their visit
through the years.
- Adjusting the top floor to give Rajarsi
his private quarters.
- How Mt. Washington in a way remained a "hotel" - disciples
coming and going, not understanding what they had.
- The first-ever convocation at Mount Washington, in 1950.
- The relationship with Mt. Washington neighbors during
Yogananda's life.
- The buildings which were later added to the headquarters.
- The plan to build a huge Mausoleum on the grounds, for
Yogananda's (still incorrupt?) body.
But as everyone can see, all this would take us way too far. This
chapter is already long as it is. Maybe it's best to finish instead
with the poem Yogananda wrote for his beloved Mount
Washington, his "life's dream," again published in his first East-
West magazine, Nov.-Dec. 1925. Note the “Nippon (Japanese)
camphor trees;” his dream to promote at Mount Washington the
union “in deepest friendliness” of all churches, mosques, temples,
so urgently needed today; and his repeated use of the word
“freedom!”
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Life’s D ream
Dedicated to Mount Washington Educational Center
The summer-East
And the wintry West
They say -- but Mount Washington
Named rightly after that pioneer
Of Freedom’s great career,
Thou dost stand, the snowless guardian Himalaya
Of the angel land in perpetual green regalia.
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Chapter 3
“In this world, we are all a little bit crazy, and we don’t know it,
because crazy people of the same kind mix with the same kind of
crazy people. When people differently crazy come together, then
they find out about their own craziness. ”
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agree on everything? Hardly. But they were able to “agree to
disagree,” as broad-minded people do.
They began to study the old SRF magazines. Serafi had brought an
amazing stack of them, and Andy added a few as well. Their goal
was to look carefully at the content and at the “feel” of the
magazines, to get a better understanding of SRF at various points
of its evolution. And truly, the beauty of the old magazines is that
they convey the pulse and heartbeat of SRF at every point of its
existence. Through them, one can almost intuit the life behind the
monastic walls.
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the Practical Spiritual Life… We plan to fill all issues with articles,
poems, pictures, and editorials of genuine wide appeal and
interest….”
So Andy and Serafi read and read, discussing magazines all day
long. Andy took notes and later together they wrote up the
following study.
Yogananda came to the West in 1920, and soon began putting the
printing-press to work, to get his mission started. Even before
establishing Mt. Washington, he had already printed Songs of the
Soul, the Yogoda Introduction, Science of Religion, and Scientific
Healing Affirmations.
Actually the first issues were called “East-West World Wide.” The
addition of “World Wide”, as one reads, was Luther Burbank’s
suggestion. But from January 1926 it was discontinued, maybe
because “East-West” already implies the concept “World Wide”.
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“Next month” Yogananda wanted to get the magazine out on the
road. But Brother Time often seems to refuse the desire to move
too quickly: the first issue of “East-West” finally came out a year
later, in November 1925, just after Yogananda had dedicated his
Mt. Washington headquarters. He kept his word: Luther Burbank’s
article “Science and Civilization” was included in this maiden
issue.
The Twenties
34
Science was important in his magazine, which was a big
contribution of the Western world. So were the arts: poetry,
paintings, musical notations. They fairly abound in the magazines
of these early years.
On the very first page in the first issue, readers were invited to
write their own contributions, or photos, and send them in for the
publisher’s consideration. The magazine was like an open field, so
to speak, where all were invited to sow seeds of upliftment.
Here are the contents of the first issue, which is typical for that era
of the magazine. Many different writers contributed.
- Dedication to Mrs. Mary E. Foster (who “made it possible to start
and carry on this Magazine.”)
- Cosmic Consciousness, by Swami Yogananda
- When God Walked in My Garden (Poem), by Elisabeth Swaller
- Swami Yogananda’s Educational Work in India
- History of Swami’s Work in America
- Life’s Dream (Poem), by Swami Yogananda
- Formal Opening of Mt. Washington Center
- Science and Civilization, by Luther Burbank
- Greetings to Swami’s American Students
- Los Angeles Class (picture)
- Luther Burbank (Poem), by Swami Yogananda
- A Prayer, by a disciple
- The Balanced Life, by Swami Yogananda
- “Dusky Sound, “ New Zealand (Picture)
- Pantheism (Poem), by a disciple
- The Path that Leads to God, by Harriet Hobson
- Sayings of Swami
- Greetings to India
- Swami Dhirananda, by Swami Yogananda
- My Native Land (Poem), by Swami Yogananda
- This and That (Notes)
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by various contributors, as well as a scientific contribution on “the
World of Nature.” Dhirananda wrote a long article, and others.
There is a nowadays un-published picture of Yogananda wearing a
head band, which was given to him by American Indians.
These first magazines were bigger in size than today, and were
somewhat rustic. Well, and of course this reflects perfectly the
heartbeat of SRF (or better: Yogoda Satsanga) during these early
years in the West: it was all very rustic and simple.
Kamala writes that when she came with her mother to stay at Mt.
Washington in Summer 1926, their room was completely empty,
unfurnished. They had to paint it too. The “building was scarcely
occupied, and we had our choice of dozens of rooms.” Imagine the
big empty house!
Durga Ma writes that still in Dec. 1929, when she moved in, “some
of the rooms were furnished with the individual’s own furniture,
and some were empty.” To her new room a bed and mattress was
brought. Yogananda personally carried a rug into her new quarters.
Later she went to buy a dresser, a chair, and a table at a second-
hand store. Other devotees used orange crates with planks to hold
their mattress up, “and more crates for dresser and shelves.” Only
15 or 16 devotees lived there at the time. Again, imagine the totally
different scene. Life at Mt. Washington wasn’t monastic then,
either. The building, which wasn’t in great shape when Yogananda
bought it, was painted for the first time only in 1933 (see Durga’s
book)! One gets the idea…. life was rustic!
36
It might be that Laurie Pratt (Tara Mata) was the editor of the
magazine from 1925-1929 (in 1929 she left, in 1936 she came
back). From Nov. 1937 onwards, the magazine states Laurie Pratt
to be its editor. In the meantime other persons filled that role:
Salome Marckwardt, Louise Royston.
~~~
The Thirties
The Thirties began on a tough and rocky path. It was the period of
America’s great economic crises. East-West had to pass through a
terrible time. It got sick, so to speak, and lay in bed, unmoving.
The printing-press stood still. Already not published had been:
Sep-Oct.1928; Mar-Apr 1929; Jul-Aug 1929; Sep-Oct 1929. The
Thirties were worse: Jan-Feb 1930 wasn’t published, neither were:
May-June1930; Sep-Oct 1930; Nov-Dec1930. In 1931 not a single
issue was printed. In Jan-Mar 1932 East-West had still not
recovered. Durga writes that during these years the devotees at Mt.
Washington didn’t receive any salaries.
37
Dhirananda was gone. A frequent contributor instead was
Bramacharee Nerode. From 1932 onwards Laurie Pratt (Tara
Mata) wrote many articles about the Yugas and Hindu philosophy,
while she was living outside SRF. It's fun to see that in March
1934 there was an add of Laurie Pratt as an astrologer in Atlanta,
and later several adds for her Yuga book, published outside of
SRF.
Tasty and healthy recipes were now a regular East-West feature.
In May 1937 the size of the magazine changed. It had been bigger
than nowadays, during the first 12 years of its existence. From now
on it was printed in the size we see still today.
This was also the year when Yogananda added his regular
interpretations of the Rubaiyat.
Often during this time Daya Mata and Ananda Mata typed the
interpretations Yogananda dictated.
38
In his later years Yogananda asked disciples to edit the early
articles: often earlier East-West editors had edited them poorly, had
changed them, even added their own inspirations, while
Yogananda had never glanced at them a second time. So they
needed correction. However, the thought comes up: Yes, before
Tara Mata came back in 1936, maybe earlier editors hadn’t done a
great job. So re-editing was necessary. But after 1936?
All this happened not long after Yogananda’s return from his
native land in late 1936. By the way, when Yogananda traveled
through South-India, he met the illumined saint Ramana
Maharishi. As Yogananda wrote, Ramana was a reader of the East-
West magazines, and had a stack of them in his room. So was
probably the Shankaracharya of Kanchipuram (one of the four
main spiritual leaders in India), who had met Yogananda in 1935,
and “followed his activities ever since.”
39
Indian saint living in America, successfully spreading the ancient
yogic teachings? Yogananda’s success in America was big news
for India, certainly. India was proud. That’s probably why
Yogananda could unashamedly request India’s Prime Minister
Jawaharlal Nehru in 1948, via cable telegram (published in the
magazine): “Deeply request you save half of Gandhi’s ashes, some
for India, some for America, to be buried beneath statues erected in
two countries.” Nehru responded positively, and that’s why we
find part of Mahatma Gandhi’s ashes buried at Lake Shrine. Later,
in November 1949, Yogananda went to San Francisco to meet
Nehru personally. It is interesting to see how Yogananda was at
home with great saints, as well as with the world’s important
politicians: he met the American president Calvin Coolidge, the
President of Mexico Portes Gil, India’s Prime Minister Nehru,
ambassadors, Lieutenant Governors, Consul Generals. And he was
equally at home with great artists, inventors, business people,
normal people, he met two Nobel Prize winners. In other words, he
was a man of the world.
Oops, we are really still in the 30ies! So: Inner Culture was
published monthly. Imagine the work involved.
~~~
The Fourties
40
In the early 40ies, Yogananda advertised in his magazine rooms at
Mt Washington. One could rent them for a day or longer. This may
show two things: Firstly rooms were still vacant, and therefore
Yogananda’s band wasn’t very numerous (a fact which changed
with the publication of his Autobiography in 1946). Secondly, it
may show financial hardship, and/or wide-open arms for outside
devotees.
41
– Daily Deliberations for April, May, June, by Paramhansa
Yogananda and many others
– Temple or Thieves Den?, Bible interpretations by Paramhansa
Yogananda
– His Face in the Mirror, by Sri Bolanathji Maharaj
– Spheres of Science, New Vitamins
– Notes from the News (popular Hindu Dancers; Comparative
Religion; Inspiration)
– International Fellowship (News from India; Science Transcends
Boundaries; China-India handclasp; Protecting Minorities)
– Book Reviews by Virginia Scott (Letter from New Guinea; Your
Kids and Mine; Life Out There)
– Directory of Centers
A note for interested readers: If you want to read and study the
whole set of the magazines, you can find them in the Library of
Congress, Washington DC. The Stanford University Library has
many, too. The British National Library in London has a few
(shelfmark P.P.636.ctd). You may also order copies of the
magazines from them via internet, or go and make copies yourself.
Legally, of course, you can only copy, or order copies, for issues
until Dec. 1942.
42
I bow to you all. May Thy love shine forever on the sanctuary of
my devotion, and may I be able to awaken Thy Love in all hearts.”
~~~
The Fifties
43
his commentaries on the Bible that had been running continuously
for twenty years. In this issue he expanded on the words: "And
when Jesus had cried with a loud voice, he said, Father, into thy
hands I commend my spirit: and having said thus, he gave up the
ghost." It appeared in the March 1952 issue, the exact time when
Yogananda left for the higher planes.
Surprisingly, at that time the magazine still cost 25c, just like the
very first issue 30 years earlier.
Daya Mata was elected president in 1955. She writes that she was
very reluctant to fill that role of leadership, which for her was "a
tremendous test." When she was chosen by the board of directors,
she questioned, "Why me?" However, soon afterwards in India, in
an ecstasy, Daya Mata saw the presence of Babaji (described in
Only Love). She mentally bowed to him, and sobbingly asked:
"They chose me. I am so unworthy. How could it be?" Babaji
replied sweetly, "My child, you must not doubt your Guru. He
spoke the truth. What he told you is true." In fact, Yogananda had
told her before his passing, “Now my work is finished. Your work
begins.” So she willingly shouldered the enormous task.
44
–– The altars and prayers were modified, adding Krishna, flipping
Sri Yukteswar’s image, and switching Yogananda and Sri
Yukteswar’s positions – all for understandable reasons.
In the 50ies the magazine sold SRF travel altars. It is fun to see
those original ones with five SRF Gurus. That altar arrangement
was still publicly clarified (answering questions from students) in
the magazine in Nov./Dec 1959: “Paramahansa Yogananda
arranged himself the number and relative positions of the five
pictures that show the line of SRF-YSS gurus.”
45
–– Monastic uniforms started.
She explains that when a great teacher leaves the world, it often
happens that different opinions arise among disciples concerning
how his mission should be guided from now on. Daya shares that
such questions arose during discussion about the work in 1955,
right on the morning after she became the leader. One point of
discussion was if the guidance of the work should be in the hands
of the householders or monastics. Yogananda, she continues, had
told them it was to be with renunciants like himself, but that
directive was being challenged by some of the members of the
board of directors. Daya found her mind troubled, as she also
understood their point: true, why be bound by externals? A devotee
is a devotee because he loves God, not because he is dressed with
an ocher cloth. That night she sought Yogananda's answer in deep
meditation and prayer. Late at night she saw her body get up from
the bed, walk down the hall, and enter Yogananda's room (it seems
to have been a vision of herself). As she did so, she saw his shawl
fluttering. She turned around, and there stood her Guru. In deep joy
she ran to him and knelt at his feet, exclaiming “Master, Master,
you are not dead you are not gone! Death has no claim on you.”
Yogananda reached down and touched her forehead. As he did so,
Daya instantly knew the answer she had to give at the meeting the
next morning. Yogananda blessed her, and she saw herself once
again sitting upon her bed. The next morning she met with the
directors of the society, and gave the answer Yogananda had
46
conveyed to her. SRF thus became centered around renunciants.
Daya Mata had good reason to be firm: within a very short time
had received the darshan and blessing from both Yogananda and
Babaji (see above).
47
was in charge of the monks, of the centers and meditation groups,
and was the main traveling Kriya minister.
48
The Sixties
From about July 1961, the magazine became quarterly again (it
had been bi-monthly).
From then on, for the next decades, very few changes can be
observed. There were 64 pages, and the set-up remained practically
undisturbed.
~~~
The Seventies
A letter from Daya Mata was included from the late 70ies onwards.
~~~
The Eighties
~~~
49
The Nineties
In 1999 once again fresh energy was poured into the magazine:
SRF increased its number of pages from 64 to 80, adding articles
of wider interest. Inside, for the first time, one color was used,
instead of black /white. The price was raised from 75c to $2.
~~~
Two Thousand
50
In Spring 1972 it says, under “total paid circulation,” that they
were 11,899 - 13,482.
In Winter 1984 it says, under “total paid circulation,” that they
were 21,488 - 21,957.
In Winter 1992, under “total paid and/or requested circulation,” we
see 26,332 - 26,396.
In Winter 1995, under “Paid/Requested outside-county mail
subscriptions,” we see 19,393 - 19,048; and “Paid in-county
subscriptions: none.”
In Winter 2000, under “Paid/Requested outside-county mail
subscriptions,” we see 19,069 - 20, 604; and “Paid in-county
subscriptions: none.”
In Winter 2001, under “Paid/Requested outside-county mail
subscriptions,” 18,250 - 18,199; “Paid in-county subscriptions:
none.”
In Winter 2002, under “Paid/Requested outside-county mail
subscriptions,” 17,494 - 17,890; “Paid in-county subscriptions:
none.”
In Winter 2003, under “Paid/Requested outside-county mail
subscriptions,” 16,629 - 16,548; and “Paid in-county subscriptions:
none.”
In Winter 2004, under “Paid/Requested outside-county mail
subscriptions,” 15,157 - 14,634; “Paid in-county subscriptions:
none.”
51
ministers’ talks for $6? With this strategy, the numbers might well
have dropped even more, one fears.
One can imagine the Heavenly Doctor diagnosing: “In this world,
we are all a little bit crazy. You in SRF are a little crazy too (don't
worry, it's everyone!). So why don't you mix with people
differently crazy, to find out about your own little craziness? Some
new fresh wind from outside might just infuse your magazine with
young and creative life."
~~~
52
Chapter 4
53
rules of addition and subtraction, the law of Kriya can never be
destroyed. Burn to ashes all the books on mathematics, the
logically-minded will always rediscover such truths; destroy all the
sacred books on yoga, its fundamental laws will come out
whenever there appears a true yogi who comprises within himself
pure devotion and consequently pure knowledge.” (Sri Ananda
Mohan Lahiri, a grandson of Lahiri Mahasaya, quoted in
Autobiography of a Yogi)
Kriya of course has not always been called “Kriya Yoga.” Babaji
renamed it “Kriya Yoga” for this age. Yogananda writes: “Kriya
Yoga is described in certain scriptures as Kabali Pranayama” (or
Kevali Pranayama, or Kevala Pranayama, according to dialect.
“Kevala” means “alone”, referring to the Self). “Kabali Pranayama
was considered to be the greatest of all techniques in controlling
prana (life force).” It scientifically leads the devotee to
breathlessness. “Breathlessness is deathlessness.” The result is
Cosmic Bliss.
~~~
54
Bhagavan Krishna
Around 700BC (plus incarnations much earlier)
For Westerners, these names don’t mean very much. For Hindus,
however, they do. It is as if we were told in the West, “Krishna
gave Kriya to Noah.” Manu in Hinduism is considered the
progenitor of humankind, who gave laws and religious rules for
Hindu life. Ikshvaku is considered to have been the very first king
in ancient India (and founder of the Sun Dynasty). We are talking
eons ago, much longer than our Western history is dealing with.
55
“The exalted Lord said to Arjuna: "I gave this
imperishable yoga to Vivasvat. Vivasvat passed on the knowledge
to Manu; Manu in turn gave it to Iksvaku. (4:1)
Handed down in this way in orderly succession, the Rajarishis
(royal rishis) knew it. But, Arjuna, by the long passing of time, this
yoga was lost sight on earth.(4:2)
I have this day informed you about that same ancient yoga (Kriya
Yoga), because you are my devotee and friend.” (4:3)
Arjuna then asks how this can be possible, since Vivasvat lived
long, long before Krishna.
Krishna replies: “Many births both you and I have passed through.
I can remember them all, but you cannot.” (4:5)
Kriya was taught again and again, but then was also always lost,
with the ebb and flow of the Yugas. The history of Kriya Yoga is a
long record of great yogis who brought this science back again and
again to its central focus, with Krishna as the charioteer of it all.
In this Yuga cycle too, Kriya Yoga was guarded by “royal rishis”
until the coming of the materialistic ages. Then, due to priestly
secrecy and man's indifference, the sacred knowledge gradually
became inaccessible. And once again Krishna, in the form of
Mahavatar Babaji, revived it, in a most spectacular manner in a
golden palace. A spiritual renaissance was set into motion for this
age, which “will encircle the globe, and aid in establishing that
brotherhood of man which results from direct perception of the
One Father.”
~~~
56
Elijah
Around 850 BC
~~~
57
Patanjali
200BC - nobody knows for sure
Patanjali was one of the ancient avatars, and is known today as the
“Father of Yoga.” He was the great exponent of Raja Yoga, and
taught ashtanga yoga ("eight- limbed" yoga) in his famous Yoga
Sutras. Patanjali’s teachings are central to yoga, and could never
be thought away from yogic history.
And well: Patanjali too was a Kriya Yogi, as Babaji states in the
Autobiography of a Yogi.
~~~
58
Shankaracharya
Most say around 700AD, others claim 500BC
~~~
59
Jesus Christ
About 0 AD
Jesus lived in India during his “lost 18 years,” and practiced and
taught Kriya Yoga. His disciples, the apostles, too, were Kriya
Yogis, as Babaji states. Even St. Paul, who didn’t know Jesus
personally, received Kriya- either in vision from Jesus, or from his
direct disciples, in Indian fashion.
Through Kriya Yoga, St. John could share his cosmic experiences:
“In the beginning was the Word…” In Revelation he talks about
the mystery of “the seven stars”, and the “seven churches.”
~~~
60
Kabir
1440 - 1518
61
Trailanga Swami
1601-1881
~~~
62
Mahatma Gandhi
1869-1948
63
“Continue ceaselessly on your path to liberation through Kriya,
whose power lies in practice.” So let’s get these currents going,
going, going, to finally exclaim: “JAI KRIYA YOGA!”
64
Chapter 5
A Short History
of Hong-Sau, the Energization Exercises,
and the Aum-Technique
Hong Sau
The Hong Sau technique, as most devotees know, isn’t a technique
which Yogananda created some decades ago. It is ancient, and has
been practiced by countless yogis for eons, just like Kriya Yoga
and the Aum-technique.
65
expressed the same appreciation for the Hong-Sau technique,
otherwise Yogananda would never have taught it.
66
Yogananda described these mantric sounds as “sacred.” The
ancient texts agree. The “Gheranda-Samhita” instructs to recite this
potent sound constantly, to arrive at a state of exaltation.
67
With “Hong-Sau” we strengthen the untouched observer inside.
(The soul is the observer, Yogananda wrote.)
~~~
68
through will power, and directing it to the body parts), they can
perform miracles of healing, physically and psychologically.
~~~
~~~
Jyoti Mudra
69
treatises “Shan-Mukhi-Mudra,” the ‘six-openings-seal.” It is
referred to, for example, in the ancient “Goraksha Paddhati,”
which explains it as the blocking of the ears, eyes, and nostrils with
ones fingers: one covers the ears with the thumbs, the eyes with
ones index fingers, and the nostrils with the remaining fingers.
This Mudra, one reads there, is recommended for the manifestation
of the inner sound. Yogananda taught it for seeing the inner light.
Interesting! Well, if one thinks about it, he also taught that the
Aum-vibration is experienced as both sound and light.
~~~
Maha Mudra
~~~
70
perhaps the most esoteric seal of all, known to saints of all
religions (who are always depicted looking upward). It is a closure
(seal) to the outward world, to become absorbed within. And
Yogananda clearly described that secret “sign” which one sees in
Sambhabi Mudra.
71
Chapter 6
A Historical Question
on Kriya Yoga Authority
This chapter might create some dispute, as it has done in the past.
Let's go slowly then, breathing deeply!
72
SRF's Kriya claim. And if that question mark proves valid, it
would be a pity if a misunderstanding, based on personal
disposition (we all hear what we are ready to hear), would prevail
over what Babaji has brought. It would be a true pity if
householders would accept in their hearts that they are "second-
class citizens" in the Kriya-world, never able to give Kriya, and if
monastics felt superior to them. It would be a pity if our precious
Kriya history got weakened in that way.
Let's look at what history has to say about their statement, which
was certainly made with good intentions:
And was it really a matter of "the early years?" Not quite, if one
looks closely. Up to the end of Yogananda's life, and even long
afterwards, married disciples gave the sacred Kriya diksha, within
SRF. Does that mean SRF was disobedient toward their Guru's
wish (since "he stipulated that Kriya be given only by SRF
monastics")? One wouldn't think so. SRF was simply doing the
right thing: letting these married disciples continue to give Kriya,
since they had their authority directly from Yogananda himself.
Here they are:
- Dr. Lewis, the first American Kriya yogi, was a married man,
not a monastic. He was authorized by Yogananda to give Kriya,
including the higher initiations. His authority as a married Kriya
73
minister was never questioned until his death in 1960.
74
may listen to her beautiful voice recordings on
www.kamalasilva.org)
75
- Paramhansa Yogananda, following his Master's lead,
authorized both householders and monastics to give Kriya, all life
long.
Doesn't their example give value to our question mark? And since
we are at it: could we make it even a bit more solid?
Lets look far back into our ancient Kriya history: we read that
Bhagavan Krishna was married, as was the "Father of yoga,"
Patanjali. Both were married Kriya masters, according to
Yogananda. Of course there was balance: historic examples of
monastic Kriyacharyas (Kriya-teachers) would be Adi
Shankaracharya and Lord Jesus (both teaching Kriya or a similar
technique, according to Yogananda).
That statement too might not pass without our calm question mark.
76
There exist a letter of Yogananda, written four months before his
passing (Nov.13,1951), to an Indian householder, K.S. Bylani in
Poona. Yogananda tells him: "Please give Kriya Yoga only to
those members of your family who are deeply interested and whom
you feel will daily use it. God bless you and your family. My
prayers will be with each of you."
77
Chapter 7
Householder Swamis:
Babaji's Historical Gesture
78
died, I joined the Swami Order and received the new name of Sri
Yukteswar Giri." That event happened after Lahiri Mahasaya's
lifetime (after September 1895), as Yogananda explains in a
footnote: 'Yukteswar' was his monastic name, which was "not
received by my guru during Lahiri Mahasaya's lifetime."
79
got (and still gets) heavily attacked for his teaching that we are not
in Kali Yuga anymore. Fortunately time is slowly moving ahead,
changing people's consciousness.
80
Chapter 8
He appeared alone, when he was still young, but his radiant force
was such that still today many a story is being told about his
matchless valor: thousands were conquered, for his heart was truly
81
mighty, noble, majestic, and also deeply wise. Light sparkled
joyfully in his large, beautiful eyes as he went on conquering many
lands. He was not tall, but his strength was so amazing that few
could even understand it. His kingdom at first started small, but it
grew every day as he strode from East to West to fulfill his
glorious mission. His mighty sword was ever held high, brilliant,
shining, carrying the symbols of wisdom, high-mindedness and
indomitable strength.
The King was known to be a man of deep love for all, loving his
closest and dearest friends as well as complete strangers. He in turn
was deeply loved and admired by many, but, as it always happens,
not by all. His enormous success far and wide kindled flames of
dark envy in the heart of some of his close friends. The flames
grew. Burnt up from within, some finally turned against the King,
betrayed him, and even fought bitter wars against him. The King
had to suffer periods of deep distress and sorrow, since he ever
loved his friends who had now declared to be his enemies.
Still the King's victories grew. His activities became even more
expansive, and his name finally became known all over the world.
He wisely established smaller castles throughout the kingdom. He
trained people to become majestic themselves, and wrote many a
82
kingly instruction for the benefit of all citizens. His fame
expanded, his rite became well-known, and his life-mission was
gloriously fulfilled.
Alas, his end finally had to come, and he gave his prosperous
kingdom into the hands of a great and mighty son, who had proved
to be the closest to the King, among all his sons and daughters.
But, as the hand of fate decided it, that worthy son's life lasted but
a little while longer, and the reigns of the kingdom were soon
passed on to one of the King's daughters, who now became the
Queen.
The new Queen was beautiful, was a woman of much love, and of
complete devotion to her father. She was supported by the high and
noble ministers of the court, and by her most intimate inner circle
of royal counselors. She also trusted her ordained knights to
faithfully carry out her queenly commands.
Her reign was strict, though, and she held the reigns of the
kingdom tightly in her hands. Such had been the command of her
father to her. Her royal scepter was richly ornamented, and at times
she used it in an uncompromising manner. She underlined her
position on the mighty throne, declaring to be the only
representative of the King in all the world. The various smaller
castles of the kingdom were tied to her through strict obedience.
The Queen would not in tolerate any disobedience, disloyalty, or
willful independence.
83
More problems arouse for the Queen. Other Lords, far cousins of
the same royal family, came invading the kingdom, bringing the
same ancient rite which the King had taught. One came from the
high Eastern mountains, another from the planes, still another from
a far Oriental city. Their battles were successful, and they grew in
strength.
Sometimes even wars were fought against them, since the Queen
had proclaimed that in all the kingdom she alone was authorized to
impart the ancient ritual. Even her knights could do so only in her
royal name. She in her heart was a true royal monarch. But the
citizens divided: some pledged their faithful unwavering loyalty to
her, as the King's daughter. Some followed other Lords, who more
strictly maintained the Eastern tradition. Others turned away
completely. Still others merely criticized and complained about the
situation and the Queen, while a few were constructive and
plentiful in sharing the King's noble heritage in their own special
way.
The Queen grew old. Her race was run. She, as a loyal daughter,
had done her very best. The kingdom, however, had not expanded
massively under her long reign. Yet she had protected it in all its
beauty, so that the King's name would ever remain a shining light
in the whole world. The gardens were blossoming, the lakes were
bright, the Castle spotless. The Queen had placed mostly the high
ladies of the court in charge, and everyone had been well trained to
say "yes" to them, with a smile.
The royal flags, the Queen knew, were conscientiously kept high
and impressive, proudly declaring the name of the Great Castle.
And the majestic emblem of the King was ever kept bright and
84
polished, in golden color to underline its kingly value and
importance.
A royal messenger, which the King himself had started long ago, is
still being printed today and is regularly sent out to the citizens
throughout the kingdom, but the number of its readers has
diminished, as royal scientists have found.
Some valiant warriors within the Great Castle were still youthfully
eager to climb their horse, as the King had always done, to fight
bravely in the King's name. But the Queen kept her knights in line,
orderly, well-behaved, controlled, their knightly prowess subdued.
All was safe for her, and all in place, all was preserved, just as it
was when the King was alive... as if time had stopped. And she
was content.
What will happen now that the Queen has died? Will the newly-
crowned Queen loosen the reigns, and will a fresh and vigorous air
breath within the castle walls, even though she is advanced in
years? Will the knights again be shining in their valiant armor, as
the King had been? Will they be able to match the numerous
invading Lords, who act in all God-given creativity and freedom?
85
Chapter 9
Yogananda was not only the inward monk, but was extremely
expansive. In this spirit, in early editions of the Autobiography of a
Yogi, he encouraged members not “to isolate themselves from the
community, but to lead balanced lives of meditation AND
constructive outer activities.”
86
Yogananda much appreciated humanitarian work, also outside his
own organization. Thus he created “SRF Gold Medals Awards for
Services to Humanity”, which were given annually as rewards to
humanitarians in the fields of religion, art, science, and public
service. During the opening ceremonies of India House in 1951 he
presented eight such Gold Medals. The Gold Medals displayed the
symbols of “a Cross, a five-pointed star with the eye of wisdom in
the center, and a lotus- its roots in the mire and its crown in the
sun, a symbol of ascent from mortality to Godhood.”
~~~
~~~
87
Yogananda's Universal Spirit
Once upon a time...did you know this fun piece of history?
The same church originally had its two pulpits for a specific
reason: Yogananda's plan was to use one for SRF ministers, the
other one for ministers of other religions whom he planned to
invite – he had in mind a true "Church of all Religions."
~~~
88
Yogananda and Freedom
Once upon a time...did you know this fun piece of history?
89
In this context it is interesting to read Sri Yukteswar's letter
to Yogananda (ch. 37), in which he thanks him for "your
methods in chant affirmations, healing vibrations, and divine
healing prayers". Yogananda as we see taught his own
methods. He was an enlightened Master, of course, and not
many of us would have that same right. At any rate, this letter
too give an impression of Kriya Yoga as a breathing spiritual
path, inspired from within.
But in all that our Kriya path should ever remain one of inner
joy, freedom, and appropriate individual creativity.
~~~
90
Yogananda Supporting Other Kriya Lines and
Institutions
Once upon a time...did you know this fun piece of history?
91
Yogananda's Spirit Toward Other Great Teachers
Once upon a time...did you know this fun piece of history?
~~~
92
At the Hollywood church once “stone seats on the lawn are an
invitation to passers-by on busy Sunset Boulevard to enter and
enjoy a few meditative moments.” Today Yogananda’s public
invitation is not offered.
"The SRF Lake Shrine is open to the public." This sentence is now
missing from the main text in the Autobiography of a Yogi, but we
still find it under the Lake-Shrine photo.
There is, in early editions, a sweet and touching testimonial for the
Autobiography of a Yogi, by Prof. Piper (parts are still being used
today). He wrote that after earnestly reading Master's book that
"one has the happy feeling of being the lasting friend of a rare
genius." His words seem most appropriate for who Yogananda was
and is.
93
Disciples Writing About Their Guru
Once upon a time...did you know this fun piece of history?
94
Chapter 10
95
part in spreading that message, and in writing that sacred life."
Fifty years after Lahiri Mahasaya's passing in 1895 culminated in
1945, the year of completion of this present book."
But it took almost one more year before his masterpiece could
96
reach his readers. The Autobiography of a Yogi was finally
published in December 1946. The problem was to find a
publishing house for it: innovative and challenging thoughts never
tread a smooth path. This was a pioneering work, filled with
unheard-of yogic stories of stunning miracles. Tara Mata in fact
had to search for a long time. The publishing house which finally
accepted the job was the Philosophical Library in New York.
97
divine draught to the parched devotee Bhagirath, so the celestial
flood of Kriya rolled from the secret fastnesses of the Himalayas
into the dusty haunts of men." Through the Autobiography of a
Yogi the mission of Kriya Yoga made indeed a major leap in all
directions, everywhere, “into the dusty aunts of men.”
Just think about it! Even today, without it, how many people would
know about Kriya Yoga? Without it, how many disciples of
Yogananda would be around? Without it, would the various Kriya
teachers enjoy the same response they are getting from seekers?
98
not lazy.
In India both SRF and Ananda have both published that original
1946 edition, as a special historical document. In the West it is
published as well, and has been posted on a growing number of
sites, since now it is in the public domain. All can use it freely,
including the photos. In this way it seems that the Autobiography
of a Yogi has lately developed new wings. The Autobiography of a
Yogi was, interestingly, Yogananda’s only book which he
published through an outside publisher, selling the copyrights.
99
Certainly true. But his universal and expansive mind, it seems, was
even aiming at a further, a global goal: world-peace! Here are
some of his quotes from the Autobiography of a Yogi (bold added):
“The yogic message will encircle the globe, and aid in establishing
that brotherhood of man which results from direct perception of
the One Father.”
100
One story, however, which he originally intended to include, didn’t
make it into the book. The point of the story, which one of
Yogananda’s friends had personally witnessed, was to show that
bodies can be changed "like car models!"
Here it is:
There was a young man in India who had died, and his body was
lying ready for cremation. The family was about to set fire to the
funeral pyre. At this moment an old yogi came running out of a
nearby forest, shouting: "Stop it, stop it! I need that young body,
cremate this one!" The family was utterly stunned. He fell to the
ground, dead. A moment later the young man leapt up off the pyre;
before anybody was able catch him, he ran off into the forest. The
family could only cremate the old man's body. That was a yogi
who changed his "model." His body had become too old- and so he
got himself into a new "model."
Yogananda relates that he couldn't find his saintly friend who had
witnessed this incredible scene- that's why he chose not to publish
it in his book.
101
Chapter 11
Saintly History:
The Passing of Four Great Disciples
The idea behind this chapter was to describe the glorious passing
of four great disciples of Yogananda: Rajarsi Janakananda, Sister
Gyanamata, Oliver Black, and Dr. Lewis. But the lines expanded
to tell quite a bit about their lives, becoming almost tiny
biographies.
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Rajarsi Janakananda
The love between Guru and disciple is love on its highest and
purest level. Such was the relationship between these two God-
filled souls. In Yogananda’s letters to Rajarsi one can get a glimpse
of their blissful inner soul-union. “You and me are one light in two
bodies,” Yogananda once said.
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Rajarsi Janakananda had been raised in a poor family, but worked
his way up to become a self-made millionaire. But he was different
from most millionaires: he, a high yogi, was following his karmic
mission to put Yogananda’s work on a stable financial foundation.
So restless was Rajarsi that he couldn’t sit still for a moment, and
was fidgeting about all the time. (Isn’t it amazing how the surface
of our personalities can totally disguise our true nature?) At their
meeting, however, Rajarsi saw a blue light around Yogananda,
filling the whole stage. He got totally absorbed, sat straight, and
became perfectly motionless, perceiving a deep inner stillness. His
old karma surfaced. From then on he was ever immersed in God.
Within only five years Rajarsi attained samadhi. There is a
beautiful samadhi-picture of him in 1937, printed in the
Autobiography of a Yogi.
Rajarsi was a man of few words, but when he spoke, they were to
the point. Nothing escaped his sharp awareness. In his later years,
when he wasn’t doing business, he practically talked exclusively
about God, Guru, and mediation.
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whispered, “You have no idea what great blessings are drawn to
the work every time one of its followers goes as deep in meditation
as Rajarsi does.”
105
went to live there, experiencing many visions of Yogananda, who
had passed away in March 1952.
Rajarsi at that time made SRF the beneficiary of his life insurance,
and also gave stocks worth of a million dollar to SRF. Altogether
“SRF will have from three, four, yes, even six million in its assets
to its credit.” He was happy. His mission on earth was fulfilled.
Later, in Aril 1954, Rajarsi had his second operation. A third one
followed in October. All that time he was divinely united with
Yogananda, in many blissful visions.
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Sister Gyanamata
After that first meeting, alas, for five long years she didn’t see
Yogananda again. But she wrote him letters constantly. “She is an
old devotee of incarnations,” Yogananda wrote.
Her health, however, was not good at all. She had a heart attack
and other serious physical illnesses. In 1930 doctors actually said
they had not much hope for her surviving, and told her that they
could not help her anymore. The Bissetts in that year went to live
in La Jolla, not far from Yogananda’s headquarters in Los Angeles.
Whenever Yogananda returned from his travels, Gyanamata came
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to visit him. Being the Master he was, Yogananda healed her of her
fatal sickness. Her faith in him was measureless.
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The divine love story between Yogananda and Rajarsi could
maybe only be matched by the story of Divine Love with “Sister.”
While Yogananda walked hand in hand with Rajarsi, he of course
couldn’t do that with Gyanamata. With her, the communion of love
was purely inside. She always stood up when he entered the room,
in silent inner contact with him. “She and I never talk, but we
always understand each other,” Yogananda said. They wrote each
other “thought letters.”
Gyanamata, by the way, was not the only disciple taking on the
karma of others. In Durga Mata's book we read that Yogananda
explained that Rajarsi suffered for the karma of others, and that she
(Durga) too was taking the karma of others.
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her last words: “Such joy, such joy, too much joy!” She took a few
very long (Kriya) breaths, then her breath stopped, and she was
gone. Yogananda arrived soon afterwards. “Touch her feet,” he
said to those present. They were cold. “Now touch the top of her
head.” The head was very hot, as if on fire. It was a sign,
Yogananda explained, that she had left in a state of “Mukti,” final
liberation. “Your seat God has kept for you in heaven.”
Oliver Black
Oliver Black was born in Grover Hill, Ohio, in 1893, the same year
Yogananda was born, who was only 8 months older. As Rajarsi,
Oliver Black was a self-made man, a millionaire industrialist
selling automobile parts in Detroit. He was an energetic and highly
talented person, who started on a very small scale: in his garage,
with an investment of only $500. By the time Oliver Black retired
from his business in 1952, it was valued $35 million dollars a year.
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He and his wife Ethel had two children: a son Robert, who was
killed while a pilot in World War II, and a daughter Phylis. His
wife died in 1970.
The outward search for truth was now over. “Yogananda taught
where to find it. You might say he handed me a blueprint, and I've
been following it ever since.”
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True, Oliver Black was the leader of the SRF center in Detroit, but
his guru had much greater plans for him. In May 1951, he wrote
him: "With your organizational power you can do something much
greater, much more lasting, much easier, and much more secure
than present-day business organizations in which one works to pay
taxes, ruining his health and happiness. Detroit, being in the center
of the United States, has a great opportunity to draw true seekers,
both from the East and West. I would like nothing better than for
you to establish a sub-headquarters there."
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in Detroit was attended by over 3000 seekers. His was the most
successful yoga and meditation activity in the United States at that
time!
By 1971, he had sold off all his properties except for a beautiful,
forested 800-acre land near Gaylord, Michigan, which became his
full-time yoga retreat, called “Song of the Morning Ranch.” There
he lived and taught, together with Bob Raymor, another direct
disciple of Yogananda. The retreat still functions today, though
Yogananda’s Kriya message seems not very central there anymore.
Oliver Black was known for his luminous face, his infectious
laughter, his divine love and friendship. He uncannily knew
people’s thoughts, and many a miracle is told from his life. He
lived up to 96 years- ever remaining young, healthy and active.
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Dr. Lewis
Dr. Lewis came down to the material plane in March 1893, just
two months after Yogananda. It was about the same time when
also Rajarsi and Oliver Black incarnated. Those four men came
down as a group of friends, it seems.
Dr. Lewis was a married man, with a wife, Mildred, and two
children: Bradford and Brenda. Their family lived in Boston,
where Dr. Lewis was a dentist and had his practice.
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After Yogananda arrived in America, in Boston, on September
19,1920, he soon met Alice Haysey (Sister Yogamata), who
invited her friend Mildred Lewis to come and meet him at their
community church. After meeting him, Mrs. Lewis wanted her
husband to meet Yogananda too. Dr. Lewis did, on Christmas Eve,
1920. “What is that ‘single eye’ the Bible speaks of?” It was a
question which had haunted Dr. Lewis for a long time. “Can you
show it to me?” Yogananda on the spot showed him the heavenly
glory of the spiritual eye and the 1000-petal lotus. Dr. Lewis was
ecstatic. He became the first American Kriyaban, and Yogananda’s
friend for a lifetime. But he almost got into deep trouble with
Mildred (go read in “Treasures Against Time”).
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week. He also was put in charge of the Encinitas Colony (probably
Gyanamata’s health didn’t allow her to do the job anymore.) In
addition, he was in charge of the monks’ training in Encinitas.
Yogananda also authorized him to give Kriya Initiations, which he
did until his passing. To get rest, he spent one day a week in
silence, in Rajarsi’s Borrego house in the desert.
She recounts: “His hands were upturned, his eyes closed. I sat
beside the bed, thinking that I too would meditate. I was aroused in
two or three minutes by a tremendous sound. It resembled the
suction sound of a huge pump, or the breath sound of a giant
Kriya. With the sound came a great flash of spiritual white light,
whose brilliance might be compared to that given forth by a
million electric light bulbs. Doctor’s blue eyes opened; piercing
flashes of blue light came from them. Then they were locked at the
Christ center in the forehead. His head lowered somewhat, but his
body remained erect. For an instant, the face of Swami Sri
Yukteswarji appeared, enveloping Doctor’s face.”
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There can hardly be a better proof for Yogananda’s promise: “For
those who stay in tune to the end I, or one of the other masters, will
be there to usher them into the divine kingdom."
117
Chapter 12
Yogananda's Books
and Written Lessons
Yogananda wore many different hats during his lifetime. One was
that of an inspired author, who tried to uplift us all. He tried with
his pen to unite Eastern and Western religion. He tried through his
books and lessons to teach practical spirituality. He tried to open
our hearts to God, with poetry and song.
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magazine: those articles began to appear in "East-West" in 1932.
His commentaries on the "Rubaiyat"(verses written by the Muslim
mystic, Omar Khayyam) started to appear in 1937 in his magazine.
1920
Still in India, Yogananda's published his first book:
“Dharmavijnana” (Wisdom of Dharma), later called “Science of
Religion.”
1923
Yogananda published his book of poetry, "Songs of the Soul."
He published YOGODA INTRODUCTION. These were
Yogananda's first written lessons, basically describing some
energization exercises; and giving a first introduction to
meditation- but not Hong Sau yet.
1924
He published both Science of Religion and Scientific Healing
Affirmations."
1925
Yogananda started his magazine: East-West (1925 to 1936) and
(1945 to 1947); Inner Culture (1937 to 1944); Self Realization
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Magazine (1948 to 1969); Self-Realization (1970 to present). The
magazine featured amongst other things his commentaries on the
Second Coming of Christ, on the Bhagavad Gita, and on the
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam.
1926
Yogananda published his ADVANCED COURSE IN
PRACTICAL METAPHYSICS
Lesson 1: The True Scientific Conception of Genesis
Lesson 2: Divine Will Healing
Lesson 3: How to Develop Intuition Consciously
Lesson 4: The Five Pranas
Lesson 5: Reincarnation
Lesson 6: The Law of Karma
Lesson 7: Spiritual Marriage
Lesson 8: Disembodied Souls
Lesson 9: Bhagavad Gita (The Hindu Bible)
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Lesson 10: Chemistry of Feelings
Lesson 11: Spiritual Food
Lesson 12: Awakening of Kundalini or Serpent Force
1930
In this year he published SUPER ADVANCED COURSE
Lesson 1—Christian Yoga and the Hidden Truths in St. John’s
Revelation
Lesson 2—Developing Response-Bringing Mental Whispers…
Lesson 3—Reversing the Searchlights of the Senses
Lesson 4—Art of Finding True Friends of Past Incarnations
Lesson 5—The Divine Magnetic Diet
Lesson 6—Installing Habits of Success, Health, and Wisdom in the
Mind at Will
Lesson 7—Magnetism
Lesson 8—Obliterating the Malignant Seeds of Failure
Lesson 9—Conquer Fear, Anger, Greed, Temptation, Failure, &
Inferiority
Lesson 10—The Art of Super-Relaxation
Lesson 11—Converting the Hands into Healing Batteries
Lesson 12—Esthetic Way of Developing Cosmic Consciousness
1932
Yogananda published his Metaphysical Meditations.
1934
He published the ADVANCED SUPER COSMIC SCIENCE
COURSE
Lesson 1—Healing by Spiritual Affirmation and by Astral Food
Lesson 2—How to Develop Creative Intuition
Lesson 3—The Tree of Life—Adam and Eve Consciousness
Lesson 4—Reincarnation
Lesson 5—How to Contact Departed-Disembodied Souls
Lesson 6—Cosmic Meditations
1938
He published his Cosmic Chants.
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He also published the PRAECEPTA LESSONS: a compilation of
previous lessons, with added stories, poems, topics etc. These
lessons are much bigger than what had been published before.
They were the bases of the SRF lessons of today. Each section
included:
- Praeceptum inspirational poems
- Praecepta prayers
- Scientific techniques and principles
- Apologues
- Health culture
- Recipes
- Inspirational messages
- Affirmations
- Special features
1944
Publication of Attributes of Success, now called Laws of Success.
1946
Yogananda published his main and most famous book, the
Autobiography of a Yogi.
1949
Publication of Sri Yukteswar's book The Holy Science.
1950-52
Yogananda spent much time in his desert retreat 29 Palms to
complete his writings, and to write new books. These were
extremely busy times for him, trying to get his books published. It
was a race against his last hour, which he knew was approaching.
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1950 during my stay at an SRF retreat near the Mojave desert, is a
translation, with commentary, of the Bhagavad Gita. The book,
God Talks With Arjuna, presents a detailed study of the various
paths of yoga."
In a footnote on the bottom of the page he added: "Published in
1951 (see page 6n.)"
And on that page 6, in a footnote one reads that one may buy the
book for $3.50 from SRF.
And on Feb.20, 1952, he wrote her: "I have been snowed under
with the work on the book, and have been unable to take care of
letters that have arrived. The book is progressing very nicely, and I
hope it won't be too long before it will be ready for publication. I
am working day and night toward that end."
The Master had worked day and night, the Bhagavad Gita
commentaries were already at the printer and needed only a final
check... it seems that only a few seconds were missing before
publication. The goal was so near, but then, on March 7 1952,
Yogananda passed on. His fire for publication was extinguished at
that tragic moment. The publishing department had obviously
more cautious feelings about the Master's books. More editing was
123
needed, they must have felt.
It seems a lot of time, but one thing is certain: the editor disciples
did the best they could, and certainly did what they thought best
for their Guru's writings.
124
Chapter 13
125
Dhirananda (Basu Kumar Bagchi) was one of the closest boyhood
friends of Yogananda. They were practically of the same age, met
in college, and were classmates there. They became close friends,
traveled together in India, visited saints, meditated, sang many
devotional songs to God, and founded a school and a library.
Dhirananda is described as being dutiful, service-oriented, and
highly knowledgeable.
Sananda, in his book “Mejda,” adds the fun story that back in
India, Dhirananda was having troubles at home: he didn’t get the
privacy he needed for his meditations. So Yogananda invited him
to his home in Gurpar Road, saying, “We both travel the same path
with heart and soul.” Yogananda kept Dhirananda’s presence in his
attic room a secret, first. He lovingly shared his food with him. But
of course Dhirananda’s presence became known to all, and he was
accepted in the house as one of the family members.
126
Yogananda traveled a lot, and thus Dhirananda spent more time at
their school, becoming the head teacher, and the central figure
there.
127
Washington with his presence there as the residential Swami.”
Even Durga Mata came later, in Dec. 1929; she writes that in May
1928 “Dhirananda had left the fold of his Guru.” (A little mistake-
she herself later explains that it happened in 1929). All other
disciples, then, tell their stories about Dhirananda by what they
themselves have heard or read.
128
where mountains, skies, and poplars reflect themselves in myriad
lanes of water amidst the playful fish, or the jewel-like lakes of
Kashmir, …”
129
abandoned it, together with his Swami title, and became a very
respected and successful University professor in Michigan. Good
for him…but it still seems a sad story. Of course, he also could
have become a great artist, a great businessman, a great star, or
whatever. But what does that mean for a devotee like him, except
emptiness for the soul?
Dhirananda could not forget Yogananda. Did his envy grow, even
then? Probably: in 1935, six years after leaving, he finally sued
Yogananda, claiming former institutional partnership with him. He
won, and collected $8,000. Congratulations! He also, in the courts,
declared that Yogananda was taking sexual advantage of his young
female devotees.
130
born in October 2, 1929, meaning that she was conceived in the
beginning of January 1929 (while Yogananda was in Boston,
lecturing).
In 1939 Nerode too left and sued Yogananda heavily for $500.000
131
(which might be compared to $2 million today), claiming
partnership with Yogananda. But Yogananda had learned his
lesson ten years earlier, with Dhirananda: he had Nerode (and
maybe others) sign a paper back then, in 1929, which declared that
he was working as a volunteer. That paper saved Yogananda.
Nerode lost the case. Much worse, however , was that Nerode
accused Yogananda’s morality even more than Dhirananda had.
He accused Yogananda of pretty bad sexual misconduct, of having
young girls at all hours in his room on the top floor, while he kept
the older women on the floor below.
Isn’t it amazing how low good devotees can sink when maya
blinds and squeezes them? Of course the easiest and most effective
way to attack an opponent legally is a clamorous sexual scandal.
That’s what Dhirananda and Nerode did with Yogananda.
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happen with Dhirananda. Even as a boy he said to his closest
friend Tulsi Bose: “One day Bagchi (Dhirananda) will betray me
and marry a white woman.” Isn’t it amazing that Yogananda still
let him in the door, and gave him all he could? He also related that
Dhirananda had already betrayed him badly in another lifetime.
But the Master’s love is divine, ongoing.
And so the drama will go on and on. Who knows what the next
lifetime will bring? Again Yogananda, as a divine messenger, will
bring light and love to the world, and again people will try to pull
him down, will throw dirt at him, will betray him, will
misunderstand him. The Master’s love and patience remain,
fortunately. And thus, one by one, the disciples will find their final
release in God.
133
Chapter 14
134
Many times, we read, while Yogananda was meditating in front of
that photo, Lahiri Mahasaya would emerge from the frame and
became a living form, sitting down in front of him. When
Yogananda then tried to touch the feet "of his luminous body", he
never succeeded: Lahiri always flew back, becoming a picture
again.
135
Some time after the Master's passing, this bare belly apparently
became a bit too bold for some tastes. Thus in the 1954 5th edition
we find Lahiri's chest beautifully dressed. The cloth, as one reads
in a footnote of the 7th edition, was later added by a "Bengali
artist."
136
Chapter 15
A Historical Question:
SRF Running Colonies?
137
“He hath made of one blood all nations of men!” An urgent need
on this war-torn earth is the founding, on spiritual basis, of
numerous world-brotherhood colonies."
138
Here's a little historical question to ponder:
In religion, we seem to observe a particular phenomenon: often
when a great Master leaves the world his following splits,
reflecting the law of duality. One side represents the lunar ray –
orthodox, protective, and conservative. The other side represents
the solar ray – expansive, creative, and less conventional. In
Christianity, St. Peter taught that Christ’s teaching should be
restricted to the Jews. St. Paul disagreed, and spread it creatively
everywhere, and non-Jews could freely become Christians. In
Islam we have the very conservative Shiites (majority in Iran and
Iraq), and the less conservative Sunnites (though traditional and
mainstream, they incorporated various customs and usages which
arose historically, but which have no roots in the Koran). The Jews
too have a strong orthodox and liberal division. In Buddhism we
see the more conservative Hinayana branch, and the more liberal
and expansive Mahayana branch.
139
Chapter 16
HISTORY?
Yogananda’s 13 Languages
Written just for fun, this chapter has been constructed upon one
sentence in Yogananda’s Autobiography. When describing his
birth and infancy, Yogananda writes: “My strong emotional life
took silent form as words in many languages. Among the inward
confusion of tongues, my ear gradually accustomed itself to the
circumambient Bengali syllables of my people.”
140
on the level of a fun evening entertainment…. a loooong evening,
we admit… since the chapter is not short at all!
LANGUAGE 1
The “Beaker ” language
141
archaeological techniques, beginning in 2950 BC, ending in
1500BC! Researchers write: “Impressive though it is, what we see
at Stonehenge now is only a fragment of what it was in its heyday,
when the final phase of construction was concluded.”
142
purposes. It was probably used as such continuously, for thousands
of years.
~~~
143
LANGUAGE 2
Sanskrit
He shared with several disciples that he had been the great warrior
Arjuna, the main disciple of Sri Krishna, who now lives in the
Himalayas as Mahavatar Babaji, as Yogananda explained.
144
Swami Kriyananda, according to the ancient “Book of Brighu” was
a king of one of India’s kingdoms at that time, and was highly
developed spiritually. Yogananda interestingly said that “in ancient
times, India was always governed, more or less, by religious kings,
from 5,000 BC, down to 637 AD, when India was invaded by
foreigners, Arabs, Moguls, Pathans, and English.”
The “Book of Brighu,” incidentally, also states that the present one
would be his last incarnation. Yogananda told him similarly: “You
will find God at the end of your life!”
A bit more history: Not long afterwards, around 560 BC, Gautama
Buddha was born, an avatar, whose reforms of Hinduism resulted
in the Buddhist religion. He had, as Yogananda wrote “many
liberated disciples.”
145
records indicate that the peerless monist lived from 510 to 478 BC;
Western historians assign him to the late eighth century AD.”
146
Mahasaya is my astral Guru (very few in the world know this);…it
was through his wishes that I met Swami Sri Yukteswarji, my
earthly Guru.”
And before that? One wonders how far back into unknown history
Babaji’s and Yogananda’s incarnations reach, as saints. One
disciple of Yogananda, Norman Paulsen, saw himself in a vision
with Yogananda in Lemuria, eighty thousand years ago: over 3
yugas ago!
~~~
147
LANGUAGE 3
Aramaic
148
Yogananda's life far back into the past, to the times of Prophet
Elisha (Eliseus) of the Old Testament, who according to
Yogananda was the former incarnation of Jesus. Elisha lived
during the reign of King Achab (875-845 BC).
Following this wild thread of thought, we see that the timing would
actually make sense for Yogananda’s evolution:
• As Elisha he attained most of his perfection (around 850 BC).
Her surpassed Elias.
• As Arjuna he found liberation (around 700BC).
• As Jesus he came as an avatar. (0 AD). In this life Elias, now
John the Baptist, found liberation too, as Yogananda wrote.
A further interesting fact is that Elijah (or Elias; John) was a Kriya
master, as Yogananda states in his Autobiography. He certainly
taught it to his disciple Elisha (or Eliseus; Jesus).
149
• As Babaji’s disciple, whatever these incarnations were,
Yogananda must have practiced Kriya.
• Yogananda practiced and taught Kriya,
But more to come: several books have been published which claim
that Jesus survived his ordeal on the cross, returned to India, and
150
lived up to a high age in Kashmir, where his tomb “Roza Bal” can
still be visited in Srinagar (and many visit it daily).
Indeed, could a physical body even enter into the astral or causal
world, or into the kingdom of God? It would fall right down! But
then.... where did Jesus go after he those 40 days?
Isn’t it interesting that both John and Matthew, the two evangelists
who actually knew Jesus, similarly wrote about Jesus’ life, his
crucifixion, resurrection, and subsequent appearance, but didn’t
write a single word about Jesus’ bodily ascension? Wouldn’t such
a major event have been treated by them vividly? Only Luke
(24:51), a doctor, and Paul’s disciple, and Mark (16:19), a disciple
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of Peter, mention the ascension briefly, writing what they had
heard. The main information about Jesus’ ascension comes from
the Acts (1:8-11), whose author is believed to be Luke (even
Luke’s teacher, Paul, didn’t know Jesus; and his goal was to
stimulate faith in people.)
In other words: Jesus had died on the cross, but he returned to his
dead body, revived it, and lived “in the same body.” It was
different from Sri Yukteswar’s resurrection, who said: “From the
cosmic atoms I created an entirely new body.”
We are basically faced with this situation: Jesus took back his
body, and then.... what happened then? What did he do?
152
Might Jesus, then, indeed have lived in Kashmir after his physical
resurrection? Were many disciples maybe waiting there, whom
Jesus had gathered throughout his long earlier years in India?
“Year fifty and four” was of the then valid Laukika Era of
Kashmir, coming to 78AD. “Yuz Afal,” translated as “Jesus the
Gatherer,” is the same name which is found on the Jesus tomb
“Roza Bal” in Srinagar.
153
strong attraction to that particular temple, as he visited it again in
1936 (see his letters to Rajarsi from India).
Of course the claim that Jesus survived the cross and then lived in
India is only a hypothesis, and apart of course challenges the
official Christian teachings immensely. Even if Yogananda had
thought it true (as have done Sai Baba and others), would he have
ever openly said it? His commentaries and teachings would have
been completely rejected by the majority of Christians.
~~~
154
LANGUAGE 4 & 5
Old French, Old English
155
night lest the family find out. My brother found out and said,
‘What is this heathen habit?’ I don't remember how I got them, but
when he kept on asking I said I was an Englishman before. He was
shocked at my reply ... Do you know my brother and I, as children,
used to plan an invasion of England? And I could have done it too,
because I had done it before.”
156
covered all of Normandy and England. The dream was
superconscious, and proved true. The tree growing was indeed
mighty – it was God's own tree.
It is also told that when William was just born, in the castle of his
father in Falaise, his very first act was to grasp a handful of straw,
and hold it so tightly that the nurse could scarcely take it away
from him. She intuitively understood this to be an omen, and
predicted that the baby would grow up and make himself famous
by seizing great territories. This prophecy proved to be true too.
157
to 1066 are called the late "Dark Ages," and years after 1066 the
"Middle Ages." That year 1066 was William's pivotal year). "The
Norman Conquest," says H. C. Davis (a foremost historian on the
subject), "raised the English to that level of culture which the
continental people had already reached,... to make England in her
turn a leader among nations."
158
a divine person, especially after all this time? Who would even be
able to recognize and understand such a disguised saint should he
appear today, right among us? Very few. Most people would have
their strong opinions about him, and most of them probably quite
wrong. Who is able to understand the divine plan and scheme of
things? Even devotees must sometimes scratch their heads! Saints
have power, they proclaim and do uncomfortable things, and are
often hard to tolerate. When they are safely dead, yes, then people
can handle them better. But when they are alive, many egos rebel.
159
had ignored Gyrth's advice. Friends and brothers, and even his own
mother, tried to stop Harold. Gyrth, told Harold (Orderic Vitalis):
"Reflect also, in your wisdom, on the oath you have taken to the
duke of Normandy. Beware of incurring the guilt of perjury, lest
by so great a crime you draw ruin on yourself and the forces of this
nation, and stain for ever the honor of our own race." But Harold
was angered by these advices. (Still Orderic Vitalis): "Holding in
contempt the wholesome advice of his friends, he loaded his
brother with reproaches for his faithful counsel, and even forgot
himself so far as to kick his mother when she hung about him in
her too great anxiety to detain him with her."
Those medieval times were terrible, but also full with signs and
wonders: in April 1066, for one entire week, an unusually bright
comet with blazing tail was seen in the sky (depicted also in the
famous Bayeux tapestry). It was deemed to be a heavenly omen.
Materialists today laugh at those "omens", but Shakespeare wrote:
"When beggars die there are no comets seen. The heavens
themselves blaze forth the death of princes."
160
good for William. Strong unfavorable winds didn’t let him cross
the ocean with his fleet. William used his time of waiting in
frequent prayer. God was ever his polestar. Orderic Vitalis (an
English monk-historian) wrote: "Duke William and the whole
army committed themselves to God's protection, with prayers, and
offerings, and vows, and accompanied a procession from the
church, carrying the relics of St. Valeri, confessor of Christ, to
obtain a favorable wind." When they finally could sail, William
lost, due to rough storms, quite some ships and soldiers. Many saw
in it an ill omen. But William the Conqueror had an indomitable
will which could never be discouraged. "The stronger the will, the
stronger the energy," Yogananda used to teach in this life too.
The famous story is told that when William landed at Hastings, the
first thing that happened was that he stumbled and fell on the
ground. A shock went through the army – they saw another ill-
omen. But William at that moment showed his strength, character,
and excellent leadership. He rose vigorously and exclaimed with a
loud voice: ”So determined am I to conquer this land that, lo, I
have grasped it with both hands.” A cheer of victory came from the
army.
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"India will be freed in my lifetimes, with peaceful means." And so
it happened.
The long time of waiting was fortunate for William also for
another reason. At a certain point, Harold had to march North with
his army, to fight against King Harald Hardrada of Norway, who
was invading England with the help of Tostig, Harold’s own
brother. Harold won that battle brilliantly at Stamford Bridge, but
also lost many soldiers. Two days after his victory Harold heard
that William had landed in England. Harold immediately marched
down South to meet William. His soldiers were confident after
their recent victory, but certainly they were also tired and less
numerous. William, who had expected to fight directly after
landing, waited. He actually organized a happy feast for his
soldiers, depicted on the famous Bayeaux tapestry.
162
the Holy Cross of Waltham he was miraculously cured from
paralysis. Thus he re-founded the church now known as Waltham
Abbey. Now, just before the battle of Hastings, he paused here for
prayer. But the black Abbey crucifix, the very same one which
once had healed Harold of paralysis, this time miraculously bowed
its head, refusing to look at him. Quite understandably, this was
regarded as a strong ill omen. Harold was marching into his dark
fate, and God knew. (Waltham Abbey continued to be regarded as
a healing shrine, and here Harold was eventually buried.)
163
It was a furious combat from morning to night, and for a long time
no side seemed to prevail. At a certain point the Saxons shouted,
“William is dead.” The Normans were terrified, and retreated. The
Saxons stormed after them. It is a famous moment: William took
off his helmet, galloping to the scene, shouting, “I am here, I am
here!” At this point the Normans turned around, and attacked. The
Saxons, before so solidly arranged for battle, were now quite
scattered, and suffered serious losses. Many historians think that
this moment was actually pre-meditated, because William used
that tactic soon again, and had used it before. His strategies were
known to be brilliant. He finally won that battle in that same way:
again he had his soldiers attack and suddenly turn around,
pretending to escape. The Saxon soldiers, who stood solid and
strong until that point, saw victory and stormed after them. In that
moment William’s soldiers turned around, and overran the
bewildered and unprotected enemies. In all that, William himself
was never in the safe background. That wasn’t his temperament.
164
known to have galloped with some knights toward Harold, when
the situation finally allowed it.
One of his knights in a wild gesture of victory cut off the leg of
Harold, and waived it in the air. William was disgusted, and
severely dismissed that knight from the army. This gesture shows
William to be a man of dharma, of right action, even in the midst
of war.
165
Or one hears about William landing at Hastings, ravaging the
countryside. But this (as in all other such cases) was a military
strategy, as opposed to simply letting his men loose to scavenge
and pillage as they chose. William knew Harold to be impetuous.
Knowing full well that his army was now within Harold’s own
earldom of Wessex, the duke wanted to provoke an immediate
attack. William needed to fight soon, otherwise his provisions
wouldn’t last for his big army.
Loyalty to King
All English land belonged to the crown, and William's vassals had
to swear fealty directly to the crown. Earlier it was Saxon practice
that each man swore allegiance to the person of his lord. Now
William was making loyalty to the nation, in the form of the
crown, supercede loyalty to the individual person of a lord. The
earls were very independent before, almost as powerful as the
King. Union wasn’t known at all. William thus united England
under his crown: all Earls had to swear their loyalty. If they didn’t,
they lost their lands to Norman barons.
Government
Now England's ties lay with France, rather than Scandinavia, as it
had been before. England became European. As a system of
government, the English is the oldest in the world (discounting
possibly the Vatican). William's insistence on everyone pledging
allegiance to the king, rather than to his immediate liege lord, was
probably the main thing that saved that system of government from
166
the disintegration that occurred elsewhere throughout the medieval
world.
Laws
New structures of government, laws and taxation regimes were
now established in England. However, William also adopted or
adapted many Saxon laws and structures of government, thereby
maintaining continuity of life. Laws were strict and offered
protection. No woman or unarmed man needed to fear anything
under William’s reign. His soldiers were commanded to act
absolutely righteously. William was rigorous: Odo of Bayeux,
William’s half-brother and most trusted advisor, had been left in
control of England while William was in Normandy. In 1082
William heard complaints about Odo's behavior. He returned to
England and Odo was arrested and charged with misgovernment
and oppression. Found guilty he was kept in prison for the next
five years.
Church
Anglo-Saxon churchmen were replaced gradually by Normans.
William chose well educated men of good character. Under the
administration of Lanfranc (who was Sri Yukteswar, Yogananda
revealed), now Archbishop of Canterbury, new monasteries were
founded, while rules and discipline were enforced more
stringently. Church and lay justice were separated; the bishops
were given their own courts, allowing common law to evolve
independently. William retained the right to appoint bishops and
impeach abbots. He used these churchmen as his major
administrators, for they were by far the best educated members of
society.
167
"Landscape" of England
Castles were brought to Britain by William the Conqueror. They
weren’t known in England before him, who now built them
everywhere, as strategic points to ensure his control. The castles
were given to Norman barons to hold for the king. William also
built the Windsor Castle. Today, as one of the Queen's official
residences, Windsor Castle still plays a formal role in State and
official occasions. The famous Tower of London (‘White Tower’)
was built by William: For over 900 years the Tower has dominated
the city of London and today is still one of the capital's most
prominent landmarks and a world famous visitor attraction. SRF
monks, when visiting London, at times enjoy a visit of the White
Tower. It is indeed special to tune into the Master in this way. The
most attractive place there is a round chapel where William used to
pray.
168
"victims" under Norman rule, it still gives a more positive
assessment about William than what most history books offer us
today:
"If anyone would know what manner of man King William was,
the glory that he obtained, and of how many lands he was lord,
then will we describe him as we have known him, we who had
looked upon him and who once lived at his court. This King
William...was a very wise and great man, and more honored and
more powerful than any of his predecessors. He was mild to those
good men who loved God, but severe beyond measure to those
who withstood his will. He founded a noble monastery [Battle
Abbey] on the spot where God permitted him to conquer England,
and he established monks in it, and he made it very rich. In his
days the great monastery at Canterbury was built, and many others
also throughout England; moreover, this land was filled with
monks who lived after the rule of St. Benedict; and such was the
state of religion in his days that all who would, might observe that
which was prescribed by their respective orders.
King William was also held in much reverence. He wore his crown
three times every year when he was in England: at Easter he wore
it at Winchester, at Pentecost at Westminster, and at Christmas at
Gloucester. And at these times all the men of England were with
him, archbishops, bishops, abbots and earls, thanes and knights. So
also was he a very stern and wrathful man, so that none durst do
anything against his will, and he kept in prison those earls who
acted against his pleasure. He removed bishops from their sees and
abbots from their offices, and he imprisoned thanes, and at length
he spared not his own [half-]brother Odo. This Odo was a very
powerful bishop in Normandy. His see was that of Bayeux, and he
was foremost to serve the king. He had an earldom in England, and
when William was in Normandy he [Odo] was the first man in this
country, and him did William cast into prison.
Amongst other things, the good order that William established is
not to be forgotten. It was such that any man...might travel over the
kingdom with a bosom full of gold unmolested; and no man durst
kill another, however great the injury he might have received from
169
him. He reigned over England, and being sharp-sighted to his own
interest, he surveyed the kingdom so thoroughly that there was not
a single hide of land throughout the whole of which he knew not
the possessor, and how much it was worth, and this he afterward
entered in his register. The land of the Britons [Wales] was under
his sway, and he built castles therein; moreover he had full
dominion over the Isle of Man; Scotland was also subject to him...;
the land of Normandy was his by inheritance, and he possessed the
earldom of Maine, and had he lived two years longer, he would
have subdued Ireland by his prowess, and that without a battle.
Truely there was much trouble in these times, and very great
distress. He caused castles to be built and oppressed the poor. The
king was also of great sternness, and he took from his subjects
many marks of gold, and many hundred pounds of silver, and this,
either with or without right, and with little need. He was given to
avarice and greedily loved gain. He made large forests for the deer,
and enacted laws therewith, so that whoever killed a hart or a hind
should be blinded. As he forbade killing the deer, so also the boars;
and he loved the tall stags as if he were their father. He also
commanded concerning the hares, that they should go free. The
rich complained and the poor murmured, but he was so sturdy that
he took no notice of them; they must will all that the king willed, if
they would live, or keep their lands,...or be maintained in their
rights. Alas that any man should so exalt himself.... We have
written concerning him these things, both good and bad, that
virtuous men may follow after the good, and wholly avoid the evil,
and may go in the way that leadeth to the kingdom of heaven."
The Anglo-Saxon Cronicle also says: "His anxiety for money is the
only thing on which he can deservedly be blamed; . . .he would say
and do some things and indeed almost anything . . .where the hope
of money allured him."
170
oppressive, wrathful, and made people suffer by taking too much
from them.
Now let's look on the other side of the Channel, and let's hear what
the monks of Normandy had to say about William. Two
contemporary descriptions of men who knew William have
survived. One of these was written shortly after his death by a
monk at Caen (from Douglas' book):
"The king excelled in wisdom all the princes of his generation, and
among them all he was outstanding in the largeness of his soul. He
never allowed himself to be deterred from prosecution of any
enterprise because of the labor it entailed, and he was ever
undaunted by danger. So skilled was he in his appraisal of the true
significance of any event, that he was able to cope with adversity,
and to take full advantage in prosperous times of the fickle
promises of fortune. He was great in body and strong, tall in stature
but not ungainly. He was also temperate in eating and drinking.
Especially was he moderate in drinking, for he abhorred
drunkenness in all men, and disdained it more particularly in
himself and at his court. He was so sparing in his use of wine and
other drink that after his meal he rarely drank more than thrice. In
speech he was fluent and persuasive, being skilled at all times in
171
making known his will. If his voice was harsh, what he said was
always suited to the occasion. He followed the Christian discipline
in which he had been brought up as a child, and whenever his
health permitted he regularly and with great piety attended
Christian worship each morning and evening, and at the
celebration of mass."
William also furthered art and music. Normandy was the site of
several important developments in the history of Western music in
the eleventh century. Yogananda recounts an interesting detail: “So
many experiences I recall from other times! Although I had never
learned anything about music in this life, I have played many
Indian instruments and have been told I would make a fine
musician. This aptitude is a result of knowledge carried over from
the past.”
172
The best text to study, if we want to understand William (from our
point of view) is William Jumieges (who wrote "Gesta
Normannorum Ducum") and William of Poitiers (who wrote
"Gesta Guillelmi II Ducis Normannorum"), two close companions
and biographers of William. Their texts are usually discredited as
being exaggerated and as being merely Norman propaganda. But
for us it is more reasonable to think that even these "disciples"
didn't even fully grasp the greatness of William the Conqueror. He
was even more, beyond their words of praise and admiration. In
fact, few disciples fully understand their master, even if they are
100% devout and loyal.
173
because I had done much building during my incarnation in
England.”
174
Robert, who wanted Normandy for himself. Again: sweet smiles
would only have killed William. In these dark medieval times
being a king excluded ahimsa (non-violence) and demanded an
iron hand.
William also legally put an end to slavery, which had still been
practiced in Saxon England. His laws forbade it. Another fact
which speaks volumes about his character. He was a man of
dharma, of principles, of righteousness, and absolutely strict in
making sure it would be followed.
How history can become a lie! Even today news in the media may
well be distorted. Hearing once one of the horrifying stories which
are being told about William, Yogananda exclaimed: “How they
distort history! That’s not at all what happened!”
175
In French historic sources, in fact, William described not only an
extremely powerful, courageous and intelligent person, but also a
patron of the arts, a wise leader, and a truly great man.
176
Yes, William was a man of enormous power, strength, courage,
with an iron fist; but does that alone describe him? It doesn’t.
William had a deeply loving side, he cared for people; and had an
extremely devotional heart. How could it be otherwise if later he
became Yogananda? Similarly: just describing Yogananda as
being only sweet doesn’t present the whole picture. Yogananda
had also the other side of the coin: incredible power.
177
About Agatha
Agatha is mentioned by the historian Orderic Vitalis, who states
that she was betrothed successively to Harold of England (who
broke that promise), and later to Alphonso VI, King of Galicia and
Leon, Spain, who had asked William for a daughter. But Agatha is
reported to have died a virgin- the marriage not being
consummated. She must have been only about 16 years old, if
recorded history can be trusted. She was buried in the Bayeaux
Cathedral, Bayeaux, Normandy, France. Interestingly, Yogananda
told Daya Mata that she had been Agatha, and that he had indeed
sent her to become the Queen of Spain. But Agatha was intensely
monastic by nature, and desperately desired to “marry God alone.”
(Story told by Daya herself). She arrived on ship in the Port of
Spain, and they discovered her dead in her cabin: she had died
praying on her knees, for her release from that ordeal. Her knees
must have suffered extremely. So much so, as Daya relates, that
the influence carried over into this life, in which she suffers from
knee problems. Again Yogananda placed that inward soul into a
position of great outer responsibility. This time, however, Daya
shouldered her enormous task, though she has often called it,
understandably, “a burden.”
About Henry
At William’s deathbed, his youngest son Henry, who was to inherit
only money, asked him: “But how shall I use this inherited money,
178
with no land on which to spend it?” William pronounced these
famous words of prophecy: “Be at peace, for you will end up
owning what both your brothers now have.” His prophecy came
true, since Henry later ruled over both England and Normandy,
successfully carrying on what his father had started. William had
obviously deeper than usual vision.
Once these two noble children were quite close: side by side at
Yogananda’s feet; then working together as the SRF president and
vice-president; traveling for months through India together; and
later fighting a lot, as brothers and sisters often do.
Henry, as William had prophesized, had a great role to play for his
father (and is of course not treated much better than William by
many historians). Similarly, Yogananda told Kriyananda
repeatedly, “You have a great work to do.”
179
put him in jail for the rest of his life. However, he treated Robert
“generously, and with honor.” His brother lived, as historians now
write, “in considerable luxury.”
Dhirananda in this life again betrayed Yogananda, left him, fought
against him in the courts. Karma repeats itself, until we stop it.
The "giant"
Yogananda told his disciple Norman Paulson that he too was
present back then: “You were my giant.” Norman has a large body
in this lifetime, too. Norman recounts: “In later years Yogananda
revealed to me why he called me his “giant returned.” Norman
recounts: "I experienced in a vision the Battle of Hastings as King
William conquered England. I was beside him in this battle, and
was of such stature I could look him straight in the eyes while
standing beside him as he sat astride his horse. I carried a gigantic
battle axe which in effect allowed no harm to come to his person
(Paulsen, 1984).”
Another warrior
To Jerry Torgerson Yogananda said, “You were good: You used to
fight for me.”
The linguist
180
Was Tara Mata around in William’s times as well? It sounds like
it, since she said, “Even as William, Yogananda never mastered
the English language.”
The answer is simply, God alone knows: “My thoughts are not
your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the Lord. For
as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher
than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.” (Bible)
But the human mind longs to understand, and tries to come up with
a sensible answer. A possible answer, therefore, could be: William
united England, a country that had never known unity before, and
created in it a power and a union which were never again
destroyed. Eventually, England helped to unite the world: it
colonized America in the West, and colonized India in the East.
181
Both these actions, of course, were in itself not always
praiseworthy, but they set the stage for the world’s future: America
and India, Yogananda prophesied, will together lead the nations in
Dwapara Yuga. England’s eventual unifying effect is also obvious
if one observes the spread of the English language, which is
becoming the language of the world, unifying all countries.
182
For one, as Douglas writes, "The scene may have been over-
colored by later writers, for the purpose of edification."
Third: Yes, maybe at his death-bed his human side lamented, just
as Christ, in his human side, was able to cry at the door of death:
"Father, why hast Thou forsaken me?" Or Joan of Arc, the French
saint and heroine, said during her last confession that she had been
selfish and cruel. Was she really? It looks as if the last moment is a
difficult one even for saints, because the human side surfaces.
Even Sri Yukteswar, the lion of wisdom, was not free from it.
When he faced his end, "for a moment, Master trembled like a
frightened child" (Autobiography of a Yogi). Also Lahiri Mahasaya
"trembled as though touched by a lightning current"
(Autobiography of a Yogi), when he heard that he would soon
leave the body. There is something very human to this moment, it
seems, even for the great ones.
183
more task for God had been fulfilled. William, incidentally, passed
on at the age of 59, just as Yogananda.
184
historic incident: a cardinal, an archbishop, and a bishop came
from Rome. They were obviously coming with a special mission,
the nature of which is unknown. They were welcomed by the abbot
Pietro di Martigny, and asked him to open the coffin of William
the Conqueror: the body of William was found in a state of perfect
incorruption,
By the way: Edward of England, the King who had promised the
English throne to William, knew William well, and was actually
his half-uncle. As it happened, Edward had lived for 25 years in
Normandy, (1016-41; William was Duke of Normandy from 1035)
in exile, since the Danish Viking king Canute the Great (Cnut) had
185
conquered England. Edward (called “the Confessor”) was an
extremely religious man. In 1102, 36 years after his death, his
tomb was opened and it was found that his body too was incorrupt!
Miracles happened there. King Edward was canonized in 1161 by
Pope Innocent II, and became England’s patron saint until he was
“toppled” by St George.
But even John Hayward, who called William the Conqueror "a
great prince", did of course not understand the great God who was
acting in and through William. That vision is difficult to achieve,
especially in the case of William the Conqueror.
186
LANGUAGE 6
Old Spanish (Castilian)
187
who also fought and won against the Moors in their last stronghold
in Granada, in the 15th century, and supported Christopher
Columbus, but unfortunately also initiated the Spanish inquisition.)
188
mission, in the outer and inner sense (“Yoga”). As Arjuna, he
united India. As William, he united England. As Ferdinand III, he
united Spain. As Yogananda he united religions, and united souls
with God.
• He took as his counselors the wisest men in the State. (William
too had the wisest men as his closest friends. Lanfranc is said to
have been the wisest man of his time. St.Anselm is said to have
been very wise, too.)
• A stern judge when it came to the law, he was gentle and
forgiving in his personal life. (William was very strict as well
when it came to law, and extremely generous in his private life.)
• He took the greatest care not to overburden his subjects with
taxation. (William too took genuinely care of his people.)
• Following his mother’s advice, Ferdinand, in 1219, married
Beatrice, the daughter of Philip of Swabia, King of Germany, one
of the most virtuous princesses of her time!
• God blessed this union with ten children: seven sons and three
daughters. (William too had ten!)
• The highest aims of Ferdinand’s life were the propagation of the
Christian faith and the liberation of Spain from the Moor’s yoke.
He was victorious, and took away from them all territories,
excepting Granada, whose king nevertheless did homage to
Ferdinand.
• He united Spain through his conquests. (Just as William united
England.)
• In the most important towns he founded bishoprics, reestablished
Catholic worship everywhere, built churches, founded monasteries,
and endowed hospitals. (William too built many monasteries and
churches.)
• He watched over the conduct of his soldiers, confiding more in
their virtue than in their valor. (William had done exactly the
same.)
• He fasted strictly. (William too was a man of strict self-control.)
• He wore a rough hairshirt, and often spent his nights in prayer,
especially before battles. (William too prayed much, especially
before battles.) Amid the tumult of the camp he lived like a
religious in the cloister.
189
• Christianity and the happiness of his people were the two guiding
motives of his life.
• He reformed Spanish law, and compiled it into a form used for
centuries after. (Just like William.) He was an excellent
administrator and just ruler, often pardoning those who worked
against the crown. (Again, like William.)
• He strove always to use his power to better his people and his
nation. (As did William.)
• He founded the University of Salamanca, the Athens of Spain.
• Ferdinand’s firstborn son became king Alfonso X, “El Sabio,”
the Learned, or the Wise, whose court was a center of culture. He
furthered astronomy, and established the form of modern Spanish.
He also wrote 400 pieces of music. Swami Kriyananda went to
Seville in 2010, visiting Fernando's incorrupt body, and was
certain that it was Yogananda. His role back then might have been
Alfonso X.
190
Seville before the image of the Blessed Virgin, clothed, at his own
request, in the habit of the Third Order.
The question is: did little Mukunda hear Ferdinand’s saintly voice
in his inner ear?
~~~
191
LANGUAGE 7
Standard Spanish
His many lives as a hermit will hardly become known. But the
poet? Who was that poet? Poetry came easily to Yogananda, he
said, because of that former lifetime. He wrote exquisite mystical
poetry.
Many disciples have fancied that Yogananda was the king of poets,
William Shakespeare, since he recommended reading a few lines
of his works every day. In his original Gita-commentaries he even
named Shakespeare together with Christ and Krishna, all being
“great luminaries.”
192
The Master (as writes Swami Kriyananda) once told Dr. Lewis that
his wife Mrs. Lewis, in a former life, had been Queen Elizabeth I,
of England (1533-1603), a contemporary of Shakespeare (1564-
1616). This could be seen as a slight hint that others might have
been around at that time: Dr. Lewis, and therefore maybe
Yogananda.
However, we are taking a different route here (it’s all just for fun
anyway, and quite un-provable!): Following the suspicion that
Yogananda left as his personal “heavenly signature” his incorrupt
bodies, we are lead to the famous mystical poet, St. John of the
Cross (1542–1591), whose body is still incorrupt. St. John is, of
course, one of the greatest figures in mystical Christianity and was
incidentally a contemporary of Shakespeare.
St. John was the advisor and confessor of St. Teresa of Avila, who
later became, as it is assumed by many disciples of Yogananda,
Sister Gyanamata.
193
Teresa died in 1582. Her body, amazingly, is preserved incorrupt
too. Again, do we see “twin incorrupts?” Do we see here a
heavenly play of divine love? Teresa’s body was exhumed several
times after her death, and each time found sweet-smelling, firm,
and incorrupt. Her heart, hands, right foot, right arm, left eye and
part of her jaw are on display in various sites around the world. St.
Teresa’s incorrupt heart and arm are enshrined and displayed at the
Carmelite convent in the town of Alba de Tormes.
St. John was much younger than Teresa (by 27 years), just as
Yogananda was much younger than Gyananmata (by 24 years). St.
John’s ministry included guiding Teresa herself. He became her
director and confessor. She referred to him in a letter as a “divine
and heavenly man.” On Nov. 18, 1572, while receiving
Communion from the hands of John of the Cross, she received the
favor of the “spiritual marriage” (divine union.)
194
about him. Thus, being happily doubtful, we just include two
verses of St. John’s exquisite poetry:
“I was so ‘whelmed
so absorbed and withdrawn,
that my senses were left
deprived of all their sensing,
and my spirit was given
an understanding while not understanding,
transcending all knowledge.
195
LANGUAGE 8
Hindi
Let's boldly place that “distant life” in the empty slot between 32
AD and 700AD, where no traces of any of Yogananda’s lifetimes
can be found. He has been a hermit many times, he said — so we
might actually be lucky. Let's also dare to designate Hindi as his
language for that particular lifetime – quite opportunistically, since
Hindi was missing from his list of languages.
Furthermore, let's (again boldly) make him live close to the ocean,
as Yogananda once said: “In one incarnation I had lived by the
ocean. As a little boy I used to see in my mind's eye many places
and events of that incarnation.” We dress him in an orange robe,
since, when his brother Ananta ridiculed him about running away
into the Himalayas (“Where is your orange robe? You can’t be a
swami without that!”), Yogananda said: “But I was inexplicably
thrilled by his words. They brought a clear picture of myself
roaming about India as a monk. Perhaps they awakened memories
of a past life; in any case, I began to see with what natural ease I
would wear the garb of that anciently-founded monastic order.”
196
Brother Ananta, by the way, was an old acquaintance of
Yogananda. In an article "Have We Met Before?", he states: "All
those in my family I knew from past lives." He even stated,
amazingly: "Nobody has crossed my path in this life except for a
reason."
Yogananda was obviously not timid at all! The first thing he does
in his Autobiography, on the very first page, is to confront the
Western reader with the startling concept of reincarnation. That
was in the 40ies, when almost nobody believed or taught it. Back
then yoga, orange Swamis, reincarnation, etc. were practically
unknown, and were certainly pretty strange.
197
incarnation I can sleep and dream that I am born in England as a
powerful king. Then I die and dream I am born a devout man. And
then I die again and am born as a successful lawyer. Again I die
and am reborn as Yogananda.” The “powerful king in England was
William, of course. Was the “devout man” St. John of the Cross, or
a hermit life? Who, Yogananda, was the lawyer?
~~~
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A WILD “SPECULATION PAGE”
It's getting worse and worse: now we enter into purest and wildest
(and totally un-answerable) speculation: Yogananda said that “in
ancient times, India has always been governed, more or less, by
religious kings.” (One thinks of King Janaka, King Krishna, King
Rama, King Yuddhistira.) As we have seen, Yogananda was a king
once or twice in Europe. Wouldn’t he have been a great king in
India too?
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All the following information about Chadragupta is taken from
Yogananda’s Autobiography and his talks:
The reign of the Gupta Kings has been called the Golden Age. The
best authorities agree that the country was never as well governed
in ancient times as in the days of the Guptas. The people were
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happy and honest, and capital punishment was unknown. There
was no need for “an eye for an eye; a tooth for a tooth.”
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LANGUAGE 9, 10, 11
Italian (Latin), Greek, Egyptian
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spherical Earth, 2000 years before Christopher Columbus proved
it, and is considered the founding father of cosmology. He founded
in Croto (Crotone), South Italy, a philosophical, religious
community: the Pythagoreans. Yogananda said: “Pythagoras was
one of the great Grecian philosophers. He remembered definitely
that he was a herald once in Greece, and that he was once a warrior
too. He remembered many incarnations.”
And what about ancient Egypt, in its golden era? Yogananda went
to visit the pyramids. He wrote: “The sphinx and the pyramids
talked to me much about ancient history.” In general, or was it
personally lived history?
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LANGUAGE 12
Hirayalokese
Let’s leave the past now, and ask: what about the present? Which
language is Yogananda speaking right now, busily roaming
through the high astral realms? Is he with Sri Yukteswar, who has
been "directed by God to serve on an astral planet as a savior,"
called Hiranyaloka?
~~~
LANGUAGE 13
World-English
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born— if I have to put on a mortal garb again. A thousand famines
may prowl and tear my flesh, yet would I love to be again in my
Hindustan… Yet would I there in India love to reappear!”
In his next life, then, about 140 years from today, will English be
his language, since it will have become the language of the world?
~~~
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OVERVIEW OF YOGANANDA'S
POSSIBLE INCARNATIONS
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Chapter 17
After the separation, Daya and Kriyananda still met each other
privately, outside of Mt. Washington. Their connection however
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came to an end when Kriyananda told Tara Mata on the phone, “It
isn’t everyone who thinks the way you do,” without mentioning
any name. Tara suspected that he might be talking about Daya
Mata (rightly so), and as a consequence she demanded that Daya
give up seeing him. Daya, to keep peace, decided she had no other
choice.
In 1970 she told him: "I've never accepted the things Tara said
against you," adding, "Even on her death bed, Tara was bitter
against me for what she considered my betrayal."
Daya now openly stated that she was not against the good people at
Ananda, but against Kriyananda. She now felt him to be a threat
for SRF and took a harsh stand against him, in order to defend her
Guru's work. Legal actions were heavy. It must have weighed on
her heart, as she told Kriyananda personally: "I can't face Master
[after death] until this legal issue has been resolved."
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Mata was the main goal of his descriptions, but so was Daya Mata,
whom he didn't compliment anymore (while in his book "The
Path" he had written glowingly about her).
SRF cares about its public image, and wasn't pleased about
Kriyananda's new writings. Nor was it pleased that important parts
of the lawsuit, such as the rights to the Autobiography of a Yogi,
were being lost. Tension rose. Swami Kriyananda often said he felt
aggressive and angry vibrations coming to him, affecting him
physically.
Some years later, in 2010, Swami Kriyananda once again put hand
to the sword, writing a detailed book, "Rescuing Yogananda," in
which he described how deeply SRF had lost Yogananda's spirit.
His goal was to create such public outrage that SRF would be
forced to change direction.
He worked hard on that new book. A first edition was soon printed,
put in the internet, and made available through Amazon. He soon
expanded and improved it, and a second edition was about to be
printed. But suddenly he withdrew it, requesting that all printed
copies be destroyed.
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A Letter of Explanation from Swami Kriyananda
I had a dream recently in which a saint, not from our line of gurus,
said to me in reference to this book, “It is not your place to judge.”
He didn’t need to tell me to what he was referring. I knew it was to
this book.
He replied, “All right, I agree. But now, drop it. Your job is not to
judge anyone, but to see God everywhere, and in everyone. Let this
book be a one-time-only statement. You be a child of God.
Judgement is of the ego; divine acceptance is of the soul. So forget
the book now, and think only of Him.”
He was severe, but also very sweet. I was deeply grateful to him.
And I agree with him completely. My feeling from this dream was
one of deep bliss. From now on I drop the subject altogether. It is
no longer something about which I care to initiate any further
discussion.
When I first had this dream, I thought the saint had approved of my
getting out one edition of the second, improved version. But a
nagging thought wouldn’t leave me: “Why even publish this
edition? I’ve already presented my key thoughts. Whatever good
they might do has been done. Enough said.” Finally I decided it
was my conscience talking to me! So I wrote our publishing house
and asked them to stop the print run. It has meant some loss of
money, but better that than an offense to my conscience.
Swami Kriyananda
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you give your life to God, the more thrilling it becomes.
Appreciation and gratitude are the main attitudes we should hold
toward life."
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Chapter 18
A Historical Reunion
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Daya Mata: "He is Deathless"
Daya Mata initiates the discussion by sharing how she experienced
Yogananda appearing to her in flesh and blood after his passing.
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Peggy Deitz: "He was a Commander of the Elements"
Peggy Deitz, Yogananda's witty chauffeur, speaks about how she
witnessed Yogananda levitate.
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faced the tiger. The killer slowly approached. The power of love
flowed from Yogananda's eyes. Suddenly the beast, instead of
springing, rolled affectionately at the Master's feet! Love had
conquered it.
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the door no raindrop touched him. He remained completely dry.
Yogananda smiled with love, "For you, Oliver!"
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