Crazy in Love For God
Crazy in Love For God
Crazy in Love For God
Narasingha P. Sil
Professor of History
Western Oregon University
2008
To
Kali and Clio
Presiding Deities of My Life and Work
iii
CONTENTS
Abbreviations
Epigraph
Preface
Acknowledgments
A Note on Orthography
Appendix:
A. The Professor and the Pujari: Martin Luther and Ramakrishna Compared
C. Biographical Extracts
Glossary
iv
Bibliography
Index
v
If we do not persist in the quest for intelligibility, there can be no human sciences, let alone any
Acknowledgments
I thank the Hamersly library of Western Oregon University, especially the staff of the Interlibrary
Loan Division, for procuring even the most obscure material used in this work. I also acknowledge,
with gratitude, the helpful critique and suggestions offered by numerous readers of my work on
Shriramakrishna. Of them I would like to mention four in particular: Professors David Kopf of the
University of Minnesota, the late David Kinsley of McMaster University, Jeffrey J. Kripal, formerly
of Westminster College and currently at the Rice University, the late Surath Chakravarti of
Calcutta., and last but not least, Dr. Sumit Roy of New Jersey. But above all, I would tender my
sincerest gratitude to two anonymous critics—one from Calcutta for his/her appreciation and
encouragement and the other a reader for the Susquehanna University Press for the helpful critique
and suggestions—that helped me in my hermeneutical and stylistic strategies and saved me from
unnecessary embarrassments. The offices of the Provost and the Dean of Arts and Sciences at
Western have provided financial support for my travel to Calcutta in 1989, 1992, and 1995, and
2008 four of the nine research trips to that Indian city during 1987-2008. I am grateful for their
distinguished scientist as well as a renowned Vivekananda scholar, who has taken a keen interest in
my studies on the holy trinity of the Ramakrishna Order: the Great Master, the “Cyclonic Monk”,
ABBREVIATIONS
B.E. Bengali Era, that is, Bengali calendar, which follows Gregorian calendar by 593 years 3
KC Kali’s Child: Mystical and Erotic in the Life and Teaching Ramakrishna.
KM Shrishriramakrishnakathamrita.
Shriramakrishna Paramahamsa.
I have decided against using diacritics as well as sanskritized vowel sound “a” at the end of most
Bengali words because Bengalis do not use it in their pronunciation. However, I used
sanskritized orthography while transliterating names of the popular deities, titles of Hindu
Preface
King of the Kings…the savior of mankind…Sri Ramakrishna Paramhansa was one of its kinds. Ramakrishna
Vijay Kumar, “Sri Ramakrishna Paramhansa Saint of Dakshineswar” (World Wide Center for Self
Realization, 2000).
In spite of its manifestly illiterate and obsequious expression, the quote in the epigraph above
Paramahamsa by Indians in India as well as in the diaspora. Indeed, this nondescript temple
priest of late colonial Bengal, a self-proclaimed godman and later a widely publicized saint of
Hindu revivalist movement of the late nineteenth century, has now metamorphosed into one of
the icons of Hindutwa movement currently raging in India and in the Hindu diaspora in the West.
attempt to investigate the fonts of his spiritual consciousness and problematize it with his
sermons on human sexuality and his personal assumptions and experiences in this regard.
Though the data for such a study remain obscure partly because of their paucity and partly
because of their being hidden under hagiography as well as apologetics, the extant vernacular
sources still supply enough material with which to reconstruct Ramakrishna’s psychic evolution
psychoanalysis, Professor Jeffrey Masson, once observed that "there is severe psychopathology
in Ramakrishna.” He, however, chose not to produce a fuller study of this saint except
suggesting a comparison between him and the German mystic, Daniel Paul Schreber
1974).2 Recently, Jeffrey Kripal, author of KC, has claimed that the saint of Dakshineshwar was
a crypto homosexual and this sexual orientation of his triggered his religious worldview—a
theme, adumbrated since the early nineties of the past century, has now assumed a pointedly gay
deliberate agenda based mostly on half-understood (due to linguistic shortcomings) and partly on
Ramakrishna as a homo religiosus has also undergone some change which may be seen in my
comparing him to the German reformer Martin Luther (see Appendix: A) and to the Vaisnava
reformer Shrichaitanya (see ch. XI). I find the Bengali saint an unread but natural (sahaja)
devotee of the divine as contrasted with Luther, who was a trained and erudite theologian in his
own right.
I have been helped by the Brahmo scholar and historian, the late Professor Surath
Chakravarti of Calcutta, who suggested several remarkable titles in Bengali. In this connection, I
organization Utsa Manus. Needless to say, I have derived great satisfaction and insight from my
contact with these professionals and intellectuals of Calcutta who have also provided me the
xii
much desired confidence in the ability of autocritique on the part of some Indians who refuse to
respect of the character and career of our spiritual and religious leaders.
Ramakrishna Order in the US, Swamis Atmajnanananda and Tyagananda, whose critical insights
connection I would like to acknowledge my association with the RISA (Religion in South Asia)
listserv and with Dr. Rajiv Malhotra, whose website SULEKHA provided a forum to express my
Last but not least, I am, as in the past, deeply indebted to Sati for her understanding and
the life and logia of a saint by endorsing the confession of a distinguished historian, who has
written:
…I am incurably curious. Curiosity, reluctance to accept the accepted, a tendency to delve into stereotypes
and commonplaces to see what lies behind them and what makes them tick, and a strong urge to tell others about
(Ram)
1Joseph M. Woods, “Some Considerations on Psychohistory” in Geoffrey Cocks & Travis L. Crosby, eds. Psycho/
History, 114 [see also the articles by Hans Meyerhoff (17-29), Lloyd deMause (50-67), Rudolph Binion (68-77), and
2J.L. Masson, “Schreber and Freud” (unpublished) cited in J. Moussaieff Masson, The Oceanic Feeling, 34.
Reportedly, J. [Jeffrey] L. [Lloyd] Masson changed his name to J. [Jeffrey] M. [Moussaieff] Masson in 1975.
3 Eugen Weber as cited in Lynn Hunt, “Eugen Weber,” 48.
i
CHAPTER ONE
Prolegomena
…the uncultured and illiterate Ramakrishna of Bengal, who knowing naught of what we term “learning,”
spoke as not other men of his age spoke, and revealed God to weary mortals.
In 1856, just a year before the Great Mutiny, that would shake the very foundation of the
Company raj, a bizarre spectacle rocked the serenity and dignity of the newly built shrine
British India. The great goddess, installed by the redoubtable dowager Rani Rasmani,
widow of the late landed magnate Rajchandra Das and proprietress of the temple, was
being worshipped by a naked twenty-year old crazy Brahmin youth recently employed as
priest.4 While trying to offer ritual food [bhog] to the deity, the wacky worshiper was
feeding a kitty, muttering “Ma, eat.” On another occasion, he was seen placing the bhog
in the mouth of the effigy of the goddess, pleading “Eat, Ma, eat it up” and uttering next
“Shall I eat, then? Okay, I eat” and actually biting part of the foodstuff and then again
trying to feed the image, uttering “Now that I have eaten, you eat.”5 The imperious Rani
and her shrewd son-in-law Mathuranath Biswas, the temple manager, were scandalized
by the report of such shocking behavior of the temple priest. However, he could not be
reprimanded or retrenched easily as it would severely importune the low caste (Kaivarta)
Rani in procuring another Brahmin priest to perform the daily worship of the temple
2
deity. This book examines the odyssey of the this madman of Dakshineshwar who, in
little over a decade following the incident described above, shot into fame as a colorful
and zany saint and spiritual master of late colonial Calcutta. The name of this enigmatic
II
Ramakrishna has been the subject (as well as the object) of a mammoth
admirers, scholars, poets, novelists, and playwrights—though, until recently, there were
no historical or critical biographies of the man. The entire hagiographical corpus on this
saint has uniformly and unequivocally declared him divine and created a rather
Gadai the precocious child of Kamarpukur village or Gadadhar the young adolescent
effective propaganda of the Brahmo leader Keshab Sen and who was transformed into a
Hindu Christ by the famous socialite, actor and playwright Girishchandra Ghosh, and the
chemist and medical doctor Ramchandra Datta. There has not been, until some two
decades ago, any historical study of the saint as human qua human. More important,
For the sake of convenience we could classify the Ramakrishna studies under two
headings: hagiographical and hermeneutic. A major part of these falls into the first
category, while only a handful belongs to the second: three dissertations (Timothy Jensen,
Malcolm McLean, and Jeffrey Kripal) and eleven monographs (Niranjan Dhar, Sumit
Sarkar, Carl Olson, Sudhir Kakar, Amiya Sen, Narasingha Sil [two], Jeffrey Kripal
[three], and Parama Roy. The hermeneutical literature on the saint can be further
Sarkar, a social historian, and his former doctoral student Sen, also a social and
cultural historian, analyze the Ramakrishna phenomenon from historical and sociological
perspectives, examining the Master’s popularity with the Calcutta bhadralok [genteel
class or group]. Their arguments have been supported by a number of Indian and
Western scholars, including Partha Chatterjee and Peter van der Veer. Kakar’s is a
Freudian and part anthropological. With his professional practice in New Delhi, the
postcolonial India. 8 Sil glosses the vernacular texts to interpret (often using Freud’s
insights) and examine the underlying causes as well the impact of Ramakrishna’s
samadhi [enstasis a la Mircea Eliade, or as is more popularly known, ecstatic state] and
4
logia on the Hindu revivalist movement of renascent Bengal.9 Roy’s “investigation [of
“enriched by…a critical conversation with…the work in feminist, queer, and African-
American studies on the problematic of originality and difference for identity formation”
is manifestly obfuscating when she discusses Ramakrishna, basing only on some select
sources in English.10 Her work adds little useful to the Ramakrishna corpus, though it
has been acclaimed by Kripal as an insightful study of Ramakrishna’s social and cultural
significance.
III
Kripal’s work on the saint calls for a more detailed commentary as it has received
both acclaim by most Western scholars and specialists in Hindu studies (some notable
exceptions notwithstanding) and criticisms by native Bengali as well as other Indian and
Western scholars, monastic as well as lay. Basically Kripal depicts Ramkrishna first as a
Ramakrishna’s experiences and conversations betraying his often latent and sometimes
patent homosexual imageries and impulses. In the KC, we meet a strange mystic, a
simple hearted homoerotic tantrika priest of Kali, cavorting around the temple complex
of Dakshineshwar with his “wildly swinging” “secret chamber” (Kripal’s version of the
saint’s anus).11 Kripal’s translation of the vernacular sources is not only flawed but in
some cases manufactured to suit his conclusions. His ignorance of the Bengali textual
materials while at the same time insisting on his reliance on the same has further
5
writing by invoking a deus ex machina from an esoteric Christian cult that invented what
IV
with an element of showmanship and drama about him. A devotee’s belief that he “did
not do anything that can be of theatrical interest to a story-teller" has little basis in reality.
prose.13 Rather, his was the mischievous countenance of a frolicsome reveller, an ecstatic
baul mad with divine passion. To borrow Professor Bynum’s elegant description of the
Ramakrishna’s spirituality was “affective, exuberant, lyrical, and filled with images”14
and thus dramatically feminine. He was, by all counts, quite a convivial soul who
enjoyed good food and melodious and highly rhythmic devotional song and dance, which
above all, the company of devotees who were mostly young men. The present study
seeks to acquaint the reader with this very earthy Ramakrishna who exhibited a curious
fondness for a comfortable life under the patronage of wealthy devotees; his pronounced
androgynous behavior as well as his misogynistic convictions; his disgust with the carnal
6
but his penchant for caritas, a variety of immaculate love in respect of god as well as
young men; his progressive eclecticism in sermons and teachings and yet his abiding
faith in casteism and culturally sanctioned taboos and superstitions, and above all, his
projection of himself as a rational Master who disparaged the supernatural and the
magical and yet his insistence on considering himself an ishwarakoti, God in human
disguise.
my two earlier publications on the saint.16 What I endeavor to accomplish in this study is
the Kali temple he achieved publicity as a Shakta, that is, a devotee of Shakti [Primal
Energy, another appellation for the goddess], there being a cultural and theological
distinction between the two sects. Secondly, I seek to establish, by a comparison with
Martin Luther, the nexus between sexuality and spirituality—for Ramakrishna, sexuality
necessary antinomy for sacrality as the concept of Devil (human arrogance and human
lust) does for Luther’s search for God (see Appendix: A). And finally, I explain the social
and cultural factors leading to Ramakrishna’s celebrity status in the context of the
interaction between Western colonial cultural contact and the Indian nationalist
appropriations and aspirations during the period of the late Bengal Renaissance.
obsession with human sexuality. As this book attempts to demonstrate, his spiritual
consciousness was imbricated in his personal sexual awareness and anxiety because the
7
former took shape at a critical juncture of his biological and social development. His
women together with his personal disposition reinforced by his cultural preferences and
physical growth as well as his subconscious desire to be unique or “other” brought about
of the self). Thus an important part of my contention is that his psychosis can only be
predicament and predilections on the basis of his reported and observed behavior is a key
to stand charged with having constructed what Sudhir Kakar called a “pathography” and
what William James had called “medical materialism.”17 Indeed, Bergmann has warned
that “if the aim of the biography is restricted to the reconstruction of the subject's
neurosis, the result is pathography.”18 As a devotee of the Master cautioned, “in our
extra-critical scientific attempt to humanize Sri Ramakrishna...we must not totally blind
ourselves to the plane of transcendental realism in which his mind almost always moved
and which necessarily formed the essential factor of his personality.”19 Swami
8
historical interpretation of Ramakrishna because “we forget that he was the incarnation of
the Mother, now shining in his own divine glory, diffusing everywhere, illumining
everything, and forming the very core of our consciousness.” 20 More recently, Kees Bolle
has referred to “the hideous disease of academe, infected by positivism for more than a
century, that would rather declare mystery nonexistent than admit its own blindness” and
Japanese and Indian personality with an underdeveloped ego. Such a model seeks to
superego and ego ideal, ego boundaries, developmental stages, self-object relationships,
self and object representations, self-identity, the internal object world, affects and drives,
transference resistance, and dream analysis, among others” and “then recontexualize
them based on the clinical data of persons from significantly or radically different
Earlier, Kakar had cautioned, a la Jacques Lacan, Donald Winnicott, and Wilfred
Bion, that mystical state, Hindu, Christian, or Islamic, reveals creative experiencing
rather than what Freud had considered a disguised concern with mother, father, sex, or
9
provenance and as such its necessary presumption about human psyche can never be free
from Western experience. That does not mean it cannot be contexualized and adapted in
(since its resolution by Tomasso di Aquino in the thirteenth century) was articulated in
early modern Europe following the Reformation, especially during the last decade of the
sixteenth century through the second decade of the seventeenth. René Descartes’
Discourse on Method of systematic doubt and Passion of the Soul adumbrating mind-
body problem appeared in 1637 and 1649 respectively, during the very decade of the
historian I have discounted the realm of the magical and the anagogical. While it is
undoubtedly true that no psychological examination can ever successfully fathom the
experiences occurred within his human psyche and as such were conditioned by the
forces of human motivation. 27 I am also fully aware that man is an amalgam of greatness
10
and wretchedness—grandeur et misère, as Pascal said. Yet, like Dr. Rieux of The
Plague, I would rather be on the side of humanity than that of heroes or hierophants. 28
different focus from that of chronological history, is still historical par excellence—“it is
history in which the focus is inward as well as outward.”29 It should also be understood
that this critical study does not in any way constitute persiflage of Shriramakrishna and, a
la Freud, let me add that its objective is not “to blacken the radiant and drag the sublime
into the dust” but to humanize him.30 In fact, one of Ramakrishna’s Brahmo devotees
gave his imprimatur for just such an exercise. Pramathalal Sen declared:
Let him stand before the world as he was and the light of Heaven show him in its true light. Why allow myths to
grow about him in the light of the present day. If truth is stranger than fiction--the real Ramakrishna will come
Unlike Swami Yogeshananda, who declared with disarming simplicity that the spirit of
Rabindrakumar Dasgupta, who frankly confessed that he looked upon Ramakrishna “as
an incarnation of God,” I must state that while I have profound respect for Ramakrishna’s
historical and cultural contributions, I refuse to share the devotee’s conviction that “we
cannot but stand in awe” of the Ramakrishna phenomenon.32 I also have to ignore the
confident assertion of a Bengali academician who concluded that Ramakrishna was “God
Himself in flesh, not merely a mystic or a great lover of God and men.”33 Similarly, with
due apology, I will ignore Saradananda’s admonition that it is especially difficult “to
11
understand the behaviours of Bhagavan Shriramakrishna, the incarnation for the modern
age.”34
Here I might add that anthropologists have cautioned researchers about the
Kenneth Pike, I could be classified as an emic in that I am a Bengali Hindu who is trying
to study the behavior of a fellow Bengali like Ramakrishna. However, a la Pike, I could
Ramakrishna Order, and further, by training, I am not a specialist in South Asian religion.
Even more important, I have been born and bred in a city, whereas Ramakrishna, though
not a peasant as such, hailed from a predominantly agrarian society.35 Marvin Harris’s
conclusion that “the goal of scholarship on human behaviors is not to determine what the
insider might mean by their beliefs or actions but, instead, to discern explanations for
why it is that they do or think what they do” informs my current undertaking. In the
analysis.”36
Charles White has warned against apologetic writings “available in the occult
market” in respect of Indian saints, living or dead. He further reminds us that “there is
little biographical material that one can be certain of, while the traditions concerning their
lives...achieve the same kind of stylization that one notices in rows of identical icons in a
temple.”37 One wholesome outcome of my “defiant” enterprise will be, I hope, to expose
the personality of Ramakrishna in its authentic human dimensions, shorn of the mask of
12
spirituality, examined on the basis of the extant documented evidence. At the same time
this work seeks to respond to White’s suggestions for an understanding of saints “in
language other than that of the adoring devotee or the hostile sceptic.”38 In the end this
writer endorses wholeheartedly the observation made by Niranjan Dhar over three
decades ago: “Ramakrishna had a natural birth, lived a dyspeptic existence and died an
extremely painful death. He was one with us in the origin of his life as well as in the
maintaining of it. There was nothing supernatural about all these basic facts of life.”39
Like Jesus of Nazareth and Chaitanya of Bengal, Ramakrishna’s story comes down to us
through a maze of myth and miracle motifs. Thus the greatest methodological challenge
a researcher faces is how to sift the chaff from the grain, to distil truth from the gospel
accounts and hagiographies purveying mystical mumbo jumbo. Yet, fortunately enough,
sources do exist that often provide intimate details of the Master’s thoughts, speeches,
and actions. Fortunately, as Diwakar has remarked, Ramakrishna’s life “was an open
book.”40
VI
1882 through April 1886, for a total of 186 days, recorded by ShriM in his KM.41 A
ardent admirer of the saint of Dakshineshwar and thus some of his personal observations
on Ramakrishna are manifestly obsequious. Yet in clear and crisp Bengali this “Boswell”
has made his subject come to life. His preservation of Ramakrishna's patois Bengali
renders the KM a genuine contribution to the art of record keeping and writing diaries.
13
However, though Professor Dasgupta has observed that “the only principle of
composition which Mahendranath must have decided to follow was the principle of
authenticity or truth of expression,”42 it is obvious that the author of the KM colored his
conclusions with his biases and, as some scholars have pointed out, even distorted facts to
suit the interests of the monks of the Ramakrishna Order—his erstwhile gurubhais
(monastic cohorts). 43
Swami Nikhilananda’s superb translation of the KM into English remains the only
one of its kind and has been used frequently by scholars since its publication in 1942.
There are, however, occasional problems with his translation. A highly cultivated
individual in charge of one of the largest Ramakrishna missions in the United States (the
unintentionally, distorted the meaning of the crude words Ramakrishna used. On his own
admission, the Swami has omitted “only a few pages” which he suggests are of “no
literal translation” of the KM cannot stand.44 His use of the Bengali word ramana (sexual
intercourse) has become “communion” in the Gospel. Likewise, the crude expressions
referring to whores and widows (magi and randh) and shit (gu or bahye) ought to have
distortions, in order to fathom the true though minor import of these expressions. Thus I
14
have cited directly from the Bengali original in my translation with page references from
the Gospel.45
A second major source for this book is Saradananda’s magisterial biography LP.
Though a meticulous researcher with a keen eye for details, Saradananda, nevertheless,
fails to provide a profile of the real man. Instead, the great Master is portrayed as a
divine incarnation and the biographer is frankly awed by his mentor's various postures,
most importantly, his frequent lapses into samadhi and equally frequent recovery from
this state. In spite of its stark hagiographical character, the LP contains a mine of
information. Even though this work has been competently translated into English by
Swami Jagadananda, I have cited from the Bengali original with my own translations.46
In addition to these two major sources I have used numerous works in English as well as
Bengali on and around Ramakrishna. My scholarly debts will be made clear in the
6Actually the official designation of the goddess as it appears in the temple documents reads Shrishrijagadishwari
Kalimata Thakurani. Personal interview with Mr. Priyagopal Hazra, a descendant of the Rasmani family through the
female line, now residing at the Calcutta (Janbazar) home of the Rani (September 10, 1989). Gadai is the abbreviated
form of Gadadhar, Ramakrishna’s premonastic name. He was born on February 18, 1836 and he died on August 16,
1886.
15
14Bynum, Holy Feast and Holy Fast, p. 105. There are some interesting parallels between Ramakrishna and St. Francis
of Assisi. In addition to Bynum see Hester G. Gelber, “A Theater of Virtue” in John S. Hawley, ed. Saints and Virtues,
15-35 and Guido Ferrando, “St. Francis and Sri Ramakrishna” in C. Isherwood, ed. Vedanta for Western World, 253-60.
15KM, IV, 113 (GR, 497). Diary of July 3, 1884. The word baul means “afflicted with the wind disease,” that is, mad
(batul). The bauls are a sect of mystics in Bengal who have no home but who travel, like the European troubadors, in
the countrysides singing and dancing. To them God is in everybody and one could see God by “gazing into the bright
mirror of the heart.” The bauls are a great proponent of naturalness (sahaja) in life and spirituality and hence are called
sahajiya, the followers of naturalness. See Edward Dimock, Place of the Hidden Moon, 163 ff (and especially 249-70).
16 See Narasingha P. Sil, Ramakrishna Paramahamsa (1991) and Ramakrishna Revisited (1998) together with the
17Pathography (actually meaning clinical profile) refers to “biographies of religious figures based on their traumas rather
than their cultures.” S. Kakar, “Reflections on Psychoanalysis, Indian Culture and Mysticism” cited in June McDaniel,
18Martin Bergmann’s paper reported by John Gedo, “Methodology of Psychoanalytic Biography,” 641.
22 “How Universal is Psychoanalysis?” in Douglas Allen and Ashok Malhotra,, eds., Culture and Self, 35.
24 Ibid., 5.
26 A reviewer has accused my Ramakrishna Paramahamsa: A Psychological Profile of being impervious to spiritual
realities and reductionist, lacking a “thick description.” William Parsons, “Psychoanalysis and Mysticism,” 355-61.
Another critic accused me of ignoring cultural relativity and called me as a “‘throwback’ to earlier generations of
psychological theory.” Angie Danyluk, “Scientific Attitudes to an Eastern Mystic,” 176. William Radice, a distinguished
expert on Tagoreana (Tagore scholarship) but lacking comparable command over Ramkrishnayana (Ramkrishna
scholarship), has observed most unkindly: “Narasingha Sil has debunked the saint so thoroughly and gleefully that it is
hard to see how he will recover, once Sil’s book becomes widely known.” “Atheists, Gurus and Fanatics,” 414.
28 Blaise Pascal, Pensees Nos. 416 & 443 cited in Arnold Toynbee, Historian’s Approach to Religion, 289; Albert
29J. Shneidman, “On the Nature of Psychological Evidence,” 212. See also James Strachey, ed., Works of Freud, XI, 63.
32Swami Yogeshananda, Visions of Ramakrishna, 6, 136; R.K. Dasgupta, “Ramakrishna Kathamrita and Its Message,” in
34 LP, I (Gurubhava—Purvardha),160.
37 “Sai Baba Movement,” 863. Anybody reading Bengali can have a first hand idea of the occult market of Calcutta in
the pages of the popular Bengali almanac, Directory Panjika, published every Bengali year by P.M. Bagchi and
Company of Calcutta, in which prophets, astrologers, saints, and paramahamsas with honorific diplomas from the
“U.S.A.”, “U.K.” or other countries of the West advertise their supernatural skills and the publishers of “the Grub
Street” announce scores of cheap and popular editions of hagiography, magic, folklore, mythology, and other religious
literature. Even to this day the city also abounds in myriads of miracle performing gurus and miracle promising
ganatkars [astrologers].
38White, “Sai Baba Movement,” 878. For a succinct and stimulating discussion of the problem concerning the popular
and scholarly images of charismatic religious personalities see Marcus Borg, Jesus, 1-17: Introduction.
41 For the total number of days I have relied on Sumit Sarkar, “Kathamrita as Text.”
42“Ramakrishna Kathamrita and Its Message,” 255. Aldous Huxley has called M Ramakrishna's Boswell (GR, v:
Foreword).
45I have not been able to consult Malcolm McLean, “Translation of the Srisriramakrishnakathammrita.”
18
46 GM.
19
20
CHAPTER TWO
Ramakrishna’s Androgyny: the Making or Unmaking of the Man
Who won’t say that Gadadhar is not Radhika? Look at his beauty. It seems to be spillng all over. Not
just in his movement and gait but in his mahabhava. Yet the beauty you see is but a reflection of Shri
Krishna.
PPR, I, 95.
Gadadhar was born into a poor Brahmin family of Kamarpukur in the Jahanabad subdivision of
the district of Hooghly, some sixty miles northeast of Calcutta in the state of West Bengal. His
native village was inhabited mostly by lower castes of Bengali society such as Suvarnabanik
(gold traders), Yugi (weavers), Kamar (blacksmiths), Shankhari (workers or dealers in articles of
conchshells), Napit (barbers), Goala (milkmen), Chhutor (carpenters), Kaivarta (peasants), Jele
(fishermen), Bagdi (low caste peasants), and Dom (cremation ground laborers). These low caste
folks worshipped a deity called Dharmathakur, represented by a sacred pitcher [ghat] or a block
Though quite a prankster and always playful, the child Gadai was never a rowdy boy.
On the other hand, he was sensitive by disposition and, reportedly, possessed of feminine charm.
Ramakrishna once told his devotees: “At school I was puzzled by arithmetic but I could sketch
very well and could also model small idols.”48 He also believed that without artistic skill “none
could be truly spiritual.”49 Somewhat effeminate and quite used to the company of women, the
21
boy, reportedly, felt no reaction whatsoever when he peeked at the naked women bathing in the
community.50 As Saradananda tells us, by dint of his natural talents, “Gadadhar remembered
many of those plays, musical compositions, and hymns to God which he had heard from his
childhood.”51 He often enacted the role of Radha and her principal female attendant Vrinda and
“he would then be exactly like a woman in his gestures, speech, and movement.” For example,
“he sometimes went to Haldarpukur to fetch water disguised as a woman with a pitcher under his
arm in front of men and nobody could recognize him under the disguise.”52
Quite expectedly, Gadadhar became an intimate companion of the village belles. In the
household of a local worthy, Sitanath Pyne, as well as in that of many others in the traders’
quarters, the women became so fond of Gadadhar that “they would send for him if the boy did
not come to them for some days.”53 To quote Ramakrishna himself, he was but a “pigeon of
pleasure” (sukher payra) who “used to frequent only affluent families” and who “would run
away from the home where [he]...saw misery and problems.”54 The boy soon discovered the
secret of his own charm: his ecstasies were widely adored by men and women, especially the
latter. Thus while playacting or singing at Sitanath’s home, he would often fall into a trance and
“when they saw this, the women’s devotion for him deepened...[and] many of them worshipped
They had a gold flute and various costumes for male and female characters for his use during
impersonations.”55 Younger women believed that he was “a part of Bhagavan Shrikrishna” and
Ramakrishna’s divine reputation during his childhood led him into many unexplained and
uncanny byways of experience. We are told that as a young boy Gadadhar was once taken by a
strong57 illiterate shankhari, “to a solitary place” where the older man “worshipped him with
flowers, made offerings of sweets, and made supplications to him with tears in his eyes, saying ‘I
only pray that Thou wouldst ever look with compassion upon this unworthy servant of Thine’.”58
Reportedly Shrinivas was extremely fond of the boy who used to visit his shop at night in order
The boy was also mystified by the awe and respect with which the roving monks and
mendicants were held by the villagers. Kamarpukur was situated about thirty-two miles south of
Burdwan district, on the highway to Puri, the famous Hindu pligrimage on the southeast coast of
sannyasis—used to traverse that road and many of them often halted temporarily around
Kamarpukur. The eight year old Gadai befriended a few of these itinerant ascetics.
At first, no one knew about this; but when the boy’s relations with the monks became intimate and he began to spend
much time with them, many came to know of it. On some days he ate so much with them that when he returned home, he
His mother Chandramani Devi at first did not pay any attention to the matter but things looked
suspicious even to her incredulous mind when the boy began to come home “sometimes with
sacred ashes covering his body” or “wearing like monks a kaupina and a loin-cloth made by
tearing his own wearing cloth.” “He would say, ‘Look mother, how the holy men have adorned
23
me’!”60 Fearing that she would lose her dear child to the community of the mendicants, she wept
II
What might have caused Gadadhar’s cross-gender consciousness will forever remain a
mystery due to paucity of direct concrete evidence. Erik Erikson has discussed young
individuals’ identity confusion under the stress of the demand, inter alia, for sexual physical
with “the most improbable partners.” Additionally, such a young person, especially one with “a
history of relatively strong artistic trends,” often seeks a mentor or a guide to learn “the very first
adolescence” in which he may feel “very young, and in fact babylike,” and behave “as if he were
moving in molasses.”61 One notices this condition in Ramakrishna even when he had become a
full adult. He himself reported how he lost his consciousness in the toilet at the home of his
Nepalese devotee, Captain Vishwanath Upadhyay, and how the latter helped him sit properly on
the commode on the floor (actually a hole in the ground) by spreading his two legs.62
Most important, Erikson postulates that one of the underlying causes of acute identity
Ramakrishna had suffered some real traumata, most probably sexual seduction, in his childhood,
which might explain his sexual choices.64 We know that the women of Kamarpukur, especially
24
the young widow from the Laha family, Prasannamayi, were extremely fond of the ecstatic boy
and treated him as their Krishna while pretending to be his gopis [cowgirls or dairymaids]. It is
quite reasonable to speculate that these experiences led him to consider women as voluptuous
and immoral. As he observed: “Many women ensnare goodlooking young men. Hence their
‘attitude of Gopala’.” We do have a clear reference to his suspicion of female lure even under the
Haripada [Ghosh, a young devotee] has come under the spell of a Ghoshpara wench. She puts on an affectionate attitude
toward him; but Haripada is a child and doesn't understand anything. Women like her behave that way whenever they see
young boys. I heard that Haripada even lies on her lap and she feeds him with her own hands. I shall warn him that this is
not good. That very filial affection will lead to undesirable feelings. These women practice spiritual discipline with men;
The fear and suspicion of female seduction of his adult life must have been caused by the
unconscious trauma of his childhood as well as later experience with theb Bhairavi Yogeshwari,
who used to make him sit on her lap and feed him with her own hands.
Then, the old man Shrinivas’s overtures might very well have been the only one of many
such unrecorded episodes. Gadadhar’s intimacy with the rough upcountrymen who were, on his
own admission, hemp-smoking sadhus, might not have ended with his clothes being stripped
and, whatever his experienbces, he was incapable of comprehending them as he was draw to
them more for free food than their putative holiness.66 However, his mother certainly felt uneasy
about her son's intimacy with the mendicants because “she had heard of pretended monks who in
the guise of ascetics tempted boys and kidnapped them. She asked Gadadhar to shun their
company.” 67
25
temple and even tried to avoid the admiring Biswas, though he was finally won over.68 Mathur
encouraged the effeminate young man to dress up like a girl and even bought him feminine outfit
as well as gold ornaments. 69 He used to stare at the naked young priest from his room and once
fantasized him as the Goddess Kali. 70 Ramchandra Datta informs us that Mathur asked
Ramakrishna to sleep with him.71 Even the Master himself recalled that during his mad state he
used to sleep in sejobabu and sejoginni’s bedroom.72 The young man must have been importuned
by his doting employer's frequent fawning. Swami Turiyananda (monastic name of Harinath
Chattopadhya) describes a very suggestive situation of the Master and Mathur inside a carriage:
One day Mathur Babu was returning to Jan Bazar in his deluxe phaeton and was bringing Sri Ramakrishna with him.
When the carriage reached Chitpore Road, the Master had a wonderful vision. He felt that he had become Sita and that
There is a clear suggestion that Mathur in fact was quite obsessed with the young priest.
Ramakrishna
recalled how sejobabu had the experience of bhava, how he stayed in a drunken state all
how people whispered that “the junior Bhatchayyi must have used a magical charm [tuk]
on him.”74
ontologically insecure individual, who cannot take the realness, aliveness, autonomy, and identity of himself and others for
granted,...[and]...has to become absorbed in contriving ways of trying to be real, of keeping himself...alive, of preserving
Such a person also tends to experience himself primarily split into a mind and a body. In other
words, he regards his body apart from his own being—“as one object among other objects in the
world.” This split between self and body “deprives the unembodied self from direct participation
in any aspect of the life of the world.”76 It is well known that Ramakrishna always referred to
himself in the third person as “this one” (eite or eta), by pointing out to his body, as if his self
was apart from his body. Laing discusses the case history of one of his young patients, David,
who is quite a “practised actor” given to “playing at being eccentric.” He appears to have grown
up with a disjunction of his inner self and his outer personality. Being basically shy, self-
conscious, and vulnerable since childhood, David has found safety and reassurance in not being
himself. Hence his penchant for playacting. “Consequently he practised the most tortuous
equivocation towards others in the parts he played.” All through his childhood he had been
playing feminine parts from the classical tragedies—in front of the mirror. He became a
compulsive impersonator of the female and on his own admission he became so in order to fight
the femininity which threatened to rob him of his control of his being. He was driven into
playing the schizophrenic role of a woman in order to combat the woman in him.77
Ramakrishna's odyssey suggests a strong parallel with that of David—a life of divided self.
There may be a deeper meaning in Ramakrishna’s insistence that the best way for a man
to conquer lust is to behave like a woman.78 To him, sexuality liberated from conventional
heterosexual relationship was immaculate and hence divine. First of all, we must bear in mind
27
that his traumatic childhood might have resulted in “bisexual confusion” as well as “identity-
consciousness.” A solution to this problem is, according to Erikson, “an ascetic turning away
God. He thus attempted to “unman” himself by simulating a passive or feminine behavior and
by imagining himself to be a woman in divinely lusty liaison with Krishna, the lord of the
ecstatic maenades or the mad gopis, who forget their world and rush out of their homes to be
with their lover-God. Ramakrishna unabashedly revealed his eroticism--in psychiatric terms,
cacodemonomania--in respect of this God whom he came to worship in the attitude of a lover--
madhura bhava. He recalled how during a kirtana at the residence of Natabar Goswami of
Phului Shyambazar (not to be confused with the Shyambazar area of Calcutta) he was so
overwhelmed with the madhura bhava that he felt his linga sharir (that is, subtle body in tantric
lexicon mystico-erotic body or a body of prema) was moving with Shri Krishna at every step.80
He frankly told his disciples that as a woman (prakriti), he longed “to embrace and kiss man,
purusa (God).”81
obligatory male homosexual” personality betraying his “G-I/R status in his speech, gait, and
his unexplainable (to him) failure to develop as a normal male. Once he said: “I desired so
much to marry, to be able to visit my in-laws' home, have lots of fun [in life]! But, alas, [I don't
a desire under the impulse of his inherent feminine mood used to arise in Master’s mind in his adolescence. Knowing that
the gopis of Vraja had Krishna, the embodiment of Existence-Knowledge-Bliss, because they were born as women, he
used to think that he too would have been blessed enough to worship and enjoy Krishna, had he been born with a female
body. Considering his male body to be an obstacle to his attainment of Krishna, he then imagined that were he to be born
again, he would become a very beautiful child-widow with long hair, in a Brahmin family and would not consider any one
in the day-time, after finishing the household chores, he would spin yarn singing songs about Krishna, and after dusk
would be ardently weeping in secret from a longing to feed Krishna with his own hands the sweets made of...milk. And
the Lord Shrikrishna would be pleased...and would suddenly appear as a cowherd boy to eat them....85
It may be that this androgynous attitude is illustrative of “the respect and reverence Indian
though it certainly is true that Gadadhar’s behavior is, “when viewed culturally and historically,
androgyny reflects the traditional Hindu concept of the bisexual God, Ardhanarishwara,
reflecting divine grandeur as well as yogic asceticism or his creative mind that at once combined
an assertion of feminine feelings, imagery, and fantasies as well as a culturally accepted way of
29
identifying “the cosmic feminine principle with his own internal concept of authority”—the
III
tendency to identify as a child of the Mother through child-parent Bhakti helps to clarify his
poetic abstraction of things sexual,” and that “Ramakrishna’s relationship with Kali...constitutes
metaphorical, though concrete, sexuality.”88 The worship of the Magna Mater reveals a peculiar
Hindu fantasy about women. She is seen as “terrible, demanding, destructive to manhood but a
loving, devoted nurse” if one can abase oneself completely before her. The origins of the
mother-goddess cult might lie in the Hindu child’s traumatic discovery of the father figure
asserting his sexual claim over the mother, who had hitherto been the child’s helpless slave. This
sudden defection of the mother “must excite the fiercest hostile fantasies against her, and these
are projected into the devouring demon mother.” 89 At the same time the child’s powerful rival is
his father--the terrible Bhairava (the consort of the mother-goddess). The only possible course
for the child is either to compete for the father’s love (homosexual solution) or to resort to
complete renunciation and surrender to the mother (ascetic solution). In either case he must
Ramakrishna greatly succeeded in projecting to the world an image of a simple and naive
boy. Protap Chunder Mozoomdar commented on the Master’s “child-like tenderness” and
“unspeakable sweetness of expression.”90 When toward the end of his life Devendranath
Majumdar offered some ice-cream to the Master, his reaction prompted ShriM to record that “at
the sight of the ice-cream the Master became happy as a child.” 91 Swami Virajananda wrote:
Perhaps the two initial impression that every visitor of Shri Ramakrishna carried away with him—be he a devout religious
believer, or a skeptical scoffing worldy soul—were his wonderful childlike nature and extreme simplicity. Like a child he
could not take care of his dress, like a child he would sometimes cry out when hungry or thirsty, forgetful of time and
place...and like a child he could not eat much at a time even when he said he was dying of hunger, but would take just a
Ramakrishna believed that “God has a childlike nature” and therefore “a childlike nature
mischievous like a boy of twelve or thirteen.”94 M informs that “the Master was very happy in
the company of his young and pure-souled devotees” and recounts the scene of his imitating the
gestures of a female kirtana singer to the utter delight of the boys, one of whom, Paltu, was so
carried away that he “rolled on the ground.”95 He was not content with just joking and frolicking
with the youngsters. Believing that God is childlike, he demanded while talking to Keshab: “I
will call on God in every mood...I will have fun with God.” 96
Most probably, psychologically speaking, Ramakrishna was what Jung would label a
with a neurosis stemming from a powerful mother complex. The attachment to his mother makes it difficult for him to
commit himself to a relationship with a woman of his own age. Consequently he may live as a Don Juan, a gigolo, or a
homosexual.97
We know that after the death of his father (Kshudiram Chattopadhyay) the child Gadai “felt
especially drawn toward his mother. He took delight in staying near her much longer than
before, helping her as far as he could, in the household chores and religious rituals.”98 Gadadhar
was so influenced by his widowed mother that his fantasy of a love-lorn female was that of a
young widow. He appears to have completely identified with his mother. His longing for
Krishna and his filial fascination for Kali must have been a transmutation of his need for a father
figure that was confused with his dream of becoming a female lover of a male God and an
IV
Ramakrishna’s passive feminine attitude, which was characterized by two of the Vaisnava
bhavas—dasya [devotion and service] and madhurya [beauty or love]—perhaps came naturally
to him. As a child Gadai grew up in an intensely religious milieu from which he imbibed all the
esoteric and erotic myths of his religion and culture. His physical environment was full of
religion, so to speak. There were several temples of popular local gods and goddesses in
Kamarpukur and its environs: the temples of Raghuvir or Ram near Gadadhar’s residence, of
Visnu at Dharmadas Laha’s home, of Shiva at the Pyne residence, of Gopeshwar Shiva near the
at Jairambati, of Shantinath Shiva at Sihor, and of Radhagovinda at Antpur. Most of the villagers
being Vaisnavas, there used to be regular recitations from the Bhagavadgita or the choral singing
of kirtana in their homes every evening.99 This environmental stimulus had an especial effect on
a boy with an artistic disposition, a penchant for ecstasy, and a growing identification with
femininity. Ramakrishna’s belief that he was a quintessential female was reinforced by its
general acceptance by his devotees. He also exhibited his attraction for his male devotees and
Vijaykrishna, Paltu, Purna, Harish, Baburam, and several others. He often posed as their girl
Above all, he was a consummate simulator and actor. Another member of his family also
appears to possess a natural flair for mimesis. His favorite niece and devotee Lakshmimani
could enact the role of Kali, Saraswati, Jagaddhatri, or Krishna even without any costume. She
deservedly earned a reputation for her “ability to mimic others perfectly.”100 Ramakrishna, too,
was quite a serious impersonator who could easily lose himself in, and become completely
identified with, the character he assumed. In his childhood he had organized a drama club in his
village along with Shrinivas and the two Laha brothers, Gayavisnu and Dharmadas, and
Bandopadhyay).101 He once acted the part of Shiva in a yatra [opera] in his village held on the
occasion of Shivaratri [Shiva’s night] at the Pyne residence. “Decked with matted hair, rudraksa
beads and ashes, he was so engrossed in the thought of Shiva that he lost all external
consciousness.”102 The ecstasy lasted till the next morning. 103 While meditating on Ram, he
donned a tail like Hanuman (Rama's simian devotee and factotum).104 He was even reputed to
33
have had his coccyx enlarged while playacting the role of Hanuman.105 Ramakrishna told
Vijaykrishna that “if a man takes the garb of a sannyasi, he must act exactly like one.” The
lesson of such an authentic imitation was illustrated by the Master: “Haven’t you noticed in the
theater that he who gets the part of a king or that of a minister always does the same role?” 106
Kinsley has rightly observed that Ramakrishna, like Chaitanya, was a great actor and frequently
recommended raganuga bhakti to his disciples.107 He once advised a young visitor from
Agarpara:
A man’s character can change through aropa [imposition or imitation]. Lust can be destroyed by imitating prakriti [female
nature]. Genuine feminine behavior can thus be acquired. I have seen those men who take female parts in the yatra talk
His assessment of the dramatic performance Chaitanyalila at the Star Theater reveals his
respect for playacting. On being asked how he enjoyed the show, the Master smiled and said: “I
saw that the real and the fake are one and the same.”109 Ramakrishna’s “ability of dramatic role-
“reincarnation” (complete identification with the world of the character) by the Russian director
He could fake the behavior not only of a woman but of a yogi and even a paramahamsa
as well. First of all, he already had in mind the stereotypical image of a yogi: “eyes are wide
34
open, with a vacant look--as if a bird hatching its eggs.”111 Sometimes he would lie down in the
open chandni [a covered resting place on the river bank for the bathers or ferry passengers] in
front of the Dakshineshwar temple and say to Hriday: “I have become a sannyasi. I shall have
my food here.”112 He also showed the mannerisms of a paramahamsa to his devotees: “romping
like a boy, face bursting with laughter, stark naked, and eyes glistening with joy.” In fact, the
appellation of paramahamsa has a cultural import that has little spiritual connection. Bengalis
consider a person of cheerful and childlike disposition paramahamsa. It is quite natural that the
owner of a sweets shop in north Calcutta which the boy Mahendranath (ShriM) used to frequent
was known as a paramahamsa in the neighborhood because he was generous to his customers,
“had a smiling countenance, he sang often, and was never sad.”113 Ramakrishna considered
femininity in man to be the mark of high spirituality. He was very fond of Nityagopal (Basu,
later Swami Jnanananda) for his “effeminate and clumsy movements and because he looked
flushed in ecstasy.” Quite naturally Ramakrishna considered him as one in “the state of a
paramahamsa.”114
in the state of madhura, he insisted on using clothes and ornaments proper to a woman and had
himself provided with “a skirt, a scarf and a breastpiece.” His patron Mathuranath, who was
fond of the effeminate young priest, “adorned him with a hairpiece and a set of gold
release of his feminine urge. Even Saradananda notices “the strange co-existence of male and
35
female attitudes.” As he reports, “during our visits to Dakshineshwar we used to see him
playfully mimicking women’s manners many times. This used to be so perfect that even ladies
marveled at it.” 116 In the past Ramakrishna had visited the Janbazar home of Rasmani in this
form and lived with the women in the inner apartment. 117 Saradananda writes how Ramakrishna
once dressed up Mathur’s daughter in his own hands and “having instructed her on the various
ways to entertain her husband, held her hand like her girl friend and conducted her to her
spouse’s presence.”118 His female devotees averred: “The Master did not seem to us to be a man
most of the time. We felt he was one of us. That is why we never felt embarrassed or hesitated
Saradananda provides what reads like a first-hand description of his Master’s make-up
and feminine charm (although it is based solely upon hearsay accounts). As he writes, during the
arati [ritual movement of a lighted lamp in certain prescribed patterns in front of the deity as part
of worship] of Kali:
the Master’s face was lit up with [spiritual] passion, and his lips showed a smile; his looks, the movements of his hands
and feet, and his gestures resembled those of women. The Master wore the beautiful silk cloth given by Mathur Babu in
the manner of a sari. Who would say that he was male? The Master’s beauty and complexion at that time overflowed all
around, as it were. That complexion further brightened in bhava as if a ray emanated from his body. People could not turn
their eyes away when they saw that beauty and stared in wonder.120
Ramakrishna admitted that in his younger days he looked so authentically like a beautiful woman
This public stare, that is, public attention, was something that he perhaps enjoyed, but he
was also embarrassed by it. “Because of people’s stare, I used to cover myself with a thick
wrapper” and “I used to pass my hand over the body [most probably referring to the breasts] and
slapping it again and again say, ‘Get inside, get in’.”122 Saradananda tells us that “because of his
constant ecstasy, the Master’s body became very tender like that of a child or a woman.”123 One
can very well see from the extant photograph of Ramakrishna that he possessed quite well-
formed and firm breasts—most possibly a case of gynacomastia. While explaining the Master’s
feminine features, Vivekananda’s brother Mahendranath Datta has observed: “It happened
sometimes that a man harbors both male and female features—beard as well as breasts—in the
same body.”124 M noted how one day the ecstatic Master held a pillow to his breast as if he were
nursing an infant.125 Even Ramakrishna quite unabashedly described his feminine behavior and
attitude. Once he sat after a midday siesta with his loin cloth disheveled. He then remarked that
he was sitting like a woman about to suckle her baby.126 In fact, he used to suckle his young
beloved disciple Rakhal Ghosh (later Swami Brahmananda).127 “What a beautiful childlike
nature Rakhal has!” Ramakrishna observed while recalling his days with the boy Rakhal.
“While at play, he would come running to me, sit on my lap, and suck my tits” (“Rakhaler ki
sundar swabhav. Khelte khelte doude ese amar kole base mai khay”).128 Similarly he suckled
Kaliprasad Chandra one night when the young man was massaging his Master’s feet. Apparently
Kaliprasad thoroughly enjoyed the experience and “drowned in a bliss forgetful of all worldly
concerns.”129 It is not surprising that in Vrindavan he was addressed by an old woman called
Gangamayi as dulali, that is, “daughter.”130 Years later, as the established spiritual Master of
Dakshineshwar, he claimed: “The guru is a ‘girl friend’, as it were, the veritable Vrinda, the
37
intermediary between Radha and Krishna, meaning devotee and deity.”131 Ramakrishna’s near-
perfect disguise deceived even the hawk-eyed and keen-sensed Mathur into taking him for a
woman when he saw him fanning the image of Kali with a chamara [a fan made out of the hair
of a yak-like animal called chamarigai and used in temples] during arati.132 Girish Ghosh was
driven to ask Ramakrishna flatly and frankly: “Sir, are you a man or a woman?” The Master
VI
Ramakrishna’s assumed femininity was at times so intense and sincere that he seems to
have exhibited the classic behavioral syndrome of a transsexual such as playing with feminine
things and even imagining having feminine physiological functions.134 Saradananda writes about
Ramakrishna's fantastic bleeding “from every pore of his body” as a result of his “extreme
anguish of the heart,” and observed that the Master “attained that state having lost consciousness
of his separate character of Shrimati Radharani.”135 “He became,” the Swami goes on, “so much
absorbed in the constant thought of himself as a woman that he could not look upon himself as
one of the other sex even in a dream.” Saradananda even claims that Ramakrishna menstruated
in this bhava. He writes apparently on the basis of the Master's testimony that the latter used to
bleed every month from the region of his pubic hair (hair around his penis--swadhisthanachakra)
and the bleeding continued for three days just like the menstrual period of women.136
Even though, according to one writer, this physiological condition of Ramakrishna was
no fiction of anybody’s imagination because it was reported by Hridayram who witnessed the
condition himself, it would be quite problematic to remain mystified into believing that
38
Ramakrishna’s alleged bodily changes were real and that “it is unnecessary to speak any more on
this topic.”137 On the other hand, the situation could be explained in a somewhat less dramatic
but more reasonable way. Ramakrishna, we are told, suffered from chronic stomach trouble
caused by “excessive gas.”138 He was advised by Shambhu Mallik to take small doses of opium
every day as an antidote to flatulence and dysentery.139 His ailment could have been acute
enough to degenerate into blood dysentery. Ramakrishna might have been persuaded by the
ingenious Hriday who noticed the occult blood in his feces into believing that it was menstrual
discharge!140 Nonetheless, it is important to note his psychological orientation even toward the
Moreover, we need to bear in mind that the Master’s madhura bhava was inspired not by
the Vedantin’s aspiration to transcend samaskara or the dichotomy of male and female (as
Saradananda explains) but by a desire to simulate Radha’s beauty and passion. Admittedly his
madhura bhava owed primarily to Gaudiya Vaisnava practices. By the seventeenth century the
famous Vaisnava scholar Viswanath Chakravarti had enjoined the male devotees to imitate such
divine models as Radha or the gopis only with “the meditative perfected body.” Physical
imitation with the sadhaka’s actual body had to refer not to the divine but to the paradigmatic
imitators of the divine model. In other words, for a Vaisnava it was not necessary to behave like
a real Radha or a real gopi (presuming, of course, that they existed in real life!), but to behave
like the Vaisnava masters of the past such as Chaitanya or Rupa Goswami, who were the spiritual
models. Ramakrishna, of course, did imitate Chaitanya but did not rest there. He actually sought
to become woman in his grand act of mimesis and this went against the traditional Vaisnava
canons.142
39
His playacting was thorough enough to elicit admiration from a woman devotee, who
one day the Master began to show in their presence the gestures which women make when they see men— pulling
the veil, pushing back the lock of hair near the ear, pulling the cloth over the breast, speaking various words artfully.
It was perfect.143
However, such perfect imitation had its moments of embarrassment too. One day, most probably
in 1867, clad in silken cloth, wearing a gold amulet, and chewing betel leaf after lunch,
Ramakrishna the “woman” boarded a palanquin in order to travel to Sihore, the village of his
nephew Hriday, via Jairambati, his father-in-law’s place. He saw a big crowd on the road near
the palanquin and was told by Hriday that the people had come there to see him because he
looked “very pretty when made up, dressed in silk cloth, and with his lips reddened by chewing
betel.” “That is why they want to see you,” said the nephew to his bewildered uncle.
Whereupon the embarrassed impersonator exclaimed: “What? People throng just to see a human
being!”144
VII
presuming that he had always avoided sexual thoughts and deeds and cultivated a transcendental
moral ideal. However, as we have noted earlier, he appeared to possess enough knowledge about
the ways of women to counsel Mathur’s married daughter. He also seems to have had a fair
knowledge of the femme fatale: “I could recognize wayward women: widows who parted their
40
hair in the middle and anointed their bodies with great care. They have little modesty. They sit in
a typical manner.” Having thus waxed eloquent on this topic, Ramakrishna suddenly became
self-conscious and hastened to conclude by saying: “Enough of worldly talk.”145 He was even
The Master sometimes taught that the outward shape of that particular organ, with the help of which women acquire the
glory of motherhood [in Ramakrishna's unpretentious language, breasts], indicates their inclination to sensual pleasure.
He said that its shape varied. Some of its forms indicated a very small amount of animality. Again he said that those
whose buttocks bulge out like black ants harbor that inclination strongly.146
Ramakrishna’s apparently special interest in female breasts could be seen in one of his
didactic stories he loved to relate to his devotees. In one such story he had a young sadhu see a
young girl’s breasts and think that she had abscesses. When the puzzled youth was told that God
would supply milk to the girl’s breasts because “she would give birth to a child,” the ascetic’s
faith in divine dispensation was so strengthened that, “struck with wonder,” he said: “Then I
need not beg. There must be food for me too.”147 The Master’s expertise in female anatomy was
alleged to have been derived from the scriptures. He once said that "according to one school of
opinion, one who has nipples on the breasts is a woman. Arjuna and Krishna (both are characters
of the Bhagavadgita and Mahabharata) did not have nipples on their breasts.” 148 It would not be
unreasonable to suppose that all this bizarre insight into female anatomy and attitudes was the
outcome of his wildly imaginative mind as well as of a pathogenic memory of his childhood and
adolescence.
41
Ramakrishna’s insight into a widow’s character must have been derived from his
childhood experience with his widowed mother and his women admirers of Kamarpukur. We
know of one such admirer, Prasannamayi, the young widowed daughter of the local worthy
Dharmadas Laha, who used to tell Gadai that he was not human but truly divine. She was also
extremely fond of the sweet voice of the child.149 As she told Gadadhar's mother Chandramani:
“Your son knows magic and has me hooked” [yadu jane chele tor gale deche phansi].150 It is
open to speculation whether the adult Ramakrishna's attitude to widows being erotic (hence
immoral) had anything to do with his childhood experiences with women such as Prasanna.
Although we have little inkling as to his negative attitude toward his own mother, it is on record
that he found his employer, the widow Rasmani, to be so worldly that he even slapped the
imperiouse Rani. This reported behavior is remarkable in that Ramakrishna actually was
extremely fearful of his employer. When once she visited the temple to interrogate the young
priest accused of gorging the naivedya (sacred food offerings to Kali), he became so scared that
on hearing of her visit he bolted and hid himself behind the statue of the goddess in sheer fear of
being punished and discharged.151 Presumably, Rasmani, while listening to the Kali songs by the
young priest (presumably naked) in the inner sanctum of the temple, did something so terrible
that the young man flew into a rage and hit her. The official story, of course, is that the Master
could plainly see that his listener had become unmindful, preoccupied with the thought of a court
case.152 However, he himself admitted that this was one of his crazy behaviors during his state of
divine madness.153
42
Thus, partly because of his unique physiognomy, partly due to his personal disposition
suffered, though unconsciously, during childhood, Ramakrishna’s normal sexual growth was
retarded and he remained, to the end of his life, half-formed sexually—“exiled from either
interact with universal, communal, and role determinants in developing human personality.156
Ramakrishna’s development might be a case in point. His unique life situation and experience
most probably caused his neurosis (“state of being at odds with oneself”157) as well as
his childhood experiences and traumas, and grew up to be a severely neurotic individual,
imagining himself in his mystical state (madhura bhava) to be God’s bride—Radha to Krishna—
leading to his subsequent conviction that he was “other,” unique, and therefore, divine.159
51 Ibid., 127.
52 Ibid., 130.
53 Ibid., 134.
54 KM, V, 45 (GR, 240). Diary of 8 June 1883. This habit of associating with affluence would persist throughout his life
and it would be the pattern of lifestyle for almost all the monks of the Ramakrishna Order.
55 LP, I (Purvakatha O Valyajivan), 34. Even while playing with his cohorts, Gadai, reportedly, experienced samadhi.
Akshaykumar Sen, Ramakrishna-Punthi, 5-6. See also Norvin J. Hein, “Caitanya’s Ecstasies” in Bardwell L. Smith, ed.
Hinduism, 15-31.
56 LP, I (Purvakatha O Valyajivan), 132. For a poetic description of Ramakrishna’s divine childhood see Sen,
59 PR, I, 21.
62 AK, 143.
44
64 Masson, Oceanic Feeling, 10-11; idem, “Psychology of Ascetic,” 623. It is also useful to recognize the problems in
arriving at a definite conclusion on “the after-effects of childhood experiences.” John Money, Venuses Penuses), 213.
65 KM, IV, 164 (GR, 535-36). Diary of 19 September 1884; II, 154 (GR, 603). Diary of 11 October 1884. The
Vaishnava sect of Ghoshpara village is called Kartabhaja. See Akshaykumar Datta, Bharatvarsiya Upasak Sampraday,
220-29.
67 LR, 23.
70Ibid., 175-76.
71 JV, 44. Kripal promptly and rather intentionally uses the information to conclude that Ramakrishna was a gay who
72 KM, IV, 72 (GR, 390). Diary of 3 February 1884. Mathur was addressed as sejobabu, that is, the “third” babu, his
wife Jagadamba being Rasmani’s third daughter. Ginni is the Bengali for wife or mistress of the house. See also Swami
Vijnanananda, 63.
73 Cited in Swami Chetanananda, They Lived with God, 29. See also Swami Virajananda, Paramahamsa-Charit, 63.
45
74 Ghosh, Ramakrishna, 117. Temple priests of Bengal were usually called Bhattacharya or Bhatchayyi or Bhatchaj
irrespective of their Brahmin surname. Thus “the junior Bhatchayyi” refers to Ramakrishna, the senior Bhatchayyi
75Ronald D. Laing, Divided Self, 44. For an interesting explanation of Laing’s concept of the “ontologically insecure
individual,” see Joanne Dewart, “Theological Aspects in the Writings of R.D. Laing.”
78 KM, IV, 97 (GR, 442). Diary of May 25, 1884. The puzzling point to note here is that the Master endorsed and even
encouraged the simulation of heterosexual female passion while he was fearful and disdainful of heterosexual male
passion. For an interesting discussion of “The Mystic as an Androgynous Being,” see Olson, “Indian Mysticism,” 165 ff.
80 KM, V, 92 (GR, 348). Diary of 18 December 1883. For Ramakrishna’s explanation of lingasharira, see KM, IV, 186
(GR, 583). Diary of 1 October 1884. See also Paula H. Salmons & David J. Clarke, “Cacodemonomania.”
Lingasharira stands for “subtle body” or suksmasharira in tantric terms, and though the master was aware of the latter
81 KM, IV, 271 (GR, 895). Diary of 26 October 1885. It is to be noted that this diary is recorded in two parts in KM, I,
233-39. See also M-KM, 714. The phrase “soul voluptuousness” is borrowed from the German ecstatic Daniel P.
83 Ibid., 466-68.
46
87 Ashis Nandy, “Woman versus Womanliness in India” in idem, Edge of Psychology, 38-39.
89 George M. Carstairs, “Hinjra and Jiryan,” 137. For a succinct discussion of the Hindu child's unrestrained upbringing
see Norvin Hein, “A Revolution in Krishnaism: The Cult of Gopala,” 313-15. See also Arun K. Ray Chaudhuri,
“Psycho-Analytic Study of Hindu Mother Goddess,” 131-38. See also David M. Wulf, “Prolegomena to Psychology of
Goddess” in John S. Hawley & Donna M. Wulf, eds. Divine Consort, 283-97.
90 Mozoomdar, “Paramhamsa Srimat Ramakrishna,” reprinted in extenso in Vivekananda, My Master, 72-73. This article
92 Swami Virajananda, “Sri Ramakrishna and His Mission to the World” in A Bridge to Eternity, 113.
96 KM, V, 210 (GR, 1010). Diary of 1 January 1881. For the Brahmo leader Keshabchandra Sen, see Meredith
Borthwick, Keshub Chunder Sen; Donald Bishop, “Keshub Chunder Sen” in idem, ed. Thinkers of Indian Renaissance.
99 Ibid., p. 127. Dharmadas’s son Gangavisnu was Ramakrishna’s playmate. See also Devavrata Basu Ray, Devalaye
Devalaye Shriramakrishna. All these shrines still exist today. I visited most of them.
101 For information on Gadadhar’s early life see Basu, Ramakrishna Sadhan Parikrama, ch. I.
107 Kinsley, Divine Player, 220. Raganuga means “a following [anuga] after passion, in a manner of passion, the
transformative process that leads to a condition of ragatmika (spontaneous and inseparable [atmika] passion).” Dimock,
Chaitanya Charitamrita, Madhyalila, 85n: 703. In the KM the word used is raganuraga (IV, 11).
48
110 David L. Haberman, Acting as a Way of Salvation, 9-10. See also C. Stanislavski, An Actor Prepares.
114 KM, II, 67 (GR, p. 297). Diary of 26 September, 1883; IV, 214 (GR, 798). Diary of 13 July 1885; II, 14 (GR, 188).
Diary of 11 March 1883. For Nityagopal, see McDaniel, Madness of Saints, 133-37.
115 LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 266; KM, II, 154-55 (GR, 603). Diary of 11 October 1884.
117 The Rasmani residence at Janbazar occupies a vast area and is presently divided into various apartments occupied by
the family members of Mathuranath. The Master visited the apartment occupied by the Chaudhuri family on 18
120 Ibid., 191. In India it is quite common among men to express their appreciative emotions, publicly, to a successful
transvestite performance. Psychologically, such emotions of course reveal homosexual interests or “the return of the
122 Ibid.
123 Ibid.,193.
126 KM, II, 207 (GR, 761. Nikhilananda omits this remark). Diary of 24 April 1885.
127 Gambhirananda, Ramakrishna-Bhaktamalika, I, 98. See also KM, V, 31 (GR, 185). Diary of 9 March 1883.
128 LM, 159. This behavior, if true, could most certainly be an imitation of that of Shrichaitanya who, reportedly, suckled
134 For transsexuals see Ira B. Pauly, “Adult Manifestations of Male Transsexualism” in Richard Green & J. Money, eds.
Transsexualism and Sex Reassignment, 37-58. Ramakrishna could also be described, in the jargon of modern medical
psychology, as a “she male,” that is, a male who, despite his male genitalia, possesses a female psyche and breasts
resembling those of a woman. Sally Jesse Raphael Show on “She Male” aired on CBS channel 13 (28 August 1989).
136 Ibid., 274. Jagadananda’s translation of LP summarizes these sentences into “His body and senses functioned
138 LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 132. Dr. Durgacharan Nag commented on the Master's dyspeptic tendency. RA, 28.
140 Anthropologists and psychohistorians report on male simulations of menstruation among several primitive cultures.
Even as late as the seventh century the Byzantine writer Paul of Aegina (625-90) mentioned about “hemorrhoidal flux”
or “hemorrhoidal bleeding” as the male counterpart to female menstruation. See James L. Brain, “Male Menstruation,”
316.
142 See D.L. Haberman, “Imitating the Masters,”; idem, Acting as Salvation, 94-108. According to Akshaykumar Datta,
Chaitanya was the first Vaisnava to start the “ridiculous” practice of sakhibhava (mood or attitude of a handmaiden).
143 LP. I (Gurubhava—Purvardha), 36. As Dr. Money has observed, “the fantasies of paraphilia...are theatrical and
showy.” Venuses Penuses, 449. LP. I (Gurubhava--Purvardha), 36. As Dr. Money has observed, “the fantasies of
144 LP. I (Gurubhava—Purvardha), 193-94. Throughout India chewing betel or piper betle (pan) seasoned with lime
paste (chun) and a number of other spices including catechu, a kind of brown powder (khayer), and areca nuts (supari) is
a habit with most men and women. The juice that gathers in the mouth after having chewed the preparation is usually
blood red and it is expectorated by the user from time to time. Naturally the use of this concoction reddens the lips and
in fact the entire mouth and this is considered quite attractive on the part of a female addict.
148 KM, II, 155 (GR, 603-4. Nikhilananda omits these lines in his translation). Diary of 11 October 1884. The authority
153 KM, II, 3 (GR, 119). Diary of 16 October 1882. He also slapped an unsuspecting Brahmin counting beads (japa) on
154 A Polish psychiatrist has commented on the influence of mental attitudes and tendencies of ecstatics on their
behavior. See S. Blachowski, “O Sztucznych Ekstazach i Widzeniach.” See also S. Kakar, “Maternal-Feminine in
Indian Psychoanalysis.”
155 This quotation describes the third century Christian priest of Caesaria (Palestine), Origen. See Peter Brown, Body
and Society, 169. See an interesting psychological explanation of androgyny from the tantric point of view in S. Kakar,
157 Carl G. Jung, Word and Image, 228. For a helpful note on neurosis see the translator’s Introduction to Schreber,
Memoirs, 15-17. Isherwood may not be quite right in maintaining that Ramakrishna's childhood was least frustrated and
least likely “to produce conflicts and neuroses in later years.” C. Isherwood, Ramakrishna and His Disciples, 6.
158 For a discussion of Freud and Jung’s concept of psychosis see Liliane Frey-Rohn, Freud to Jung, 220-24. A
competent explanation of psychosis may be found in the translator's Introduction to Schreber, Memoirs, 15-17.The word
theosis is borrowed from Happold, Mysticism, 228. It simply will not do to see, as Gatwood does (Devi and Souse
Goddess, 177) in Ramakrishna's behavior, any deliberate design to create a unique religious paradigm.
159 See Robert Fliess, Psychoanalytic Series. Vol. III: Symbol,Dream, and Psychosis, 205.
CHAPTER THREE
Ramakrishna the Godman
The trouble is we make Ramakrishna too human. We forget that he was the incarnation of the Mother, now
shining in his own divine glory, diffusing everywhere, illumining everything, and forming the very core of our
consciousness.
I
This chapter examines Ramakrishna’s divine reputation taking the above comment of
Swami Atulananda as its starting point. At the very outset thus, in stark contrast to the
Swami’s contention, I candidly express my own thesis that the trouble is we make
understand, support, or love him. His most important identity is that he was human thus
was constrained by the human need for material as well as spiritual sustenance. Thus we
Though the child Gadai had earned a reputation for his divinity among the
neighbors of his native village, his divinity as an adult was first recognized by Pandit
nyaya and Vedanta, Padmalochan was a powerful debater and, reportedly, his forensic
skill was acquired through magical practices with water and napkin. Ramakrishna, who
had met the pandit and impressed him with his songs and samadhi, hid the scholar's
water-vessel and napkin one day. When the harrowed Padmalochan learnt that
Ramakrishna had removed them, he marvelled at the latter’s power to fathom the
54
“innermost centres of his mind” and surrendered himself completely at the Master’s feet.
his divinity and even boasted that he did not care for anyone's trying to prove his
incarnational status after he had received an imprimatur from the tarkalankar in this
regard.160
factotum Hridayram, who served his uncle at Dakshineshwar during 1855-81 before he
was relieved of his service following a financial scandal. Around 1870 Hriday felt one
night that both he and his uncle (on his way to the latrine) had become luminous. Wild
with joy, the ingenious nephew hit upon a plan and cried out: “Oh Ramakrishna, you and
I are the same, we are not mortals! Why linger here? Come, let’s go places setting people
free from bondage.” 161 It is well known that Hriday was hardly a spiritual individual. He
was quite greedy and dishonest with money and enriched himself by regularly fleecing
Ramakrishna’s wealthy devotees. He even made fun of his uncle and told him that he
was a fool who would not have been respected as a saint without him. He in fact tortured
Ramakrishna so much that the latter was driven to drown himself in the river.162
the contribution of his alleged Tantrika mentor Yogeshwari, Girish Ghosh, Ram Datta,
and a few others. Above all, the saint himself openly proclaimed his divine provenance
and personality toward the later part of his life, especially after the onset of his terminal
throat cancer. Yogeshwari is reported to have observed that Ramakrishna’s “body and
55
mind” contained “all the signs of the incarnations.”163 She was convinced that the priest
of Dakshineshwar was Lord Rama Himself after she had seen him gorge the food
the behest of the bhairavi around late 1870 or early 1871. These two scriptural experts
from two schools of Hinduism were to decide in a public debate with Ramakrishna if he
Gauri Pandit, however, wished to test the two contenders’ qualifications in a formal
debate. The actual debate never took place, though the Master emerged as the conquerer
of Gauri. The report of what transpired comes from Ramakrishna himself. According to
it, Gauri had a habit of shouting ha re re re whenever he entered the temple and this was
his battle cry before engaging in any kind of argument. On the day of the debate he did
the same but Ramakrishna was “prodded by someone within him to utter those words
more loudly. Hearing the Master’s voice, Gauri yelled still more loudly and, excited at
that, Ramakrishna uttered ha re re re more loudly than he.”165 On hearing the raucous
created by both "debaters" the security guards of the temple rushed to the spot only to see
two men yelling at each other. Finally, as Saradananda relates Ramakrishna's amusing
but boastful reminiscences, “Gauri could not at last utter those words more loudly than
the Master and was silenced and, in a somewhat dejected mood, slowly entered the Kali
temple.” The Tantrika scholar ultimately conceded defeat and accepted the victor as
56
divine in a grand fashion. Vaisnavcharan let the ecstatic priest of Dakshineshwar mount
on his shoulder as a mark of humility and Gauri, having seen Ramakrishna being carried
by the venerable Vaishnava, accepted the Master not just as an avatara but a part of God
as such.166
man of the world, Biswas understood the importance of using an avatara to mystify and
by his highhanded treatment that led to death.167 He often took Ramakrishna with him on
his periodic visits to various parts of the Rasmani estates. Swami Shivananda writes that
Biswas used to take the Master to his estates in Nadiya during the revenue collection
season.168 Swami Prabhananda describes Mathur and Ramakrishna’s visits to the former's
estates at Kalaighata in Ranaghat and at Sonabere “for collecting the payment of dues”
and to Tala “to settle a long-standing dispute among the members of his Guru’s
mentions that Mathur took Ramakrishna on tours “perhaps to divert his [Mathur’s]
mind”170—a curiously ambivalent statement that leaves open the question of Biswas’s
diversion in Ramakrishna's company. We should also bear in mind that most probably
wherever he went, because she suspected him of being unfaithful to her. According to the
Master, once Biswas took the young priest to a home in Calcutta and made him wait for
It may also be that Rani Rasmani actually wanted a priest for her temple of
Dakshineshwar, who was not just an ordinary Brahmin, but something more, someone
endowed with divinity. Being of a lower caste (Kaivarta) origin, the Rani had
experieced extreme difficulty in procuring a priest for the temple as no caste Brahmin
agreed to be employed by a Shudra woman. Even Ramakrishna himself refused the offer
cooked his own food himself rather than eat the temple offerings (prasada) that were
prepared in the temple kitchen by cooks employed by her. Thus it was quite natural for
Rasmani to seek social distinction with a living godman as a priest of her temple. It goes
to the credit of her astute son-in-law, Mathur, who intelligently discovered in the
cataleptic young priest the making of an incarnation and succeeded in establishing the
Sonabere where a Brahmin named Bamacharan (he had visited Dakshineshwar earlier)
was engineered by Girish Ghosh, himself a popular figure in the world of entertainment
and a habitual drinker. Girish met Ramakrishna in September 1884 after the latter’s
cancer had been diagnosed, declared the ailing saint an incarnation, and tried to induce
everyone to share his conviction. It was Ghosh’s penchant for the dramatic that for the
first time provided a “Christian” hermeneutic for the Master’s suffering. “Does any of
you realize why he is here?” asked Girish of Ramakrishna's devotees and answered the
58
Gauranga. 175 The Brahmo preacher Vijay Goswami claimed to have seen Ramakrishna's
vision in Dacca. Naturally, “the belief in the Master as a Divine Incarnation spread
among the devotees like wild fire.”176 A typical example of how the Master’s divinity was
fabricated by his eager devotees is the episode of Surendra’s vision of the Goddess Durga
and Ramakrishna together. The Master claimed to have visited Surendra’s home on an
illuminated path and beheld the emission of a ray of light from the third eye of the image
of the deity. He further saw that Surendra was weeping piteously, crying “Ma, ma.” This
actually saw “Paramahamsadev standing beside the Durga image and offering him his
blessing.”177
II
Ramakrishna often sought affirmation from his devotees that he was the same
divine incarnation as other historical prophets. He asked M if the latter found any
similarity between him and Christ and was told that Christ spoke like Ramakrishna
because he had said that his disciples should “make merry” as they had been living with
an incarnation of God and that milk should be kept in a pot in order not to spoil (meaning
knowledge that emanated from the Master’s mouth).178 Ramakrishna in fact gained
recognition from his devotees and admirers that he was Christ. A Christian school
59
teacher, one Mr. Williams, sincerely believed that the Master was “Jesus himself, the Son
Ramakrishna’s disciples clearly: “You do not realize who he is. He and Jesus Christ are
one....I have already seen both...in a vision. He is the present Jesus Christ.”179 When M
told his Master that he was the same person as Jesus and Chaitanya, Ramakrishna
affirmed enthusiastically: “Same! Same! Certainly the same person! See how He is in
the two godmen. What was more important was to note the fact Ramakrishna was Christ.
At Yadulal Mallik’s house the Master was entranced by the painting of “Madonna and the
Divine Child” and had a vision of Jesus come out of the canvas and enter his body.181 To
underscore his identity with Jesus Ramakrishna sought the most visible marks of identity
between Christ and himself. He asked his devotees: “Well, you have read the Bible. Tell
me what it says about Christ’s features. What did he look like?” Those who read the
Bible answered: “We haven’t seen this particularly mentioned anywhere in the Bible.
But Jesus was born among the Jews, so he must have been fair, with large eyes and an
aquiline nose.” The Master remarked: “But I saw that his nose was a bit flat—who
knows why!”182 The Semitic (or, as in popular polychrome, European) features of Jesus
Ramakrishna's religious orientation. “His love for and devotion to the gods vanished, and
a profound faith in and reverence for Jesus and his sect set in...”.183
60
Similarly, after having been “initiated” in Islam by the Bengali Sufi Govinda Ray,
Ramakrishna spent three days in that mood, and obtained the results of practices of that
faith. We are told that “during his practice in Islam the Master first had the vision of an
popular Hindu imagination].184 Ramakrishna told his cousin Ramlal that he went to a
mosque near about Dakshineshwar to practice Islamic prayer. There he prayed for three
days along with other Moslems and was blessed by an old fakir. 185 His Punjabi devotee
Koar Singh reportedly told him: “I have never before seen a person who has returned
from the plane of samadhi. You truly are ‘Nanak’.”186 Ramakrishna also sought
identification with the Buddha. He first announced that the Buddha was one of the ten
incarnations of God. Being innocent of the Buddha's teachings he asked Narendra about
the subject and listened to his disciple's peroration patiently. At the end he came out with
a single query: whether Narendra had seen a tuft of hair on the Buddha’s head. Narendra,
who had seen in history textbooks photographs of the Buddha's statues modelled by the
Gandahra School of Art, answered that his head “seems to be covered by strings of
rudraksha beads.” Then Ramakrishna inquired about the Buddha's eyes and was told that
they were fixed.187 Obviously Narendra’s description of the Buddha was derived from
these photographs—and the young man either deliberately or innocently interpreted the
Hellenistic style of hair of the Buddha statues—but his information was enough to assure
having become an adept in all his sadhanas...the Master felt that he was an incarnation of God, an adhikarika
purusa [person commissioned by God to do good to the world], all of whose spiritual efforts were for the sake of
others. 188
subjected to all the sufferings that there can be; …I have taken upon myself the miseries
of the whole world.” The simple Sarada did indeed believe that “the Master’s disease
was due to taking upon himself the sins of Girish.”189 Ramakrishna informed his disciples
and devotees that the Divine Mother had told him that his ailment was caused by the
sinful people who touched him, thus ridding themselves of evil and transmitting it to their
Had this body been allowed to last a little longer, many more people would have been spiritually awakened...But
Mother has ordained otherwise. Lest people should take advantage of my simplicity and illiteracy, and prevail
upon me to bestow the rare gift of spirituality, She will take me away.191
He told Ramlal:
I came into this world secretly with a few close devotees, and now Ram...brings all sorts of people here and asks
me to touch and to bless them. How much burden can I carry? I got this disease by taking the sins of these
people upon myself. Look, I won’t stay in this world any longer.192
It is simply not true, as M. Rolland would have us believe, that Ramakrishna disliked to
talk about his incarnation reputation and “could not bear it to be mentioned in front of
him” because “in general, praise was disagreeable to him.”193 The Master himself told his
62
disciples how his devotee, the “Kapten,” considered the Bengalis fools who failed to
recognize the fact that “they have a gem near them.”194 Reportedly, Ramakrishna
just before his passing away, when he was suffering from...difficulty in breathing, he said to me as I was
cogitating in my mind whether he could even in that pain say that he was an incarnation, “He who was Rama and
III
Ramakrishna himself preached the divine purpose of an incarnation and then told
his audience that he was God in human form. His method usually was to make his talk
dramatic, esoteric, and even obscure, and yet at the same time appear naive but sincere.
I have no hesitation in telling you who are my devotees. Presently I can’t see God as Spirit. Clearly He now
manifests Himself in human form. Naturally, I can see, touch, and even embrace God. I have been told, “You
have assumed a body; therefore have fun through your human form.”
This enigmatic statement was followed by another: “No doubt, God is in everything, but
He manifests Himself more through humans.” Of human beings in general, only “in the
That God exists may be known by looking at the universe. but it is one thing to hear about Him, another thing to
see Him, and still another thing to converse with Him. You can obtain peace only when you have seen God. You
can be happy and strong only when you have talked to Him.197
Ramakrishna’s belief that God is a tangible being squared very well with the
endowed to be on intimate terms with Him. When a visitor to Dakshineshwar showed the
audacity to equate the phenomenon of a specially endowed person with God’s partiality,
What! Are horse and saucer alike (“ghodatao ta ar batitao ta”), though both may have the same article
“the” [“ta”]? ... God is present in everything as the all-pervading Spirit—in me as well as in an ant. But His
In fact, Ramakrishna regularly reported to his devotees how he had been seeing God in
concrete form. For example, he saw Kali’s “entire form as She spoke to him and directed
saw Her partake of the food even before it was offered in the regular way. Formerly he regarded the stone image
of Kali as possessed of consciousness; now the image disappeared, and in its stead there stood the Living Mother
Herself, smiling and blessing him. “I actually felt Her breath on my hand,” the Master used to say later on.199
Reportedly a male God laughed and played with him, “cracked” his fingers, and “then He
talked.”200 On his own admission the Master recognized his Shiva identity while looking
at kalakarpura plant during defecation at Burdwan railway station and began to place the
64
plant on his own head in a gesture of worshipping the Shiva in him.201 On another
occasion, around 1864-65, while listening to a recitation of the Bhagavata on the balcony
Krishna from whose feet a luminous ray emanated, touching the holy book and his chest.
“After this vision,” he said, “I came to realize that Bhagavan, Bhakta, and the Bhagavata
Toward the end of his life Ramakrishna openly and convincingly talked about his
connection with the divine. Once he told his devotees: “There are no strangers around,
let me tell you a secret. The other day I saw Sachchidananda come out of me, assume a
form and say, ‘It is I who incarnates in every age’.”203 In August 1885, just one year
My parents knew who dwells inside this [body]. Father dreamt at Gaya that Raghuvira was saying to him “I
shall be your son.” It's he who dwells inside this [body]. Could I renounce “woman and gold” by myself? I
When M informed the Master that Sir Humprey Davey’s book on divine incarnation had
stated that “divine truth must made human truth” and that “divine incarnation is
necessary,” he rejoiced: "Splendid! That’s a nice statement."205 “I shall make the whole
thing public before I go,” declared the dying patient enigmatically. “When people in
large numbers will know and whisper about (the greatness) of this body, then the Mother
will take it back.”206 On 14 March 1886, Ramakrishna told Girish: “I see many forms of
God. Among them I see this form too” [referring to himself]. 207 Even as late as 9 April
65
1886, when his condition was fast deteriorating and he was finding it extremely difficult
to talk, he persisted in his conviction: ‘I have seen that He and the one who resides in my
heart is the same Person.” Narendra confirmed this claim, apparently to silence the
patient struggling with life and death: “Yes, yes! Soham—I am He.” Ramakrishna was
so obsessed with his divine identity that he went on talking about a clearly visible and yet
inaccessible “roof,” “Great Energy,” samadhi, and a snake. Whereupon Rakhal reminded
those present that the Master had already spoken a lot and asked everybody to stop
talking further.208
unshakable conviction that he was God by his performance rather than through his
sermons. A typical example of how he inspired awe among his visitors comes from a
report from the Brahmo press. According to it, the Brahmos initially regarded the
skepticism. Immediately after he had gone into a trance, Hriday Bhatchaj uttered OM
loudly and requested everybody to do so. After a while the paramahamsa came to and
laughed loudly and thereafter began a serious conversation excitedly. The Brahmo
preachers were dumbfounded at this sight and came to realize that the Master was no
He provided a strong reason for his devotees to believe in his divine status. He
individual in his own right. “Seeing God or an incarnation is the thing,” he added.210
However, “ordinary people do not know when an incarnation comes. He comes in secret.
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Only a few of his intimate [antaranga] devotees know.” 211 He also sounded a note of
warning that anyone considering his guru as a mere mortal could never make progress in
spiritual life.212 In this way the Master provided sufficient motivation to his devotees to
hasten to call him an incarnation publicly and loudly. Some of them showed an
extraordinary degree of enthusiasm and sincerity. When one day Ramakrishna reported
to his devotees on Harish’s rhetorical remark that Ramakrishna was the ultimate authority
to “pass all checks” before they could be cashed in a bank, M “listened to these words
with wonder...[and] realized that Sachchidananda, in the guise of guru, approved of all
checks.”213
The Master must have impressed ShriM profoundly. On one occasion he inquired
of his favorite devotee: “Well, do you find any similarity between me and any other
person? ... Like any paramahamsa?” Having received a satisfactorily negative reply from
M, he talked again about an achin [“unknown”] tree—“nobody can recognize it.” This
bit of talk drove Mahendranath to cogitate over the question: “Is whatever the Master
referred to called incarnation of God? Is this called [divine] lila through man? Is the
disarming simplicity:
Resting on a pillow the Master was holding conversation. He had said to M: “My legs are aching a bit. Could
you massage them gently?” He was thus listening to the sacred words right from the blessed mouth of his
generous and merciful Master while attending on his blessed lotus feet.215
67
When the disciple said that his Master was the aperture, as it were, through which one
could have a glimpse of the eternal, Ramakrishna was greatly pleased and patted M’s
back, saying, “You have done well by realizing this.”216 The Master is reported to have
If you seek knowledge of God, then seek it in man. He manifests Himself more in man. If you see a man of
ecstatic devotion, overflowing with prema, mad after God, intoxicated with His love, know then for certain that
He has descended.218
Once the paramahamsa asked a visitor straightaway: “Well, Ram and others call this
(showing his own person) an incarnation. Let me know what you think of it.” The
visitor replied that Shri Ramakrishna was more than a mere incarnation and that he
thought that the Master was Shiva Himself. Apparently elated, Ramakrishna blushed:
You have asked me to meditate on Shiva, but I can't, even though I try regularly. As soon as I sit down to
meditate, your smiling face appears radiant before me. I can never think of Shiva by removing it [the Master's
nonsense! But I know that I am like a tiny hair of yours. (Both laughed) Anyway, I had
lots of worries about you. I am relieved today.”219 The Master applied gentle persuasion
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to his devotees to convince them of his divinity. M reports how one day “suddenly Shri
There is no stranger here. That day when Harish was with me I saw Sachchidananda emerge from this sheath
[referring to his own body] and said: “I incarnate myself in every age.” I thought I was talking to myself in my
imagination. I kept quiet and heard Sachchidananda speak again: “Chaitanya, too, worshipped Shakti.”
listened to their Master in amazement and some of them even thought they were actually
note in the KM that he “touched a grain with his tongue and asked Surendra to distribute
the prasada [leavings of food ritually offered to a deity] to all others.”221 Often he would
play the role of a paramahamsa and even let his devotees know that he indeed is one
made by Kali. For example, M’s diary describes how Ramakrishna one day went into a
trance after listening to the sanai from the Nahavatkhana (music room where the sanai
players perch for their performance) and began to see the form of Brahman in the ants
then began to laugh like an excited boy and “his eyes looked like those that radiate bliss
following a wondrous vision.” Next he began to converse with the Divine Mother and
was heard praying to Kali: “Ma, the paramahamsa is but a little kid. Doesn’t a child
need his mother? Therefore you are my Ma and I am your child.” M thought that “the
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Master...has become a paramahamsa to inspire his faith and discrimination as well as for
which his befuddled devotees beheld Mother Kali in him. M records an interesting
incident that occurred on the evening of the festival of Kali (Kalipuja) in 1885.
Ramakrishna was in an advanced stage of his terminal cancer but he still participated
ecstatically in the kirtana and dancing. His dances, trances, and songs completely
overwhelmed his devotees, among them especially Latu and a youngster named Khoka
(nickname of Manindra), who experienced samadhi. 223 Then at seven, during the dark
night of the new moon (amavashya), Kali worship was arranged in Ramakrishna's room.
The Master asked his devotees to meditate, who, prodded by Ram, Girish, M, Rakhal,
and others, offered fragrant flowers “at the lotus feet of the Master,” while the devotee,
Niranjan, prostrated himself before his guru calling him “Brahmamayi” (another
appellation of the Goddess Kali) loudly. All others cried out “Hail Ma.” M describes the
iconographic transformation in the Master’s posture that speaks eloquently of his skill in
impersonation:
Gradually Shri Ramakrishna goes into deep samadhi. How strange! The devotees are witnessing a miraculous
transformation. The Master’s countenance has lighted up with a heavenly glow. His two hands have assumed
the posture of bestowing boons and security. He sits facing north, motionless without any consciousness of the
external world. Is the Jagajjanani [Mother of the Universe] manifesting Herself through him? The amazed
devotees are beholding the awesome specter of the Mother of the Universe, bestower of bounty.224
70
Daniel Bassuk writes, the Hindu concept of an avatara, meaning literally, “the one who
descends” (that is, the God who crosses, passes, comes, or appears), endows the Deus-
homo or Godman with special qualities and realities, especially the distinction of a
an elect. Hindus have always recognized certain individuals as Godmen and all
between two categories of incarnation: general and special. The general incarnation
represents God in man, whereas the special incarnation God made man. All human
beings are part of the divine, but only a select few, or in other words a few elects, are
one and his claim was a part and parcel of the Hindu incarnational tradition.
development in Hinduism. The Aryans in the age of the Vedas and the Upanisads never
subscribed to a belief in an avatara. Rama of the Ramayana was a human prince and
indeed considered as a man whose odyssey surpassed that of other men (Mahabharata,
Vanaparvam, 273/12, 274/1, Dronaparvam, 59/1, 24-25). Krishna was regarded human
by his contemporaries. His divinity was an interpolation by the writers of the Bhagavata
of a much later date. Above all, as Amalkumar Ray observes, “incarnationism suffers
from a built-in apostasy in that an incarnation usurps the unique status of God.”226
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IV
Perhaps the individual who best understood the complex character of this androgynous
godman was his friend, physician, and critic, Mahendralal Sarkar.227 Ramakrishna had
been placed under his care by October 1885. Dr. Sarkar was a busy homeopath of
Calcutta. He was a well-cultivated rational individual who loved the Master for his
childlike simplicity but did not hesitate to object to his playing God. “It isn’t nice that
you place your foot on others’ bodies in ecstasy,” Sarkar admonished Ramakrishna. The
Master responded: “This is due to madness, what can I do? Divine ecstasy makes me
mad.” The doctor now observed his patient “expresses regret for what he does” and is
“aware that the act is wrong.” Having been cornered by this unaccustomed assault,
“You’re clever. Why can’t you say something? Why don’t you explain to him?” Girish
sought to proffer an explanation. “You’re mistaken, Sir,” he told Mahendralal. “His own
body is pure, untouched by sin. He touches others for their own good. Sometimes he
thinks that he might be ill by taking others’ sins upon himself.” 228 Dr. Sarkar perhaps
rightly felt that Ramakrishna’s devotees were unduly pampering their Master and
entreated Girish not to turn “the head of this good man” by treating him as God or a
godman. Narendra hastened to explain: “I do not say that he is God but that he is a
godlike man.”229
public-supported divinity. He also could not match Dr. Sarkar’s wit. He thus feebly
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protested like a child: “You told me that you loved me.” The doctor replied with all
sincerity:
I say this because you’re a child of nature. It hurts me to see people salute you by touching your feet. I feel they
are spoiling such a good man. Keshab Sen was spoiled that way by his devotees. Listen to me. . .
This was too much for the ailing incarnation to stomach. He exploded calling Sarkar
“greedy, lustful, and egotistic.”230 Yet Sarkar calmly reminded the patient that in a
discussion he must be allowed to speak his mind freely. When Ramakrishna asked him to
read the scriptures (something he had not done himself), the doctor curtly pointed out that
control his temperament. The Master confessed helplessly: “What can I do? I become
unconscious in that mood and hence am ignorant of what I do.”231 Sarkar sincerely told
Ramakrishna: “Certainly I respect you and show you my regard as people do to human
beings.”232 What the good doctor said was his reason for loving and respecting
the man’s worth: “You should know that I like you so much because of your love of
truth. You never deviate a hair’s breadth from what you know as true in your speech and
action.”233
Even the Master’s admiring Brahmo devotee Trailokyanath Sanyal once told him
that “the Infinite Power is not and cannot be manifested through man, however great he
may be.”234 Another admirer, the Brahmo preacher Protap Mozoomdar, wrote after
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Ramakrishna’s death: “We have nothing but respectful affection for the memory of the
Paramahamsa; but the Divine perfection devotees thoughtlessly impute to him harms his
name and forces us sometimes to speak the sober truth.”235 Three other men refused to
recognize Ramakrishna’s divinity. We have already seen how Hriday, the Master’s
nephew and companion, actually regarded him a moron. 236 Pratap Hazra never
considered his illustrious village neighbor as “anything more than a holy man” and even
argued, “what does it matter whether an incarnation of God exists or not?”237 Still another
was the leading pandit of the time, Shashadhar Tarkachudamani. He met the saint of
Dakshineshwar on June 25, 1884 and was not impressed by him. In a letter to his
the enthusiastic and unthinking people. Even if he was regarded as such by his guru
Totapuri, the appellation was inappropriate because Shashadhar never observed the
some general knowledge which might have been of some use to those who are absolutely
simple hearted and honest soul,” at best an avadhuta, but nothing more.238 Dr. Sarkar
told M on 14 February 1886 in plain terms that “by calling their Master incarnation his
whom he later regarded as somewhat of a moron (haba), claimed that she impregnated by
a draft of air that emanated from a Shiva temple and penetrated her womb with a terrific
force.240 Since infancy, Ramakrishna had been reputed for his larger than life like stature.
To his mother, the infant Gadai appeared as a tall young man.241 As a boy he was
considered either a Krishna or a Shiva by his villagers. The adult Ramakrishna became a
Godman—even more, a living God. Perhaps he was painfully aware of the sham with
which his life was enveloped. On being accused by Shashadhar that his spiritual
exercises had degenerated due to bad company, Ramakrishna admitted that the pandit
was right and that he was unable to avoid bad company in spite of his best efforts. “I’ve
fallen in their clutches,” the saint lamented. “There is no way of getting out of them now.
It must be realized that Ramakrishna was fully aware of his avatara reputation as
something he perhaps needed to make him popular among his devotees, admirers, and
visitors. Yet he was sensible enough to realize its artificiality, even absurdity. During his
terminal illness his Brahmo friend Shivanath Shastri once told him in a spirit of jest: “As
there are many editions of a books there have been many editions of God Almighty and
your disciples are about to make you a new one.” To this the dying patient responded
with a touch of irony mingled with sincerity: “Just fancy, God Almighty dying of cancer
in the throat. What great fools these fellows must be!”243 In fact he never approved of
February 1886, following a hemorrhage from his cancerous throat, the Master told Naren:
160LR,162. The tarkalankar even went to the length of proclaiming that Ramakrishna was “the one who creates
incarnations of God.” FM, 21.
164FM, 11-12.
166Ibid., 36-37.
167Ramakrishna is reported to have said that Mathur used to be fearful of lawsuits resulting from charges of murder and
confess his sins to him in order to save himself from danger. LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 179.
168RH, 136-37.
170LR, 240.
172Dhar, Vedanta and Bengal Renaissance, 129-33. Biswas’s original estates were located at Satkshira in Tala village
and later he came to manage the huge estates at Shalbari Pargana in Dinajpur (present Bangladesh) purchased from
Trialokyanath Tagore of the famous Tagore family of Jorasanko, Calcutta. Personal interview with Mr. Priyagopal
Hazra, one of the descendants of the Rani through the female line, at the Rasmani residence in Janbazar, Calcutta (10
September 1989).
175See Datta’s three lectures on Ramakrishna after the latter’s death. Ramachandrer Vaktritabali delivered at the Star
Theater in north Calcutta (1299-1300 B.E.). I used a handcopied version which did not provide the publishing details.
176LV, I, 155-56.
177RA, I, 44-46.
76
182LR, 255.
183LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 371. Shambhu Mallik had earlier (sometime during 1874-75) read parts of the Bible to the
Master. Along with Mathuranath, Ramakrishna had visited the Wesleyan Methodist Church at Surendranath Banerjee
Road (Janbazar), Calcutta and seen the performance of the Mass from outside. Sometime after 11 May, 1882, he visited
the Holy Trinity Church at Raja Rammohan Sarani (formerly Amherst Street), Calcutta. Swami Prabhananda,
“Ramakrishna’s Interactions with Christianity,” 31.
185AP, 2-3. M adds (though he does not include it in the KM) that the Master “offered namaz five times a day like the
Muslims.” Swami Nityatmananda, M., Apostle & Evangelist, V, 114: M’s conversation with Dr. E.M. Hummel of the
United States. See also Pravrajika Atmaprana, ed. & comp. Ramakrishner Dakshineshwar, 70-72.
189Her Devotee-Children, Gospel of the Holy Mother, 128. The idea of becoming “the scapegoat of humanity”
is
quite common in India. See R. Rolland, Prophets of New India, 247 n.7. Ramakrishna's several devotees
such as
Viswanath Upadhyay Ghimiray (“Kapten” or “Captain”), Ram Datta, Girish Ghosh, Kalipada Ghosh and
others
201RC, I, 121-22.
206LR, 571-72.
209Ghosh, Ramakrishnadev, 2.
226VP, 91.
227For a succinct biographical sketch of this learned physician see Shivanath Shastri, Rachanasamgraha, I, 418-25. See
also the three very interesting short biographies: Jaladhikumar Sarkar, Shriramakrishner Daktar; Manoranjan Gupta,
Mahendralal Sarkar; Chittabrata Palit and Subrata Pahari, Mahendralal Sircar.
231KM, II, 219; I, 240 (GR, 910, 891). Diaries of 29 & 26 October 1885.
233Cited in LP, II (Thakurer Divyabhava O Narendranath), 291. It is a pity that Dr. Sarkar’s personal diary containing
his experiences with Ramakrishna as his patient is lost. According to Shri Nrisimharamanuja Das of Balaram
Dharmasabha, Khardah, West Bengal, Dr. Sarkar’s daughter had taken her father's diary to the Ramakrishna Mission at
Belur for its publication, but the Mission authorities, reportedly, misplaced the manuscript and it has been missing since.
Personal interview with Shri Das (22 December 1995).
235Mozoomdar's article in the Interpreter (1900) cited in Surath Chakravarti, Ramakrishna Paramahamser Pramanya
Jivani, 37.
238RV, 5-6: Tarkachudamani’s letter to Padmanath Bhattacharya (25 Paus 1327 B.E.). I thank Nrisimharamanuja Das
240RC, “ga” and “gha” (i.e., iii & iv). At this time Chandra’s husband Kshudiram was away from home, visiting Gaya, in
Bihar.
242The tarkachudamani’s letter to Padmanath cited in RV, 10-11. For a succinct biographical sketch of Shashadhar, see
CHAPTER FOUR
Ramakrishna’s Gynephobia
By continence you will buy up a great stock of sanctity, by making savings on the flesh, you will be able to
invest in the Spirit [Per continentiam enim negotiaberis magnam substantiam sanctitatis, parsimonia carnis
spiritum acquires].
Ramakrishna was repulsed by women. Above all, he harbored a pathological hatred and
fear of heterosexual contact or thought. “If my body is touched by a woman I feel sick,”
he confessed to Dr. Mahendralal Sarkar. “The touched part aches as if stung by a horned
catfish.”245 There may be several explanations for such an attitude. We must, of course,
discount a devotee’s belief that Ramakrishna’s celibate life was based upon his mother’s
admonition to him that he was like a son to all women after he had been caught peeking
at bathing women in the village pond.246 Apparently it revealed his ascetic aversion for
from anxiety.247 According to one writer, “this attitude in part reflects Ramakrishna's high
caste background, in which the social separation of the sexes is the norm.”248 Still another
scholar, a political scientist, has suggested that “the figure of woman kamini, and the
signified a social world of everyday transactions in which the family man was held in
bondage.”249 The Master’s stern admonition against this bondage was meant to guide the
male to the path of freedom—liberation—which is the true goal. Such an idea formed
part of Ramakrishna's cultural heritage constituting, inter alia, popular religious beliefs
“in which the female in her essence of prakriti, the principle of motion or change, is
and death in the male whose essence of purusa represents the principle of stasis or
rest.”250 Indeed, the Master’s most favorite book which he recommended to all young
devotees was the Mukti Evang Tahar Sadhan which, inter alia, cited Shankaracharya’s
Maniratnamala counseling men seeking liberation to give up women who are devil
incarnate. The Mukti extolled the efficacy of unmarried life and celebrated the celibates,
All these explanations, however, do not explain the matter fully. Ramakrishna’s
contempt for women was basically a misogynist attitude of an insecure male, who
thought of himself as a woman in order to fight his innate fear of the female. “I am
devour me. Besides, I see large pores in their limbs. I find all of them as ogres.” 252 He
seeing his ecstatic state that “the Divine Mother has gripped him, like a tiger grabbing a
man” and added: “I was young then, quite plump and always in ecstasy.”253
Ramakrishna’s vision of woman possessing large holes all over her body was most
certainly his exaggerated fear of the vagina. The memory of his frequent childhood
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encounters with the adult women of Kamarpukur might have later suggested to him the
reason for their infatuation with a cuddly ecstatic boy. The experience might have
induced a mixed reaction in him: pleasant and yet repulsive. As a young man he
harbored this ambivalence. Satyacharan Mitra writes about Ramakrishna’s feeling of lust
after staring at the curves of a full figured young woman on the bank of the Ganges in
wet sari through which “the beauty of her body had become acutely
accentuated” [soundaryer prakharata vardhita] and then his running back home like a
mad man weeping and praying to Kali to calm him down.254 Hence he contemptuously
described the female body as nothing but “such things as blood, flesh, fat, entrails,
worms, piss, shit, and the like.” 255 He thus insisted on disciplining, even discarding, if
need be, intransigent spouses who kept their husbands away from spiritual company with
their multiple mundane demands. “Abandon your wife,” Ramakrishna thundered, “if she
creates obstacle in the way to God. Let her even kill herself or do whatever she can.”256
pathetically at the insinuation of sex. During the period of his so-called divine madness,
his relatives and employers became concerned over his condition which they thought was
the outcome of his relentless continence. Once, his nephew Hriday procured a prostitute
in order to entice his uncle from the path of divine to carnal love. When Ramakrishna
sighted the temptress, he was overtaken with a mortal fear of being stung by a poisonous
snake.257 When Rasmani and Mathur tried to relieve the young high strung priest of his
almost died at the sight of the whores. He lost consciousness and his genitals
83
(deliberately described in such innocuous term as “organ”) contracted and recoiled into
his body “like the limbs of a tortoise.”258 Even the most provocatively erotic pose of a
young woman in the Nabarasik hangout at Kachibagan, near Calcutta, where he went in
had taken his big toe into her mouth. It is not clear but it is quite suggestive of an act of
fellatio, though not quite this act.259 He seemed to have remained impervious to the
provocation by another woman who made “a very obscene gesture” [ati kutsit bhav], but
Ramakrishna appears to have suffered from what the Chinese call koro, [virility
anxiety], quite common among passive and dependent East and South Asian males.261
When Ramakrishna attempted to make love to his teenage wife and stretched his hands to
embrace her, “within the flash of a moment someone drained him of his libido, that is,
jivaner vidyut shakti [electric energy of life], and he completely lost his
He remarked: “I used to be quite afraid of women and never allowed them to come close.
Now I train my mind with great difficulty to see them as manifestations of the Blissful
Mother.”263 He frankly reported his conversation with Saradamani: “One day while I was
in ecstasy, my wife asked me, ‘who am I to you?’ ‘The Blissful Mother,’ I replied.”264 A
anonymous crazy woman (pagli)--though not quite clinically insane but who could be
probably she had a crush on the famous Godman priest of the Kali temple. As
One day she came to Dakshineshwar and began to weep suddenly. “Why are you crying?” I inquired. And she
said: “I have a headache.” She came another day as I was sitting down to eat my lunch. She suddenly said,
“Why have you been so cruel to me?” I went on eating innocently. Then she said, “Why do you avoid me?” I
asked her: “What is your bhava?” She replied: “Madhura.” I told her: “Don’t you know that I have woman’s
nature [amar ye matriyoni]? All women are like mother to me.” And she said, “Oh, I didn’t know that!”265
overture:
As a reaction to such an antagonistic sentiment, the Master was thrown so violently into a fit of childlike protest
that he jumped up from his seat instantaneously, his cloth dropped from his loins, and he began to pace the room
like a madman, cursing such a relationship in the strongest terms he could muster.266
II
hysterical, he gained a reputation for his respectable attitude to them. In one of his
I myself have seen this man standing before those women whom society would not touch, and falling at their
feet, bathed in tears, saying, “Mother, in one form Thou art in the street, and in another form Thou art the
The Swami either was quite innocent of his Master’s real attitude
toward women or chose not to analyze it, or worse, he simply added his own version to
a couple of whores standing on the balcony. I felt I saw the Goddess Herself and I bowed
divine was part of his psychic defense against temptation. Satyacharan Mitra reports on
the Master's “Waterloo” or “Kurukshetra” battle with temptation when he was sent by his
employer Mathur to a room full of ravishing prostitutes. When the young temptresses
disrobed the flabbergasted priest and grasped his genitals and “squeezed him in various
obscene ways, he began to weep profusely and pray to them calling them Goddess
Kali.”269
The fact of the matter is that the Master’s behavior to prostitutes among strangers
or new acquaintances contrasted sharply and radically with his real attitude to them,
expressed in the presence of his known friends and devotees. During the initial stages of
his acquaintance with Girish Ghosh, Ramakrishna one day met some of the actresses of
the Star Theater, where he had been invited by Ghosh to watch a theatrical performance.
As M reports:
After the play, the actresses were instructed by Girish to meet ørã Ramakrishna and salute him. They entered the
room and, to the utter surprise of the devotees who stood or sat there, saluted the Master by touching his feet.
While they touched his feet, the Master said, “It’s enough, mother, it’s all right.” Those were truly kind words.270
86
Similarly, he admonished a young devotee who had confessed that he could not
bear the presence even of little girls. “You talk like a fool!” Ramakrishna told him.
“Look down upon woman! What for? They are the manifestations of the Divine
Mother.”271 He even urged Gauri-ma (Mridani Chattopadhyay) to dedicate her life to the
cause of women who were “in a sad plight.”272 He in fact proved his indifference to
gender discrimination by coming down from his bed and sitting close to some visiting
women devotees who attempted to move away from the paramahamsa. He declared:
“Why feel shy? Nothing will be gained as long as the three things—shame, hatred, and
fear—persist. (Waving his hand) I am the same as you. But you feel shy because of this
(showing his beard), isn’t it?” 273 It seems that he had little problem with women
However, his real cultural bias against whores never left the Master. After having
Ramakrishna, reportedly, suffered from a burning sensation in his feet they had touched
and was relieved only after washing the “contaminated” limb with the Ganges water.274 A
similar example of his antagonistic attitude to prostitutes may be seen in his violent
Like one startled and pained when stung by a scorpion, Shri Ramakrishna stood up, shaken, uttering “Govinda!
Govinda!” He hurried near the big pot of Ganga water that was in one corner of the room and washed the spot of
87
his feet touched by Bhagavati. The few devotees in the room watched in silent wonder. The maid sat there as if
struck dead.275
These incidents clearly reveal Ramakrishna’s caste and moral paranoia for the whores in
general and particularly for the low born Bhagavati who had been a street-walker in her
youth. His attitude to another old woman, a reformed prostitute, was equally hostile.
Even after having been told by his wife that the woman in question “talks now only of
Hari,” he said disdainfully, “Pooh, pooh! A public woman! To think of chatting with her,
whatever the extenuating factors! What a nasty idea!”276 The Master’s enlightened insight
expressed in public—“All female wombs are maternal wombs and thus I do not
The same conclusion may be made in respect of Vivekananda’s claim that his
Master’s “lips never cursed anyone, never ever criticized anyone. Those eyes were
beyond the possibility of seeing evil, that mind had lost the power of thinking evil. He
saw nothing but good.”278 Admittedly, Ramakrishna sometimes showed a liberal and
tolerant attitude to the prostitutes. He, reportedly, counseled some whores of his village
concerned for their salvation that if they considered only one man as their god, they
would be saved and not if they cohabited with several men.279 His conflicting attitude of
condescension and contempt for whores is also illustrated by his sketch of a smoking
prostitute on 21 January 1886 on deathbed.280 Most possibly the Master was troubled by
his “whore” consciousness. Probably he often compared their devotion to their calling to
a sannyasi’s hypocritical or insincere devotion to the divine. He once related the story of
a prostitute's confessing to her sinful occupation by default and an ascetic’s peeking into
88
her room to count how many customers she entertained every night and then after their
death the whore's reward in heaven and the monk's punishment in hell. 281
“One must not trust that race [of women]. Women ought to cook only....Only cooking
helps them become good.”282 The target of this obloquy was none other than his own wife
Sarada and her sister-in-law Lakshmi who, he feared, would stare at men [all the time] if
they were not kept busy. He thus advised his householder devotees: “Never trust your
wife even if she is devoted to God [bhaktimati].”283 He also preached: “Never trust a
woman even if she rolls down on the floor weeping in devotion.” 284
Is it easy to achieve a reliance on god? Look at the doings of Mahamaya who creates hurdles in this regard!
One who has nobody to turn to [presumably a widow] would still engage into relational complications
through a domesticated cat, thinking “What to do? That cat takes nothing but milk and fish.” Consider a
rich aristocratic household where all the males—husbnads and sons—are dead leaving a bunch of rahndis
[a vulgar term for widows]. They don’t die! The house is breaking down here and there, a large tree as well
as a few wild stalks have grown on rooftop. The widows pluck the stalks and cook to maintain themselves.
Why can’t they call on god? Why not take refuge in Bhagavan? Isn’t it the proper moment now? No, they
won’t do that!
Again, suppose someone becomes a child widow [kade rhandi] soon after marriage. Why can’t she call on
god? No, she becomes the head of her brother-in-law’s family! With a braid on her head like a crow [kaga
khonpa] and dangling a bunch of keys on her shoulder, she moves around like the mistress of the
household. All men in the neighborhood dread this dangerous dame [sarvanashi]! And she goes about
averring: “My brother (in-law) can’t have his meal without me!” Go to hell, bitch [mar, magi]! You don’t
The above is, according to the paramahamsa’s hagiographer, an example of how the
His gynephobia was so trenchant that he advised his devotee Narayan to cover
himself with a thick wrapper in order to keep his holy body safe from the blast of profane
air emanating from all women except his mother.286 He made his point about the
inexorable immoral influence of women in his characteristic language: “No matter how
much care you take in the room of collyrium [kajal, designating women, who use it as
mascara], you can’t avoid being stained a little.”287 He went to the length of insisting that
“the company of a young woman evokes lust even in a lustless man.”288 Masson makes a
very important point in respect of the ascetic anxiety for lust: “The ascetic exists, because
for contact.”289 Malcolm McLean shrewdly observed that “Ramakrishna seemed to see
women predominantly in sexual terms.” 290 The Master himself confessed: “Listen, lust
lingers until God is realized. Even then, as long as the body lasts, a little of it persists;
but then it cannot surface. Do you think I myself am altogether free from it?”291 It is
manifestly clear that Ramakrishna was troubled by his natural attraction for women, and
III
The Master, however, understood the need for flexibility in his sermons against
sexuality. In order not to repulse his admirers or drive them away from his spiritual
90
added: “But it is not harmful for a wise man to have sex with his own wife. Discharge of
semen is just like ridding the body of excreta—it is like pissing or shitting, not to be
while.”292 He in fact declared that “forcible renunciation of the world is not good” and
preached: “Discharge your worldly obligations and call on God as well.”293 He was also
semen lost in wet dreams does not cause any harm. It can be obtained from food. What remains after the
discharge is enough...[and] very refined....[But] ejaculation is extremely harmful for ascetics...[and therefore] it is
not good even to look at a woman...[as] there will be ejaculation in dream, if not in the waking state.294
One day “father” went out suddenly while talking with Mathur and returned with a sad face, and asked Mathur,
“Could you tell me what this disease is? I saw a worm going out of my body with the urine.” On hearing this
Mathur said [by way of reassuring the distraught young priest]: “It’s all right, father.” Everyone has a lust-worm
in his body. It produces evil thoughts and prompts evil actions. That lust-worm has left your body by the grace
that he enjoined his disciples to practice it for the sake of understanding spiritual sermons
semen, one simply cannot comprehend all this” [sermons].297 This obsession with control
is part of what Spratt calls “narcissistic psyche.” 298 Hindus generally believe that “a man
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who possesses a store of...good semen becomes a super-man.”299 Indeed the Manusmriti
clearly and categorically explicates what the Randolphs have called “sexual and moral
hydrostatics…when one among the organs slips away from control, thereby a man’s
wisdom slips away from him, even as the water flows through the one open foot of a
water-carrier's skin.”300 Agehananda Bharati writes that “Patanjali and the classical yoga
spoke of ojas, a sort of hierogenetic power residing in, or embodied by the semen which
has not been shed.”301 Masson observed that the “sexual fantasies of immense prowess
are of course only the other side of the coin from constant fears of sexual depletion.”302
Thus the conquest of carnality is the primary condition for spiritual realization. Hence
river-side” that “brought crowds of people who bitterly cried when he cried...”.303
the male reflects a deep-seated anxiety typical of high-caste Hindus. In order to explain
this anxiety, we need to have some idea of the split mother-image of the Hindu woman,
whose unrequited sexual expectations are sublimated into her close and erotically charged
relationship with the son. When the child grows up and is detached from the physical
closeness of his mother, he develops an anxiety which creates an image of his mother as
cruel and capricious (who arbitrarily withdraws affection and thus punishes him). This
image of the bad mother is related psychically to the growing son’s anxiety and fear of
maternal incest. And when the child finally develops into an adult, he harbors a fear of a
sexually mature woman and sees her, on the one hand, as an instrument for procuring a
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male heir and, on the other hand and by the same token, as “a safe mother who, frustrated
in her sexual dealings with her husband, transfers such feelings to the newborn son, thus
perpetuating the syndrome.” 304 A byproduct of this psychosocial situation is the culturally
sanctioned sanctimonious contempt for the woman who is feared for her insatiable sexual
desire and her threat to male virility. The woman is thus at once an object of sexual
desire and an instrument to perpetuating the family line and an object of sexual fear and
anxiety “generated by maternal incest danger, which may in turn create negative feelings
towards women.”305
IV
preoccupation with sex but also an obsession with what Masson calls “displaced
distinguished an avatara from ordinary mortals by arguing that even after having
renounced lust an ordinary fellow sometimes “forgets his vow” and “cannot control
himself.” To clinch his argument he adduced a fantastic but sexually quite explicit
example. “A lion is carnivorous and yet mates once in twelve years,” he said, “but a
sparrow eats grain and copulates day and night.”307 Even after having listened to a
melodious kirtana and having delivered a discourse on prema—“that love of God which
makes one oblivious of the world and even of one’s body”--Ramakrishna unhesitatingly
harped on the problems of human sex. A little while ago, he heard a song which had a
line saying that a sannyasi must not look at a woman because it is his dharma, and now
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he elaborated on the line by adding: “A sannyasi should not only desist from sexual
intercourse with a woman but he must not even hold a social discourse with her.” 308
In order to drive home the point that “one cannot explain the vision of God to
others” he said that “one cannot make a boy of five understand the pleasures of sex
between husband and wife.”309 While lecturing on the various Vaishnava bhavas, he
referred to shanta, the serene, attitude of the ascetics,” which he likened to “the wife’s
bhava was, however, madhura, which he defined as “the attitude of Shrimati, that is,
Radha.”310 He of course said that “the gopis [Radha was a gopi] did not experience lust”
presumably because they made love to Krishna, who was God. The implication is that
love for God is lustless or immaculate, even though it is not clear whether love or “lust”
for God does not generate erotic sentiments.311 He, however, considered swear words
(khisti or kheyur) as meaningful as the Vedas and the Puranas and was particularly fond
of performing japa (ritual counting of rosary) by muttering the word “cunt.” He told his
devotees: “The moment I utter the word ‘cunt’ I behold the cosmic vagina, which is Ma
After having heard Prahlada’s story from the Bhaktamal how that divinely
delirious boy sang a hymn to Narasingha, the half-human and half-lion form of Lord
Visnu, who was “affectionately licking Prahlada's body,” Ramakrishna was entranced and
sat motionless with tearful eyes. Having recovered from his samadhi, he began his anti-
sex routine “expressing anger and disgust for those who, while remaining on the path to
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God, still continue sexual relationship with women.” His vehemence was directed
Have you no shame? You have kids and yet don’t mind copulating with your wife! It’s sheer animality! Don't you
hate mucus, blood, piss and shit, and the like? One who meditates on the lotus feet of God regards even the
prettiest woman as mere ash of the cremation ground. How could anyone like a body that will not last and is
made up of such dirty stuff as worms, filth, and phlegm! Aren't you ashamed of yourself?
M listened to these invectives with head hung low in shame. The effect was quite
satisfactory to the lover of the divine. He was ecstatic and danced, singing: “Who sings
Hari’s name on the bank of the Suradhani [Ganges] It must be Nitai [Nityananda, an
associate of Shri Chaitanya], the bestower of prema [divine love], who's come.” 313
Though Ramakrishna believed that there is no fun in sexual intercourse and that
“the realization of God brings million-fold happiness,” his description of this Seligkeit or
divine euphoria was full of sex symbolism. To give an idea of the happiness of
Tarkabhusan of Indesh: “With the attainment of mahabhava or divine ecstasy all the
pores of the body, even the roots of the hair, become a great vagina, mahayoni, and in
every pore one feels the pleasure of intercourse with atman."314 As Sudhir Kakar
explains, this classic tantric sexual metaphor describes sexual embrace “as if each pore of
the skin were a vulva and intercourse were taking place over the whole body...”. This
constitutes the “supreme bliss” for a Tantrika sadhaka and, minus the “mystical
Catherine Clément provides an interesting analytical term “ego orgasm” that “invades the
body, the skin, the consciousness.” “It has everything,” she writes further, “that the other
orgasm has, except the coupling.” Ramakrishna’s mahabhava could thus be a state of
ego orgasm.316
their precise import or intent. He in fact invented a special vocabulary in order to render
his stark sexual attitude to God mystical and mysterious. “God can’t be seen with
physical eyes,” he declared. “In the course of spiritual exercise,” he continued, “one gets
a body of prema and ears and eyes of prema. One sees God with those eyes, and hears
His voice with those ears. One even gets genitals of prema.” This statement of the
Master, however, drove even a docile devotee like M (to whom Ramakrishna directed this
apparently unruffled: “the soul copulates with this body of prema.”317 Curiously enough,
Ramakrishna’s thinking in this regard resembles that of the desert monk of the fourth
century, John Cassian, who sought to conquer his lust by dreaming that God had
(lust) and prema or priti (love or absence of kama) and argues that “the absence of kama
does not mean chaste, platonic love” but a situation in which love-making is not
interrupted by the spilling of semen. Indeed, Krishna the lover-God is often called
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Achyuta (“unfallen” or “the one whose seed does not fall”). 320 It is known that the idea of
divine love springs from an intense desire to enjoy love-making eternally. As Walter Otto
has observed, any carnal attraction is but ephemeral. Male “passions are cooled by
transient moments of possession.” Divine love, that is, Dionysiac love, “is ecstatic and
binds him to the loved one forever.”321 According to a psychiatrist, mysticism can be
extended far beyond the mere enjoyment of pleasure even though mystic experience is
often a means of expressing a multitude of sublimated sexual needs and desires. 322
hint of his practicing masturbation in his youth. “During the days of my madness I used
to worship my own penis as the Shiva linga,” he once said. “Worship of a live linga. I
even decorated it with a pearl, something I can't do now-a-days.”324 Most probably the
“worship” was a ritual masturbation and the “pearl” actually a drop of his semen. There
may be other explanations for this strange ritual. It is quite possible that the women of
Kamarpukur, devotees of Shiva linga like most Hindu women, worshipped child Gadai’s
penis, believing the boy to be God. In fact, he had already earned reputation as an
incarnation of Shiva after his samadhi while enacting Shiva’s role in his village opera.
He once took his future disciple, the young Gangadhar Ghatak (or Gangopadhyay, later
Swami Akhandananda) inside the Kali temple at Dakshineshwar, entered into samadhi,
put off his clothes, and told the teenager to look at the live Shiva. “The boy Gangadhar
was enchanted and entranced. He did behold the Lord Shiva.”325 Then, Ramakrishna’s
penile obsession might have been inspired by his naked Vedanta mentor, Totapuri the
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nyangta. This hulky Punjabi monk, reportedly, inducted young Gadadhar into Advaita
Vedanta after having “pierced” his forehead with a sharp hard object (a piece of broken
glass). The hidden meaning of this initiation into Vedantic practice is, most probably, a
contorted account of the fact that he experienced some sort of “penetration” by a big male
inside a bush, resulting in his loss of consciousness (samadhi). Tota was so taken by the
ecstatic young man that he stayed at Dakshineshwar longer than his usual tenure at any
spot.
Ramakrishna’s later aversion to sex might have been caused as much by his own
well as physical infirmities especially during his advancing years.326 Either due to
became incapacitated for any normal sexual activity, even for normal conjugal relations
with his young wife. And, as we have noted earlier, he lamented to M over his failure in
this regard.327 Shivanath Shastri, the Brahmo devotee of the Master, writes:
One day finding me complaining of some friends assembled there, about the virtual widowhood of his wife, he
drew me to himself and whispered in my ears: “Why do you complain? It’s no longer possible, it’s all dead and
gone.”328
Even after having been told by a practicing Tantrika, Achalananda, that Lord Shiva
Himself approved of a spiritual adept’s heroic (vira) attitude to women (involving sexual
relationship), Ramakrishna the godly saint persisted: “I don't know why, I don't like all
that. Mine is the attitude of a child.”329 He told Girish that “the hero's mood...in which
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one looks upon prakriti as a woman and aspires to satisfy her by sexual intercourse leads
repression by placing naked prostitutes before him with a noose tied around his neck for
tightening it in case he felt “the desire for carnal gratification” may be dismissed as
apocryphal at best.331
VI
Though contemptuous of the sex act, Ramakrishna developed quite a knack for
visions of active sex. During his final fatal illness, in a nostalgic mood, he related his
I saw a twenty-two or twenty-three years old young man, just like myself, enter the susumna nadi and engage in
fellatio with the cunt-shaped lotuses: first with the anus, then the penis and the navel. The four-petalled, six-
petalled, and ten-petalled lotuses, which had been drooping, now stood erect.332
He also dreamt of the soul with a lolling tongue of fire touch dirt and taste shit. This
dream would be followed by another showing a roomfull of his associates. The Master
recalled how he used to “cry out loud with a longing heart” for devotees: “Where are you
all? Come down over here! I am dying to see you.” 333 “I saw with my own eyes that
[God] dwells even in the vagina,” he told M. “I saw this during the mating of a dog and a
bitch.”334 Most probably, he learnt to witness sexual act at the behest of his Tantrika
Unable to make her adept participate in live sex as the consummation of tantric sadhana,
she finally succeeded in persuading him to witness the so-called heroic rite. As
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Ramakrishna recalls: “...I remember the day when I beheld in the supreme pleasure of
sex of a pair of lovers nothing but the blissful sport of Shiva and Shakti and was
As we shall see later, to Ramakrishna any pleasant sensation, deriving from food,
music, or company, was divine. Obviously the sight of human lovemaking induced
samadhi in him. Similarly, the sight of canine copulation also transported him into
ecstasy and revealed to him the face of God. The impact of such spectacle must have
been deep. No wonder he claimed to have beheld the entire universe engaged in raman
or sexual activity. And this vision was divinely inspired and induced:
One day [the Divine Mother] showed me Shiva and Shakti copulating with each other. Shiva and Shakti
existing in men, animals, trees, and plants--male and female! And [all] engaged in copulation.” 337
Probably Gadadhar had witnessed sex act at Janbazar where, during the period of his so-
called “madness,” he was made to sleep in the bedroom of Mathur and his wife
moment. He even described it as “lolling flame” (lak lak korto).339 This cosmic
toilet. As a child he had seen them bathing in his village pond and most probably also
answering calls of nature in the open, as was common practice among rural folks. This
childhood habit must have led him in his adult life to visions of whores defecating inside
100
the Kali temple and to his curiosity as to when and where his teenage wife would perform
her toilet. His curiosity in this regard reportedly alarmed Saradamani.341 Reportedly he
saw his wife naked when he undressed her and wrapped a new sari around her for the
Ramakrishna had a curious way of speaking of “hard” things and semen in the
same breath. He said: “But after the attainment of Saccidananda one finds that he
[Saccidananda] has become the universe and the living beings. The skin, the seeds, and
the flesh are made of the same substance...”. He also said: “Then one may inquire, ‘How
has Saccidananda become so hard?’ This earth does feel very hard to the touch. The
answer is that such a big creature as man comes out of such thin liquids as blood and
semen.” These two sentences appear to be full of sex symbolism: “hard Saccidànanda,”
“blood and semen,” “skin,” “seed,” “flesh,” “touch,” “feel,” et cetera. 343 Just before
these verities were pronounced, the Master had savored a number of erotic songs by
Trailokya Sanyal, the popular Brahmo singer. Ramakrishna repeated the same sermon to
Prankrishna Mukhopadhyay on another occasion: “Why does the earth feel so hard, if it
has come out of atman? All is possible through His will. It's because bone and flesh are
made from blood and semen. How hard sea-foam becomes!” 344
intercourse with atman and his garbled metaphors confusing Krishna, God, and
“hardened” Sachchidananda, the object of prema, and his protestations that he had not
“experienced sexual intercourse even in dream”345 coupled with his constant chirpings on
sensation of lust as perceived by those who will not recognize it as such, and who
interpret it as loathing because of the convulsive sensations common to both orgasm and
nausea.”346 Thus even though he made his contempt for the widows known to people,
Ramakrishna also seems to have found the erotic widow quite attractive. We have his
childhood fantasy to be reborn as a Brahmin widow in love with the lusty Lord Krishna.
as the one from such a fiery revolutionary of Bengal as Netaji Subhaschandra Bose that
“Ramakrishna’s example of renunciation and purity entailed a battle royal with all the
forces of the lower self” as pious and nationalistic ovation to a cultural icon.347
248Gatwood, Devi and Spouse Goddess, 177. While Ms. Gatwood is right in her observation on casteism,
she seems to be oblivious of the fact that as an adolescent Ramakrishna delighted in the company of women. That is, he
loved female company because he felt not as a man among women but as one of them.
249 Partha Chatterjee, “A Religion of Urban Domesticity” in P. Chatterjeee & Gyanendra Pandey, eds. Subaltern
250Ibid.
102
251Mukti Evang Tahar Sadhan, comp. Bipin Bihari Ghosal, 116-29. This is the unabridged edition of the original
253Ibid.
254JU, 34-35.
258LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 168. According to another version of the incident, only one Mechuabazar
259Bengali and north Indian prostitutes in the nineteenth century used to suck the toes of their male customers by way
of humbling and debasing themselves while pleading for a favor or a gift. See Sunil Gangopadhyay, Sei Samay.
260JV, 36.
262RD,108. Reportedly this incident was related by the Master’s wife Saradamani.
269JU, 37-38.
270KM, III, 114 (GR, 683). Diary of 14 December 1884. Ramakrishna took the help of one Mahendranath
Mukhopadhyay, a friend of Girish’s, in getting himself invited to the Star Theater. Sen, Ramakrishnapuïthi, 392.
271LR, 477.
103
272FM, p. 261.
273LP, I (Gurubhava—Purvardha), 32.
278CW, IV, 183: Lecture “My Master” delivered in New York and London (1896).
279AK, 158.
282RP, 191-92.
283MJ, 81.
287KM, IV, 83 (GR, 409). Diary of 23 March 1884; V, 55 (GR, 250). Diary of 17 June 1883.
295Carstairs, “Hinjra and Jiryan,” 134. Carstairs considers jiryan as “a culturally conditioned neurosis” (135).
296LP, I (Gurubhava—Purvardha), 217.
298Spratt, Hindu Culture and Personality, 92 (see also 14 ff for a discussion of the narcissus complex).
300Georg Bühler, Laws of Manu, Vol. XXV, ch. II, verse 99, p. 48 cited in Lloyd I. & Susan H. Rudoplh, Modernity of
Traditiion, 196.
305Ibid. For an insightful understanding of misogyny and emphasis on continence and celibacy among Christian monks
of Egypt and the Near East during the first through the fifth centuries A.D. see Brown, Body and Society, chs. XI-XV.
309KM, V, 118 (also III, 156) (GR, 429 and also 759). Diaries of 24 May 1884 and 12 April 1885.
310KM, III, 22 (GR, 115). Diary of 24 August 1882. Here we recall that Ramakrishna would not recognize a real
woman’s attempt to establish madhura relationship with him. See the episode of the pagli described above.
312LM, p. 79.
313KM, IV, 28-29 (GR, 341). Diary of 15 December 1883.
320F. A. Marglin, “Types of Sexual Union and their Implicit Meanings” in Hawley & Wulff, eds. Divine Consort, 305-6.
For a psychiatric perceptive on this problem see Morton Schatzman, Soul Murder, 91-104.
321Walter F. Otto, Dionysus, Myth and Cult, 177. See also Daniel A. Kealey, “Eroticizing Spirituality/Spiritualizing
Eroticism,” 4 ff. For a resemblance between religious ecstasy and Plato's eros in the highest form, the contemplative
love of God, see F. Behrendt, “Das mystische Erlebnis and seine Beziehung zur Erotik.”
323KM, IV, 17 (GR, 220). Diary of 2 May 1883. Ramakrishna may have learnt the phrase “intercourse with atman”
from his Vedantic mentor Totapuri, who could possibly have read about atmarati [pleasure with atman], atmakrida
[dallying with atman], atmamaithuna [copulation with atman] or atmananda [bliss of atman]in the Chhandogya
Upanisad (VII.25.2).
324KM, IV, 106 (GR, 491. Nikhilananda omits a complete sentence in his translation). Diary of 3 July 1884.
325SK, 32-33.
335For an interesting study based on extensive field-research on the activities of the bhairavis, see Bholanath
338Ibid., p. 72 (GR, 390). Diary of February 3, 1884. Nikhilananda does not provide the date of this diary but identiofies
339LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 212-13. My translation of brahmayoni is based upon what I feel Ramakrishna meant while
referring to its giving birth. However, we ought to note that the Upanisadic sexual symbol of yoni such as atmayoni,
vishwayoni, etc. designates womb rather than female genitals. See Robert C. Zaehner, “Sexual Symbolism in the
Svetasvatara Upanishad” in Joseph M. Kitagawa & Charles H. Long, eds. Myths and Symbols), 209-15. In Sanskrit,
340Cited in Masson, “Sex and Yoga,” 309. For a discussion of parapraxis see S. Freud, “The Psychopathology of
Everyday Life.” See also Charles Brenner, Elementary Handbook of Psychoanalysi; “Parapraxes and Wit.” Voyeurism
341PS, 52.
344KM, II, 97 (GR, 418). Diary of 5 April 1884. Sea-Foam refers to cattlefish bones found on the sea shore. is
347 Bose, An Indian Pilgrim (1948), 45 cited in Bandyopadhyay and Das, Samasamayik Dristite Ramakrishna, 139.
107
108
CHAPTER FIVE
The youngsters are yet untouched by kamini-kanchana. That is why I love them so much.
over by a Master who regaled in the company of young boys and men. His most favored and
famous devotee was Narendranath Datta. Narendra met the Master for the first time in
November 1881 at the home of the latter’s devotee Surendranath (alias Suresh) Mitra, where he
had gone to entertain Mitra’s guests with his melodious songs.348 The paramahamsa was
absolutely enchanted by the personality and performance of the young man with large eyes. It
was love at first sight. Ramakrishna instantly scrutinized Narendra’s various limbs in order to
figure out his spiritual potential and invited him to Dakshineshwar. Narendra visited with
Ramakrishna sometime next month in the company of Surendranath and a couple of other
friends. This time he made a profound impact on the Master, who confessed later that he felt
such an “agonizing desire” to see the young man that he was tormented by an excruciating pain
as if it his heart was wrung like a wet towel. “Then I could no longer restrain myself,” he said.
I ran to the northern quarter of the garden, a rather unfrequented place, and there cried at the top of my voice, “O my
darling, come back to me! I can't live without seeing you!” After some time, I felt better. This state of things
109
continued for six months. There were other boys who also came here; I felt greatly drawn towards some of them but
Well, I sang the song, but shortly after he suddenly rose and taking me by the hand led me to the northern verandah,
shutting the door behind him. It was locked from the outside; so we were alone. I thought that he would give me
some private instructions. But to my utter surprise he began to shed profuse tears of joy as he held my hand, and
addressing me most tenderly as one long familiar to him, said, “Ah, you come so late! How could you be so unkind
as to keep me waiting so long!” ...Thus he went on amid sobs. The next moment he stood before me with folded
hands and began to address me, “Lord, I know you are that ancient sage, Nara--the Incarnation of Narayana—a born
Narendra’s reaction:
I was altogether taken aback by his conduct. “Who is this man whom I have come to see,” I thought, “he must be
stark mad!” ...Presently he went back to his room, and bringing some sweets, sugar candy and butter, began to feed
me with his own hands.... Then he seized me by the hand and said, “Promise that you will come to me at an early
date.” 351
Ramakrishna fantasized Narendra as one of the saptarsi, the seven magis, and himself as
the divine child who brought the magi down to earth. We follow Narendranath here:
Absorbed, one day, in samadhi, Ramakrishna had found that his mind was soaring high, going beyond the
physical
110
universe...intothe subtle region of ideas....There Ramakrishna saw seven venerable sages absorbed in
meditation....[As] he was admiring their unique spirituality he saw a portion of the undifferentiated Absolute
become congealed, as it were, and take the form of a Divine Child. Gently clasping the neck of one of the sages
with His soft arms, the Child whispered something in his ear, and at this magic touch the sage awoke from
meditation....Ramakrishna was amazed to observe that a tiny portion of the sage, however, descended to earth,
taking the form of light, which struck the house in Calcutta where Narendra’s family lived, and when he saw
Narendra for the first time, he at once recognized him as the incarnation of the sage. He also admitted that the
Divine Child who brought about the descent of the rishi [sage] was none other than himself.352
Ramakrishna felt much disturbed and distressed if he could not see Narendra for some
days. One night, about eleven, Ramakrishna, “with his cloth under his arms,” that is, naked,
awakened two of his devotees, Ramdayal Chakravarti and Baburam Ghosh (later Swami
Premananda) from sleep: “Well, are you asleep?” “No, sir,” replied one of them and both
hurriedly sat up. “Look here. Please tell Narendra to come,” insisted the Master. “I feel as if
somebody were wringing my heart like a wet towel,” he said twisting his cloth. Ramdayal did
his best to console the grieving man assuring him of their effort to coax Narendra to come to
Dakshineshwar, though he and his cohort were greatly puzzled by their Master’s behavior. It is
reported that “this scene was repeated several times during the night.”353 Ramakrishna's pang of
separation from his "beloved" Narendra was noted also by Vaikunthanath Sanyal. The Master
cried out: “O Ma, I cannot live without seeing him” and told Vaikuhntha: “My heart is being
Girish Ghosh describes another interesting episode. Once Narendranath did not pay
attention to the Master’s ministrations. “Why don't you listen to what I say?” Ramakrishna
asked the young man angrily. The latter replied: “I have not come here to listen to your talk....I
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come to see you because I love you.” Girish writes: “The Paramahamsadev instantly stood up
and hugged Vivekananda [sic] and both remained still for a long time locked in each other's
embrace. Thus continued the love-play of the Master and his disciple.”355 On seeing
Narendranath Ramakrishna would choke with emotion. “It is impossible to say,” writes
Saradananda, “on how many occasions we saw the Master drift into samadhi uttering ‘There’s
Na,—‘there’s Na—’.”356
M noted how “the Master kept on staring hard at Narendra.” 357 On one occasion he recorded a
he wrote:
...[the Master] was stroking Narendra’s body and face, uttering “Hari Om! Hari OM! Hari OM!” Why was he doing
and saying this? Did Ramakrishna behold God Himself in Narendra?...Gradually the Master was losing
consciousness....Perhaps this is called partial consciousness—something that had happened to Shri Gauranga. His
hand is still on Narendra’s feet as if he were pretending to massage God’s feet. He is again moving his hand on
Narendra’s body. Why so much massaging of body and feet? Is he giving service to God or transferring energy into
his body? Gradually the Master is drifting into an ecstatic mood and now beseeching Narendra with folded hands:
"Please sing a song and then I shall be all right. How else shall I get up? O my Nitai [the legendary companion of
Chaitanya or Gauranga], you mad in love of Gora [that is, Gauranga. Ramakrishna was considered Chaitanya by his
devotees]...”. Then for some time Shriramakrishna sat silent and speechless, like a portrait. In utter ecstasy he said:
“Watch out, Rai [Radha], you crazy in Krishna’s love, you might fall into the Yamuna!” In a rapturous mood he
continued: “Tell me, friend, how far is the grove where my beloved Krishna dwells? His fragrance reaches me even
Then the Master forgot the phenomenal world. He did not notice any one, not even Narendra, who was seated right
in front of him. He had no sense of where he was. Now he was merged in God. The inner self was totally extinct.
Suddenly he stood up yelling: “I am totally drunk with the love of Gora” [Gorapreme gargar matoara] and sat down
again, saying: “I see a light coming, but can’t figure out where it is coming from.” Now Narendra sang:
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Lord, you have lifted all my sorrow with the vision of your face,
Beholding you, the seven worlds forget their never ending woe;
Ramakrishna, with eyes closed, was fast losing touch with the world. His body became motionless. He was in deep
samadhi.
M was utterly mystified and wondered if this was worldly affection or pure divine love.358 To an
impartial and psychologically trained observer, however, Ramakrishna’s samadhi (considering its
II
sentiment, meaning sexual attraction of a male for another male. It was, on the other hand, as far
as he was concerned, a perfectly natural and even a sublime sentiment, for he was not “man”—
physically or emotionally.360 He was femina perennis, the eternal female. Indeed we need to
note Dimock's shrewd observation that “if a man becomes a woman, he presumably no longer
considers a woman’s body desirable.”361 Then again, in Bengal (and most probably elsewhere in
India) male bonding that often manifests in touching and hugging might seem homoerotic to an
reminiscences to his teenage love (pranay) with a boy of the neighborhood, Shriram Mallik, with
whom he associated day and night. The Master even reported that “people used to say that they
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would have been married to each other had one of them been a girl.”362 However, to treat this as
Ramakrishna’s sexual attraction for Shriram would be out of place at best and unfair at worst.
During one of his story-telling sessions at Dakshineshwar, the Master, as usual “naked as a five-
Let me tell you something very secret. Why do I love Purna, Narendra, and others so much? While trying to
embrace Lord Jagannath [a variant of Vishnu or Narayana] in the attitude of madhura [that is, like a woman with
intense desire for her beloved], I broke my arm. The Lord commanded: “You have assumed a human body, you
Ramakrishna’s divine mandate to substitute his madhura relationship with God with close
intimacy with men suggests his feminine attitude to males. In fact he once told Narendra:
“Behold, in you is Shiva, and in me, Shakti! These two are One!”364 Saradananda reports that the
Great Master used to say that “Narender [a rustic corruption of Narendra] belongs to my in-laws
connection—the principle that which is this (showing himself) is feminine and that which is in
Dakshineshwar, Ramakrishna had entreated the young man: “Look here, come a little more
often. It’s because you’re a newcomer. After the first acquaintance all newcomers pay frequent
visits as is the case with a new male lover [and his woman beloved]. You will come, won’t
you?”366
Ramakrishna used metaphors loaded with sex symbolism to describe his favorite
“Haldarpukur” (the pond at Kamarpukur built by the Halder family), “a huge red-eyed carp,” “a
very large pot,” and “a big bamboo with holes.” Above all, “he is like a male pigeon” and so the
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Master said: “I feel reassured in a gathering [of people] whenever Narendra is with me.”367 He
succeeded in implanting his feminine image in Narendra’s psyche. One night the young man
dreamt his older admirer saying to him: “Come, I’ll show you Gopi Radha.” Following his
Master’s footsteps, in dream, he saw the latter turn toward him and say, “Where else will you
go?” and “transfor[m] himself into the beautiful personality and exquisite form of Radha
herself.”368
Toward the end of his life, Ramakrishna also began to consider himself as a powerful
maternal force for young Naren. Once, during his terminal illness, Narendranath and Taraknath
Ghosal (later Swami Shivananda) suddenly disappeared from their Master’s home, leaving the
ailing man distressed. On being reassured by a devotee that the truants would soon return, he
exclaimed in affirmation: “You’re right. Where could they go? They might wander here and
there, but their ultimate shelter is under the ass of this old hag” (el tala, bel tala, sei budir
pondtala).369 However, there are some reports of Ramakrishna’s behavior toward Narendra that
are somewhat puzzling. For example, he once mounted the young man’s back and went into
samadhi.370 At the home of Balaram Basu, he crawled stealthily toward Narendra who was
sleeping on the same mat with his back turned toward him. It is reported that, at the Master’s
“touch,” the startled young man cried out in English (!): “Lo! the man is entering into me!”
Ramakrishna is said to have retorted: “Shala! You think I can’t make out your prattles in
English! You say I am entering inside you.” 371 It would be hard to interpret this incident as an
example of homosexual overture of sodomy.372 On the other hand, in view of the Master’s habit,
it could be read as a somewhat garbled report of his attempt to touch Narendra by way of
“channeling” his divine energy into the latter’s body or it was just a childish prank to awaken a
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man soundly and restfully asleep. At the same time, we cannot ignore his scatological
expressions associated with the anus and shit in his conversations. Even the experience of his
highest realization that there exists within the individual self the Paramatman, the repository of
all knowledge, was derived from his beholding a grasshopper with a thin sticklike object inserted
in its rectum!373
There may be some substance in the popular claim that it was Ramakrishna who was
responsible for Narendra’s spiritual transformation, provided one agrees that the latter was
indeed a spiritual personality. It may also be a fact that he offered a deep psychological stability
to the flamboyant young man facing a crisis of career and family responsibility after the untimely
death of his spendthrift father resulting in family bankruptcy. Indeed, as Dr. Kakar has written,
Narendra was under intense mental strain, highly vulnerable and suggestible when he met the
paramahamsa at the young age of twenty-one and Ramakrishna, the “mighty mentor,” stepped
into the void of his would be disciple’s life rendered chaotic after his father's death. Thus there
might have developed a “quasi-therapeutic relationship” between Ramakrishna and the future
Vivekananda. 374 Kakar’s observations are interesting, and readily remind one of the crisis-ridden
Martin Luther’s experiences with his sober scholarly colleague Johann von Staupitz.375 However,
while in the case of the two Germans we have a symbiotic relationship between two scholars and
of a naive but intelligent and passionate young man with little background or interest in
spirituality or theology and a semi-literate and ecstatic saintly figure. As the Master told his
nephew Ramlal: “As Raske [Rasiklal Sarkar] was Ram’s ‘phyarendo’ [‘friend’] and as Hazra was
III
In addition to Narendranath, there were several other youths who inspired similar
sentiment in Ramakrishna. By looking at a thirty-year old devotee, Adhar Sen, he would appear
candy and cajoling him to come to Dakshineshwar without the knowledge of his parents. This
attempt at intimacy appears to parallel Chinu shankhari’s attraction for the boy Gadai who used
to visit the former’s shop at night for procuring his free candy. Of course the cute Purna was
regarded as a “part of Narayana and a spiritual aspirant possessing a high degree of sattva.” As
Saradananda reports,
on many occasions we saw the Master weeping to see Purna. Noticing our surprise at his behavior, he said one day:
“You are wondering at my attraction toward Purna. I don't know what you would have felt had you seen my
heartache when I first saw Naren and how restless I became then.”
Slowly he brought Purna around. When, for the second time, he saw the boy, Ramakrishna
fed him with his own hand like an affectionate mother and asked him, “Well, what do you think of me?”
Overwhelmed by an extraordinary impulse of the heart swelling with devotion, Purna replied, “You are Bhagavan--
God.”378
He treated the boy like a child by making him sit on his lap and lie in bed. However, in his
dream, the Master was transformed into a naked village child playing with his naked playmate
Purna. While describing this dream, Ramakrishna entered into his wonted samadhi.379 Swami
Akhandananda reports that the Master had also entered into samadhi after having had a vision of
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Rama in underwear.380 The Master continued to think about his beloved kayet [Kayastha caste]
devotee Purna even when he was in acute pain of the cancerous throat.381
Calcutta. One of them, the boy Paltu (nickname of Pramathanath Kar, son of a deputy
magistrate) exercised an especial fascination for the Master. After they met for the first time,
Calcutta I go?” When the boy replied that he would try, the disappointed veteran exclaimed:
“That’s a shrewd businessman’s answer.”382 Still another young boy, chhota Naren
(Narendranath Mitra, the junior Narendra), caused a stir in the Master’s heart. M writes how
“the Master went into samadhi while staring intently at the younger Naren.” The reporter is
naturally awestruck and mystified: “Did he behold the divine in the pure-souled devotee?” Then,
after a while, Ramakrishna told the young man: “I've been eager to see you. You’re okay.
Come once in a while. Well, which do you prefer--knowledge or devotion?” Naren answered:
“Only devotion.” Then the Master asked: “But how can you have devotion for someone unless
you know him?” Ramakrishna’s interest in the young eager devotee was apparently on the rise.
He then asked Naren to take off his shirt and said: “Let me examine your body....A good-sized
chest, it’s fine. Come here from time to time.” M’s report: “Sri Ramakrishna was still in
ecstasy.”383
He harbored a maternal love for young Rakhal whom he used to suckle and casting a
fleeting glance at whom he used to be transported into a trance. The young Narayan exercised
the sight of him arouses affection in me....You see, he has much mettle in him, otherwise how could he attract me to
him even while I am listening to a kirtana? I had to go into the room. Leaving kirtana--that never happened
before.384
Why the Master had to go into seclusion having felt an unusual attraction for the boy cannot be
explained easily. Ramakrishna was also quite fond of Vijaykrishna Goswami, who would drop
his outfit while dancing ecstatically, to the utter delight of the Master.385 When Ramakrishna met
Goswami’s friend Nityagopal Goswami, he “was so pleased at the sight of him that he could not
enjoy his meal and in fact left it half-finished.”386 He of course experienced instant samadhi
after having placed his hand around young Baburam’s neck.387 Baburam was special in that the
Master absolutely loved his touch.388 He was so impatient to look at the bare chest of young
Subodh Ghosh (later Swami Subodhananda) before initiating him that his eyes reddened and
eyes half closed (øivanetra) and he himself unbuttoned the boy’s shirt. Thereafter he squeezed
Subodh’s tongue and touched his body uttering “Awake, Ma Brahmamayi, awake!” 389 Even
during the advanced stage of his illness, Ramakrishna’s attraction for boys remained quite strong.
The handsome Bhavanath Chattopadhyay, Narendranath’s college mate, exercised great charm
on the Master when he lay ill at Shyampukur, Calcutta. He insisted that the young man visit him
more often than he actually did. As he told Bhavanath, he was not satisfied with his mere sight
but he wished to touch him and converse with him intimately.390 He remarked to M that
“Bhavanath came to Shyampukur dressed as a bridegroom and asked me, ‘How are you?’ I
haven’t seen him since. I treat him that way for Narendra’s sake, but I am not interested in
him.”391
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Bengali description for a well-dressed male, has to be viewed in the context of his general
attitude to males that we have been trying to understand. He once treated his devotee Surendra
just as a woman would her lover. When Surendra visited the dying Master and offered him a
garland of flowers, the latter took it from his neck and placed it around Surendra’s. Then
Ramakrishna asked his devotee to massage his feet. His exchange of garland (a typical custom
between husband and wife and also between a guru and his disciple) together with Surendra’s
massaging his feet (the typical Bengali imagery of a young bride asking her man to render body
service popularized by the Vaisnava poets in their lyrics on Radha and Krishna) had the cultural
imprimatur for a guru’s behavior but yet had some deep, though unconscious, erotic
implications.392
When in September 1885 Ramakrishna was visited by two admirers, including the
teenager Manindrakrishna Gupta, he stared at his young visitor intently and whispered to him to
see him alone the next day. The boy kept the tryst and the Master shed tears having seen him and
then touched him. Thereafter, as Gupta recalled years later, Ramakrishna’s body “became stiff
like a corpse.”393 His unabashed feeling for the young Harish Mustafi (Ramakrishna’s attendant
Shriramakrishna was then under Dr. Pratap [Majumdar, a homoeopath] during the advanced state of his throat
cancer. He awoke at midnight and felt extremely restless. Harish, his attendant, was in the room. Rakhal was there
also. Ramlal [Ramakrishna's nephew] was asleep on the verandah. The Master remarked later on: “As I was feeling
extremely restless, I wanted to hug Harish. I felt a little better when the medicinal oil [Madhyamanarayan taila]
No doubt, the ageing mystic was quite aware of public reaction to his apparent fondness for
his young devotees and he is reported to have confessed to his yearning for Narendra: “What
will they think on seeing that I, an old fart [budo minse], am weeping and panting so much for
him?...But by no means can I control myself.”395 In fact he was once reprimanded (though to
little effect) by his dauntless devotee, the insufferable Pratapchandra Hazra. As Ramakrishna
reported: “Hazra took me to task because I was anxious to see the boys. He asked, ‘when in fact
do you think of God?’” 396 Hazra is also reported to have observed that the saint was especially
fond of rich and goodlooking boys.397 In fact Ramakrishna's uncontrollable urge for youngsters
forced M to procure them from his school and this even earned the hapless headmaster the
explanation for his feelings. Reputedly a paramahamsa himself, he claimed that a paramahamsa
“like a child is not subject to any of the gunas [qualities such as sattva, rajas, or tamas]. That is
why the paramahamsas let little boys come near them with a view to imitating their nature.”399
Ramakrishna’s attention also turned on a few young men who became his devotees.
Once, on seeing Shivanath Shastri, he ran to embrace him and “so great was his delight that he
fainted away from excess of emotion.” As Shastri reports, later inside the carriage on his way to
Calcutta,
Ramakrishna insisted upon sitting on my left-hand side on the seat. I could not understand his meaning. But as the
carriage started, he covered his head with his chudder or covering sheet, in the fashion of young married women of
Bengal. He said, “Can’t you see I am a woman for the time being; I am travelling with my lover.” Saying this he
threw his arm around my waist and began to make short of dancing movement, seated as he was, as a mark of great
Ramakrishna expressed a sentiment for Keshab which was similar to the one for Shastri.
Once, on seeing his Brahmo devotee and his companions approach Dakshineshwar in a
steamboat, Ramakrishna eagerly rushed to meet them before they embarked. When restrained by
a devotee he exclaimed: “Buzz off! Radha is now on her way to Shyam!” After having boarded
the steamer, he embraced Sen, saying, “You’re Shyam and I am Radha, you Shyam and me
Radha.”401 Years ago, he had undergone another episode of feminization, when alone with his
doting employer Mathur Biswas, he had felt himself to be a Sita being abducted by Ravana.
performance at the Star Theater he was delighted to see a young man from Khardah standing
behind his chair. “He held the young man’s hand and conversed. He said from time to time,
‘Please sit down here. I feel charged up [uddipan] if you stay here.’ He fondled the young man’s
hands and lovingly petted his face.”402 Having met an Indian Quaker named Prabhudayal Mishra
and exchanged some spiritual niceties with him, Ramakrishna was so overwhelmed by his new
acquaintance that he saw his vision in the pose of a vira (in tantric lexicon, which was used here,
vira means an aggressive male in a sexual context) in the latrine and could not achieve clearance.
Reportedly, he kept on staring at the man and laughing ecstatically. Moments earlier, Misra had
disrobed himself to show his undergarment, a monk’s kaupina.403 The Master’s idea of a true
devotee was charged with sexual imagery. He compared a devotee to a flower and God’s
manifestation in himself to getting a little juice after much sucking. And he asked M: “Have
IV
Evidently Ramakrishna was curious to see the young male physique, especially the male
talking to a boy [Akhandananda] one day at Dakshineshwar on various topics, he said, “Could you tell what this is?
I can't keep a piece of cloth on my loins--it does not stay there. I don't even know when it has slipped off. I, an old
fart, go about naked. Yet I don’t feel embarrassed. Previously I had no idea at all as to who saw me. Realizing that
some of those who see me might feel embarrassed, I now keep a piece of cloth on my lap. Could you move about
among people naked like me?” The boy replied, “Sir, I am not sure, but I can take off my cloth if you say so.” He
said, “Just let me see. Go round the temple courtyard with your cloth tied round your head.” The boy said, “I can’t
Akhandananda describes how the Master, himself nude, initiated him on a Saturday night at
Dakshineshwar by stripping him of his outfit, making him sit in a relaxed pose (sukhasana),
squeezing his tongue, and sleeping with him on the same mat in the verandah outside of his
room.406 Another young man, Saradaprasanna Mitra (later Swami Trigunatitananda), delighted
Ramakrishna by stripping himself naked when asked.407 His adult devotee Girish, despite his
occasional crude and rude behavior, earned a special niche in the paramahamsa’s heart after the
latter, reportedly, had a vision of him in dream as a naked boy jumping into his lap and
his shirt in order to examine his chest with a view to determining the great aristocrat's spiritual
potential.409 He recalled in 1885 how during the days of his Vedantic training under Totapuri he
loved to touch the penis of a naked boy emanating from his body—an unmistakable hint of
autoerotism. He even confessed (while advancing toward the young Haripada Mitra--Haripadar
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prati agrasar haiya) that while he was engaged in Tantrika practices with Yogeshwari, he used to
“worship” the cocks (dhan, literally “treasure”) of young boys with flower and sandal-paste.410
He is reported to have “touched” Vijay Goswami’s penis in ecstasy with a view to driving the
latter’s lust away.411 On another occasion, when he was meditating under the bel-tree, he
he [papapurusa] allured me in various ways during my meditation. Appearing as an English soldier, he wanted to
give me wealth, prestige, pleasure of sex et cetera. I began to pray to Ma. It's very confidential. She appeared and I
But an English boy whom Ramakrishna saw leaning against a tree in the Calcutta Maidan
(a vast open meadow in downtown Calcutta, on the bank of the Hooghly River) reminded him of
Krishna. “He stood with his body bent in three places. As soon as I saw him, the longing for
Krishna arose in me,” the Master recalled. Then the inevitable happened. At the sight of the
Lord, Ramakrishna the Radha “fell into a trance.”413 There are two intriguingly suggestive
reports. Just a couple of months after Ramakrishna’s death, his beloved devotee M had a dream
on 15 May 1887, in which he saw his Master proceeding to kiss his mouth and fill it with his
saliva.414 One could easily interpret this as M’s unconscious homoerotic desire. However, this
might very well be a fabricated account that reveals his anxiety for recognition as the leader of
the Master’s flock. It is known that there developed an unspoken rivalry among some of
Ramakrishna’s intimate devotees (and disciples). Naren, and following him, Niranjan (later
Swami Niranjananada), Shashi (later Swami Ramakrishnananda), and Sharat (later Swami
Saradanana), had already scored one up by ingesting the dying cancer patient’s saliva and
thereby proving a genuine love for their guru.415 We can easily see Mahendranath’s winning a
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laurel in dream. There is also a strange report by a brahmachari named Hiralal, who lived in the
Pancavati for some time and who saw one night (actually early morning, around 1:30 a.m.)
someone walking toward Ramakrishna’s room. He followed the prowler but lost sight of him.
He then knocked on the door of the Master’s room, but it did not open.416
manipulating the sources legitimated by the use of his hermeneutic tool of “personal symbols” or
the Bogomilian gnosis Kripal is determined to declare the saint a Western type gay guru.417
Kripal writes that Ramakrishna was “not particularly attracted to women in the first place” and
that “assuming the nature of women allowed him...to kill what desire he had for women and to
nourish his more natural desire for men.”418 He further states that Ramakrishna “also took on the
nature of a woman to live with and lie down with Mathur...”419. This is a preposterously
misleading conclusion from Ramakrishna’s report that he was occasionally invited by Sejobabu
(Mathur) and Sejoginni (Jagadamba) to sleep with them. Mathur may very well have been
attracted by the effeminate young priest and he could possibly have been a bisexual man, but to
presume that Ramakrishna “slept” (in the Western sense) with his employer because he was a
Swami Vijnanananda) wrote in his Paramahamsa-Charita (1902): “It is well-known that when
Mathur was staying Janbazar, Ramakrishna used to sleep in a separate bedstead in the same
To complicate the matter further Kripal unhesitatingly allows himself to fall into his
bizarre speculation that Ramakrishna feared being sodomized and yet felt an urge to sodomize
others and this conflict was played out in his diarrhea (opening of the “secret door”, that is anus)
and constipation (shutting up of the “secret door”). Ramakrishna’s ecstatic states in “fecal
contexts” or his “wildly swinging ‘back door’,” in other words, the saint’s anus, constitutes his
“secret.” 421 Kripal’s psychoanalytic mumbojumbo is at its ludicrous best in his bold assertion
that the “association between the secret and the act of defecation is rooted in Ramakrishna's
experiences of being ‘entered’ through the secret door of the anus and his consequent desire to
women. Nor is there any contemporary account accusing him of homosexual behavior. None of
his disciples or devotees was ever reported to be sexually attracted to their cohorts. Even the
young Rakhal who had sucked his Master’s nipples grew to be a normal male adult. So was the
case with Premananda, Akhandananda, and Purna Ghosh. Narendranath of course regarded
Ramakrishna's unbridled sentiments for him with benign contempt. Thus the paramahams’s
Dakshineshwar was an erotic community in that it was a place where the aging Master enjoyed
lots of fun and frolicks [phachkimi] with youngsters, but it was never a haven for homosexuals.
Kripal endeavors, unnecessarily, to make the community of Dakshineshwar not just erotic but
homoerotic with such contrived evidence as Ramakrishna’s description of his disciples’ “love for
Dr. [Mahendralal] Sarkar with a fairly obvious sexual metaphor: >Because you are coming, the
lovers stay awake, dress up, and tidy up the bedchamber.”423 The actual passage in the KM reads:
“Shriramakrishna (Daktarer prati)—‘Seki!--era tomay kata bhalobase! Tumi asbe bale basak-
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shayya kare jege thake’” [“Shriramakrishna (to the doctor): ‘What (are you saying)! How much
they love you! They tidy up the bedroom and stay awake in expectation of your visit’.”]424 The
Master’s statement was made in the context of Sarkar’s disapproval of worshipping Ramakrishna
as a god and it was specifically a rebuttal of the doctor’s fear that even “his ‘best friends’ regard
him as cruel and merciless.” He then expressed his anxiety: “Maybe you will all kick me out.”
In his characteristic rustic (and somewhat effeminate) metaphor Ramakrishna sought to reassure
his physician that the intensity of love his boys have for him is comparable to that of a woman
for her husband. Kripal’s literalness and culturally vacuous interpretation of Ramakrishna's
would either run to the temple or invoke the strategy of escape by getting into samadhi. His
attraction for young boys that may be considered as muted pedophilia is often associated with
aging impotent males. But Ramakrishna, a typical Bengali male, could easily absorb femininity
and yet remain heterosexual in orientation. His becoming a woman or his attraction for boys was
pathogenic and not “natural” as they are for the drag queens and gay men of Kripal’s society.
Like most Bengali males of his day, his sexual orientation was heterosexual. His description of
pleasure derived from love of Krishna was couched in unmistakable heterosexual terms. His
often comparing carnal love to divine love and valorizing the latter revealed his recognition of
strangely attracted to females with what must be called a “negative fascination.” He wanted to
be a female himself because, for him, the woman, kamini, was a quintessentially erotic being. As
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a child he had peeked at naked women bathing in the Haldarpukur and, reportedly, remained
indifferent at the sight. He probably began to consider his male physique with a penis an
obstacle to his desire for assuming a female identity. Hence his psychic castration and his
attention to the genitals of other males. Most probably, his habit of seeing naked youngsters had
to do with this mental state. His ecstasy was induced by touching his favorite young devotees.
He developed a few strategies for touching or petting the body (occasionally the penis, as was
the case with Vijaykrishna Goswami, whose cock he calmed by his “touch”) of devotees—the
only sexual option for an impotent male. He may not have been open and active like a modern
for heterosexuality he could not practice due to his personal condition, though it was seen as his
not to claim that he was ambivalent and unconscious, though somewhat willing, homosexual in
his early life and a deliberate, conscious, even “unashamed”, gay as he grew older. Nor do
Ramakrishna’s so-called tantric experiments mean that he found tantric eroticism as a convenient
spiritual conduit through which to channel his awakened homosexuality.427 Yet, in spite of his
almost manic obsession with sexual imageries and metaphors, his vehement protestation of his
sexual innocence together with his pleadings for divine love or divine sex made him a distinct
spiritual personality, a realized saint, in the eyes of his disciples, devotees, and admirers. His
spiritual persona was further bolstered by his deliberate projection of an image of himself as a
woman with a penchant for lachrymose affection. The outcome of a puzzling combination of
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feminine tendency and habits legitimized by the Vaisnava myths and traditions of Bengal was
quite useful for propagandizing the advent of a macranthropos—a “great man” or a Godman.
His diffuse eroticism provided a powerful source for his universal compassion and was
sublimated in his religion of love that transformed the erotic community of Dakshineshwar into a
349 LV, I, 76. For the controversy surreounding the exact time and place of the first meetng between Narendranath and
Ramakrishna see FM, 181-89. Here we recall the Master’s six-months-long ecstasy after he was initiated by Totapuri into
nirvikalpa Samadhi.
355 Girishchandra Ghosh, “Ramakrishna O Vivekananda” in idem, Thakur Shriramakrishna O Swami Vivekananda, 20.
358 KM, 207 (GR, 735. Nikhilananda omits the last seven or eight paragraphs of the Bengali original). Diary of 11
March 1885.
359 Freud had associated hypnoid states with masturbation leading to a spiritual ejaculation. Psychologists maintain that
the catatonic rigidity of the Indian ascetic transforms the body into a phallus and the absence of mentation is a kind of
masturbation. See Charles Hanly and J. Masson, “Critical Examination of New Narcissism,” 57-58. For an explanation
of jouissance of the mystics see Clément, Syncope, ch. XIV: “Jouissances: Between Angel and Placenta.”
360 Professor Masson believes that Ramakrishna was a pathological homosexual. Oceanic Feeling, 9, 46-47 (n. 9).
362 KM, III, 184 (GR, 787). Diary of 13 June 1885. We need not label this childhood attraction as homosexual.
Ramakrishna’s contemporary, the impetuous intellectual and poet, Michael Madhusudan Datta, was once madly in love
with his handsome college mate Gaurdas Basak, though both turned out to be heterosexual males. See Gangopadhyay,
371 Swami Purnatmananda, ed., Smritir Aloy Swamiji, 250: Reminiscences of Tulsiram Ghosh, elder brother of Baburam.
372 Kripal, however, has little qualms in interpreting this incident (without bothering to really fathom the hidden
metaphor of the dialog or examining the context of the report) as Ramakrishna’s overt and “unabashed” homosexual
375 Narasingha Sil, “Luther, Erikson, and History,” 32. See also Appendix: A.
379 RA, I, 53, 56-57. Ramakrishna’s penchant for dreaming of a putto, the naked child, reminds one of a similar
401 Matilal Das’s article in Dharmatatwa (Agrahayana 16, 1334 B.E.) cited in SDR, 115.
403 KM, IV, 277 (GR, 922: Nikhilananda omits part of the sentence). Diary of 31 October 1885. See also FMR, 411.
According to another wyewitness account of this encounter, Mishra removed his outer garment to reveal his ascetic
attire, an ochre cloth. RH, 382: reminiscences of Manindra Krishna Gupta. For an outlandish analysis of the Misra
episode, see KC, 293-96. There is, however, some problem with Kripal’s observation that Ramakrishna’s constipation
was caused by his fear of penetration through the “back door”—a fear that had its origin in his being “sodomized” by
Mathuranath. Granted Kripal’s take on Ramakrishna’s sexual orientation, it is still puzzling how a homosexual man
would abhor or avoid sodomy! I maintain that the Master was greatly excited to assume the iconography of Christ and
this excitement may have caused his temporary constipation. We note him, following his return from the latrine, smiling
and staring rather mischievously at the young Quaker, who had pronounced the paramahamsa Christ.
408 Girishchandra Ghosh, Ramakrishna Shrima O Vivekananda, 191 (see also 79-80, 184-86).
410 KM, IV, 231-32 (GR, 813-14). Diary of 15 July 1885 (Nikhilananda omits part of the sentence). Most probably the
416 AP, 6.
417 Kripal cites on KC, 35 Gananath Obeyesekere’s Work of Culture. See Sil, “Question of Ramakrishna’s
Homosexuality.”
419 Ibid.
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420 Vijnanananda’s Bengali memoir was translated into Hindi and published in Allahabad in 1904. See Arun K. Biswas,
421 KC, 297, 320. It is important to point out here that Kripal mistranslates sources (for the sake of maintaining the
integrity of what he considers the larger picture, that is, Ramakrishna’s sumbolic universe) in so many places that it
would fill several pages to just enumerate them providing their accurate and sensible translation. See the two magisterial
422 KC, 314. Kripal’s conclusion is based solely on a report of Narendranath’s remark that he felt someone was entering
424 KM, I, 253 (GR, 905). Diary of 27 October 1885. Nikhilananda’s metaphor of “bridesmaids” is quite appropriate.
425 It is remarkable that Christopher Isherwood refers to an anonymous writer who attempted to write a book on
Ramakrishna in 1962 depicting him as “a homosexual who had to overcome his lust for…Vivekananda” and was
persuaded by Swami Pravabhananda of the Ramakrishna Mission to delete such references from the work.” Guru and
Disciple, 247. Most likely this unnamed author is Isherwood himself—a self-confessed homosexual (ibid., 4, 8).
Kripal’s recent writings reveal clearly his estimation of homosexuality as the quintessential human sexuality. His collage
of autobiographical tidbits with academic discourse on religion and mysticism together with visions of floating severed
penises, his deference for diference (especially in terms of sexual orientation) say more about him than does his
loquacious peroration. See June McDaniel’s review of his Roads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom.
426 Long ago Sumit Sarkar had speculated on Ramakrishna’s impotence. “Kathamrita as Text,” 103.
428 See Stanley A. Leavy, “Male homosexuality Reconsidered,” 155-74. The phrase anander hatbajar is borrowed from
PS, 81.
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CHAPTER SIX
Ramakrishna’s Holy Insanity and Ecstasy
I
Ramakrishna has been famous and popular as the pagal Thakur, “mad Master” of
Dakshineshwar. His so-called madness has nothing do with our clinical concept of mental
derangement or lunacy, but it is an acceptable and respectable erratic and often funnily crazy
behavior culturally associated with the state of a mystic in direct liaison with divinity. In
Thus madness denoting freedom from or transcendence of the social norm has been very
much a part of Hindu tradition. Even some of the popular Hindu Gods and Goddesses like
Shiva, Krishna, Chamunda, or Kali are mad. The Bhakti movement has produced numerous
saints who appear, from the standpoint of society, crazy, but they represent an indifference to
the phenomenal world. Among such crazy saints mention may be made of Tukaram,
Ramdas, Nabha Das, Bilwamangal, or Chaitanya, who were all male, and Mirabai, or
behavior of Shri Chaitanya. He was convinced that Chaitanya’s “renunciation was so great
that when Sarvabhauma poured sugar on his tongue it did not even melt but simply
evaporated into air.”2 He also borrowed his ideas of the five sthayi bhavas (permanent
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emotional state or mood) from Chaitanyite Vaishnavism: shanta (calm), dasya (service),
sakhya (companionship), vatsalya (childlike naiveté), and madhurya (sweet love). Chaitanya
emphasized Radha’s madhura bhava as the lover of Krishna. An expert mimic, Ramakrishna
also impersonated the Radha of folklore and in fact frequently recommended the technique of
raganuga bhakti, that is, devotion of love, to his disciples. As “Chaitanya’s beauty, dancing,
and ecstasy marked him as special and implied his divinity,”3 Ramakrishna’s alleged good
the outcome of meritorious acts of past lives and superior to samskara, which constitutes the
inherited traits from previous births. This is so because madness is the characteristic trait of
the final birth.4 Hence crazy or “ghoulish behavior is the trait of a perfect jnani [knower] who
does not practice discrimination in food and purity. A man of perfect knowledge and a
perfect idiot betray similar characteristics.”5 Hence his spiritual battle cry: “Be mad! Be
crazy with love of God!”6 We need not impute any ideological appeal on the master’s
tendentiously.6a
II
We know all about Ramakrishna’s spritual struggles including his divine madness
from his personal reminiscences, as described in the KM or the LP, or Vivekananda’s several
speeches and writings. This fact presents a real problem about the authenticity of these
experiences. One can never be sure about the motives behind these reports. Swami
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Saradananda has little difficulty in testing the genuineness of the Master’s visions and bhavas
and thus he declares: “If we want to test the truth of the vision...there is no other means than
to believe in what the Master told his antaranga devotees about his own personality.” 7 The
Swami also relies on the reports of two contemporaries, Mathur Biswas and Kenaram
Bhattacharya in particular as well as “the words of the sadhakas and siddhas who came to
madness which lasted, mutatis mutandis, from the time of his employment at the Kali temple
of Dakshineshwar in 1856 to the conclusion of his Vedantic training from Totapuri in 1866.
It appears that right from the beginning of his appointment as the temple priest Ramakrishna
began to betray his crazy behavior. A plausible explanation would be that he did not want to
carry on the dull daily routine of boring rituals, as he really was not capable of any sustained
responsible or regular undertaking. He knew that Mathuranath fancied the young Bhatchaj
and thus his stay at Dakshineshwar would not be threatened. Moreover, he began to perform
strange acts so that he aroused all kinds of curiosity among people. He would worship
himself with flowers and gorge foods consecrated to the Goddess or something somewhat
bizarre. His ecstatic excesses celebrated in the literature as his divyonmattata (“divine
in my mad state I used to tell people what was right without caring for anybody. Once I found Jai Mukhujjye
[Mukherjee] unmindful while counting rosary on the Baranagar Ghat. I went to him and delivered two slaps.
One day Rasmani visited Dakshineshwar and came to the Kali temple. She used to visit during the ceremony
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and ask me to sing one or two numbers. I was singing but noticed that she was unattentive. Instantly—two
slaps.9
The LP has it that Mathur became curious about the priest when he came to hear
canards about the young man’s “various immoral [avaidha] erotic [premapurna] behavior
which was considered quite superfluous and unnecessary by the people.”10 Biswas began to
visit the temple secretly (leaving his world of work and amusement in Calcutta) and not only
found the ecstatic young man the “living image of love and simplicity” but even beheld Kali
when looking at him face to face and Shiva when he turned back.11 This period was marked
by a growing intimacy between the enchanted Biswas and the ecstatic Bhatchaj. The former
took the priest to his Janbazar residence in Calcutta, custom ordered for him sets of gold and
silver jewelry befitting a woman, bought gold and silver crockeries for his meals, and began
to take him for a ride around the Maidan and other places of recreation in the city.12
Meanwhile Ramakrishna had succeeded in getting his nephew Hriday to perform the daily
Ramakrishna told his devotees at the beginning of 1884 that he used to sit in the
Panchavati and became mad “in course of time.”14 Reportedly, he used to meditate alone at
night under an amalaki tree for he believed that “according to the scriptures anyone
meditating under an amalaki tree has his desires fulfilled.”15 One day Hriday saw his uncle
meditating completely naked and feared that the latter had gone off his rocker.16 The Master
once recalled how his mad condition was witnessed by one Narayan Shastri, a saint “with a
his vision “of particles of light like groups of fireflies” and on his burning sensation. His
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burning sensation became so acute during the period of his madhura bhava (1863-64) that he
was prescribed various ointments and oils by physicians, though to little effect. At last he
received a lucky charm from a Shakta lawyer of Barasat village, which seemed to work.18
However, by 1861, his condition was confirmed as a sacred disease by two important
individuals. A physician from eastern Bengal named Durgaprasad Sen (most probably the
brother of the famous physician Gangaprasad), having “listened to the symptoms of his
affliction,” felt that Ramakrishna was “in a state of divine madness” [divyonmad avastha].19
III
people” because of his crazy behavior.21 Perhaps Mathur was right in thinking that “due to an
excess of devotion” the young priest was suffering from a psychosomatic disorder. He knew,
for example, that Ramakrishna was a chronic patient of acidity and flatulence and “believed
that physical illness produced in the Master a sort of mental derangement which manifested
itself as excessive devotional mood, and tried to turn his mood by reasoning with him.”2 2 He
and his mother-in-law, Rani Rasmani, also “thought that the Master’s mental derangement,
Ramakrishna himself felt that his visions aggravated his indigestion caused by overeating
during his ecstatic mood: “Day and night would roll by when I was in ecstatic state. Next
Most probably, he was forced to get married by his mother and concerned members
of his family who believed the young man’s crazy condition to be an outcome of his
repressed rut. He of course chose a bride of five years for himself in 1859 and, as was the
custom then, the married child returned to her parents after the nuptial. Ramakrishna earned
the nickname of kshyapa jamai or “nutty son-in-law” by the people of Jairambati, his in-
laws’ village. Whenever he would visit his in-laws, the village women would blow conch
shell and spread holy water on the path along which they would take their village's son-in-
law to his wife's home. We are told that the reason for Ramakrishna's ceremonious reception
by the residents of Jairambati was their attempt to cure Ramakrishna of his malady by that
ritual.25
psychological point. Like many religious minded people all over the world, he suffered from
a deep guilt complex and was acutely aware of the existence of an evil self (Papapurusa)
within. As he said:
At the time of performing sandhya [evening rituals] worship, when I used to think that the Papapurusa within
was burnt up according to scriptural prescriptions, who could know then that the Papapurusa really resided
He even described the process of the annihilation of the evil self within him:
One day, while I was sitting in the Panchavati, I saw that a jet-black hideous looking man with red eyes came
reeling, as if drunk, out of this (showing his own body) and walked before me....Another person of placid mien,
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in ochre robe with a trident in hand (Siddhapurusa, that is a realized renouncer) similarly came out from the
Reportedly his six month-long burning sensation subsided after he had the vision of the
IV
Yogeshwari during his state of divine madness. This episode of his spiritual career is
enveloped in mystery and mystification, especially in his first biography by Ram Datta,
which contains lurid details of his practices with the bamni (brahmani, the popular
designation of Yogeshwari by the Master). Over the years, various writers, including Jeff
Kripal, have built an elaborate mystical and tantric explanation of this experience the
authenticity of which is difficult to determine. What one can gather about the Master-
nowhere, sometime in 1861. As has been mentioned earlier, she probably was a bhairavi
from the region of Dakshineshwar which abounded in numerous bhairavi chakras. She
appears to have a rather mysterious and muddy past and we have Ram Datta’s admission:
“We have heard many tales about the brahmani but we hesitate to divulge them to the
public.”28 It is likely that she had heard about the capricious young priest of the Kali temple.
She could have also been procured either by Hriday who was a regular participant in the local
bhairavi chakras or by Mathuranath to provide an acceptable imprimatur for the strange state
Yogeshwari easily influenced the young man with her charm, alleged erudition, and feminine
care. Naturally, “the affection and attraction at first sight between the Master and the
Ramakrishna was greatly impressed by the bhairavi, and the various books she
carried with her: books on tantra, Chaitanya Bhagavata, and Chaitanya Charitamrita. The
Master understood his ecstatic condition as something “like a huge elephant entering a small
hut” shaking it to its foundations and shattering it.3 0 She even suggested a clinical cure for his
malady--garlands and sandal paste--and sure enough, it worked.3 1 Most certainly the bhairavi
had some plan for herself and the young priest. A shrew out and out, Yogeshwari could not
stand him paying attention to his newly wedded wife, Sarada. “We have heard,” writes the
author of the LP, “that she used to be jealous at the Master's giving occasional instructions to
the Holy Mother.”32 Even Saradamani said: “She was a little hotheaded. She used to boss
over me always. She would tell me at times, ‘You must keep Pantabhat [boiled rice soaked
in cold water overnight--a delicacy in rural Bengal] for me; otherwise I shall pierce you with
my trident!’ Hearing this I would get frightened.”33 We learn from Gambhirananda how in
1867 young Sarada rushed to Kamarpukur from her parental home (where she had been
staying since her marriage at five some eight years ago) to live with her husband who had
been playing child with his newfound spiritual mother, Yogeshwari, and how the latter
Yogeshwari, reportedly, taught her eager but utterly confused disciple sixty-four
Tantras including sadhana with “the skulls of five creatures, including that of a human
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being,” which she procured personally.35 Subsequently she tried to train him in sodashi
On one occasion, I saw, that the Brahmani had brought at night—nobody knows from where—a beautiful
woman in the prime of her youth, and said to me, “Baba, worship her as Devi.” When the worship was
finished, she said, “Sit on her lap, Baba, and perform japa.”
At this point Ramakrishna realized the gravity of the situation; next, there might be a
command to act on her as a Tantrika hero. “I was seized with fear,” the Master recalled,
wept piteously, and said to Ma, “O Ma, what are your commands to one who has taken refuge in you? Where is
the ability of your feeble child to perform this feat?” As soon as I said so, I felt my heart was filled with divine
power. And no sooner had I, uttering the mantras, sat on the lap of the woman, like one possessed, unaware of
There is a hint that the brahmani herself wished to have a ritual sexual relationship
with her young disciple presumably with a view to making him her spiritual partner in the
heroic mode of the Tantrikas, as she was a follower of the vira mode of Tantra.37 She
attempted, albeit cautiously, to instil erotic feelings into Ramakrishna’s “innocent” mind. To
quote Saradananda,
When the Brahmani came, the Master’s mind was filled with the contemplation of Divine
Motherhood....Therefore we clearly understand why he addressed her as “mother" as soon as he saw her and
like a child sat, at times, on her lap, taking food from her hand. We have heard from Hriday that whenever the
Brahmani under the mood of the gopis of Vraja sang songs of madhura bhava, he did not like that mood and
requested her to stop them and sing instead songs expressive of the motherhood of God.38
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respect of younger men they ostensibly treated as their son. He used to remark about his
female devotees that “the mood and attitude of Gopala or vatsalya bhava was not good for
them, because that mood degenerated eventually” [ai vatsalya thekei abar tacchilya hai].39
The clever Yogeshwari “rightly understood the Master’s mental state and started immediately
singing songs as the female attendant of the Mother of the Universe; or introduced songs full
of the outburst of affection of Yashoda for the Vrajagopal.”4 0 It is well known that
Ramakrishna enjoyed erotic songs based on the theme of madhura relationship between
Radha and Krishna. However, he could not afford to encourage the bhairavi to sing those
numbers with a young man on her lap, though reportedly, he once sat on the bhairaviu’s lap
in the state of Gopala and sucked her breasts.41 It was most probably the fear of bhairavi the
female that led him to suggest that she stay away from Dakshineshwar as her continued
presence in the temple “would spark public rumour.” Consequently she fixed her abode on
divinity was popularized and reaffirmed by his frequent public ecstasies coupled with his
regular pleadings for divine delirium. It is thus necessary for us to understand the nature and
function of samadhi. It is first of all an experience that falls within the ambit of yogic
exercises. The yogi or the mystic devotee who wishes to achieve true union (yoga) of the
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human soul with God, edeavors to master a triple technique of samyama (“going together” or
(dhyana), and stasis (samadhi). These spiritual exercises have to be undertaken only after the
successful completion of hathayoga (physiological exercies), “when the yogi has succeeded
Samadhi or “enstasis” is the pinnacle of yogic experience in which the adept grasps
"the form of object without the help of categories or imagination (kalpana)...a state in which
the object reveals itself ‘in itself’ (svarupa).”43 The samadhi achieved by concentrating
thought on an object is samprajnata samadhi (differentiated enstasis) while the one achieved
Dr. Kakar, the highest stage of samadhi is moksa, which is, a la Vrihadaranyaka Upanisad,
“entry into brahman, a merging with brahman, eating of brahman, breathing of brahman’s
spirit.” In other words, “it is the unity of self and the world.”45 Samadhi, according to the
Rajayoga school, is a prelude to moksa. However, as Kakar argues, “the perfect samadhi or
feeling” (Ewigkeitsgefühl).
VI
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dissolution of the mind”47 and tried to explain samadhi through tantric terminology. As he
said:
The Kulakundalini is the Muladhara. When it is aroused, it passes along the Susumna nerve, goes through the
centers of Swadhisthana, Manipura, and so on, and at last reaches the head. This is called the movement of the
‘I’ and chetana samadhi which is attained through the path of bhakti, and such like.49 Once
the Master provided what must be considered as a zoological description of various samadhis
there are five kinds of samadhi. First, the ant movement—the Mahavayu rising up like an ant. Second, the fish
movement. Third the serpent movement. Fourth, the bird movement--just as the birds fly from one branch to
another. Fifth, the monkey movement in which he Mahavayu reaches the head with one jump, as it were,
followed by samadhi.50
samadhi (when the aspirant stays for a long time in a state of unconsciousness) and unmana
samadhi (a condition which permits sudden withdrawal from the phenomenal world and
union with God). The sthita equals to jada and it culminates in nirvikapla samadhi. The
chetana equals to bhava which constitutes a somewhat lower category of samadhi in which
a trace of ‘I’ remains for the sake of enjoyment and taste of the phenomenal world.
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However, either kind of samadhi cannnot be comprehended until one has given up kamini-
kanchana.51
sight of white cranes flying in the sky overcast with dark cloud. This was hardly a spiritual
experience, but his next reputed samadhi occurred two years later when he was singing a
prayer song dedicated to the village deity Vishalaksi or Vishalaksmi. A third episode of this
state occurred, probably later, when he was acting the part of Shiva in a yatra at the Pyne
attaining the nirvikalpa samadhi, in the mystery of which he was inducted by his naked
mentor Totapuri.5 3 Reportedly, he was in the nirvikalpa state for six months and this spiritual
feat was indeed remarkable because, according to him, ordinary mortals can live only for
twenty-one days in that state. He clearly recalled that in his nirvikalpa condition
he had no clue as to the passing of days and nights. Just as flies enter into the nostrils and the mouth of a
corpse, so they entered into mine though I had no consciousness. The hair became matted on account of
He was saved, he said, fortunately for the good of the world, by a holy man with “a
stick like ruler in hand,” who recognized Ramakrishna’s condition and “knew that a lot of
Mother’s work was yet to be done through this body; if it could be preserved, many people
would benefit.”54 It is puzzling how the Master could recall his condition and experience in a
spiritual condition in which there was no consciousness of the ego or of the phenomenal
world! His zoological explanation of samadhi is supposed to have been derived from an
149
anonymous holy man in Hrisikesh, whose experiences matched the Master’s. Ramakrishna,
of course, maintained judiciously that samadhis could not be described adequately, they must
VII
presume that Ramakrishna was a practitioner of yoga. However, we know that he never
really mastered hathayoga, although he did try it once. He reports that one evening he felt an
irritating sensation in his palate which bled and “the color of the blood was dark like the juice
of bean leaves.” Though he was terribly scared, his anxieties and fears were put to rest by a
sadhu who diagnosed his condition as the outcome of his practicing yoga.56 The significance
Ramakrishna had brought in a testimony form a holy man that he practiced yogic exercises.
He also believed that his condition was caused by Haladhari’s curse on him. It is quite
possible that Ramakrishna in fact was unable to undertake any physical exercise. The
description of his physique as sabal o sutham (“strong and well-built”) by his admirers is a
“constitution...seems to have been naturally frail.”58 Protap Mozoomdar observed that even
under forty years of age, the Master, though “well-formed naturally,” looked pitifully pale
and shrunken, probably because of his austerities during the days of his sadhana.59 M wrote
150
that Ramakrishna had “a very frail constitution and his health had to be maintained with
utmost care.” Keshab remakred that Ramakrishna “was such a delicate and extraordinary
personality that he should be protected carefully just as a beautiful and expensive article has
to be preserved in a glass case.”60 We have Saradamani's personal testimony that her husband
used to go to the country for recouping his health; for he suffered very much from digestive troubles at
Dakshineshwar and said, “Pooh! The stomach is a store of filth which keeps on flowing out!” All this made the
Ramakrishna especially found basti (cleansing of the large intestine and the rectum
by using anal pump), neti (cleansing of the nasal cavities by means of wires or threads
introduced into the nostrils), and nauli (contraction of a muscular area of the abdomen in
order to exert direct action on the functioning of the digestive apparatus) extremely difficult,
a man practicing hathayoga is concerned with his body. He washes his intestines with a bamboo tube through
his anus. He draws clarified butter and milk [symbolizing semen?] through his sexual organ. He learns how to
manipulate his tongue through some exercises [possibly referring to the so-called “lion pose” in which the
hathayogi sticks his tongue out in order to make his facial muscles firmer.6 2
Hathayogis, the Master maintained, aspire not for the realization of God, but for a long life
only.6 3 Moreover, as he announced, hathayoga was not efficacious for the Kaliyuga in which
human beings have a short lifespan, depend on food for living, and need a lot of hazardous
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and horrendous exercises with utmost care and correctness for a long time. Any slightest
deviation from the rules of exercise and regimen would result in sure death.
Therefore, it is not necessary to practice these things. Besides, is it not for the purpose of regulating the mind
that one needs to control the vital air by practicing pranayama and the like? You will see that both the mind and
the vital air will gradually be controlled through meditation and by devotion to God.64
Ramakrishna never openly confessed to his personal problems with yogic exercises. He,
however, claimed that he never took “more than three days to succeed in any of the
disciplines.”65 Being unread in the scriptures, he forbade Vedic scholarship and worship
because it was unsuitable for the Kali Age. On the other hand, he had some smattering of
tantra, as taught by Yogeshwari, and thus declated that it was suitable for Kaliyuga.66 Above
all, “the path of bhakti is good for Kaliyuga” because “it’s easy.”67
VIII
Ramakrishna’s frequent samadhi and his quick recovery from that state or his claim
state appear to be incongruent with the traditional description and definition of stasis.
According to Dr. Joshi of Saugar University, samadhi, properly speaking, “is a state which
makes for an experience of equipoise (samatva),” and such a state “does not come and go; it
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is once for all.” It is a permanent “state of liberation in bodily existence” and therefore “a
samadhi that comes and goes...is really not a samadhi at all."68 Dr. Kakar agrees that moksa
or perfect samadhi “is not a temporary surge of oceanic feeling, but a constant and fully
experiences of an unconscious state of mind, Ramakrishna used two Bengali words: bhava
and ishwarakoti. He told mota bamun (“fat Brahmin”) Prankrishna Mukhopadhyay that he
had been commanded by Kali “to remain in bhava.”70 All Ramakrishna scholars insist that
the Master used the word bhavamukha (literally meaning, “toward bhava,” that is, “on the
verge of ecstasy,” and not quite “in ecstasy”), though it is mentioned only once in the KM,
writes that “the Divine Mother asked Sri Ramakrishna...to remain in bhavamukha, on the
threshold of relative consciousness, the borderline between the Absolute and the Relative.”72
Monaranjan Basu obfuscates the meaning of the word by borrowing a Latin phrase from
samadhi (as Isherwood did).73 Tapasyananda claims that the word is “for the first time given
out by the Master himself, as he heard it from the commandment of the Divine Mother” and
that “the concept...forms a contribution of his Vedantic thought.”74 More recently, Dr. Kripal
adds his own interpretation to the existing pool by first translating bhava as “existence” and
then claiming that Saradananda’s interpretation and use of the word bhavamukha was wrong
because the Swami sought to predicate it on the Master’s Vedantic orientation, whereas, it
points “to the ultimate truth of the Tantric dialectic and its preference for the dynamic,
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dualistic, and devotional realities of the goddess over the seemingly dead truths [whatever
Ramakrishna is said to have declared that this skill of dwelling on the threshold is
the monopoly of the specially gifted individuals: the ishwarakotis,76 who are divine
incarnations, superior to ordinary mortals, the jivakotis.77 The latter are unable to return to the
plane of relative consciousness after samadhi, “but incarnations and Ishwarakotis can go up
as well as come down.”78 They are also qualified to experience mahabhava or prema.79 There
is a divine telos behind this scheme of things and that is, “when God Himself appears as a
man, as an incarnation, he holds the key to the liberation of beings; then for the welfare of
humanity he returns from samadhi.”80 Hence, claimed the Master, the natural inclination of
his mind was to move upward—toward nirvikalpa, but he made an effort to bring his mind
down to the realm of the mundane just for the sake of his devotees. He accomplished this
feat by kindling artificially the desires for drinking water, eating soup, smoking tobacco,
seeing or conversing with people. As he said, he constantly had to wrestle with his mind
which, given the slightest opportunity, would sprint for the nirvikalpa.8 1 The message of this
liberate mankind and postpone his permanent merging with the Godhead.
Shashadhar Tarkachudamani wrote that Ramakrishna was innocent of the fact that
nirvikalpa samadhi “was possible only after having mastered the numerous stages of
was not the product of any spiritual exercise. More likely it was the effect of some condition of the brain.
Those with feeble brain become senseless even by the impact of the most trivial incidents. This may happen
Among modern scholars only Professor Dhar boldly and judiciously asserted that the Master
consciousness.”83
Actually speaking, samadhi or syncope (“a fainting or swooning and other kinds of
from the distresses, dilemmas, and anxieties of the real world into the safe haven of a psychic
moratorium or, to borrow Fliess's phrase, a “hypnotic evasion.”85 This condition appears to
be corroborated by the Master's own admission. During the advanced stage of his terminal
cancer, when told by the physician to control his emotions, Ramakrishna said: “During
ecstasy the illness of the throat remains in one corner.”86 Saradananda writes how the mere
mention of the word “hemp,” “wine,” etc.—something that Ramakrishna did not desire—he
would go into samadhi. We learn further that “the strange Master enter[ed] into samadhi
uttering the name of that part of the female body, at the name of which, our civilized but
conceited mind...is filled with the idea of vile enjoyment.”87 Ramakrishna’s samadhi served
also as an escape from anger. Once when Ramlal touched his uncle’s pate while giving him
oil massage (a daily chore), the Master became furious and “then he suddenly went into
samadhi.”88
Some psychologists have interpreted the striving for moksa [perfect samadhi] as a response to environmental
stress—that is, a regression to the undifferentiated phase of infancy in which child and mother are united in the
symbolic intimacy, and withdrawal to a (potentially controllable) inner world of personal experience. As a
partial explanation of the psychological basis of such a cultural ideal and in the case of some individual Hindus,
powerful emotion—thought of sex or any stimulus such as fear or fantasy or sheer desire to
achieve dramatic effects for a certain activity—all these were contexts or pretexts for his
It is quite likely that the memory of childhood trauma (sexual abuse) rendered
Ramakrishna an easy and frequent prey to hypnotic trances in later life. Lloyd DeMause has
suggested a “linkage between childhood abuse and adult psychoses.”91 It may also be
possible that by constant practice Ramakrishna developed a habit or mania for being on high
whenever possible, and he could do nothing about this so-called “sacred disease.”92 An
“ecstasy edict,” he went into samadhi in 1868 while listening to a veena recital by
Maheshchandra Sarkar as easily and completely as he did while listening to the prayer songs
or a recital from Vaishnavic or Shakta stories and lyrics.93 Reportedly he prayed to Goddess
Kali: “Ma, keep me awake so that I am able to listen to the veena real well.”94 As he
by a ghost. I cease to be my own self.”95 Similarly he confessed to Dr. Sarkar: “What can I
do? I lose consciousness in that mood. I am not aware of what I do.”9 6 This confession of
course makes a mockery of his earlier boast: “How can one lose consciousness by
156
contemplating of Him whose consciousness has made the world conscious?”97 That his
trances were pathological rather than spiritual is attested to by the report that Ramakrishna
used to recover his consciousness when awakened by the loud cry of God’s name.
Obviously, then, his samadhi was something not connected to the divine—merger with the
Absolute and the like.98 Shivanath Shastri spoke of Ramakrishna’s “strange nervous disorder,
under which, whenever there was any strong emotion or excitement, he would faint away...
of a little child of five or six, who used to lose their senses on hearing a kirtana and regain
consciousness after a while. The child was considered an incarnation of Chaitanya by the
“inventors of neo-avatars.”10 0
In the final analysis, we must recall that the Master was quite an accomplished
actor. In fact there is a very interesting and very suggestive statement by him which
insinuates the dramatic element of his samadhi. “Haven’t you seen a theatrical
performance?” he inquired of an actor who visited him at Dakshineshwar. “The people are
conversing with each other, when suddenly the curtain goes up. Then everybody’s attention
is directed to the play. There is no other vision. Such is the state of samadhi.”101 This bit of
conversation does make Ramakrishna’s point quite clear but it also points to his intimate
Reportedly, his public trances initially brought him little more than people’s ridicule and the
Ramlal, his uncle’s stare during samadhi was fixed and eyelids half-closed— ardashivanetra.
157
He would weep profusely and after the spell was over would make faces and utter “ka, ka, ki,
ki, ku etc.” “Nobody understood these,” the nephew said.103 However, the Master soon
turned out to be a popular performer. Indeed the real reason behind his vast popularity was,
as he himself discovered, the rumor that he was a man “who died seven times and came back
to life seven times.”104 We also need to recall how Chaitanya, whose ecstatic dance was
imitated by Ramakrishna, regarded his own ecstasy (Radhabhava) as the outcome of epilepsy
or mrigivyadhi [indisposition of the female antelope or mrigi in rut] that mirrored Radha’s
IX
that his samadhi was not the lone experience of a monk but a performance par excellence by
a popular godman. One of his early public trances that earned him celebrity occurred at the
“Steamer Parties” of Keshab Sen in 1881 and 1882. Nagendranath Gupta, a relation of M,
We intently watched Ramakrishna Paramhamsa in samadhi. The whole body relaxed and then became slightly
rigid. There was no twitching of the muscles or nerves, no movement of any limb. Both his hands lay in his lap
with the fingers lightly interlocked. The sitting posture of the body (asana) was easy, but absolutely motionless.
The face was slightly tilted up, and in repose. The eyes were nearly but not wholly closed. The eyeballs were
not turned up or otherwise deflected, but they were fixed and conveyed no message of outer objects to the brain.
The lips were parted in a beatific and indescribable smile, disclosing the gleam of white teeth. There was
something in that wonderful smile which no photograph was ever able to reproduce. We gazed in silence for
158
several minutes at the motionless form of the Paramhamsa and then Troilokya Nath Sanyal, the singing apostle
of Keshab Chandra Sen’s Church, sang a hymn to the accompaniment of a drum and cymbals (khol and kartal).
As the music swelled in volume the Paramhamsa opened his eyes and looked around him as if he was in a
strange place. The music stopped. The Paramhamsa looking at us said, “Era sab kara?” (Who are these
people?) And then he vigorously slapped the top of his head several times, and cried out “Nebe ja--nebe ja” (Go
[The Master] lost outer consciousness and was in samadhi as soon as he boarded the boat. The boat came
[alongside the steamer]....Everybody crowded to have a view of the Master. Keshab carefully brought the
Master out of the boat. With great difficulty he was brought back to consciousness and taken inside....He was
made to sit on a chair....the onlookers peeking from outside. The Master again went into samadhi and lost all
consciousness of the outer world....The Brahmo devotees kept staring at [the Master]. The Master’s trance
came to an end. But his ecstasy was still intact. He mumbled to himself: “Ma, why have you brought me here?
Now kirtana is about to begin. The khol (an earthen percussion instrument) is playing. The singing has not
started yet. The sweet sound of the khol brings to mind the kirtana of the party of Gauranga. The Master is
getting into an ecstatic mood. Now and again he is looking at the drummer and saying, “Ah! Ah! I am getting
goosebumps.”
When the singer began his ecstatic melody, improvising several erotic imageries,
Shriramakrishna went into samadhi. After a short while he regained consciousness and then
159
suddenly stood up and began to sing like a cowgirl of Vrindavan gone berserk for Lord
Krishna. M wrote: “The Master danced and sang and the devotees watched spellbound.”107
A month later, on May 27, a Vaisnava kirtania named Manohar Goswami visited
Dakshineshwar and sang a few numbers on Chaitanya’s ecstatic love and on Lord Krishna’s
The Master was absorbed in Radha’s mood. He tore off his shirt and...began shivering in mahabhava. Looking
at Kedar, he is singing to the melody of the kirtana: “Please fetch Krishna, the lord of my life and heart.... Either
The performance of the avatara astounded the professional. Charmed by the Master’s
mahabhava, Goswami entreated him with folded hands: “Please deliver me from my
worldliness.”108
Again, next month, at Mani Sen’s Panihati residence, on the occasion of the Chinra
the Master suddenly began to race with the speed of an arrow. They searched for him a good deal and found
him dancing with the chorus group of Navadwip Goswami. He was getting into samadhi from time to time.
Shri Navadwip Goswami held him carefully lest he should tumble....[And then] the singing crowd surged
toward the Raghava temple....Only a part of the singing party could enter the temple of Sri Sri Radhakrishna.
Most of them failed to get in and jostled with one another to have a look at [Ramakrishna]. In a mood of intense
intoxication the Master again began to dance in the courtyard of the Shri Shri Radhakrishna shrine. He is getting
into samadhi from time to time....The name of Hari was being chanted frequently from inside the courtyard and
the strain was resounding in the chanting of thousands on the street. The flabbergasted passengers on the boats
160
plying on the Bhagirathi listened to the Hari chant resembling the roars of ocean waves and began chanting
themselves.10 9
performance. At the Brahmo Samaj office of Sinthi in north Calcutta, the Master danced to
the tune of Trailokya Sanyal “intoxicated with divine love.” As the description goes:
While dancing, he went into samadhi several times. He stood motionless in samadhi, his eyes still, his face
smiling, with one hand on the shoulder of a beloved disciple. At the end of the trance, he danced again like a
mad elephant....A marvelous sight! The dance of a divine child intoxicated with love and life dedicated to the
Mother! The Brahmo devotees were dancing around him like iron stuck to a magnet. Everybody was chanting
the name of Brahman ecstatically. Again, they were chanting the name of the Mother, the sweet name of
Brahman. Many of them were weeping like children, crying “Ma, Ma!”110
Shayampukur in north Calcutta, where Ramakrishna was transferred toward the final stage of
Ma, make me drunk with the wine of your love and plunge me...into the sea of love.
Here in this madhouse of yours, some laugh, some weep, and some dance joyfully:
Hereafter we follow M:
161
A wonderful sight after the song! Everybody is mad in ecstasy....At first Vijay was got up and stood
intoxicated. Then Shri Ramakrishna followed. The Master had forgotten all about his painful and fatal illness.
The doctor, in front of him, also stood up. Both patient and physician forgot themselves. Naren, Jr. and Latu
went into samadhi. Dr. Sarkar had studied science, but he was watching this strange scene in utter amazement.
He noticed that those who were in ecstasy were utterly unconscious of the outer world. All were motionless and
transfixed. At the end of the spell some laughed and some wept. As if a number of drunkards had assembled
there!111
The KM contains two interesting accounts of the Master’s ecstasy that reveals sheer
fun and nothing else. According to one such account, on the second day of the Durga Puja
festival in 1884, Ramakrishna noticed his beloved Narendra while conversing with his
devotees. Immediately he stood up and experienced samadhi. Having recovered from his
Shall I say again? No, today it's Ma, the bestower of the bliss of intoxication! Ma, full of the bliss of
drunkenness! Sa, re, ga, ma, pa, dha, ni [do, re, mi etc.]. It isn’t good to remain on ni. It isn’t possible to
In due course Narendra arrived, and there was no limit to the Master's happiness. After having saluted the
Master Narendra began talking to Bhavanath and others. A long mat was spread on the floor. Narendra lay on
his stomach while conversing. The Master looked at him and suddenly experienced samàdhi. He then mounted
Thereafter Ramakrishna sang a number dedicated to the Goddess Durga and then went out to
the porch to practice japa, taking the rosary from Pratap Hazra (apparently to calm himself or
control some undesirable thought). Here he was in trance again. “He sat in the state of
On the same day, after lunch, everybody took a little nap and thereafter some
brahmachari and Narendra as a Tantrika. Suddenly Ramakrishna began to sing and dance
ecstatically: “Ma, you can’t fool me any more as I have seen your crimson feet.” Then he
became normal again. After a while he sang and danced with his devotees in a circle. The
song had the refrain “Ma playing with Shiva, completely lost in ecstasy.” At the end of this
performance, Ramakrishna told M: “There would have been more fun had there been a
drummer. The note of the drum should have been: ‘Tak tak ta dhina! Dak dak da dhina!’”114
pleased with something or someone. One day, after having instructed his wife to dust and
make his bed and prepare a few rolls of betel leaf (as his mouth refresher), he entered the
temple at Dakshineshwar but came out a few minutes later “as if in a drunken state.” A
rather easy-going man who was also an accomplished actor, he obviously was aware of his
behavior. Yet he gave Sarada a nudge and asked her: “Am I really drunk?” Though quite
surprised to see him that way at that moment, she still replied in the negative. “Why do I
stagger then? Why can’t I speak? Am I really drunk?” Ramakrishna insisted (he was
talking!). Finally Shri Ma said what must have sounded very palatable to the ecstatic Master:
163
“No, no! Why should you consume alcohol? You have drunk the nectar of Ma Kali’s
bhava.”115
the sight of a bunch of drunken men reveling loudly on the roadside. His words became
slurry and “he brought suddenly a part of his body and the right leg out of the carriage and
stood on the footboard on one foot. Like an inebriated man he expressed his joy by
gesticulating shouting his approval at them: ‘Great! Fine! Cheers!’” His companion, a
complete stranger, dragged him inside and, reportedly, “his heart went on throbbing for some
time.” He thought, “how awful it was...to drive in the same carriage with this mad
Master!”116 M observed astutely and eloquently: “The Master is like a boy, beyond the three
gunas....He is devoid of any juice of material desire and is like a dry timber, highly
combustible.”117
XI
It really is not quite true that Ramakrishna danced and romped in his matoara
bhava (intoxicated mood) oblivious of the world around him. On the other hand, he was
fully aware of his audience and also of any possible criticism of his widely and wildly
publicized ecstasies. In particular he was especially careful in making his debut in a new
place. At the Star Theater, where he went see a religious play, he was becoming emotional
while watching some of the scenes and admonished Baburam and M seated next to him:
“Don’t make a fuss if I fall into ecstatic mood or undergo a samadhi. The worldly people
will think it’s playacting.”118 He loved to playact the Visnu of folklore by placing his foot on
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the chest of his devotees, but he was aware of its perception by unbelievers, and so made it a
point not to allow those whom he somehow disliked to participate in that spiritual game. For
example, he told Pratap Hazra, whom he dreaded as well as disliked, to stop clutching to his
feet by chiding him: “Leave me, what’s this drama you’re enacting...people will see us and
spread rumors.”119 But he unhesitatingly placed his feet on Vijay Goswami’s chest and the
latter, reportedly, literally washed them with his tears.120 Ramakrishna would remain quite
self-conscious even in a trance. M once reported how after “his samadhi was over, the
Master found the gaze of a room-full of people fixed on him. He went on talking to
himself.”121 At another time, following a session of kirtana, heavy dancing, and frequent
samadhis, the ecstatic Master noticed Vijay drifting into a trance and asked: “My dear, Sir,
have you lost consciousness, too?”122 Saradananda informs accurately: “His excessive
bhava notwithstanding, the Master used to be mindful of even the most insignificant
matter.”123 Ramakrishna considered his condition truly sacred and even told Priya
Mukhopadhyay: “Believe me as I speak in this state of mind. There is neither any parade
nor pretense here.”124 Vaikuntha Sanyal writes about the Master’s protestations of the
Upon my mother, this is no put on by no rascal” [mairi balchi, kon shala bhanday].125 Girish Ghosh described
the paramahamsa’s ecstatic state in Balaram’s living room. After having exchanged a few niceties with
Balaram, the Master suddenly stood up, murmuring “Sir, I’m all right—sir, I’m o.k.” and drifted into a peculiar
mood. He thereafter protested: “No, no, this is not a put on, not a put on.” A few moments later he sat down
again."126
165
He also enjoyed being under people’s stare. Mahendranath Datta reports on his
amusing behavior while eating naked, which created a great impact on his spectators, male as
well as female.127 The Master was equally concerned about the degree of his impact on
people. One day he sought confirmation of his performances from M: “Does whatever I say
in my ecstatic state attract people?” Having received a positive response he asked again:
“What do people think? Do they think anything in particular when they see me in ecstasy?”
Once more he asked M “What happens to me in the ecstatic state?” and was told that “he has
vision of God.” The Master then spoke: “It is He who’s doing everything. I know nothing
whatsoever.”128 M, who “had never seen or heard of such a thing before”—was overwhelmed
with wonder, and thought: “Can a man be so oblivious of the outer world in the
contemplation of God? How deep his faith and devotion must be to bring about such a
state!”129
XII
Ramakrishna’s ecstasies were publicized by the Brahmo press. Keshab met the
Master for the first time in 1875 at the retreat of Jaygopal Sen and became his ardent devotee.
Ramakrishna initially impressed Keshab with his “thrilling song” and samadhi. When
Hriday brought his ecstatic uncle back to consciousness by uttering “OM” and Ramakrishna
claimed that he could dwell in the realm of the spiritual and the phenomenal at the same time,
Keshab and his friends “were amazed.”130 The Brahmo leader himself had claimed an
avatara status through his New Dispensation in the Jewish, Christian, and Vaishnava
traditions.131 Quite naturally he took particular interest in publicizing the new prophet on the
166
God” drove Sen to tell him: “How long will you hide yourself in this way? Gradually people
will be thronging here in great crowds.” He undertook the responsibility for advertizing the
Ramakrishna phenomenon: “All right, I shall gather people.” Most certainly elated by the
the dust of everybody’s feet. Anyone gracious enough to come here is always welcome.”13 2
The above statement is demonstrably false, for Ramakrishna did look for
confirmation of his spiritual condition. As he confessed: “I used to say ‘Ma, I shall take
[myself] seriously only when the zemindars of this country appreciate me.’”133 As to
considering himself “dust of the dust of everybody’s feet,” we know that he considered
himself a specially realized person, in fact divine, and believed that “he who has realized
God looks on man as a mere worm.”134 He actually had a very low opinion of people in
general. Once he told Keshab that “nobody can make a man great by writing about him in
books and newspapers....What can man do? Never depend on people. Man is but a worm.
He can venerate or vilify you with the same tongue.”135 While publicly proclaiming his love
for humanity—“Let me be condemned to be born again and again, even as a dog, if I can be
of help to a single soul”—he was overheard murmuring in front of the image of Kali: “Why
do you bring here all these worthless people, who are like milk diluted with five times its
own quantity of water? My eyes are almost destroyed by blowing fire to dry up the water.
since 1879. An editorial of 15 June 1879 in the Brahmo paper The Indian Mirror wrote: “I
167
can assure the reader...that if the Yogi is not gallant is pure.”137 The Sunday Mirror of 2
when he and the procession chanted the name of God before him. This is what we call being
intoxicated or maddened by communion with God....The sight we saw there is worth seeing
Belgharia retreat where all the Brahmo invitees were struck by the divine intoxication of the
Master.139 Describing the “steamer party” of 23 February 1882 organized by Keshab in honor
of Ramakrishna, The New Dispensation of 26 February wrote that in the presence of the
Brahmos, of Rev. Joseph Cook, and Miss Mary Pigot and to their wonder the paramahamsa
“successively went through all the phases of spiritual; excitement which characterize him.”
The paper added that “Rev. [Joseph] Cook who represented Christian theology and thought,
seemed much impressed and interested.”140 The Dharmatattva of 5 August 1884 wrote that
Ramakrishna was a paramahamsa “in action and not in apparel” and added that “at the very
Most readers of these magazines and newspapers would probably have shared
under exercise but was a siddha purusha or one who had attained direct vision of spiritual
Ashwinikumar Datta, who watched the devotees dance around Ramakrishna in a circle with
the Master standing motionless and transfixed in samadhi for a long time, said to himself:
“Yes a paramahamsa indeed.”143 Swami Saradananda pays an eloquent tribute to his guru’s
performances: “Swami Vivekananda used to say, ‘Could one enjoy a rhinoceros doing
168
khemta dance? But, when we met the Master, we found everything turned upside down.
Though he was middle-aged, the Master danced, sang, made various poses—and, ah, how
sweet they were!”144 Ramakrishna’s official biographers have rightly commented that his
“contact with the members of the Brahmo Samaj gave him the first opportunity to study the
mentality of the educated community of Bengal from which later came the chief instruments
429For the problematics of experiencing ecstasy and explaining this experience see Ann Taves, Fits,
Trances & Visions.
3Kinsley, Divine Player, 220. See also Narasingha P. Sil, “Kali’s Child and Krishna’s Lover.”
8Ibid, 155-56.
9KM, II, 3 (GR, 119). Diary of 16 October 1882. Padmanath Bhattacharya questions the authenticity of the Jai
14KM, IV, 60 (GR, 380). Diary of 5 January 1884. Pancavati stands for five (pancha) plants consisting
of fig, banyan, ashoka, vilwa [marmelos], and amalaki [embelic myrobalan]. The Skanda Purana
contains the instructions for planting them in appropriate places. Ramakrishna and Hriday planted them
16Ibid.
18Ibid., p. 129.
20Ibid., 189.
21Ibid., p. 154.
23 Ibid., 168.
24 KM, IV, 232 (GR, 813). Diary of 15 July 1885. See also LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 35.
27 Ibid., 128.
28 JV, 33.
29 Ibid., p. 191.
34 HM (G), 36-37.
36 Ibid., 225.
41 RC, I, 69.
42 LR, 118.
43Mircea Eliade, Patanjali and Yoga, 92. Eliade makes a distinction between enstasis (feeling of being one with the
Absolute) and ekstasis (transcending self-experience characterized by expansion of consciousness, increased intensity,
and the experience of pleasure). See Hans Hof, “Ecstasy and Mysticism,” 241-52.
44Eliade, Patanjali and Yoga, 93-96. See also Georg Feuerstein, Holy Madness, 238, 302, 447-48.
46Ibid., 17-18.
52LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 44, 48, 53. These episodes of early samadhi were reported by the Master himself to his
53 Ibid., 296. Nirvikalpa means without vikalpa, that is, the confusion induced by “cognitive inferences based upon
the conceptual meaning which the perception of the object evokes in our mind.” Harold G. Coward, Yung and Eastern
Thought, 137.
5 5KM, II, 57 (also III, 258-59) (GR, 237 and also 949-50). Diaries of 5 June 1883 and 9 April 1886.
56LR, 91-92.
171
57RA, I, 129.
60KM, V, 9-10 (there is no corresponding translation in the GR). Diary of 2 April 1882. However, GR, 464 translates
63Ibid., 285.
64LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 146.
65Ibid., 209.
6 8K.S. Joshi, “Samadhi,” 59, 57. Joshi predicates his analysis on Patanjali’s Yogasutra and on a careful etymological
70 KM, IV, 3 (GR, 175). Diary of 1 January 1883. See Kakar, Analyst and Mystic, 20-23 for an interesting discussion
of bhava.
7 1KM, III, 85. Diary of 30 June 1884. Nikhilananda does not translate the relevant passage as is but provides a
paraphrased version in English (GR, 485). I thank Dr. Kripal for providing the KM reference.
72GR, 30.
73Ramakrishna Sadhan Parikrama, 16 and 137-40 for a discussion of bhavamukha. See also Isherwood, ed. Vedanta
76GR, 52: Nikhilananda’s Introduction. Nikhilananda translates Ishwarakoti as “a soul born with special spiritual
qualities.” The word means, literally, “of the level of God.” I am grateful to Dr. Kripal for having supplied the
meaning.
88RH, 45.
89 Inner World, 27.
91 Cited in Jerold Atlas, “Understanding the Correlation Childhood Punishment and Adult Hypnotizability,”
309.
92 The term in quotes is borrowed from Dhar, Vedanta and Bengal Renaissance, 116.
93 LR, 231. I have borrowed the phrase “ecstasy addict” from Clément, Syncope, 205.
94 RC, I, 137.
99Cited in Mookerjee, ed. Ramakrishna, 16. See also Dhar, Vedanta and Bengal
Renaissance, 114-27.
10 3AP, 15.
105 Dimock, trans., Chaitanya Charitamrita, madhyalila, ch. 18, p. 607 and n. 174. For Chaitanya’s
113 KM, II, 138-40 (GR, 569-70). Diary of 29 September 1884. Interestingly enough Ramakrishna would
admonish Hazra only a few days later that the latter needlessly practiced japa at Dakshineshwar, where the
sheer physical presence of the Divine Mother in the temple was enough to arouse spiritual consciousness.
115 LP, II (Gurubhava--Uttarardha), 67. See also AN, 98-133: “Kirtane Nartane Shriramakrishna.”
117KM, II, 230 (GR, 963). Diary of 22 April 1886. Yoga psychology recognizes three gunas or substantive qualities of
consciousness: sattva (brightness or intelligence), rajas (emotion or dynamism), and tamas (dullness or inertia). See
120 Ibid., 255. See the Appendix for Ashutosh Mandal’s critique [“Parampurus Shriramakrishna”: Grantha
122KM, IV, 95 (GR, 441). Diary of 25 May 1884. For a discussion of Vijaykrishna’s “storms of bhava” see McDaniel,
131 Keshab Sen’s lecture “Jesus Christ: Europe and Asia” cited in Geoffrey Parrinder, Avatar and Incarnation,
99.
134KM, II, 193 (GR, 689). Diary of 27 December 1884. I follow Nikhilananda’s accurate translation
here.
136GR, 66-67: Nikhilananda’s Introduction. Note Ramakrishna’s use of expressions that characterize
138Ibid., 121.
140Ibid., 256.
1 41Ibid., 255.
14 3KM, I, 262 (GR, 1023). Appendix: ch. II: Datta’s letter to M, undated.
14 4LP, II (Gurubhava--Purvardha), 88. Khemta is an erotic dance, usually performed by professional dancers
145LR, 288.
176
CHAPTER SEVEN
It is my sweet pleasure. I shall chew pan, look at my face in the mirror, and dance naked among a thousand girls.
Ramakrishna to Krishnakishore Bhattacharya, KM, III, 76 (GR, 477). Diary of 30 June 1884.
The contrast between Ramakrishna’s publicized status as a renunciant and a realized monk
and his actual life style presents interesting but intriguing anomalies. Reputed to be
claimed celibate status even though married, while he remained absolutely dependent on the
largesses of wealthy admirers and patrons. He of course needed an all-time attendant to carry
out various personal daily chores for him and he had his wife glued to the kitchen, as it were,
during all her waking hours cooking for and catering to her ecstatic husband and the
members of his all-male erotic community. The Master’s food fetish was phenomenal.
Sarada related that the first thing her husband would talk about early in the morning was
what he would like to eat during lunch. She usually followed his elaborate instructions on
the menu scrupulously and she would be upset if she could not find the specific spices that he
would like her to use in cooking that day. Once she could not find the particular spice that
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the paramahamsa has asked her to use for cooking the dal (lentil soup) and he would not
relent on her cooking the stuff without that particular spice. “How can that be?” thundered
If you do not have the spice in the home, get it from the village shop. . . .I left behind the rice pudding and other rich
dishes of the Dakshineshwar temple and came here just to enjoy the flavour of that particular spice, and you want to
Even though he was extremely fond of spicy food—“Season your lentil soup in such
a way that it will make a hog grunt,” he would say2 —he was constitutionally unable to put up
with all kinds of foods. His wife knew what kind of stuff would suit him. He had a weak
stomach and he could not eat the foods prepared in the kitchen of Dakshineshwar temple.
Thus he needed his wife to cook for him. When one day she declined to cook because she
Who told you that a woman cannot cook for these three days? You must cook for me as usual. There is nothing
wrong about it. Please tell me what is impure in a person—the skin, the flesh, the bone, the marrow? It is the mind
that makes one pure or impure. There is no impurity outside the mind. 3
This bit of sermon flatly contradicted his contempt for the female body with its
entrails, flesh, bones, filth, excreta, blood, and the like. Even when terminally ill at Kashipur,
the Master would be concerned for his foods. He was prescribed a special diet of “boiled
cream of wheat… rice gruel, and meat and clam stew.” When asked to prepare the clam
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stew, Sarada refused to kill clams. This threw the patient into a fit of rage and she ultimately
decided to comply. Once again, this behavior of the dying man went against his admonition
against fishing administered to one of his young devotees some years earlier that “a man of
II
disorder. Hridayram deposed that his uncle suffered from terrible pangs of hunger during the
days of his sadhana. One night he woke up from slumber after dinner and felt extremely
famished. He had to be fed stale rice soaked in water (pantabhat) mixed with molasses.5
After samadhi one morning, Ramakrishna woke up and said: “I am famished.” Once at
Kamarpukur, where he usually went during the rainy season, he ate, even while indisposed
due to indigestion, a huge bowlfull of parched rice (mudi) and over two pounds of sweets, to
the utter puzzlement of his relatives, who thought he had been in another plane of
consciousness. At another time, at his in-laws’ home at Jairambati, he gorged rice “enough
for at least three men.”6 One day, while voiding under a plum tree, he ate up a plum that
dropped on the ground. Having gorged the fruit in that condition he confessed to his nephew
Ramlal, who was on attendance nearby: “What’s happening to me! I just ate the plum while
my ass is still full of shit! Know what? Mother makes me behave like a child, or a lunatic, or
a ghoul sometimes. Right now I am in the state of a ghoul.”7 Indeed, his idea of an authentic
paramahamsa was a naked boy eating with assfull of shit and after wash offering his naked
posterior to people for their inspection. 8 Ramlal stated that his uncle often forgot to wash
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himself properly in the morning whenever he had a hunger pang. 9 This gluttony is interpreted
by his biographers as his skill in demonstrating the power of human mind to regulate “the
functions of the body to meet the demands of the situation.”10 M interprets his Master’s
that
in order to keep up his link with the external world, the Master used to create some small artificial desires in his mind.
. .[to] force the mind to remain at the threshold of relative consciousness, the Bhavamukha, from which he could
that “according to the Gita, the jnani himself does not eat; he thus [by eating] makes
offerings to his kundalini.”13 While it is difficult to locate this sermon in the Gita, it is quite
easy to see that the Master was no sthitaprajna or a man of perfect equipoise, according to
the Gita. Nor did he follow its admonition that “gluttons have no discipline, nor the man
who starves himself, nor he who sleeps excessively or suffers wakefulness;” and ‘when a
man disciplines his diet and diversions, his physical actions, his sleeping and waking,
discipline destroys his sorrow.” From the Gita’s point of view, then, he clearly was neither a
disciplined man who “renounces cravings” is “free from the things of desire” nor a yogi
Food seems to have provided the mad lover of God the fuel for his colorful ecstasies
and enstasis. It might also have provided his psychic strength to combat stress which could
idiosyncratic explanation for his food fetish. “Why do I eat a variety of dishes?” he asked
and answered his own question: “Monotonous meals might compel me to give [the devotees]
up.”15 Bengalis in general are obsessed with food. The variety and volume of various food
preparations during breakfast, lunch, and dinner in a Bengali household demonstrate their
ethnic gluttony. Ramakrishna, Saradamani, and Vivekananda—indeed almost all the ascetics
belonging to the order of this cultural trinity—seemed to be as hungry for the divine as for
food. One of the most powerful attractions of the Master, and after his death, the Holy
Mother, consisted in their generosity with foods and snacks, which made him, and
devotees, disciples, and admirers.16 Ramakrishna’s favorite daily meal at dinner time
consituted luchi and farina pudding.17 His favorite snack was sweet cream or sar.18 He was
very careful about bad breath. He always carried with him a small pouch containing such
mouth refreshing spices as aniseed, cardamom, cloves, caraway seed, and cubeb
felt negatively about the devotee’s morning breath.20 He advised Akhandananda to eat pan to
refresh his post-prandial breath.21 His usual diversion after meal consisted in body (chiefly
feet) massage by his devotees, most often M, who even felt that “the Master was actually
teaching him how to be of service because he did not know how to serve [a Godman].”2 2
In the classic Hindu tradition of a guru, Ramakrishna in fact attributed spiritual value
unsuspecting young man who refused to wash the Master’s feet after the latter’s toilet: "If I
piss standing, you buggers have to do it dancing around. You must do my bidding for your
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own good” [“ami yadi dandiye mooti, to shalara pak diye mootbi. Tai toder bhalor janyai
amar acharer prayojan”].23 Surrounded by a number of young men one day, he cracked a
few jokes as usual making his visitors laugh. He then asked them to massage his feet. While
they were engaged in the chore, he said to M: “It has great significance.” He then placed his
hand over his chest and said: “If there is anything in this, it is total elimination of ignorance
bliss, ananda niketan, as it were. The nahavat (tune from a windpipe called sanai in
Bengali) used to play various melodies in the early hours of the morning, in mid-morning, at
noon, in the early afternoon, and in the evening, in short, throughout the day. Scores of
devotees and itinerant mendicants visited the place every day.25 Ramakrishna lived in this
charming and serene atmosphere in superb comfort—singing, dancing, eating good food, and
being ecstatic to everybody’s wonderment. “This world is a hunk of fun. I eat (and drink)
and make merry”—[“Ei samsar majar kuti, ami khai dai ar maja luti”]—he loved to repeat
this doggerel often.26 He frankly told Krishnakishore Bhattacharya: “It’s my sweet pleasure
I'll chew betel-leaf, look at my face in the mirror, and dance naked among a thousand girls.”27
As to assuming the role of a preacher or teacher he confessed to his friend Keshab that he
was not interested in lecturing to people. “I’ll eat, sleep, and shit, and that’s all. I can’t do
any other things”[“Ami tomar khabo-dabo thakbo, ami tomar khabo, shobo ar bahye jabo.
III
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Arguably, the Master’s somber renouncer reputation was a significant factor behind
avadhuta is one who rejoices in as well as renounces all creature comforts. He exercises or
exhibits total detachment while retaining a markedly uxorious habit, as was the case with
was thus a classic paramahamsa but with one significant exception. As will be seen later, he
was absolutely indignant of any sexual relationship with a woman including his own wife.
He publicly proclaimed his indifference to mundane wealth with his famous slogan of taka-
make of this? My hand gets twisted and my breathing stops whenever I touch money.”30 On
hearing from Vivekananda, sometime in 1888, that his guru “had completely annihilated his
senses, and that if anybody brought a piece of metal in contact with his hand, it was
invariably paralysed,” Swami Bhaskarananda Saraswati of Benares observed that the Master
was “a cheat, a charlatan.”31 Far from being a case of Ramakrishna’s unique demonstration of
aversion to riches, this was a well-known medieval practice of the Hindus—a “an application
of...of the Sankara Vedantic formula of Brahma satyam jaganmithya [Brahma is real and the
substantial donation for his comfort and even “besought him with folded hands never to
mention the subject again.” It is, however, well known how much he depended on his
rasaddars like Mathur Biswas, Adhar Sen, Shambhu Mallik, Balaram Basu, Suresh Mitra,
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and Girish Ghosh. But he reacted to the present offer of help by stating: “I felt as if
When I flung the money into the Ganges, I became a bit alarmed. I thought I had renounced Lakshmi! What would
happen if Ma Lakshmi stopped all my supplies [yadi khyant bandha karen]? Thus I became a diplomat like Hazra and
When his nephew Hriday showed him a calf which he intended to “grow into a fine
animal for the plough,” his saintly uncle “fell into a swoon.” The shocked ascetic exclaimed:
“Just look at the spirit of hoarding in worldly people! Now it is but a calf; it will grow big,
and then help to till the fields! They plan so far ahead, and do not lean upon God! Ah, this
Mathur after having showed his fascination with it. “What is there in it?” cried the saint.
“Nothing but some goats hair....Like all other things, it does not help realize Saccidananda.”35
Indeed he believed himself to be, as he said later, “not merely a sannyasin [monk], but king
The Master’s celebrated slogan against kamina-kanchana did not discourage him in
his early youth from coveting gold ornaments for himself as part of his madhura bhava, nor
did it prevent him from presenting his wife with gold bangles.37 We must also note that he
never gave up world but always lived at home like a householder in the midst of comforts
without doing any work. Like a practical minded householder, Ramakrishna maintained a
diary listing every kind of expenses ranging from defraying the cost of a horoscope for
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himself, paying the physicians he often consulted for his ailments, buying ornaments for his
wife and even for her maidservant, and above all, investing in landed property at
Kamarpukur and Sihore. He even had the property duly registered though he refused to put
his own signature on the document claiming his renouncer status. Though Swami
Prabhananda writes that this diary of the Master is “a treasure to the devotees who wish to
savor the nectar of his lila as an incarnation,” it does reveal his rational calculations for a
secure and happy life at home.38 Moreover, he did never really show a consistent indifference
to kanchana. He was concerned for Hriday’s material welfare: “Hride did a lot for me and I
would be happy if he got something in return. But which Babu could I ask?”3 9 Though he
advised the young Kaliprasad against fishing proclaiming that “a man of realisation can
never be cruel to others...because it is against his very nature,”40 he did not hesitate to kill
bedbugs for the sake of comfort.41 Similarly, he was keen on consuming clam stew during
his illness and even ordered his wife to kill the mollusks and cook them for his satisfaction.42
counseled material help for the mendicants: “How will the sadhus eat if they don’t get any
money?”44 He conceived of the yogis, sannyasis, and sadhus as some sort of respectable
social parasites. As he said, “Yogis and Sannyasins make no home for themselves. They
pass their days in other men's homes—today in one home, tomorrow in another.” His idea of
a sadhu’s life is also quite idiosyncratic. His holy men appear to be thoroughly this-worldly
Sadhus never settle down in a place where there no “jungles” nearby and where “food and drink” is hard to get.
“Jungles” means solitary spots for answering the calls of nature; and “food and drink” means alms. As Sadhus live on
alms, they select only those places for their temporary residence where alms can be easily procured.45
Even his taxonomy of ascetics is influenced by his primary concern for food. As he said:
There are three classes of mendicants: good, mediocre, and bad. Those who are good do not exert to procure food.
The dandis [a sect of mendicants who always carry a staff, danda] and the like are either mediocre or bad. [To get
food] the mediocre ususally approach by uttering “Namo Narayana”. The bad one fights those who do not give alms.
The good sadhu behaves like an ajagara [boa constrictor]. He gets his food just sitting at one place. The ajagara
never moves.46
Ramakrishna must have heard about the aajagara vrata from somewhere. The
Bhagavatapurana, composed in the 9th century, years after the Kurukshetra battle, extolled
the aajagara. The king of Ajanabha Varsa, Risava (the first of the twenty-four tirthankaras
of the Jains and regarded as a partial avatara of Visnu), abdicated in favor of his eldest son
Bharata (the name Bharatavarsa is derived from him), became an itinerant mendicant, and
ultimately practiced aajagara, that called for total inaction, that is, lying down and eating,
drinking, and excreting in one place without moving anywhere. Another aajagara
practitioner, a certain sage, told King Prahlada that he would be happy with what he got in a
day and would lie down like a python (ajagara) the day that brought him nothing. Narada is
said to have called this behavior the dharma of a paramahamsa (Mahabharata, 179/19). The
aajagara vrata is an extreme example of quiescence and inaction that characterized the
It would not be out of place in this connection to note that Ramakrishna grew up in a
less than egalitarian and humanitarian environment. As a Brahmin boy he was held in high
hierarchical society. He was a thoroughly caste-conscious Brahmin in spite of his claim that
he had not discriminated between castes during the days of his Tantrika sadhana, and in spite
of his occasional preaching about the oneness of the world. The much publicized story of his
childish whims in respect of his nanny Dhani Kamarni and its fantastic interpretation as
something socially revolutionary4 8 is misleading at best. The saint was in fact quite vocal
about his caste discrimination. “Do you know what it means for an ascetic to accept money
or to succumb to temptation?” he once asked his devotees. “It’s like a Brahmin widow
keeping a bagdi [low caste] paramour after having undergone penance for a long time.” M
added a note to his report: “Everyone is struck dumb.”49 His crude, cruel, though naive,
casteism even offended his patrons such as Manilal Mallik, most probably a suvarnavanik by
caste but mistakenly considered a teli because of his prosperous oil business, who once fell a
victim to the Master’s ridicule.5 0 He similarly harbored a benign contempt for the caste of
gold merchants (sonar bene) and found them calculating but dim witted,51 even though some
of his patrons like Adhar Sen, Shambhu, Yadulal and Mani Mallik came from their midst. It
is on record that he despised the idea of working for a Shudra employer and even eating the
explanation that Gadadhar disliked his position as the temple priest because he regarded it a
Ramakrishna’s case, to say the least.53 The Master’s public view on casteism was reported by
The venerable Ram Kissen of Dakhineswar paid a visit to Pandit Sasadhar Tarkachuramani on Friday last week. In
the course of conversation the Pandit asked the Paramhamsa's opinion about the caste system--whether it ought to be
abolished or not. The Paramhamsa replied—“When the fruit is ripe it falls from the tree of itself. To wrench the
IV
his married status into a situation that catered to his creature comforts, especially his
demands for good foods daily. The Master’s strange marriage to Saradamani reads like his
towards his wife...beats all records. It is strange, unprecedented and obviously beyond the
reinforced by the persuasion of his patrons, Rasmani and Mathuranath, to get married and he
complied because he was led to believe that marriage would help him restore his health
affected adversely by his sadhana (whatever it was).56 He eventually got married in May
1859 when he was twenty-three and his bride a mere child of five. As was the custom of the
day, after wedding the child bride returned to her parents’ home at Jairambati to stay there
until she came of age. The groom returned to his temple at Dakshineshwar to continue his
spiritual exercises and from 1861, exclusively tantric practices, under Yogeshwari.
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Within a few years, reports of his “very scary” and “extremely horrible” Tantrika
sadhana reached Sarada at Jairambati. A teenger by now (1867), she became alarmed and
hurried to the adjoining village of Kamarpukur, where Ramakrishna had taken his Tantrika
mentor to help his sadhana in his ancestral home.57 Here she was treated by her “motherly”
consort as a mere child and he now instructed her on how to behave properly in the family
and perform puja and other chores. He also taught her about the unreality of the world and
its troubles and tribulations and once said to her: “Detachment and devotion are the only
things that matter. What would one gain by bearing children, like bitches and vixens?”5 8 He
even tried to terrorize her about the agonies of motherhood if the children died. When, after
repeated allusions to deaths of children, Sarada protested, “Will all of them really die?” the
exasperated and alarmed mentor yelled: “Ah me! Here indeed I have trampled on the tail of a
deadly snake. Dear me! I thought she was good-natured, and innocent of everything, but she
Most probably he was torn between the bhairavi’s possesiveness and veiled
seduction and the natural desires of a young wife. He probably felt uncomfortable with the
disturbed by Yogeshwari’s pampering him as a living Chaitanya as well as her sexual lessons
ostensibly as part of her training. She even warned him “that by freely mixing with his wife
he was but jeopardizing his spiritual welfare.”60 He, however, persisted in living with his
wife, which discouraged the tantric nun and she departed in despair. Ramakrishna left for
Dakshineshwar sometime in November 1867 and Sarada for Jairambati. Here she heard the
rumor that Ramakrishna had gone insane. The post-bhairavi phase of his spiritual adventure
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was that of vatsalya bhava with the doll Ramlala and madhura bhava with Krishna. This
indeed was the celebrated period of the Master’s divine inebriation. Sarada thus hastened to
Dakshineshwar on foot sometime in 1872 and finally arrived at destination, tired and
considerably ill.
It is at this point that the Master’s anxieties arose as he had now to deal with his
eighteen-year old wife at a time when he had chosen to behave like a romantic teenager mad
in love of the lusty Krishna. The problem called for careful endeavor. He struggled hard, as
the role of a mother to her. Now at Dakshineshwar he made her believe that she was the
mother, indeed the Divine Mother. When one day, while massaging her husband's feet, the
girl summoned the courage to ask him about his attitude toward her, he replied: “It is that
Mother in the temple who has given birth to him, who lives in the Nahavat [since 1872
Sarada had been sleeping separately in the Nahavat] and is now massaging his feet. I always
Bhanu pisi (aunt Bhanu)—no relation to Sarada’s but a family friend who was friendly with
the young girl’s mother—that he was Shiva and Sarada Shiva’s consort.62 At another time he
proclaimed her to be his Shakti and said that she indeed was Saraswati, simply because her
name was Sarada (a popular appellation of the Goddess).63 He must have succeeded
eminently in deifying Saradamani and thus rendering her sexually irrelevant. As he deposed
later: “After marriage I anxiously prayed to the Divine Mother to root out all sense of
physical enjoyment from her mind. That my prayer had been granted, I knew from my
contact with her during this period [March 1872 - November 1873].”64
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castration in the sodasi puja (“virgin worship,” supposedly a tantric ritual) celebrated by her
husband, who actually worshipped her as a Goddess on May 25, 1872, the day of
of his wife’s ever making a sexual advance toward him and at the same time gaining
recognition as an adept who had successfully graduated in the highest tantric practices. Most
probably he tried to imitate one of his mentors, Gauri Pandit, who reportedly worshipped his
wife with flowers believing her to be Goddess Bhagavati in human form.65 His chantings
preparatory to the worship instilled most probably a feeling of alarm and vulnerability in
Sarada and she was in an almost comatose state. Then began the ritual by her saintly consort
who prayed: “O Thou eternal Virgin, Thou Mother Tripura-Sundari, the Source of all power,
do Thou open the gates of perfection.”66 Thereafter he worshipped her with the usual sixteen
kinds of offerings. He fed her some sweets with his own hand. As Gambhirananda
describes: “By and by, the Mother lost all consciousness and the worshipper, too, as he
proceeded with his ceremonies, gradually lost himself in beatitude. On that level of ecstasy
the Deity and the devotee became identified.”6 7 It was a strange consummation of a strange
relationship! Their relationship would henceforth have none of those anxieties one associates
with youth or normal heterosexual instinct. Both felt completely dehumanized—and deified!
declared that the young saint was “really established in Brahman” because he manifested
“self-abnegation, detachment, discrimination, and realization” and therefore could lose “no
spiritual value” and “incurred no demerit” by performing “his duty towards his wife.”68 Yet
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Ramakrishna chose to remain celibate. Saradananda speculates, rather judiciously, that the
Master had been able to avoid sexual entanglements with his young wife because of her
delayed physiological developments which made her look like a little girl.69 Sanghaguru
Matilal observes that “it is not unreasonable to suppose that he was saved [from carnality]
feminine figure though she possessed a charming visage (as can be seen in her early
photographs). That may be one of the reasons why her husband could detach himself easily
from any erotic feelings for her and remark to Golap Ma (Golapsundari Devi, a disciple of
the Master and Sarada’s companion) that his wife was Goddess Saraswati, who had
looking at her with impure eyes.”7 1 There is also that amusing incident related by Golap Ma
how in 1912, in Benares, she was mistaken for Shrima because of her stately and handsome
stature and she had to admonish the confused woman who made the mistake: “Can’t you
accustomed to regarding her husband as God. What Manisha Roy has written about modern
The wife must consider the husband as her god whom she worships as she worshipped the god Shiva....She must
follow him in every way and sacrifice her own interests and life if necessary to insure his safety and well-being.73
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Gradually, Sarada came to be convinced that as a godman’s wedded wife she must also be
divine. Following her husband’s claim that she was actually Shiva’s wife, Sarada later
claimed: “I am Bhagavati, the Divine Mother of the Universe.”74 However, we must note
that in spite of a divine status accorded to her by Ramakrishna, her position among the
Master’s devotees and disciples after his death was no more than a respectable widow of their
late guru. It was problematic for a young widow of thirty-three to live among the male
devotees of the late Master and she had to move, during 1886-1909, amidst great difficulties,
between Kamarpukur, Jairambati, various sacred places during a pilgrimage, and several
homes in Calcutta, until 1909, when her permanent residence, Udbodhan, was built at the
popularized by the Brahmo leader Keshab and the playwright and actor Girish in India and,
as we shall see later, by Vivekananda abroad, Sarada’s divinity was proclaimed first by her
husband, as has been mentioned above, and then popularized by a number of devotees like
Swami Niranjanandna, Durgacharan Nag (Nag Mahashay), Girish, and Swami Vivekananda.
devotees without any reserve.”75 When Durgacharan, a great devotee of the paramahamsa,
came to visit Sarada at Belur, sometime in 1893, he kept on banging his head so hard on the
steps while bowing down to his late guru’s widow, that the maid-servant attending on the
Holy Mother feared that it would bleed. The overwrought Nag paid no heed to the entreaties
of Swami Yogananda, who was in charge of Sarada’s welfare at Belur, and, with a swollen
forehead and in tears, crying "Ma, Ma," was brought before her. He recovered only after she
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shouted Ramakrishna’s name into his ears and wiped his eyes, patted his pate, and fed him
Girish, a habitual drinker and a womanizer, took care not to look directly at
Ramakrishna’s young widow. When a young monk called Brahmachari Gopesh (later
Swami Saradeshananda) once peeked into Sarada’s room, Girish noticed the brahmacari’s
behavior and remarked loudly, though jestingly: “See what that Brahmin is doing! See,
where he is staring at!”77 Ghosh confessed that he could not look at the Holy Mother because
he thought himself to be a great sinner. But when in 1891, following the death of his three-
year old son and on the suggestion of Niranjanananda, Girish went to Sarada’s parental home
took a dip in a nearby pond and went to salute his Holy Mother in his wet clothes. As
Gambhirananda informs us, when Ghosh looked at Saradamani he saw in her the exact
resemblance of the face of “a radiantly motherly figure” he had dreamt as a young man
suffering from cholera and recovered from the deadly disease after having partaken, in
During his stay at Jairambati he one day argued vehemently with Sarada’s brother
Kalikumar Mukhopadhyay that his sister was truly divine. When Kali protested, saying:
“You call my sister Mother of the Universe, Creatrix of the World, and what not!...I don’t,
forsooth, perceive a bit of it,” the enthusiastic and ebullient Girish called him an ignorant
bucolic Brahmin and commanded him to “take refuge at the Mother's feet at once.” The
incident was more amusing than angry and Sarada calmly and lovingly accepted the vistor’s
dithyrambic accolade as well as her brother's levelheaded remonstrance. Several years later,
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in 1896, Ghosh created another scene in Sarada’s temporary residence in Calcutta, when he
came to see her off on the eve of her departure for Jairambati. He pleaded to her that she
must allow him to be of service to her and with a choked voice and “face flushed with
emotion” declared in the presence of other visitors who had gathered there:
It is difficult for human beings to believe that God can incarnate in a human form like our own. Can you realize that
you are standing before the Mother of the Universe in the form of a village woman? Yet she is the Mother of the
Universe--Maha-maya, Maha-Sakti--appearing on the earth for the salvation of all creatures and at the same time
Vivekananda, who also was responsible for creating the universally revered Vedantist image
of Ramakrishna.8 0 Most probably the Swami admired Sarada’s selfless devotion to her
husband, felt sorry for her austere life, and grateful for her generosity to him among all other
disciples of the late Master. He confessed to his “fanaticism” in respect of the Holy Mother
to Swami Shivananda and declared: “Of Ramakrishna, you may claim, my brother, that he
was an Incarnation or whatever else you may like, but shame on those who have no devotion
for Ma.”8 1 He also became aware of the efficacy of female power and leadership in the
United States where, on his own admission, he saw how much India lagged behind the
Western world in recognizing the worth of women. He not only found the American women
“very beautiful” but also possessed of divine attributes.82 Thus the wife of his guru needed to
be elevated to a divine status in order to project her as the living embodiment of the
Ramakrishna ideal he was preaching in the West. He, therefore, declared that "Mother is the
incarnation of Bagala in the guise of Saraswati."83 He agreed with Yogananda’s remark made
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as early as April 23, 1890 that if Ramakrishna was Ishwara, “she must be the Ishwari.”84 It
may be that calling the young widow a Goddess was the most respectable way of allaying her
as well as of society's misgivings in respect of her association, even living, with young
monks.
Vivekananda also wished to publicize the image of the Holy Mother first as the living
Durga” [jyanta Durga], to quote his famous phrase8 5—and finally as the inspiration, not
necessarily the leader, behind his projected Ramakrishna movement in India and overseas.
Thus Vivekananda, with an eye on the world at large, conceived of the Shakti motif. As he
Brother, without Shakti there is no redemption for the world. Why is it that our country is the weakest and the most
backward?—Because Shakti is dishonoured there. Mother has come to awaken that wonderful Shakti; and following
her the nucleus, the Gargis and the Maitreyis will be born again into the world.8 6
Often the ebullient Swami would go to the length of glorifying Sarada at the expense of her
Godman husband and his acknowledged guru with such remakrs as “in fact the Master was
nothing”87 or, as he candidly confessed to his bias to Shivananda: “Brother, please don't
mind... to me, Mother’s grace is a hundred thousand times greater than Father’s....I am a bit
fanatical about Mother.”88 In order to demonstrate his utter devotion and ultimate respect for
Saradamani, the flamboyant Swami drank dirty river water by way of purifying himself
before coming into her presence. When he was asked by his companion Hari Maharaj to stop
196
drinking the stuff, Vivekananda replied: “No, brother, I am afraid. We are going to Mother, I
VI
In spite of her personal conviction in her being the consort of an avatara and in spite
of her being labelled and treated as a goddess by the devotees of the paramahamsa, Sarada
remained the same all-suffering, demure, village woman at the beck and call of her ecstatic
husband and after him an instrument at the hands of the organizers of the Ramakrishna
movement. Her entire young adult life was spent cooking and catering for her husband and
his admirers. Reportedly she used to enter into the tiny cabin of nahavat regularly at three in
the morning and could never come out even for the purpose of answering calls of nature. On
her own admission: “Then at times it so happened that I could go to the latrine only once in
two days” [“takhan takhan amono hoyeche je ajker haga kal hegechi”].90 When once she had
The saint seems to have squandered all his humanity and love for others, especially
for his young male admirers and devotees and not much was left for his own wife. When his
patron Balaram’s wife fell ill, Sarada was instructed by her husband to visit the patient.
Though Balaram’s home was some five miles away from Dakshineshwar, she could have
undertaken the journey by foot, as she was used to walking long distance. However, part of
the way lay through the city and she, like most women of her day, felt uneasy to be seen
publicly. She therefore asked for a conveyance. Ramakrishna snapped back: “What! You
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won’t go when my Balaram’s family is facing disaster? You’ll walk; go on foot.”92 She
submitted to his demands, though mercifully, she was provided with a conveyance by a
kindhearted devotee.
mattress on a simple mat and a pillow stuffed with jute fibers left over from the slings which
she had to make to hang pots of sweets for her husband’s visitors. She must have greatly
relieved when her bedstead improved later.9 3 Nikhilananda describes her spartan abode in the
nahavat:
In her small stuffy room Sarada Devi kept her supplies and necessary belongings. She also worshipped, meditated,
and slept there. Two or three of the Master’s women devotees often spent the night with Sarada Devi in her room.
From the ceiling hung a pot in a string containing live fish, used for Sri Ramakrishna's meals. They splashed water all
night9 4.
Ramakrishna was reputed to be a strict disciplinarian and hence would never allow his
overworked wife to sleep longer than what he considered adequate. Reportedly he would
pour water on her bed if she “overslept.”95 After one has read Nikhilananda’s saga of the
mute tribulations of the hapless Holy Mother, one cannot but appreciate the remark made by
a visitor to Sarada’s room: “She is in exile, as it were, like Sita.”96 Yet Sarada unhesitatingly
declared: “...I knew no other suffering....No discomfort could touch me if it was for his
service.”97
graphic description of the Holy Mother’s service to her husband during meal time. It
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consisted of massaging him with oil before bath, preparing and then presenting lunch
thereafter, singing while he ate, but in a low tone so as not to induce his ecstasy (which might
spoil his meal as well as mood), and later giving him a concoction of betel leaf as mouth
refresher.98 An unlettered and unsophisticated woman from rural Bengal, Sarada was so
that she considered herself especially fortunate because he never addressed her in the familiar
tui. “Ah! How he treated me! Not even once did he tell me a harsh word or wound my
feelings,” she proudly recalled.99 The Master, however, told his nephew Hriday that women
are generally untrustworthy and hence they ought to be kept busy with cooking. “Only
cooking helps them become good,” he postulated. The context of this obiter dicta was his
wife Sarada and her sister-in-law Lakshmi who, he feared, would stare at men whenever they
were free.100 Quite naturally she was advised to remain “mild and weak...meek and sober” by
her husband who maintained that “modesty is...[women’s] forte; otherwise there will be
public scandal.”101 But to prevent him from insulting and harrassing the demure Sarada, he
one day told Hriday—and this is cited by several authors as a testimony to the Master’s high
regard for his wife—that “if she was provoked even the Trinity of Brahma, Vishnu, and
VII
Sarada came to feel that she, too, should have some of the divine afflatus which kept
her ecstatic husband so much occupied. She once entreated Yogin-Ma: “Pray to him, so that
I have a little of spiritual ecstasy. I don’t get the opportunity of telling him, because he is
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always surrounded by people.”10 3 In the end she turned an ecstatic by herself. We have
Yogin-Ma’s report that she “found Mother seated for her daily worship...now giggling and
the next moment weeping....Tears were rolling down her cheeks in an unceasing stream.”104
She not only internalized her husband’s mood of divine madness, she even occasionally
imitated his habit of staying nude.105 As has been mentioned above, she also began to
consider herself divine. Gambhirananda describes her predicament after she had been deified
by her devotees, who often inflicted acute physical pain on her by literally biting or hurting
her limbs with a view to be remembered by their Holy Mother.106 Surprisingly enough, she
endured these persecutions of love and devotion with the solemn conviction that she indeed
was divine because her husband had been God: “Why should I be in such a state if not
because of maya? I should have been sitting by Narayana as his Lakshmi in Vaikuntha.”107
The Holy Mother’s dissolution of femininity into desexualized divinity has been
Mukhopadhyay’s short story Devi (1899) dealing with the young and innocent Dayamayi’s
forced assumption of divinity by her doting but dauntless father-in-law Kalikinkar, a Shakti
worshiper. However, while Dayamayi finds liberation from the snares of her Goddess status
in death (as her hapless husband Umaprasad accuses his diabolical father: “Shall I tell you
more about what you’ve done? By making my wife into a Devi, you've trapped her under a
stone”), Sarada lived on to end her life playacting (without being aware of it) Jagajjanani
(Mother of the Universe) and sanghajanani (mother of the Ramakrishna Order).108 Rev.
Protap Mozoomdar, who really respected Ramakrishna for his simplicity, nevertheless
accused the saint of an “almost barbarous treatment of his wife.”109 Sarada was neither a devi
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nor a spiritual leader but a wonderfully hospitable woman with common sense and
compassion. She was without conceit, albeit naive, and above all, eminently charming. She
was far from the beacon of feminism or modernism, as some of the writers of the
Ramakrishna Order has attempted to make her.110 Mozoomdar was a progressive Brahmo
preacher and his outrage was genuine. On the other hand, we have Swami Vivekananda’s
outburst of his love and respect for his jyanta Durga, befitting a condescending male, but
Let Ramakrishna disappear, that does not frighten me. But it will be a calamity if people forget Mother....Her grace
on me is one hundred thousand times greater than that of the Master....Brother, when I think of Mother, I say to
But the Master remained wonderfully impervious to any sense of guilt or remorse in
respect of his wife. When accused by one of his Brahmo devotees--a university educated
young man—that he had totally neglected his wife and was advising others to leave their
families, Ramakrishna first said that he had merely obeyed the instruction of the Mother
[Kali] and then left his devotee to defecate in the garden. While squatting for evacuation he
began to play with two pieces of bricks and hold a conversation with the Divine Mother:
“Look, Ma, that son of a bitch tells me that I have done something wrong. Have I, Ma?” He
then heard the goddess assure him that he was not guilty of anything. When he returned to
his Brahmo accuser, his eyes were ablaze with spiritual fire and he told him that he did not
care about what the young man had to say because he was told by the Divine Mother that he
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had done no wrong. The Brahmo devotee, reportedly, felt that Ramakrishna spoke like a god
2Ibid.
3Ibid., 65.
4LR, 488.
6LR, 293-94.
7RP, 189.
8KM, I, 214 (GR, 861. Nikhilananda omits the relevant sentence). Diary of 22 October 1885.
9RP, 188. The Master also knew how to prevent his devotees from pumping excessive amount of
sweets into his mouth. He told a female devotee, Nistarini Ghosh (d. 1930), who wouldn’t stop
feeding her beloved Thakur with sweets: “No more now. Wait. In my sukshma sharira [“subtle
body”] I shall take all the sweets you and others can offer me.” RH, 363.
10 LR, 294.
16 See KM, 5 vols.; Swami Ishanananda, Matrisannidhye; Swami Saradeshananda, Smritikatha; Swami
Arupananda, ed. Mayer Katha; Shri Durgapuri Devi, Sarada-Ramakrishna; Swami Chetanananda,
Matridarshan.
19 Mayer Katha, 214-15; KM, I, 188 (GR, 724. Nikhilananda omits the relevant sentence). Diary of 11
March 1885.
21 SK, 9.
22KM, I, 189 (also III, 102, 260; IV, 249) (GR, 725. Also 662, 951, 840). Diary of 11 March
23 LM, 59.
25 KM, I, 14-15 (GR, 77). Diary of 26 February 1882 in KM but March 1882 in GR. See also PS, 81.
26 KM, V, 72 (GR, 293. Nikhilananda regards kuti as kuthi and translates the word as “mansion”).
28 KM, I, 261 (GR,1022). Appendix: ch. II (undated letter from Ashwinikumar Datta to M).
28a For avadhuta see Mahanirvanatantram, 8.
Vivekananda’s Bharat Parikrama,” 44. Quite expectedly Vivekananda waxed eloquent in his
defense of the Master and, reportedly, elicited the wondrous admiration of the Benares ascetic
that the Bengali monk had “Saraswati [Goddess of Learning] on his tongue.” LV, I, 215. There
is, however, a contradictory evidence suggesting that Vivekananda never met Bhaskarananda.
1899) expressed a desire, sometime in 1898, to meet the Bengali monk. Mahendranath Datta,
Kashidhame Vivekananda, 3-4. It may be that Bhaskarananda had in fact met the Swami, an
obscure parivrajak from Calcutta, who perhaps had not assumed his famous monastic name and
called himself Sacchidananda at the time. Hence he could not possibly have identified his
Bengali visitor of the 1880s with the internationally famed Swami Vivekananda he wished to be
32 Pal, Bijaykrishna Goswami, 29. Even Ramakrishna was aware of this ancient wisdom. KM, I, 61
34 LR, 295.
38 AM, 28-32, 34, 36. Interestingly enough, the celebrated Christian ecstatic mystic, St. Teresa (1515-
82), founder and head of the Discalced Carmelite convent at Avila (Spain), was a deft manager of the finances
of her convent and a shrewd political negotiator. See Zimmerman, “St. Teresa of Avila.”
40 LR, 488.
41 RC, I, 273.
47 VP, 70.
48 RS, 33. For a traditional interpretation of Ramakrishna’s casteism see Jayashree Mukherjee,
57 JV, 31.
58 HM (G), 37.
59 Ibid., 34.
60 Ibid., 33.
61 LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 362; KM, II, 155 (GR, 603). Diary of 11 October 1884.
62 HM (G), 40.
63 HM (G), 114.
64 LR, 252.
67 Ibid., 50.
68 HM (G), 36.
70 RD, 3.
71 HM (G), 114. We do know about Ramakrishna’s paranoid fear of female pohysiognomy as alluring
72 FM, 373.
73 Bengali Women, 160.
206
74 HM (N), 187.
75 HM (G), p. 213.
76 Ibid., 175-76.
77Saradeshananda, Smritikatha, 4.
78 HM (G), 215-16.
79 Ibid., 219-20.
82 CW, VII, letter # 23: Vivekananda’s letter to Manmathanath Bhattacharya (5 September 1894).
The PL (184-85) reproduces the Bengali original in a truncated version. There is an editor’s
footnote on 185 that the original letter was discovered after the PL had gone to the press.
83 Cited in Swami Prabhananda, “Swami Vivekananda and His ‘Only Mother’,” 18. Bagala is one
of the ten Godesses of the tantric pantheon. See also CW, VII, letter # 25.
87 HM (G), 183.
88PL, 256.
91 LP, I (Gurubhava--Purvardha), 133. In later life, as the Holy Mother of the Ramakrishna Order,
Sarada would continue to be busy catering to the comforts of her devotees and disciples. See
92 HM (G), 123.
207
93 HM (N), 58.
94 Ibid., 55-56.
96 HM (N), 56.
97 Ibid., 76.
98 Ibid., 76-77.
10 0RP, 191-92.
10 2Ibid., 66.
10 3Ibid., 111-12.
10 7Ibid., 465.
10 8See Satyajit Ray, “Devi,” trans. Dilip K. Basu. Mimeo. I thank Professor Basu for supplying
me a copy of the draft. For an interesting analysis of the movie, see Andrew Robinson, Satyajit
110 For example, see the nineteen articles under the section “Sarada: Manane O Vishlesane” in
CHAPTER EIGHT
Ramakrishna’s Logia
“Basketfuls of philosophical books can be written on each single sentence spoken by the Master”.
Ramakrishna was not “practically illiterate,” as his biographer makes him to be,
but he certainly was practically uneducated.430 Most important, he never read any scriptures,
though he studied in his village school from five till the seventeenth year and later at the tol
of his brother Ramkumar in Calcutta for a time. We are told that the boy Gadai was fond of
reading stories about the legendary devotee of Vishnu, Prahlada, and reciting them to a
village neighbor, a weaver named Madhu.431 He handcopied four religious dramas in Bengali
—a Harishchandrer Pala (May 1, 1848), Mahiravaner Pala (August 16, 1848), Yogadyar
Pala (February 10, 1849), and Suvahur Pala (July 2, 1849)432—as well as portions of
Krittivasa’s Ramayana.433 Thus most of his insights were based on what he had heard (from
shrutidhara, one gifted with a powerful memory434 —and internalized. His spiritual wisdom
was neither deep nor original, although Freda Matchett believes that he actually possessed
“an extensive knowledge of the Hindu religious tradition.”435 His half-baked knowledge of
Tantra owed to the enigmatic Yogeshwari. He claimed to have learnt Vedanta from
Totapuri.436 His frequent reference to his own body as “this,” which apparently impressed
admirers like M. Rolland, was, on his own admission, learnt from Gauri Pandit. 437
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Yet he declared:
Though I read nothing myself, ... I have heard the Vedas, the Vedanta, the Darshanas, and the Puranas from good and
reliable scholars. Having heard them and understood what they contained, I made a garland of them with a string and
hung it round my neck and offered it at the lotus feet of the Mother, saying, “Take all your scriptures and Puranas.
Reportedly the Goddess Kali taught him that “the essence of the Vedanta is that Brahman is
real and the world is an illusion.”439 Additionally, he received instructions from a young
sannyasi with a trident, who emerged from his own body and killed the evil self within him,
others...told [him]...what [he]...knew already.” 440 He in fact told Hriday that he had made that
naked bloke (nyangta-phyangta) his guru merely “to honor the injunctions and instructions
of the Vedas.”441
Despite such boasts about this self-induced knowledge, Ramakrishna was in fact quite
aware of his lack of a formal education, and yet insisted that he “was not in the least sorry”
for not being able to read the Vedanta and other scriptures.442 On the other hand, he justified
his scriptural inadequacy by arguing that “scriptures merely give hints and therefore it is not
necessary to read a few scriptures.”443 As we have seen above, he claimed a divine source for
Advaita! Hyak thoo—I spit on it.”444 He also spat on the floor denouncing rationality. “A
mere scholar without discrimination and renunciation has his attention fixed on woman and
gold.”445 Even bhakti or devotion is not efficacious if it “tinged with knowledge.”446 He was
greatly relieved and gratified to learn from Narendra that the Scottish philosopher Sir
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William Hamilton had said that “a learned ignorance is the end of philosophy and the
beginning of religion.” When the disciple translated the sentence in Bengali to his Master,
the latter smiled and responded in English, “Thank you! Thank you!”447
However, on his own admission, the Master was incapable of ratiocination. Once he
asked M to explain to him the causes of tide. When the disciple drew on the ground the
figures of the sun, moon, and earth, and tried to explain gravitation, flood-tide, new moon,
full moon, eclipse, and so forth, the befuddled saint cried out: “Shucks! I can’t follow you, I
feel dizzy. My head’s aching. How on earth could you know about this far out stuff?” And
then he confessed with disarming candor: “You see, during my childhood I could sketch
very well but could never comprehend simple arithmetic.”448 When a visitor named Shyam
Basu asked Ramakrishna “How can you say that sin is punishable when you say that He is
doing everything?” the latter was cheesed off and quipped: “What calculating cunning
[sonar bener buddhi]! You asshole [Ore podo], just eat the mango. What will you gain by
A certain Vaisnava visitor from Katowa once wanted the Master to discuss rebirth and
was told by the latter that according to the Gita, rebirth is controlled by the thoughts of
people at the moment of death and as such King Bharata was reborn as a deer because he
thought of that animal at his death. When the inquirer insisted on a direct evidence for this
instruction before accepting it, Ramakrishna exploded: “I don't know! I can’t cure my own
disease and you want to know what happens after death! You talk like a nitwit. Try to find
ways of putting faith in God. You're born as a human only to learn devotion.”450 Indeed, any
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kind of reasoning made the Master very uneasy and upset. Once he was talking to Kali in his
wonted monologue:
All right, Ma! Had I not said, “I’ll eat,” would I be overcome with hunger? You hear only when I speak to you and
you remain deaf even if my heart is heavy with longing, how’s that? You’re what you’re, so why should I pray? Oh,
I see! I do what you make me do. I’m getting confused now! Why make me reason?451
II
Ramakrishna preached:
Too much knowledge is called ajnana, ignorance. To know only one thing is jnana, knowledge--that is, God alone is
real and exists in all beings. To converse with Him is vijnana. To love Him in different ways after realizing Him is
vijnana.452
Obviously he considered himself a vijnani--one who has frequently conversed with the
Divine Mother. Moreover, in his ecstatic rhetoric, jnana or “mere knowledge of God” is
male and bhakti, the quality of a vijnani, is female. Following Ramakrishna’s gender
preference one can easily see how and why he opts for bhakti. “Jnana or knowledge being a
male is obliged to stand and wait at the outer court of the Divine Mother’s home, whereas
Bhakti being female goes direct to the inner apartments, to the very presence of the
attempted to demonstrate his moral purity, spiritual excellence (ability to converse with Kali
philosophical foundation. He does not seem to have suffered from any existential/
soteriological anxieties as to the meaning of life, of God, of salvation, and of the universe.
All his spiritual problems, on the other hand, were the outcome of his inordinate desire to see
the Magna Mater as a real-life woman, the Divine Mother as the real mother to a God-
intoxicated child. We are told by Saradananada that the Master’s desires to meet his Ma was
so vehement that he flung himself violently on the ground, rubbing his face against it and
filling all corners with piteous wailings. He gasped for life due to shortness of breath. He
took no notice of the fact that his whole body was cut, bruised, and bloodied.454 To continue
I felt as if my heart was being squeezed like a wet towel. I was overpowered with a great restlessness and a fear that
it might not be my lot to realize Her in this life. I could not bear the separation from Her any longer. Life seemed to
be not worth living. Suddenly my glance fell on the sword that was kept in the Mother's temple. I determined to put
an end to my life. When I jumped up like a madman and seized it, suddenly the blessed Mother revealed Herself.455
First of all, we must note that this episode, though reported in the LP, does not
seem to have its source mentioned clearly anywhere. It is at least interesting to note that M
had no clue as to its veracity. When a Parsee visitor named Mr. Jinwala and his companion
Dr. De Melo inquired of him about the truth of the incident, M clearly stated that he had
neither heard nor written about it.456 Even if the report is true, it clearly described a
hallucination, which was possibly the outcome of his depression and aggression toward the
most important object (Kali) in his life at this time and thus, in Freudian terms, it was a
213
classic case of the shadow of the object falling upon the ego. In the Pali texts we come
across the example of an ascetic trying to take his life by means of a sharp razor and then
“the peril became clear; disgust with the world was established.” This reversal from a dark
suicidal mood into a sudden illumination parallels Ramakrishna’s vision of Kali at the crucial
The Russian novelist Feodor M. Dostoevski, himself an epileptic and one who
considered mystical raptures the expression of a lower life, comes close to capturing the
I remember among other things a phenomenon which used to precede his epilectic attacks when they came in the
waking state. In the midst of the dejection, the mental marasmus, the anxiety which he experienced, there were
moments in which all of a sudden the brain became inflamed and all his vital forces suddenly rose to a prodigious
degree of intensity. The sensation of life, of conscious existence, was multiplied tenfold in these swiftly passing
moments. A strong light illumined his heart and mind. All agitation was calmed, all doubt and perplexity resolved
themselves into a superior harmony; but these radiant moments were only a prelude to the last instant—that
Dr. Kakar tends to read too much yoga sadhana into the clearly pshychotic behavior of
Godmad Gadadhar when he interprets the “Mother and sword” episode as Ramakrishna’s
yogic endeavor “to endure and transcend the archaic anxiety” about death in order to attain
moksa.459 In the end we ought to note that the entire incident is a fabrication by the monastic
reporters of Ramakrishna’s very clear admission: “Once I had a mental derangement and I
III
Ramakrishna’s Gottes-Minne, that is, love affair with Gods, had begun pretty early in
his life. As a child he experienced samadhi in the thought of Shiva or Vishalakshi. Like
other children of his village he must have listened to the lores of sadhakas, saints, and local
gods and goddesses. At six, child Gadai had already absorbed a great deal of episodes from
the Ramayana, the Mahabharata, and the Bhagavata “by hearing them from the Kathaks, a
class of men who preach and read these Puranas for the enlightenment of the uneducated
masses all over India.”461 Most important, he was familiar with the life and lyrics of such
Ramprasad is reported to have seen Kali as his own little daughter. It is quite natural that
such a social and cultural stimulus would exercise powerful influence on the mind of a child
who was also quite sensitive and imaginative. In Ramakrishna’s case, in particular, these
cultural icons took a concrete shape in dolls and images. Hence his obsession with the divine
had more poetic and imaginative rather than philosophical or theological substance.
Mathur’s insistence, he still remained a village child within and had not grown up or matured
mentally or socially. More important, in spite of his receiving the so-called Shakti mantra as
part of his priestly training from Kenaram Bhattacharya, he was either incapable or
unmindful of priestly duties or both. Throughout his life Ramakrishna demonstrated his
liberated soul, who is above all constraints. He had found the powerful zamindar Biswas his
indulgent patron and he probably wished to remain under his financial patronage, though not
215
under his tutelage. Moreover, being treated by Mathuranath as his friend, Gadadhar may
Thus the young man found ample time to fantasize himself in the company of gods
and goddesses. In his fugue state Ramakrishna used to play with Kali (the Goddess he was
now living with) just like a little child playing with dolls, treating them as living. As he
reminisced:
In spite of observing very closely, I could never see the shadow of Ma’s blessed body on the temple wall in the light
of the lamp at night. I heard in my own room Ma, merry like a little girl, her anklets jingling, going upstairs in the
temple. I hurried out of my room and found that Ma, her hair dishevelled, was actually standing on the balcony of the
first floor of the temple and now viewing Calcutta, now the Ganga.462
Quite naturally, the psychotic visionary looked “excited” or “possessed” and “absent-
minded,”463 though his description of Kali and his description of a prostitute standing on a
experienced similar “excitement” when, around 1864, he received a brass image of child
Rama, actually a doll, as a gift from a roving Vaishnava monk named Jatadhari. Reared in a
home where the family deity was Raghuvira (another name for Rama), he naturally was
overjoyed with his child Rama, the Ramlala. “I used to walk about carrying Ramlala, the
deity of the monk,” Ramakrishna recalled years later. “I bathed it, fed it, and laid it down to
sleep. I would take it wherever I would go. I became mad for Ramlala.”464 Interestingly
enough, Ramakrishna himself was aware of the doll metaphor and said in his characteristic
way: “...how long do little girls play with their dolls? Until they are married and cohabit with
216
their husbands....hat further need is there of worshipping the idol after the realization of
God?”465
About Ramakrishna’s divine obsession or his vision of the Magna Mater in living color,
M. Rolland observed:
My own view is that he saw nothing, but that he was aware of Her all-permeating presence. ...His experience was like
a dream,...wherein without the slightest feeling of incongruity, the mind attaches the name of the being filling its
Mahesh Ghosh has the most judicious explanation in this regard. “Now what were these
visions? Did God really appear before him in these forms?” he asks and then observes:
“Believers will answer in the affirmative and skeptics in the negative. Psychologists will say
that these are externalizations of inner thoughts.”467 Constant exposure to the religious
mythical and miraculous tales made him forgetful of the world and additionally, his life of
utter freedom without responsibilities at Dakshineshwar, afforded him the scope for deep
imaginative contemplation and autism. As his official biographers write, “as he grew older,
these turned into frequent trances whenever his religious feelings were aroused.”468 Hence
his childhood and youthful trances were romantic daydreams quite usual in a hypersensitive
child or young man under the influence of religious folklore and fairy tales. The point to
note is that the subjects of his daydreams happened to be saints and Gods instead of the
IV
217
Ramakrishna often revealed his sincere anxiety for being respected by people as a
wise man. “Does he call me a jnani,” the Master once asked M to find about one Tejchandra
Mitra.469 At another time he asked his devotee: “Is there any similarity between me and...a
scholar or a monk?” He certainly was delighted with M’s response: “God has fashioned you
with His own hands. He has made others mechanically, as everything else, according to
law.” Having been thus reassured of his uniqueness, Ramakrishna showed his familiar
humility: “Mairi balchi [I swear on my mother], I don’t feel proud a bit.”470 However, he
seems to have been dumbfounded when Ashwini Kumar Datta was asked to give his
and stated that there could be no comparison between them as Ramkumar was a scholar,
whereas the paramahamsa was not. Only when Datta told him that though not a scholar like
Ramkumar, he was “a funny guy,” did the Master recover his usual affable self and remark
the childlike Master became afraid on many occasions like a boy whenever he heard that a famous person would
come to see him. He feared what his visitor would think as he could not read or write. Also he never knew when he
H e
Devendranath Tagore because of his lousy dressing habit.473 He had the same uncertainty and
218
uneasiness when, on his way to Vidyasagar’s home to meet him, he confided to M like a
child: “My shirt is unbuttoned. Will this be offensive?”474 He was clearly nervous after he
had met the famous scholar and, as usual, experienced samadhi. He then asked for a glass
for water. Thereafter he began a talk on Brahman, the Vedas, Puranas, Tantras, the six
systems of philosophy, and concluded his peroration by stating that unlike these systems of
learning only Brahman has remained undefiled, because “no one has so far been able to say
what Brahman is.” To this piece of wisdom Vidyasagar, who “had studied Hindu
philosophy” and who “used to perform...the Hindu rituals,” responded: “That’s wonderful!
What a nice statement! I learnt something new today.”475 Ramakrishna of course duly
reminded his learned host that “mere scholarship is but empty.”476 Then he sang a song of
Ramprasad (his all-time favorite) and talked about divine love and madness. He, however,
was quick to point out: “My talk really is superfluous. You already know whatever I said,
though you are unaware of it.” Iswarchandra replied politely but casually: “You may say
that.” The Master must have found the Vidyasagar unmoved by his song, samadhi and
charitable but lacks inner vision. Gold lies hidden within him….”478
Ramakrishna by declaring that man’s duties consisted in “eating, snoozing, and mating.”479
“How could we know God without knowing something of this world?” he asked and posited
his anti-paramahamsa thesis: “We should first learn from books.”480 The Master was terribly
upset and shocked. “What nonsesnse are you saying! One belches out the dirty stuff one
consumes.”481 He recovered his posture and gained recognition from Bankim and his
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associates only after he had performed his famous samadhi while Trailokya Sanyal was
singing. He then began his ecstatic dance and “Bankim and his English educated friends
looked at him in amazement.”482 Finally, the Master sang a song and advised his august
visitors to “dive deep...in God.” Yet apparently he failed to make a dent in the minds of the
you’re thinking” and quietly took his leave after having extended an invitation to the
Ramakrishna’s situation became truly pathetic when he came face to face with
Michael Madhusudan Datta, the flamboyant and fiery intellectual and the most celebrated
poet of the time. Datta had “expressed a desire for some religious instructions from the
Master” but the latter quite mysteriously became mute. As Ramakrishna recalled later: “My
mouth was pressed, as it were, by someone and I was not allowed to say anything.” From
Hriday and some other devotees of Ramakrishna we learn that his condition normalized a
little afterwards and “he delighted Madhusudan’s heart by singing in his sweet voice a few
numbers of eminent sadhakas like Ramprasad and Kamalakanta. He thus taught him that
devotion to God was the only essential thing in the world.”484 However, he engaged his
learned visitor at Dakshineshwar, the nyaya pandit Narayana Shastri, to impart religious
instructions to Madhusudan.485
The Master’s plight before Shashadhar Tarkachudamani was revealed in his effort to
impress the great scholar with his banal talks. He actually heard from his visitors that the
tarkachudamani was drawing large crowds of Calcutta bhadralok to his learned discourse on
Hinduism and the Hindu scriptures and wished to meet him. When he did see him for the
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first time, he delivered a sermon warning the scholar that anyone attempting to become a
appellation of Kali) was sure to face utter ruin. After a few days of this initial encounter,
coming there, Ramakrishna became so alarmed that he beseeched Narendra, Jr. and Yogindra
and a few others to stay with him. Upon meeting the pandit, the Master kept on staring at
him with a smiling face and became ecstatic. He requested his visitor to say something and
when the latter expressed his desire for the Master’s talk, Ramakrishna delivered an
explanation of Sachchidananda.
The gist of his talk was that Sachchidananda first became androgynous
(Ardhanarishwara) in order to show that He is both male and female, and thereafter he
created separate entities of male and female. Until one’s mind is lost in Sachchidananda, one
has to be both mindful of one's worldly duties and a devotee of Sachchidananda. Once the
merger with Sachchidananda takes place, all worldly duties cease. He illustrated his point
thus:
Suppose, someone is singing “Nitai is my mad hati [elephant].” At the beginning of the song the singer
maintains lyric, tune, and rhythm carefully. After a while, when the singer’s mind has begun to merge [in God
consciousness] by the bhava of the song, he sings: “mad hati, mad hati.” After a little deeper merger, he sings:
“hati, hati.” More merger, and he can say only “ha” while trying to say “hati.”
While saying this “ha” Ramakrishna lost his speech and consciousness for fifteen minutes.
At the end of his trance, he told Shashadahr: “My Pandit, you are great. Just like the
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mistress of the house who after finishing cooking and feeding everybody goes for her bath
and does not return to the kitchen, you too will go back after having spread His words never
to return.” At this the scholar shed tears and left the paramahamsa.486 After the scholar's
departure, the Master is reported to have expressed his satisfaction that the dry (arrogant)
pandit had become “diluted” (modest) following his visit to Dakshineshwar.487 In his
eastern Bengal, Bhagavandas Babaji, by doffing his dhoti and standing naked and angry in
front of the latter, rebuking him sharply for his presumption to teach people.488
As far as his sermons are concerned, Ramakrishna generally used stories that
sometimes made a profound impact upon his listeners. No doubt, he did possess a story-
teller’s skill even though some of his stories were puerile at best. Pandit Vaisnavacharan,
who believed that the Master was an avatara, once said to him: “I could find in the
scriptures everything you say. But do you know why I come to you? To hear them from your
mouth.”489 Indeed, Ramakrishna has been the most talked about and talkative saint of modern
India. Amal Ray is right when he observes that “Ramakrishna’s life is full of talk.”490
However, what the Master sometimes said conveyed nothing that could be described as
meaningful. For example, his sermon on the Gita that it need not be read from cover to cover
but its title should be repeated ten times for learning its essence. He posited that tyaga or
renunciation is the essential message of Gita and this wisdom would be at once revealed
when repeating Gita the word tyagi would automatically be sounded.491 He even said this to
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Vidyasagar when he visited the scholar.492 The only problem with the Master’s advice is that
the word Gita, repeated over and over again, may sound tagi (Gita reversed), something he
could not know in view of his innocence in Sanskrit words and grammar. Even though he
claimed that he had detected several errors in Madhusudan Datta’s Sanskrit conversation with
Narayan Shastri, 493 and even though M provided a conceited justification for his Master’s
confusing tyagi with tagi,494 Ramakrishna, as Protap Mozoomdar observed boldly, “did not
know a word of Sanskrit.”495 The Master’s lack of a rudimentary knowledge of Sanskrit was
detected also by Shivanath Shastri, though he did not make any overly critical comment
overtly. While trying to explain the comparative merits of jnana (“knowledge of God”) and
bhakti (“ardent love of God”), Ramakrishna referred to jnana as male and bhakti female.
Shastri diplomatically observed so as not to offend his Hindu friend that the latter’s
“application of the Sanskrit grammar in this instance was very striking and peculiar.”496
emphasize the uselessness of birth, he told his devotees that even the newborn baby is aware
of the utter futility of its birth and thus it wonders where it has come and cries “kanha e
kanha e,” meaning “where am I, where am I.” Kanha means “where” both in Bengali and
Hindi and it does have the sound of a child’s cry. Though the example and the explanation
contained little grammatical substance, its intended spiritual message must have worked
wonders on the ears and imagination of his audience.497 He told a visitor that “ordinary jivas
are called manus [human beings]” but “one endowed with chaitanya [“consciousness”] is
manhus”498 [a concocted Bengali word that is supposed to mean a manus with huns, meaning
consciousness]. He made a pun on mantor [colloquial Bengali for mantra] and man tor
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[“your mind”] and entertained Keshab by singing “We know your mind [that is, your desire]
and thus minister that mantor to you” [“amra jani ye man tor; dilam tore sei mantor”].499
mundane world and yet remaining indifferent to its tribulations. “Golmale mal achhe. Gol
chhede malti nebe,” he said.500 While it is extremely difficult to convey the Master’s
my English translation runs something like this: “There is cream in commotion. Partake of
the cream and avoid the commotion,” though Nikhilananda has not translated the sermon but
provided its intended meaning: “The world is indeed a mixture of truth and make-believe.
Discard the make-believe and take the truth.” While lecturing on salvation, Ramakrishna
spoke of the calf's wailings: “Hamba Hamba!” It is born to suffer because it is slaughtered
for its hide which goes to the making of shoes and drums and its guts are used to make
strings for the cotton carders. The carding machine while is use emits the sound “Tuhu
Tuhu!” The calf achieves salvation only when its guts in the form of the carder’s string
produce the “Tuhu Tuhu” note. He explained that “Hamba Hamba” means “Me, Me,” a sign
of egotism that causes all suffering, “Tuhu Tuhu” means “You, You” and thus the gut says “O
God, you’re the doer and I am nothing.” 501 This posthumous wisdom of the calf’s entrail
brings about its salvation. Therefore, egotism is the root of evil, surrender to God is the way
to salvation.
The Master even unhesitatingly manufactured meaningful words and legends to make
When one talks to Jadu Mallik, one can know everything about his houses, gardens, and company shares. That
is why the sages advised Valmiki to chant the word “mara.” There is some meaning in this. “Ma” means God,
and “ra” the world. First God and then the world. 502
only clue to this mysterious sermon can be partially extracted from Ramakrishna's reference
to Valmiki, the author of Rama's exploits, the Ramayana. The Master used the word mara by
simply reversing the word Rama. The context for this teaching was his admonition to Rakhal
against execessive vichara or argument and calculation. Hence, clearly the sentence with
concoction is his myth of the Homa bird whose egg, laid high in the sky, is hatched in the air
while falling downward. Upon realizing the danger of falling to death the newborn Homa
chick begins to fly upward to its mother. This “Vedic” illustration was meant for his beloved
new acquaintance Narendranath who was compared to the Homa chick. According to M’s
report, Narendra did not respond to the Master’s encomium but went out of the room.503
devotion he told his devotees how “Chaitanya once dressed a donkey in a [religious] garb
and then prostrated himself before it.”504 He wanted to convince Keshab of the existence of
God by an apparently jejune story. “Well, Keshab,” he asked his Brahmo devotee,
[is it true] that your Calcutta Babus deny the existence of God? A Babu was going up the stairs. He took one step, but
before taking the next one he cried, “Oh! What happened to my side!” and dropped unconscious. There was a hue
and cry for a doctor. But before he came the man was gone. And such people say, “There is no God!”505
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On Keshab’s steamer the paramahamsa told his audience about his “secret” sadhana:
“Sometimes I would fancy myself as the Brahminy duck calling for its mate [“ami daktum
‘chaka’ ar amar bhitar theke ra asto ‘chaki’”]....I would be a kitten calling for the mother cat
and there would be the response of the mother” [“ami baltum ‘mew’ ar, jena, dhadi bedal
balto ‘mao’”].506
One of the most noteworthy things he said the other day was that he believed in the identity of Janak and Nanc [sic.
Nanak]. After the death of the former the Lord blessed his spirit, and expressed His joyful appreciation of the Rishi’s
life. Greatly pleased, He said to him to the following effect—“Well done, good Rishi. Thou hast sanctified many by
the purity and asceticism, and by the noble example of a self-denying King thou hast set. So good a teacher thou shalt
not sleep in heaven, but thou shalt go again into the world. Thy services, O Janak, are required in the Punjab. Go
there, harmonize the scriptures, and draw together hostile sects. O thou apostle of union and reconciliation.”
Brahmo sect, the New Dispensation, approved of. Once again, we see here the Master’s use
of two names, Janak and Nanak, rhyming with each other neatly.507
VI
Though Ramakrishna publicly disparaged the supernatural and the occult because
these hindered realization of God, and compared them to whore’s shit,508 he not only believed
in the superstitious and supernatural but often underscored the fact that he possessed the
latter. Sumit Sarkar, however, believes sincerely that “Ramakrishna never claimed special
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miraculous powers, often expressed contempt for such siddhai and disappointed some
devotees by consulting a doctor, during his last fatal illness.”509 Reportedly, he was a magic
healer who cured a leucoderma patient by passing his hand over his body and experiencing
intense pain in the process. 510 Even though bed-ridden at Kashipur with his terminal illness,
he told his wife how he had left his room and walked out in the garden to drive a cobra away
so that his devotees who had planned to drink juice by tapping a date palm without having
told their Master, could be safe there. “The Mother was dumbfounded on hearing this,”
wrote Saradamani’s devotee-children. “The Master had asked her not to divulge this to
anyone then.”511 Even though he is heard to pray “O Rama, I do not want the eight occult
powers, not even a hundred,”512 he sincerely believed that “God is full of the six supernatural
powers [sadaishywarya]” and without them “who would have obeyed Him?”513
Ramakrishna in fact acquired a reputation for his power of touch. According to his
biographers, “he explained that when he touched the disciple, the impurities of the man
would be removed, and truth would flash before his purified vision.”514 Nikhilananda writes
that Ramakrishna’s devotees had convincing proof that the Master could, by his mere wish,
“kindle in their hearts the love of God and give them His vision.”515 Akshay Sen created the
popular mythology of the Master as the saint whose touch tamed turbulent souls such as the
college educated young skeptic Naren, the arrogant Pandit Shashadhar, the famous Brahmo
leader Keshab, or the flamboyant and temperamental playwright Girish.516 It was, however,
Swami Vivekananda who provided the most powerful and colorful account of his Master’s
power of touch that made him lose control of himself and brought him, almost perilously, to
“an all-encompassing void.”517 This very impressive but nonetheless very problematic
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personal testimony of the Swami is all the more interesting as it came from the same man
who had once made fun of his Master's ecstasy518 and preached: “Shri Ramakrishna used to
disparage supernatural powers; his teaching was that one cannot attain to the Supreme Truth
VII
Ramakrishna was shrewd enough not to make any frivolous claim for his
thaumaturgical skill in any unguarded manner, except once when he tried to transfer his
must have been based on his growing up in the midst of rumors of miracles and magic from
his village and its environs—that occult skills called for instant demonstration of their
efficacy in curing illness. Hence he was extremely wary even to the last days of his life not
to endorse magic and thus he often showed his indifference to and indignation for such
powers. When Shashadhar visited him at Kashipur and mentioned that the pain of the
disease could be alleviated by mental concentration (reaching the manomay kosa) and
projection of concentrated thought on to the affected part of the body, and wondered if
Ramakrishna the yogi would “just try this once,” the latter, never a practicing yogi, replied
rather thoughtfully: “How could you, a pandit, speak like that? Can I wish to withdraw the
mind dedicated to Sachchidananda and attach it to this dilapidated cage of bone and
Hazra for having said that “anyone who realizes God must also acquire God’s supernatural
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powers”523—a most logical but for the paramahamsa who had been emphasizing his God-
realization for some time a very embarrassing argument. Importuned by the drunken Girish
that he must cure himself of his cancer by his will power, Ramakrishna was forced to say that
he regarded himself a devotee of God and not God per se--thus retracting his lifelong
people’s mind like articles in a glass case.”525 Especially he let it be known among his
followers that he possessed the faculty to ascertain human characrter by his physiognomical
extent by his physical characteristics. A fraud has a heavy hand. A flat nose is not
good....Pigeon-breast is not a good sign. The same goes for one who is bony with protruded
elbow-joints and unshapely hand and having light brown eyes like a cat’s. Mean nature is
marked by lips shaped like a dom’s” [a dom belongs to the scavenger caste in Hindu society].
He had little qualms in considering his patron and devotee Shambhu Mallik a born crook
because his nose was flat!526 He also suggested that a circumcised penis, like that of a
Muslim, is a sign of bad character.527 He of course took especial care to examine the chests of
Saradananda writes that toward the end of his life Ramakrishna achieved renown as
reactions in the human body caused by the excesses of spiritual emotions.”528 In fact his
reputation in this respect was so great that his biographer speaks of his Master’s
physiognomical insights while overlooking the simple fact that Ramakrishna was quite
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curious to know who the people were, what they wanted, and how they could be influenced.
We noticed that he would stare at a visitor in a peculiar way. If he felt attracted to him he would engage him in a
general spiritual talk and ask him to visit with him again. In course of time as that man repeated his visits, he would,
unbeknownst to him, observe his limbs, his attitude toward kamini-kanchana, as well as the extent of his thirst for
enjoyment and his attraction for him as revealed by his behavior and speech. He would notice all this minutely with a
Examples of the Master’s various methods of observation of peoples and their habits are
quite interesting. He held that “during sleep a renouncer did not breathe in the same way; a
man given to enjoyment [of life] did it one way and a renouncer did in a different way.”
Then, while pissing, the worldly person had his stream of urine deflected to the left, while the
renouncer to the right. The shit of a yogi was never touched by hogs and so on.”530
Amal Ray questions Ramakrishna’s several sermons which he finds flawed. His oft-
quoted statement that God alone is substantial (vastu) and everything else is unsubstantial
(avastu) is fundamentally wrong because it presupposes existence other than God, whereas
there can be no existence beyond God. As the Chandogya Upanisad (3/14/1) has it, “sarvam
hetyad brahmah:” everything is permeated by Brahman.531 The Master’s claim that God
could be seen goes against the scriptural postulate that God can never be perceived nor
realized by words or mentation: “Words and thoughts cannot reach him and he cannot be
seen by the eye” [naiva vacha na manasa praptam sakyo na chakshusa astiti] (Kathopanisad,
2/3/12).532 Then, Ramakrishna’s dictum on kamini-kanchana was not new. An ancient Hindi
doha (couplet) has it that a mere sight of kamini-kanchana is poisonous. In the Bhaktamal,
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we read of a certain devotee (bhakta) who used to advice people to meditate on Krishna's feet
is basically flawed in that it is based on differentiating God and assuming that God is absent
in the phenomenal world. The truth is that both kamini and kanchana are parts of God and to
give up kamini-kanchana is to give up God in one sense. As Ray would have it, “trying to
realize God by renouncing woman and wealth is like trying to drink aqua by giving up
water!”533
Ramakrishna’s logia as well as the parables and allegories were the product of his
peasant upbringing and culture. In fact some of these were borrowed from others. His
sermon on brahmajnana rendering all rituals useless through the metaphor of “shedding the
shell of coconut” was learnt from a goswami.534 His popular sermon on the Gita and its
reverse tyagi its grammatical solecism notwithstanding, was taught by Totapuri.535 His almost
jejune stories provided more fun than food for thought; in fact they possessed uncannily the
qualities of modern-day television talk show. Hence their popularity among his devotees
from the community of Calcutta bhadralok. In any case, these urban middle class devotees
and admirers were either minimally or moderately educated and in spite of their urban
background were steeped in a culture that was traditional and influential in rural and urban
Calcutta from where most of his devotees hailed—as particularly urban seriously or literally.
The so-called urban culture of Calcutta had little conflict with the culture of Ramakrishna's
bhadralok-constructed, Other with whom an urban group plagued with a sense of alienation
The late Shailendranarayan Ghosal, Director of the Vedic Research Institute, was
Let anyone show respect to ... [the paramahamsa's] mental structure and his crazy behaviors such as climbing trees
like a monkey or imitating a menstruating woman as religious, but from the standpoint of the scriptures, I disagree
vehemently....I distinguish between the spiritual and the mental make up [of human beings] and thus can never
In his famous work Alok Tirtha, Ghosal described Ramakrishna’s tantra sadhana as “a
variety of uncouth rituals such as sitting on the lap of a naked young woman, eating the
leavings of dogs and jackals, fish and human flesh in a human skull, and performing the
heroic rite like stirring female vagina (yonimanthana).” He concluded: “All these foolish
acts performed in his immaturity can never be the path to earning merit.”538
437 Rolland, Prophets of New India, 247; KM, III, 189 (GR, 791). Diary of 13 June 1885.
446 Ibid.
457 The Elder’s Verses I. Therigatha, trans. R.K. Norman, Pali Text Society Translation Series No. 38 (London: Luzac,
463 Ibid.
234
464 KM, IV, 38 (GR, 347). Diary of 17 December 1883. See also GR, 24: Nikhilananda’s Introduction.
469 KM, III, 100 (GR, 662). Diary of 9 November 1884. Indeed the paramahamsa was so concerned to bring Tejchandra
around under his fold that he went out of his way and against his usual preference to initiate the young man. Swami
478 KM, I, 89 (GR, 267). Diary of 22 July 1883. The best account of Vidyasagar’s career and character remains Benoy
Ghosh, Vidyasagr. See also Gopal Halder, Vidyasagar: A Reassessment ; Santosh Kumar Adhikari, Vidyasagar and New
National Consciousness.
479 KM, V, 199 (GR, 669). Diary of 6 December 1884. The veracity of M’s report on the Bankim episode has been
482 KM, V, 205 (GR, 673). Diary of 6 December 1884. For Bankimchandra see Narasingha P. Sil, “Bankim Redivivus.”
484 LP, II (Gurubhava-Uttarardha), 85. For Madhusudan see Priti K. Mitra, “Dissent in Modern India;”
487 KM, III, 90 (GR, 488). Diary of 30 June 1884. For a critique of the KM account of the first meeting between the
494 KM, III, 34 (GR, 260). Diary of 21 July 1883. M told Ramakrishna that the scholar Navadwip Goswami had stated
that both tyagi and tagi meant the same thing as both words were derived from the same root tag.
However, M chose not to say if the word tagi contained any sense.
498 KM, IV, 209 (GR, 599: Nikhilananda omits the sentence). Diary of 5 October 1884.
506 Gupta, “Ramakrishna Paramahamsa” cited in Banerji, Keshab and Ramakrishna, 259-60.
508 KM, III, 140 (GR, 745). Diary of 12 April 1885; IV, 261 (GR, 871). Diary of 23 October 1885).
520 LP, II (Thakurer Divyabhava O Narendranath), 196-97. Narendra is reported to have told the Master: “Sir, I have no
need of these things. Let me realize God first and then I will decide whether to accept them or not.”
521 LP, I (Gurubhava-Purvardha), 73. The tarkachudamani’s letter to Padmanath Bhattacharya reports the
paramahamsa’s response entirely differently: “Any attempt at mental concentration takes me toward my istadevata
528 LP, I (Gurrubhava-Purvardha), 207. See also Rolland, Prophets of New India, 135 n.4.
531 Upanishads, trans. Juan Mascaró, 114. Another variant expression is sarvam khalwidam Brahma (see
532 Ibid., 66. See also VP, 64-65; Swami Bhuteshananda, ed., Kathopanisad, 295.
534 KM, III, 120 (GR, 719). Diary of 7 March 1885; II, 164 (GR, 612). Diary of 11 October 1884.
537 S.N. Ghosal, Vaidic Bharat, 206: Ghosal’s letter to Tagore, 22 Asad 1365 B.E. Ghosal’s Alok Tirtha critiques idol
worship and many misunderstandings concerning the Bhagavata, the Ramayana, and the Mahabharata. I thank Surath
CHAPTER NINE
Ramakrishna Reconstructed: The Vivekananda Project
No superhuman personality like the Master has ever come to this world. This great man is the only pillar of light in
the dreary darkness of the world. It is his light that will help mankind wade through the ocean of worldly existence.
avatara—had been established during his youth, thanks to the efforts of his admiring patron
Mathuranath and his Tantrika mentor Yogeshwari. Later, Keshab’s Brahmo press publicized
the samadhis and sermons of the paramahamsa. Toward the end of his life, the saint himself
began to insist on his divinity and this claim was widely circulated in Calcutta and beyond by
ecstatic to a religious eclectic, especially a Vedantist prophet of the highest caliber, was the
work of Ramakrishna’s most favorite and most famous disciple, Narendranath, who as
Upon his return to Calcutta after his first visit to the West (1893-96), Vivekananda
told his interviewer Narendranath Sen, editor of the Indian Mirror, that his intention had
been “to elicit, as a spiritual master, the respect and sympathy of the mighty Western world
by preaching the deep secrets of Vedantic religion there and make them our mentors in
mundane matters.”1 During his second visit to the United States, the Swami declared that his
messages were “an attempt to echo...[Ramakrishna’s] ideas.”2 In two lectures in New York
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and London, he underscored his conviction in Ramakrishna’s message that “religion can be
given and taken more tangibly, more really than anything else in the world.” He further
insinuated his own credentials by declaring that his late Master had said that “only those who
have attained spirituality can communicate it to others, can be great teachers of mankind.
They alone are the powers of light.”3 He preached what he proudly called “Practical Vedanta”
to his Western audience. For them it meant that “the Vedanta recognises no sin, it only
recognises error. And the greatest error...is to say that you are weak, that you are a sinner, a
miserable creature.”4 To the Indians, however, the Vedanta lion loared: “I do not believe in
God that cannot give bread.”5 He interpreted the principles of the Vedanta to suit the
requirements of his age, his watchword being “dynamic religion and united India.” 6
He is said to have especially espoused the cause of the poor, the downtrodden, and the
women. His mission was to galvanize the Indian people into a program of self-help and self-
improvement—to bring to a successful fruition the work of their British masters who had
the gospel of equality. He wanted to assimilate the message of practical Islam, that is, the
message of equality with the message of personal salvation of the Hindus. That is what he
meant in a letter to his Muslim friend in Nainital: “For our own motherland a junction of the
two great systems, Hinduism and Islam--Vedanta brain and Islam body--is the only hope.”8
All this was a far cry from the paramahamsa’s constant emphasis on “realization of God
first” and his advice for total quiescence and passive surrender to Jagajjanani—“mew mew”
like a kitten profusely and piteously.9 He had admonished his devotees against exerting
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themselves unnecessarily for the good of the world and advised them to realize God first.10
But the Swami had little patience with the spiritual qua spiritual. He considered a quest for
the divine to the neglect of “humanitarian work” as imbecile behavior.11 He was also quite
contemptuous of ecstatic enthusiasm. Toward the end of his guru's life, at the Shyampukur
residence, Narendranath openly inveighed against the paramahamsa style of dances and
trances indulged in by several eager young devotees of the Master. He boldly declared that
because “these mysticisms, in spite of some grains of truth in them are generally weakening.”
He claimed that he had come to this conclusion on the basis of “his lifelong experiences of
it.”13 Thus he had little qualms mimicking and making fun of Ramakrishna’s samadhi shortly
As a matter of fact both the Master and his disciple projected a fundamentally
different image to their followers. Though a curious combination of premika (erotic) and
prajna (polemicist), pagal (irrational) and paramahamsa (spiritual), Ramakrishna had been
popular as the pagal Thakur (“mad Master”)—a childlike, naive, unsophisticated. The
Swami, on the other hand, appeared to his admirers as a veritable princely ascetic, indeed a
mahayogi—an intellectual, a hero and a humanitarian, and above all, a regal renouncer.15
However, Vivekananda’s new image of Shri Ramakrishna was built by reconciling the latter’s
asocial piety to the former’s social activism. The paramahamsa of the Swami’s ideal was to
humanitarian with global compassion, and at the same time a spiritual intellectual, a
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consciousness by the Master’s touch, interpreted Ramakrishna’s erotic bhakti as the purest
form of Hindu spirituality, and depicted his caste conscious, androgynous but frankly
misogynist mentor as “the Saviour of women, Saviour of the masses, Saviour of all, high and
low”16 and declared that he was the greatest of all avataras. He was convinced that “India
can only rise by sitting at the feet of Shri Ramakrishna” and hence “his life and his teachings
are to be spread far and wide, are to be made to penetrate every pore of Hindu society.”17 His
absolute necessity for a redeemer figure like his Master explains his efforts to discover a new
meaning in the Ramakrishna phenomenon. He told Nivedita that Ramakrishna “lived that
great life,” and he “read the meaning.”18 He discovered that the paramahamsa had “spoken
And that was not all. As noted earlier, Ramakrishna towered above the Buddha or
the conventional godman--or even a godlike man, as he had once regarded the Master over a
decade ago but a saintly superman. 20 This delicate balancing of the traditional avatara image
with the modern prophet motif informed Vivekananda’s interpretation and propagation of his
guru’s message in the world. Though he recognized the political value of an avatara for a
an incarnation.21 He in fact clearly told Prasannakumar Shastri in 1899 that he did not
“preach that the Master was an avatar.”2 2 His ideal godman and prophet was a militant mystic
—an amalgam of a yogi (saint) and a Kshatriya (warrior). He indeed was influenced, inter
alia, by Thomas Carlyle’s “Great Man” idea.23 The Swami’s letter to Dewan Haridas Desai
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articulates this idea: “It is a character, a life, a centre, a God-man that must lead the
way, ...That centre, that God-man to lead...was the great Ramakrishna Paramahamsa…”.24
III
The Swami’s quest for a special image of his Master led him to critique the existing
biographies of Ramakrishna. His reaction to those published in the 1890s was far from
favorable. He was particularly vehement in his denunciation of the JV, and he described the
shameful Bengali book as “Bosh and rot” to his disciple in Madras, Alasinga Perumal.25 He
delightful payar rhyme, the Ramakrishnapunthi.26 While he was quite appreciative of the
work by his beloved shankchunni [Akshay’s nickname, literally meaning, goblin, for his
homely appearance], he noticed a grave lacuna in it, the absence of a description of Shakti.
He believed, as he would write a couple of years later, the Westerners were rich and strong
because “the Dharma of the Westerners is worship of Shakti--the Creative Power regarded as
the Female Principle.”27 In his letter to his gurubhai [monastic brother] Swami
Ramakrishnananda, the Swami observed: “Always remember that we now stand facing the
world. Do everything bearing in mind that people are listening to our every word and
watching our every move.” He thus proffered a few suggestions for improvement of Sen’s
text:
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Tell shankchunni to write these things in the third chapter titled “Propagation”: Whatever has been accomplished by
the Vedas, the Vedanta, and the incarnations, he [Ramakrishna] has demonstrated in life by himself. He was the
explanation and thus nobody can comprehend the incarnations, the Vedas, and the Vedanta without first understanding
him. The Satyayuga has started the day he was born. Now all discrimination is over and everybody including the
Chandala will be treated with equanimity. He has wiped out all distinction between man and woman, rich and poor,
scholar and jnani, and the Brahmin and the Chandala. He is also the terminator of all feuds and thus all [animosities]
between the Hindus and the Muslims or the Hindus and the Christians are gone. All those squabbling due to
differences belonged to the other ages. In this Satyayuga the tidal wave of his love has united all. Tell him to expand
applauded ShriM’s diary of his visits to Ramakrishna during 1882-86,29 he did not like the
manuscript of M's English version of the diary, The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna (to be
country? M—has a tendency to put that stuff down everybody’s throat, but that will make our
movement a little sect.”30 However, the Swami changed his mind next year most probably
when he saw the printed version of the work (presumably incorporating some of his critiques
and suggestions) and wrote to M from Rawalpindi: “Dear M. C’est bon ami—Now you are
doing just the thing. Come out man. No sleeping all life. Time is flying. Bravo that is the
way. Many many thanks for your publication...”.3 1 Again he showered a lavish praise on M
The move is quite original and never was the life of a great Teacher brought before the public untarnished by the
writer's mind, as you are presenting this one. The language is beyond all praise, so fresh, so pointed, and withal so
plain and easy....I am really in a transport when I read them!...Our Teacher and Lord was so original, and each one of
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us have to be original or nothing. I now understand why none of us attempted his life before. It has been reserved for
Even when the Swami found a work on the life and logia of his Master quite
acceptable in all essentials, he still noticed something in it to cavil at, as was the case with
sketch of the Master “Shri Ramakrishnalila.” Commenting on this work Vivekananda wrote
“Ramakrishnalila”] by Suresh Datta. Good. But why did he print those examples...? Shame
on him! What great sin!”33 Most probably Vivekananda did not approve of Datta’s candid
account of Ramakrishna’s madhura bhava, nudity, gluttony and the like. The Swami in fact
instructed Ramakrishnananda: “You must not identify yourself with any Life of Him written
by anybody, nor give your sanction to any.”34 The Bengalis, thus, generally disappointed
Vivekananda, as none of them could write an “original” piece (he had as far as he could to
concede that in M’s Gospel, “the move is quite original”), that is, one which would depict
the world.
He considered his Madras disciples as “at least far superior to the Bengalis, who are
simply fools and have no souls, no stamina at all,”35 though he did not hesitate to lambast
Alasinga and “this pack of Madras babies,” who “cannot even keep a counsel in their blessed
noodles! Talk nonsense all day, and when it comes to the least business, they are nowhere!”36
However, the mercurial monk changed his mind again a few months later, and confided to
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Alasinga: “I have all hope in Madras.” He now suggested to him that Kidi (nickname of
The life of Ramakrishna was an extraordinary searchlight under whose illumination one is able to really understand
the whole scope of Hindu religion. He was the object-lesson of all the theoretical knowledge given in the Shastras
(scriptures). He showed by his life what the Rishis and Avatars really wanted to teach....The Vedas can only be
explained and the Shastras reconciled by his theory of Avastha or stages—that we must not only tolerate others, but
positively embrace them, and that truth is the basis of all religions.
He especially cautioned Alasinga to “avoid all irregular indecent expressions about sex etc.,
…because other nations think it the height of indecency to mention such things, and his life
in English is going to be read by the whole world.”37 A few months earlier Vivekananda had
approached Kidi with the same proposal: “Take thought, get materials, write a sketch of
Ramakrishna, studiously avoiding all miracles. The Life should be written as an illustration
Soon he was disenchanted again with his south Indian hopefuls. As he wrote to his
gurubhais in Calcutta:
Of course I never had any confidence in the Bengalis, but the Madrasis couldn’t do anything either... .not one
independent thought crosses anyone's brains, all squabbling over the same old, torn wrapper--that Ramakrishna
Paramahamsa was like this and that and those fantastic tales—stories having no end....Today you have your bell,
tomorrow you add a horn, a fan the day after; or you introduce a bedstand today, and tomorrow you have its legs
silver-mounted, and people help themselves to a hotchpotch concoction, and you spin out two thousand cock-and-bull
In the postscript, the writer observed: “It won't do by just calling him an incarnation. You
could be partially explained. Most probably, he found the Bengali works full of verbatim
reproduction of Ramakrishna’s talks in patois, often full of crude and obscene expressions
and indecent and uncritical reports, including eyewitness accounts, of the Master’s ati
bhayanaka (“very scary”) and ativa bhayankara (“extremely horrible”) sadhanas with the
Bhairavi Brahmani as well as his intimate encounters with Mathurmohan.40 Certainly he felt
uncomfortable with any reference to the Master's obsession with himself. He admonished his
gurubhais at Alambazar for having published the late paramahamsa’s loving remarks on him.
“Why did you tell the Indian Mirror that the paramahamsamashai used to call Naren this and
that? All that junk and stuff!” wrote the angry and exasperated Swami.41 His dislike for the
works by the south Indians stemmed probably from the fact that these depicted Ramakrishna
in the conventional motif of the Indian hagiographical tradition. The Bengali works were
embarrassing while the Madrasi ones dull and both eminently unoriginal!
IV
following the footsteps of Swami Vivekananda, attempted to tell the reader that great life...the realization of a little of
which has made Swami Vivekananda and others, including ourselves, dedicate their lives at the lotus feet of the
Master.42
as if they are gods” (Shivajnane jivaseva) ascribed to the Master by the Ramakrishna Order
convincingly argues that the paramahamsa was squarely opposed to social service though he
It is also quite likely that ShriM took a long time to publish his KM first because he
was hesitant to rush to print his stuff in its Bengali original without Swamiji’s imprimatur
and second because, even though, as a critic shrewdly pointed out, he had revised his
manuscript to either deemphasize or demean the Brahmos, probably at the behest of the
Ramakrishna Order,44 he still took time for effecting further revision, refinement, or
readjustment. Nikhilananda’s concern for projecting the right image of the paramahamsa in
his translation of the KM was most certainly inspired by the ideas of Vivekananda whom he
greatly admired.45 Most probably the real reason for Vivekananda’s praise for the second part
of M’s own translation of the KM was the fact that it partly reflected (in M’s commentaries)
the Swami's ideas of a Godman and that it partly deflected the importance of the Brahmos in
experiences and teachings of his Master with a view to aligning them to the classical Vedanta
of Shankara, which the Swami “regarded as the basis of his own universalized form of
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Hinduism.”46 While the Master himself admitted that his personal experience fell within the
ambit of the Shakta, Vaishnava, and Vedànta traditions, he undoubtedly was influenced more
by the Vaishnava teachings, witness his preference for the Bhàgavadgita, the Bhagavata
Purana, and, above all, the Adhyatma Ramayana, which represented a synthesis of Vedantic
non-dualism (advaita) and Vaisnava devotionalism (bhakti) as well as some Tantric element
(Sita being indentified with Prakriti).47 Ramakrishna saw in the Adhyatma Ramayana the
Ramakrishna was not in the least a Vedantist, except that every Hindu unconsciously imbibes from the atmosphere
around some amount of Vedantism, which is the philosophical backbone of every national cult. He did not know a
word of Sanskrit ....His spiritual wisdom was the result of genius and practical observation.48
It is thus clear, as Dr. Matchett concludes, that Ramakrishna’s spiritual experience and
teaching cannot be identified with any one Hindu tradition, because they were derived from
and “shaped by a tradition where much synthesis had already taken place.”49 Another writer
had remarked astutely long ago that Ramakrishna’s eclecticism was informed by his
responsive and childlike mind. “In this way,” wrote Wendell Thomas,
our saint became in turn a Saivite, Visnuite, and Advaitin, a follwoer of yoga, bhakti, and jnana, in short, an epitome
of Hindu tradition. He held all cults to be true, because each one seemed to lend itself to his familiar travel, which as
a typical Hindu he regarded as the highest realization of God. He could harmonize every Hindu cult with his simple
Edward Dimock rightly observed that “there is an eternal borrowing and reborrowing of
ideas and doctrines...among religious sects of India, until the lines of derivation become very
blurred indeed.”51
Vivekananda not only made a Vedantist out of Ramakrishna but even attributed to the
latter the teaching that “all of religion is contained in...the three stages of the Vedanta
philosophy, the Dvaita, Vishistadvaita, and Advaita.”52 Moreover, he made a prophet out of
his guru, who could never have recognized himself in a messiah figure born to enlighten the
world. Though Ramakrishna believed himself to be an avatara, he did never see himself in
the role of a messiah, nor did he ever undertake any spiritual exercise for the sake of others.
His reported experiments with various sadhanas were not an exercise in any systematic
practice of various faiths or paths. He undertook them because “they were all there in Bengal
to observe and cultivate.”53 The Master’s dictum of yata mat tata path should not be taken as
a solemn pronouncement of the validity of the religions of the world. Rather it should be
states of consciousness in which one feels assured of one's own union or identity with Reality may be reached by
various means and from starting points which are grounded in very different assumptions as to the nature of that
Reality.54
Properly speaking, it was the brahmo intellectual Keshabchandra who had pleaded for
a reconciliation of the religions of the world in England long before he met the
Look at that ground march of all religious denominations of the earth, Christians [,] Hindus, Buddhists,
Mahomedans ....Each is true to its own historic traditions. Each retains its peculiar virtues, but is freed from all
its peculiar errors and impurities. And thus these sanctified and reformed Churches move out of their respective
sects, and press onward in their variegated colors to the Central Church of Reconciliation.55
Ramakrishna ought to be seen in his own terms detached from Vivekananda’s Vedantist
messiah. “When Ramakrishna is separated from Vivekananda, it becomes clear that the
Sometime in late 1896 Saradananda asked Vivekananda why the latter had not written
Ramakrishna's biography for Professor Max Müller. The Swami replied in his characteristic
dithyramb:
I have such deep feeling for the Master that it is impossible for me to write about him for the public. If I had written
the article Max Muller wanted, then I would have proved, quoting from philosophies, the scriptures and even the holy
books of the Christians, that Ramakrishna was the greatest of all prophets born in the world.57
I am sending you a very short biography of Ramakrishna in English. Get it printed and translated into Bengali and
sell it at the great festival [Ramakrishna Festival]--people do not read books that are distributed free. Put a nominal
Most probably he read this biography as a public lecture in New York on 23 February
1896. Though this biography is short, it is shot through with the author’s very personalized
interpretation of Ramakrishna’s preachings and teachings and his claims on behalf of the
English translation of the LP) but Vivekananda’s “My Master” which is familiar throughout
the world, and “My Master” is Vivekananda all over. It is important to remember in this
context that Max Müller had warned Vivekananda against coloring his guru’s life with “the
irresponsible miraculising tendencies of devoted disciples,” thus confirming the Swami's own
Ramakrishna’s new image was further refined in the Swami’s lecture “The Sages of
combined the
brilliant intellect of Shankara and the wonderfully expansive, infinite heart of Chaitanya; one who would see God in
every being, one whose heart would weep for the poor, for the weak, for the outcast, for the downtrodden, for every
one in this world, inside India or outside India; and at the same time whose grand brilliant intellect would conceive of
such noble thoughts as would harmonise all conflicting sects, not only in India but ouside of India, and bring a
marvellous harmony, the universal religion of head and heart into existence....[T]his great intellect never learnt even
254
to write his own name, but the most brilliant graduates of our University found in him an intellectual giant. He was a
Vivekananda’s inspired hyperbole in respect of his Master was as its highest and best in his
claim made in 1901: “It is my opinion that Shri Ramakrishna was born to vivify all branches
of art and culture in this country.”62 The Swami used to say: “Each one of the Master’s
VI
Since Vivekananda’s days, the life and logia of the paramahamsa have been written
and interpreted by a variety of researchers both in India and abroad. Almost all biographies
of Ramakrishna have relied upon the interpretation of the Master’s life provided by the
Krishnakumar Mitra, astutely observed: “It is true that Narendranath became the disciple of
Ramakrishna, but this disciple made his guru ‘unsectarian.’”6 4 The much publicized
paramahamsa is not only the greatest incarnation who ever descended on earth but also the
patron saint of renascent India. The projection of Ramakrishna as the universal redeemer
was made in total disregard of the Master's pronounced casteism and misogyny. On the other
Ramchandra Datta, while trapped in the ivory tower of divinity, still has a human face--an
and naivete. As will be discussed below, Vivekananda’s modern messiah was neither a social
reformer nor a Vedantist nor even a Tantrika in any meaningful sense but an enthusiastic
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bhakta. In fact it was Max Müller who had warned long ago against confusing
Ramakrishna’s teachings with the Vedanta and insisted on distinguishing between “the
perfervid utterances of… Ramakrishna, an enthusiastic Bhakta...and the clear and dry style of
the Sutras of Badarayana."65 Yet the “cyclonic” Swami made his Master Bhagavaner Baba—
a “God’s daddy,” that is, greater than God!66 Vivekananda once confessed: “I say, I am a
slave of Ramakrishna—I am even ready to steal and rob for the sake of establishing his name
in his land of birth and sadhana as well as helping, however, minimally, the sadhana of his
disciples.”67 He certainly never committed any of these crimes but with a view to making a
scholar of out of his semi-literate Master. He resorted to his wonted colorful exaggeration
bordering on the ridiculous when he, reportedly, told Max Müller “the story of
question to his gurubhais with his characteristic nonchalance: “Without me, who would have
made your Master known to the world!”69 Nobody dared to suggest any name then, nobody
1Saracchandra Chakravarti, Swami-Shisya Samvad, p. 3: Diary of 1897. The first half of this chapter
draws heavily on my “Vivekananda’s Ramakrsna.” I thank the editor for his permission.
3CW, IV, 179, 187: “My Master.” This lecture as is reproduced in CW, IV (154-91) combines
Vivekananda’s lectures in New York and England in 1896 (see Ch. IV n. 33 above). However, he had
lectured on the same topic in Boston in 1894. According to Ms. Burke, “the first six and a half pages
of ‘My Master’ as published in volume four of the Complete Works are from New York lectures.
Thenceforth, passages both long and short, from the England lectures are liberally transposed.” Marie
6Ibid., 159.
7Ibid., 177.
8Swami Vivekananda, Letters, 379-80: Vivekananda’s letter to Mohammed Sarfaraj Husain (10 June
1898).
12 LV, I, 156.
15 Prophetic Mission, I & II passim. See also His Eastern & Western Admirers, Reminiscences of
Vivekananda: Reminiscences of Sisters Christine and Nivedita, Emma Calvé, and Edward Sturdy.
For a critical study of Vivekananda’s achievements see Sil, Swami Vivekananda. For the Swami’s
renown as a Vedantist see Prabha Dixit, “Political and Social Dimensions of Vivekananda’s Ideology.”
257
16 PL, 421: Vivekananda’s letter to Ramakrishnananda (c. 1895). The quoted sentence is in Swamiji’s
English.
17 CW, VI, 281: Vivekananda’s letter to Dr. Nanjunda Rao (30 November 1894).
25 CW, V, 54: Vivekananda’s letter (30 November 1894). Akshay Sen regarded Ram Datta as the
source of all kinds of canard and commotion. As he wrote in the Ramakrishnapunthi (see note
26 Sen’s original project was a four part biography, Bhagavan Shri Ramakrishna Paramahamsadever
Charitamrita, which took him several years (1894-1901). He publicly recited from one of the parts,
Ramakrishnapunthi, for the first time in 1895 at Dakshineshwar on the occasion of Ramakrishna's
birth anniversary. He sent a copy of this version of the Punthi to Vivekananda, then in the United
States. Later on, on 25 November 1901, the Punthi would be published, incorporating all the four parts
of the Charitamrita.
29 Cited in KM, V, 287 (not reprinted in GR): Vivekananda’s letter to M (14 April 1896).
258
30 PL, 449: Vivekananda’s letter (14 April 1896). Vivekananda’s own language.
33PL, 284: Vivekananda’s letter (1895). Datta’s Upadesh was first published in two parts in 1884-86.
They were published in slightly larger and revised edition in 1892. In 1894, the author collected more
sayings of the Master and added his short life, the Lila, to his collection. Soon the work ran out of
stock, but it was never reprinted immediately, “due to various factors,” according to the publisher of
34 Ibid., 419: Vivekananda’s letter (1895). The English sentence in italics appears in the original.
35 CW, VIII, 314: Vivekananda’s letter to a Madras disciple (28 June 1894).
36 Ibid., 312.
38 Letters of Vivekananda, 71: Vivekananda’s letter (3 March 1894). Emphasis in original. Puzzlingly enough,
40 JV, 31.
41 PL, 162: Vivekananda’s letter (1894). It is on record that he hesitated to discuss Ramakrishna's life,
confessing that he did not quite understand his guru. Swami-Shisya Samvad, 155.
42 LP, I (Gurubhava--Purvardha), 3.
47 LP, I (Sadhakabhava), 5-6. See also Adhyatma Ramayana, , Balakanda, I.34 cited in Matchett,
56 Ibid., 182.
57 Cited in Nikhilananda, Vivekananda, 193-94.
58 PL, 284: Vivekananda’s letter (1895). The word " éclat " appears in the original.
whole Hindu race in this way and then the whole world. That is the reason behind the Master's
incarnation.” Swami-Shisya Samvad, 125. Vivekananda was wrong in making Ramakrishna a totally
illiterate man. Perhaps the misstatement was made deliberately for rhetorical effect. In actuality,
however, the Master could and did sign his name. Ramakrishnananda, Ramakrishna, 14.
62 CW, VII, 205: Vivekananda’s conversation with Ranadaprasad Dasgupta, founder of the Jubilee Art
Academy, Calcutta.
63 Cited in Chattopadhyay, Latumaharajer Smritikatha, 447. The English word “original” occurs in the
Bengali text.
64 Cited in Datta, Patriot-Prophet (1954 ed.), 178. The 1993 edition omits the quotation.
66VR, p. 28. The journalists of Detroit called Vivekananda “cyclonic Hindu” for his eloquent and
forceful lectures. CW, VIII, 301: Vivekananda’s letter to his “Babies” (Hale sisters), 15 March 1894.
CHAPTER TEN
One kind of rapture is that in which the soul even though not in prayer is touched by some word it remembers or hears
about God. It seems that His Majesty from the interior of the soul makes the spark…increase, for He is moved with
compassion in seeing the soul suffer so long a time from its desire. All burnt up, the soul is renewed like the phoenix, and
one can devoutly believe that its faults are pardoned. Now that is it so pure, the Lord joins it with Himself, without
anyone understanding what is happening except these two; nor does the soul itself understand in a way that can afterward
be explained. Yet, it does have interior understanding, for this experience is not like that of fainting or convulsion….
Shriramakrishna has been universally acclaimed as a mystic par excellence. One writer
has even called him a “super mystic.”1 A review of the literature on the psychology of religion
and mysticism might be helpful to have some idea of a mystic personality and Ramakrishna’s
various spiritual or otherwise “strange” behaviors during samadhi or during that semi-waking
consciousness which he considered to be the state of bhava. In other words, we must attempt an
scriptures clearly assert that the true Self of man is God. It is thus possible for him to identify
himself with his true self or with the Divine Ground. Tat tvam asi—“that (Brahman) art thou”—
is the formula which is also echoed by the mystics of medieval Europe. The Flemish mystic
John Ruysbroeck (c. 1293-1381) maintained: “This union is within us of our naked nature and
were this nature to be separated from God it would fall into nothingness.”2 As Meister Johannes
Eckhart (c. 1260-1327?) has it, “while I am here, He is in me; after this life I am in Him.”3 Yet it
262
is noteworthy that “the Oriental doctrine of the union of man and Brahman is the symbol of a
psychological experience rather than a statement of objective fact, and it is almost impossible to
study Oriental religion with profit unless one is always careful to inquire into the experience
psychological structures that organize, limit, select, and interpret perceptual stimuli.”6
cognitive functioning? Psychologists have discovered several criteria for this behavior: that a
mystic’s perception and cognition are vivid, sensuous, syncretistic, physiognomic, animated, and
de-differentiated with respect to the distinction between self and object and between objects. In
other words, “classical accounts of mystic experience emphasize the phenomenon of Unity.”7 We
Houses, doors, temples—everything seemed to disappear altogether—as if there was nothing anywhere! And I beheld a
boundless infinite illuminated sea of consciousness! However far in whatever direction I looked, I saw a continuous
succession of effulgent waves surging forward, raging and storming from all sides with great speed. Very soon they fell on
me and drowned me to the unknown bottom. I panted, struggled, and fell unconscious.8
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The excessive clarity of vision experienced by the mystic is seen as an outcome of the
Psychologists of religion have identified five characteristics of mystic vision. In the first
what might be termed ‘reality transfer’, thoughts and images become real.”9 A second feature of
mystic experience is “sensory translation” whereby the individual has experience of nonverbal,
the concept of sensory translation offers an intriguing explanation for the ubiquitous use of light as a metaphor for
mystic experience. It may not be just a metaphor. “Illumination” may be derived from an actual sensory experience
occurring when a resolution of unconscious conflict occurs, permitting the experience of “peace”, “presence”, and
the like. Liberated energy experienced as light may be the core sensory experience of mysticism.10
When I sat to meditate, I had, in the beginning, the vision of particles of light like group of fire-flies; sometimes I saw
masses of mist-like light covering all sides; and at other times I perceived that everything was pervaded by bright waves of
light like molten silver. I could see these with my eyes sometimes shut and sometimes open. I did not understand what I
saw nor did I know whether it was good or bad to have such visions.1 1
A third important feature of mystic experience is a sense of unity. The mystical idea and
the experience that we are at one with the world and with God “constitute a valid perception
insofar as it pertained to the nature of the thought process, but need not in itself be a correct
perception of the external world.”12 This ego inflation is, according to Philip Spratt, a flatus
religious man of the world,” in whom “libido cathects on the ego-ideal.” The concentration of
libido upon ego creates for it an autonomous moral world and makes it impervious to the norms
264
of the real world of people other than himself. He is in the state of vairagya—tristia. The
narcissist is endowed with an infant psyche and as such “tends to look upon the outer world as
animated by emotions like his own.” Narcissism, carried to the limit, may either result in
samàdhi or a feeling of identification with the universe. “One step further,” observes Spratt,
“and the subject loves the universe, for he loves himself. He has become a saint. This situation
ineffability might be the outcome of mystic experience’s deep connection with our preverbal
(that is, infantile) and primitive memories suggestive of an “undifferentiated state.” Most
probably such early memories, those of infant and breast, might be mystically reexperienced as a
consequence of the regression in thought process brought about by renunciation and meditation
as well as the activation of infantile longings by the guiding religious impulse that induces the
image of a benign deity who would reward childlike surrender with permanent euphoria.
Ramakrishna used to say “mine is the attitude of a child.” He said further: “After having
realized God one acquires the nature of a boy....God has a boyish nature.”16 His infantile
Who can ever know God? I don’t even try. I only call on the name of Ma. Let Ma do whatever She likes. She will let
Herself be known if She likes and She won't if She doesn’t. My nature is that of a kitten. It only cries, “Mew, mew!” Then
Ma keeps it wherever She wants—sometimes in the kitchen, sometimes in bed. A little child wants his mother. He does
not know his mother’s wealth, nor does he ever want to know. He knows, “I have my Ma, what do I care?”...I, too, have
shows “transparent femininity of the person concerned.” 18 It is also a homosexual attitude in that
265
to the mother’s womb, and...to castrate oneself in order to become a woman so to be able to
identify with the mother.”19 It should, however, be noted that homosexual feelings referring to
emotional links between members of the same sex in preference over those of the opposite sex
are not necessarily identifiable with homosexuality, that is, homosexual practice. Thus
Ramakrishna exhibited strong homosexual (passive) feelings although his sexual orientation was
not “homosexual” in the conventional sense. On the other hand, his sexual feelings could be
better apprehended by complicating them with unrealized natural heretosexual desires seeking
Finally, the mystic experience “goes beyond the customary sensory pathways, ideas, and
memories.”21 Through austerity and renunciation, the mystic has temporarily removed the
undermined the logical organization of his consciousness. At the same time he is intensely
motivated to perceive something. Naturally, in the state of fana (the Sufi term for “dying to
verbal or sensory experience. Hence a mystic experience is, in Carl Jung’s category, numinosum
understanding” or that which Abraham Maslow has identified as the “peak experience.”22
We must, however, recognize two important facts in respect of mystical experience. First, as
Steven Katz has pointed out, and in Wayne Proudfoot’s paraphrasing, “the mystic's experience is
conditioned by the complex pre-experiencial pattern of beliefs, attitudes, and expectations which
he brings to it.” And second, mystical experiences are not only “prescriptive and evocative
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rather than descriptive” but also varied, according to different traditions shaping those
rationally unverifiable has been challenged by Donald Evans. While acknowledging the limited
validity of Katz’s overall thesis, Evans concludes that “spiritual reality...has an objective
structure which human beings can discern...”.24 There is, moreover, some support for the
Recently Larry Shinn has shown how Ramakrishna’s mystical/religious experience, that
is, his “direct acquaintance” with the Goddess Kali, was set “within the context of the words and
images associated with Kali” and concluded that “Ramakrishna's experience of Kali is not easily
replicable outside the mythological and symbolic context of the Bengali Kali tradition.”26
However, through his personal mystical experience of Shiva, the Christian scholar Shinn has
posited further that “if it is true that particular religious experiences are mediated symbolically
through culturally bound words, images, and rituals...that same system of symbols [might] serve
as an avenue to valuable interfaith experience of the nonadherent.”27 Shinn does not claim any
absolute certainty of his position but cautiously questions Katz's absolute stand against the unity
of mystical or religious experience and suggests, through his personal experience, that “even
partially understood and individually appropriated symbols clearly do have the power to provide
an avenue to the experience(s) of other religious realities beyond one’s own.”28 According to
Bolle,
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the mysterium magnum of the mystic’s experience is always a matter of a universal aspiration. Groping for
descriptive terms, we can say sometimes that they leave all provincialism of religious certitudes behind. Whatever
expressions seem best in our specialization and on the level of our understanding, their aspirations should interest
and orient a student who does not want to be scientific with a mere list of facts in one promise.29
Sigurd Lindquist has argued that unitive mystical experience is comparable to the
the object of his fixation is a psychological illustration of identity with God. “It is,” says
Lindquist, “ suggestively produced identity with the object of meditation of the same nature as we
find in India and in ordinary hypnosis.”30 According to Roger Bastide, the main goal of the
mystics is not self-annihilation in the literal sense of the word, but rather the effacement of the
old personality and its replacement with a new one. This is also Katz’s view and, as he says,
reconditioning of consciousness, i.e., a substituting of one form of condition and/or contextual consciousness for
another, albeit a new, unusual, and perhaps altogether more interesting form of conditioned-contextual
consciousness.31
The mystic no doubt seeks depersonalization, a divestment of the self, of everyday ordinary
thought and feeling, but he does not, indeed cannot, “lose himself in an absolute consciousness.
Other feelings, other thoughts upsurge, only that the mystic no longer recognizes them as his
own, that they seem alien to him....He is no longer himself; he is another. He claims to be
deified.”32
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II
The case history of a particular female mystic of France is of great relevance to our
Madeleine (1854-1918) by her physician and psychologist, Professor Pierre Janet, author of De
l'Angoisse a l'extase: Etudes sur les croyances et les sentiments (2 vols. 1927-28. Rpt. Paris:
Payot, 1975).33 Madeleine lived in Sàlpetriere, where Janet observed her from May 10, 1896 to
March 5, 1904, with the interruption of about a year. A cultivated individual, Madeleine “lived
in religion” since childhood. By nature she was extremely impulsive and hypersensitive and
strikingly shy and timid. “With these qualities she combined a morbidly sensitive conscience,
which found expression in bitter self-reproaches for the slightest faults.” For example, she had
an abnormal fear of losing sexual purity while washing her genitals and thus of sinning terribly
against God. She was also “possessed by coercive ideas of pregnancy (flatulence), of eternal
damnation and so forth.” She had no male lover and she became “the bride of God or of Christ.”
She was thoroughly incapable of organizing her life and thus ended up as a street vagrant
in Paris where she became ill with multiple muscular ailments and was ultimately consigned to a
hospital at Sàlpetrière, where she came under Janet's observation and care. The professor
observed four phases of her crisis: (1) state of temptation or doubt accompanied by severe
vexations of spirit and mental conflict; (2) state of dryness marked by an “emptiness of feeling”
or a “feeling of emptiness” in which she felt like a soulless animal from whom God was hiding;
(3) state of torture characterized by delirium and despair; and (4) state of consolation
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characterized by intense joy and optimism. This pathological crisis was preceded and followed
by relatively normal mental states—“the states of equilibrium.” Dr. Janet diagnosed Madeleine’s
immobility--an enormous depression of external activity. After the termination of her ecstatic
state, Madeleine complained that her legs and arms had been like bundles of cloth. At the
beginning of the consolation she began to lose the power of speech. This speechlessness lasted
from eight to ten days up to more than a month. During the state of recollections or semiecstasy,
her eyes manifested at times a certain degree of ptosis. “She can not [sic] open her eyes
completely, she regards us and reads through a little slit between her eyelids,” Janet reported.
Janet characterizes Madeleine as mainly a visual type. She frequently beholds the
countenance of the Holy Virgin, of “Our Lord, surrounded by light and radiant with glory.” She
beholds him also as the Christ whose hands and little feet she kisses and whom she holds in her
arms close to her heart. She even sees the Holy Trinity. Professor Janet further observes that she
caresses, and is caressed by, god. Her love-tryst with god is characterized by “inexplicable
voluptuousness,” that has “a strongly sexual character, perceptible even in her genitals.” At the
same time, Madeleine receives and transmits God’s commands in a series of ecstasies and thus
proclaims in god’s name a new morality that castigates in no uncertain terms sexual immorality
and sensual love, and endorses voluntary virginity and ascetic renunciation of the world. This
of which it is felt as inspired by a power outside of the subject’s own self. Her faith is
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“assertive” and it takes no account of proof or logic. It is the sinking of the intellectual level as a
regression or return to a simple and primitive form of thinking similar to the prelogical thinking
of the savages, that is, the bicameral men and to the thinking always found in very young
children. In Janet's clinical terms, “it has its complete counterpart in the feebleminded or
III
There is an uncanny resemblance between the ecstatic and spiritual experiences and
crises of Ramakrishna and Madeleine, especially because these were phenomena of their
religious sensibilities. Ramakrishna’s alleged twelve year sadhana (c. 1856-68) reveals all the
four phases of Madeleine’s mystico-spiritual crisis. The Master’s phase of vyakulata or intense
yearning begins from about 1856 and escalates into a state of temptation or doubt, accompanied
by vexation of spirit, which seems to find a temporary resolution in his first vision of Kali.35
Like Madeleine’s second phase noted by her psychologist—the phase of dryness and emptiness,
in the LP.36 His state of torture—the third phase of Madeleine’s crisis—may be said to have
occurred during the years of his madness and marriage, followed by his tantra sadhana with
extended to the period of Ramakrishna’s madhura bhava. His sadhanas culminate as well as his
conflicts find their resolution after he meets his Vedantic mentor Totapuri the Naked One.38
Admittedly, this comparison between the experiences of Ramakrishna and Madeleine is a trifle
overwraught; nevertheless, the apparent similarities are striking and intriguing enough to warrant
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Bynum’s insightful analysis of the medieval mystics’ use of female symbols as part of their
even though there are significant differences between his attitudes and behaviors and those of his
IV
of bicameral mind we have referred to earlier. In order to understand what a bicameral mind
means we must first have some elementary idea of hemispherical brain process. The cerebral
cortex of the human brain is divided into two hemispheres, joined by a large bundle of
interconnecting fibres called corpus callosum. The left side of the body is mainly controlled by
the right side (or hemisphere) of the cortex, and the right side of the body by the left side of the
cortex. The left hemisphere is predominantly involved with analytic, logical thinking especially
in verbal and mathematical functions. If the left hemisphere is specialized for analysis, the right
hemisphere seems specialized for holistic mentation. This hemisphere is primarily responsible
for our orientation in space, artistic endeavor, crafts, body image, recognition of faces and the
like. Robert Ornstein has observed that “the recognition that we possess two cerebral
hemispheres which are specialized to operate in different modes may allow us to understand
much about the fundamental duality of our consciousness”: reason and passion, intuitive and
rational, religion and science, verbal and non-verbal. It is interesting to note that the Vedanta
recognizes the duality of consciousness as between buddhi (intellect) and manas (mind).4 0
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recent evolutionary phenomenon rooted in the earlier failure of bicameral consciousness. And
bicameral consciousness was a God consciousness. Primitive people were bicameral as their
right and left hemispheres were separated. They were “unconscious” in that they did not
reflexively decide what to do but simply did what they were told. What they were asked to do
occurred within their heads via the left hemisphere. Left hemispheric visions and voices dictated
socially acceptable behaviors to the right hemisphere, which controlled action. “The bicameral
man,” writes Jaynes, “was ruled in trivial circumstances of everyday life by unconscious habit,
and in his encounters with anything new or out of the ordinary in his own behavior or others’ by
his voice visions.”4 1 Jaynes further speculates that when the stable world order broke down,
emerged. This awareness was the “death of the gods” and the emergence of what we know as
normal consciousness. Voice-visions of the bicameral mind now occur only in isolated
Mortimer Ostow sees mysticism as a result of the same psychic mechanism as psychosis:
“disparagement and abandonment of the world in which the individual lives, followed by a
commitment to a ‘new world’.” Ostow further observes that a psychotic individual finds his
intrapsychic, personal, or social reality unacceptable and therefore excludes from his
consciousness by “psychically destroying it” and replacing it with “a new inner reality.” “This
infancy, when he was able to deal with frustration and disappointment by retreating to a world of
fantasy and when he was blessed with a firm and ultimate union with his parents.”42
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This explains, at least partly, why Ramakrishna’s teachings were so antisocial or at least
asocial and the man so devoid of social conscience or consciousness. He did not approve of
working for a living. When he came to know that one of his boy devotees, Nityaniranjan Ghosh
(later known as Swami Niranjanananda) had obtained an employment, he felt aggrieved and was
heard to say, “I feel more pained to hear that he has taken up employment than if I had heard of
his death.”4 3 In fact, when he first arrived at Dakshineshwar along with his elder brother
Ramkumar, the young Gadadhar scrupulously avoided the temple manager Mathuranath because
he feared that he would be offered a job. As Ramakrishna later confided to his nephew and
companion Hridayram Mukhopadhyay, “I have no mind to be tied down to service for life.”44
He thought Pandit Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar, the famous scholar and social critic, was
merely wasting time in trying to reform society.45 When his patron and admirer Shambhucharan
Mallik decided to build hospitals, dispensaries, schools, roads, and public reservoirs, his Master
admonished him: “You should discharge only those obligations which come first and are
“It is not good to be involved in too many projects. You will forget God that way.” “You people
talk of doing good for the world. Is the world a small place?” Ramakrishna asked his audience
angrily. “And who the hell are you to do good to the world? Meet Him by means of spiritual
discipline. Realize Him if He gives you strength, then you can do good to everybody; otherwise
not.”46 In similar vein he admonished Kristodas [Krishnadas] Pal who dared to posit that the
proper goal of human life should be to exert for the betterment of the world, The Master quipped
irritatingly that Pal was a nitwit possessing the “intelligence of a widow’s [or a whore’s]
reputation and a self-proclaimed (though often given to windy rhetoric) social worker, the Swami
Who cares for your Ramakrishna? Who cares for your Bhakti and Mukti? Who cares what the scriptures say? I will go to
hell cheerfully a thousand times, if I can rouse my countrymen, immersed in Tamas (inertia), and make them stand on their
own feet and be Men, inspired with the spirit of Karma-Yoga. I am not a follower of Ramakrishna or any one; I am a
follower of him only who carries out my plans! I am not a servant of Ramakrishna or any one, but him only who serves
A most powerful argument has it that the Master’s teachings went against the Upanisadic ideal of
activism:
Even while doing deeds here, one may desire to live a hundred years. Thus on thee—not otherwise than this is it—the
The wise souls of yore knew that the honest householder and trader Tuladhara was more
advanced spiritually than the anchorite and fully realized brahmin Yayati. It was the former who
taught the latter that one who is sincerely a good friend of everybody and who works for
universal welfare is a truly religious person (“sarvesam yah suhrnnityam sarvesancha hite ratah
panthah? What's the way?” asks Amalkumar Ray in his incisive comparison between Vidyasagar
and Ramakrishna.
The path of Indian spirituality or the path of divine ecstasy, the path of action or the path of idleness legitimated by
religion? Should we attend to the sick and the poor or should we while away time dancing and clapping in the name of
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Kali? Should we strive to spread education and cultivate science or should we preach the gospel that realization of God is
Dhurjati Mukherji was right when he observed that “Paramahamsa Deb’s influence has
succeeded in shaking our social foundations. A number of people have been inspired, no doubt,
but the masses have not trembled in their sleep.”50 In the final analysis, Ramakrishna’s career
poses the eternal problem of “how to be both a mystic and a militant...how to combine the search
for an expansion of inner awareness with effective social action, and how to find one's true
identity in the synthesis of both.”51 Fortunately for him, in spite of his marked asocial attitudes,
Ramakrishna was reinvented and modernized by his St. Paul, the irrepressible Vivekananda, who
borrowed the institutional and organizational techniques of the West and made his guru,
the grand Ramakrishna miracle which happened in spite of the Master and which is a distinct
__________________________________________________________________________
1Mahendranath Sircar, Eastern Lights, 224.
2Cited in Frederick C. Happold, Mysticism, 21.
3Cited in Alan Watts, Meaning of Happiness, 74.
4Ibid., 81.
6Arthur J. Deikman, “Deautomatization and Mystic Experience” in Charles T. Tart, ed. Altered States of
Consciousness, 30.
7Ibid., 32. See also C. Olson, “Mythico-Ritualistic Motifs in Indian Mysticism,” 3-13: “Characteristics and Types
276
of Mysticism.”
10Ibid., 38.
15The ineffability of mystical experience was first formally stated by James in his Varieties of Religious
16KM, III, 24 (GR, 116). Diary of 24 August 1882; IV, 3 (GR, 176). Diary of 1 January 1883.
18Gay, Freud, 285, 281. This dependence syndrome is called amae in Japanese. See the classic analysis of amae
in Takeo Doi, Anatomy of Dependence, chs. II-IV. See also William R. Rogers, “Phenomenology of Helplessness”
20Kripal, however, tends to classify Ramakrishna as a homosexual. Quite expectedly, appropriate excerpts from his
book have been reproduced by Trikone, a magazine for South Asian gays and lesbians.
22Mary A. Mattoon, Jungian Psychology, 194. Jung actually borrowed the term numinosum from Rudolph Otto,
Idea of Holy. See also A. Maslow, Religions, Values and Peak Experience.
277
23 W. Proudfoot, Religious Experience, 128, 122-23. See also S. Katz, ed. Mysticism.
24D. Evans, “Can Philosophers Limit What Mystics Can Do?,” 57, 59.
27Ibid., 425.
28Ibid., 431.
30S. Lindquist, Die Methoden des Yoga cited in Ernst Arbman, Ecstasy or Religious Trance, II, 424. Emphasis in
original.
32R. Bastide, Les Problemes de la Vie Mystique, 168 cited in Arbman, Ecstasy or Religious Trance, II, 415.
33 See Catherine Clément, Syncope; Catherine Clément and Sudhir Kakar, La Folle et le Sainte.
34For details of Janet's reporting of Madeleine’s case history, see Arbman, Ecstasy or Religious Trance, II,
428-78.
37Ibid., chapters “Pratham Chari Vatsarer Shes Katha,” “Vivaha o Punaragaman,” and “Bhairavi Brahmani
Samagam.”
278
41J. Jaynes, The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind (Boston: Houghton Mifflin
42Cited in Andrew Greeley, Sociology of Paranormal, 54-55. Ostow's two pathbreaking studies are:
“Antinomianism, Mysticism and Psychosis” and “Mysticism Past and Present—Psychiatric View”
(Unpublished).
44Ibid., 130.
47KM, V, 168. Appendix (Parishista). See also KM, II (GR, 605). Diary of 11 October 1884.
49VP, 106. I thank Professor Surath Chakravarti for drawing my attention to this source.
51Ursula King, Towards a New Mysticism, 288 citing Adam Curle, Mystics and Militants.
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CHAPTER ELEVEN
Though Ramakrishna practiced various spiritual paths, his primary sadhana was the path of tantra….Ramakrishna
The devotees were delighted to witness the reenactment of the 450 year-old divine play at the blessed Navadwip at
the Kali temple of Rani Rasmani. Next to the twice-blessed Chaitanya the twice-blessed Ramakrishna is the great
If Ramakrishna’s disciples under the aegis of the Ramakrishna Order have been concerned with
the Master’s Vedantist image, a number of scholars—interestingly all of them from the Western
world—have been arguing assiduously for the saint’s Tantrika identity. Over three decades ago
Walter Neevel argued that Ramakrishna’s spiritual orientation was tantric on the basis of an
earlier interpretation by Heinrich Zimmer that the Master was essentially a Tantrika.539 The
Danish scholar Anders Blichfeldt considers Ramakrishna a practitioner of left-handed Tantra but
Tantra...seems to have been a permanent influence.” 540 Recently Dr. Kripal has built upon the
tantric theme an elaborate superstructure of arguments and concluded that “it was Kali of the
Shakta tradition that was the focus of Ramakrishna’s life” and thus “Ramakrishna’s world...was a
Tantric world.”541 These scholars appear to find it convenient to comprehend the Master’s
mysticism (demonstrated by his samadhi and enigmatic eloquence), bhakti, non-traditional, even
apparently eccentric, behavior and life style, his songs and dances, and his obvious location at
Dakshineshwar Kali temple, under the rubric of a Hindu tradition that is at once esoteric,
ecstatic, and erotic—something that is tantalizingly exciting and exotic. Kripal relies on one of
the early biographers of the Master, Satyacharan Mitra, who wrote that he was first and foremost
a realized Tantrika, overlooking Mitra’s concluding remark that Ramakrishna, next to Chaitanya,
Tantrika. The Master once told a Vedantist monk whom he met near the latrine at
Dakshineshwar that he “would piss on the knowledge of Vedanta which was the wisdom of a
householder.”542 Also, as we have noted earlier, he expressed his utter contempt for the
Vedanta.543 We must note that Ramakrishna had been brought up in a Vaisnava household where
the chief deity was Raghuvira (that is, Rama, the legendary king of Ayodhya, regarded as an
incarnation of Visnu) and his childhood and adolescence passed under the magic spell of Krishna
and his amorous antics with the gopis of Vraja, as regularly sung and enacted in his village. It
was by accident that young Gadadhar became a reluctant priest of Kali at the temple of Rasmani,
most probably because of a hassle-free living, thanks to the loving insistence of his enchanted
employer Mathuranath. Interestingly enough, his scribblings and doodles made a few months
before death invoked the name of Radha (“Jai Radhe pumamohi [premamayi]) instead of Kali,
As to his tantric training under Yogeshwari during 1861-67, it should be understood first
of all that she was never his mentor in any spiritual practice whatsoever. About Ramakrishna’s
sadhana with the bhairavi, we hear of his mad state (unmader avastha), his delight in wearing
silk clothes (garader kapad), and his practices under the bel tree, during which he did not
discriminate between the basil and the horseradish plants, his eating foods left by jackals, riding
a dog and feeding it luchi, and washing himself in the muddy water collected on the ground. He
was also made to lick a piece of rotten flesh as part of the ritual of purnabhiseka and perform
other “rituals too numerous to mention.”545 Finally, the bhairavi made him witness ritual
intercourse, the so-called heroic rite. On his own admission, the Master savored the sight and
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was entranced. This initiation into beholding human love making resulted in his vision of
cosmic coitus. However, as a Tantrika initiate Ramakrishna felt that the world is full of Visnu
(sarvam Visnumayam jagat). 546 Ramakrishna’s Tantra sadhana was more a playacting of the
stereotyped and popularly believed Tantrika behavior than practicing a spiritual discipline
systematically. Also, the interlude with the bhairavi seems to have provided him with an
opportunity to escape from the drudgeries and responsibilities of priestly chores and embark on a
venture for which his curiosity was kindled but for which he was fit neither mentally nor
physically.
Shakti and Brahman was quite confused, even contradictory. Once he complained to Bhavanath
that Hazra could never understand that Shakti and Brahman were the same—“one and the same
Becharam, that saguna Brahman, nirguna Brahman, and Adyashakti are one and the same.548
actually an impediment to the realization (or vision) of “Him” (Tanr), that is, Brahman. Hence
She needs to be propitiated.550 The implication is clear and unmistakable: Shakti and Brahman
are different. In fact, there are indications that the Master became disenchanted with, even
defiant of, Shakti. Trailokyanath Dev writes in his Atiter Brahmo Samaj that when once he
requested the paramahamsa to show him Kali’s arati ritual at Dakshineshwar, the Master
responded: “I no longer look at the face of that hag, you go alone and see for yourself” [ami ai
shalir mukh ar dekhina, tui ekla giya dekhia ai]. When Trailokya insisted on hearing the cause
of his disaffection, Ramakrishna exploded: “For a long time that siren gave me a run around
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without pointing to the right path. That’s why I no longer look at Her face” [anek din dhariya ai
shali amake path ghuraiya laiya bedaitechila. amake thik path dekhaiya dei nai, sei janya ami
ar or mukh dekhina].551
Ramakrishna’s disaffection for Kali is most probably a strategy to endear himself to his
Brahmo admirer. This is apparent when he continues to tell Trailokya that one night he was
summoned by a voice to come to the bank of the Ganges and sit there with his eyes closed.
When commanded to open them he beheld “an unprecedented lighted apparition” filling his
“heart and soul [pranman] with a blissful ray.” Trailokya later commented admiring the
“brahmo [sic] vision of this great man who was a great man—a realized yogi” [yogasiddha
mahapurus].552
Surath Chakravarti rightly points out various conflicting behaviors and statements of the
paramahamsa in respect to his deity. He would insist on regarding the image of Kali as “the
inducer of the realization of Supreme Consciousness” but would have little qualms rolling on the
ground crying profusely to actually “see” the goddess.553 Once he placed the zone of Brahman
(brahmasthan) higher than the abode of the gods and yet, in spite of this very realization, he
attempted to offer ritual foods (bhog) to Kali as her priest.554 He even had to cleave with the
sword of knowledge Kali’s image appearing in visions during meditation on Brahman at the
behest of Totapuri.555 He equated Kali with Brahman but promised her sugar and coconut at
Dakshineshwar with a view to persuading the goddess to cure Keshab Sen’s illness.556 When
Narendranath asked the goddess to give him knowledge and devotion instead of wealth, the
though there is a world of difference in the life style of a Tantrika and a Vaisnava, it being
somewhat confused in the practices of the marginal Kartabhaja or Sahajiya) which provided a
paradigm of salvation radically different from the Upanisadic ideal of moksa. As Maudeleine
Biardeau has observed, “Bhakti appeared as a new reading of Vedic Revelation and of its most
narrow brahmanic interpretation, a reading in which the world of desire came to be rehabilitated
in its relation to salvation.”558 The Upanisads emphasized renunciation as the path to moksa at
the expense of desire, but bhakti reversed the perspective by overcoming the antimony between
kama and moksa. This is what Tantra sought to achieve. Conceiving the Absolute (Brahman) as
the Purusa into which all—including its feminine Energy or Shakti—is reabsorbed, Tantra
provided the vision of a cosmic couple—Brahman “in a permanent and happy union” with
Shakti.559 Tantric ideal, then, glorifies amorous (and heterosexual) love—the quintessential
kama.560 Ramakrishna’s tantric orientation thus ought to have made him a practitioner of kama.
But though he was reputed to be a realized Tantrika, because of his personal phobic aversion to
normal heterosexuality, he would have nothing to do with the tantric heroic rite (virachara) and
even regarded the ways of Tantra as defiled and dirty--the passage of paikhana (“latrine”).561
Kripal overlooks the question of why the Master developed an antipathy to kama, in other
words, his pathogeny, and explains the matter by pronouncing him a natural homosexual. In
order to fit the square peg of a Tantrika Ramakrishna into the round hole of a homosexual
Vaisnavacharan (actually a Vaisnava scholar) a homosexual Tantrika who “was a major player in
the early years of Ramakrishna’s Tantric training.”562 The pandit is considered a Tantrika because
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of his association with the Kartabhaja community. The Kartabhajas are considered Tantrikas
because of their “secret practices” such as worship of men, consumption of bodily fluids like
“shit, piss, menstrual blood, and semen”,563 and group sex with the Navarasika (a Vaishnava
subsect) women, who are not whores but whose “way of life” is too repugnant to describe (the
Bengali for the phrase “way of life” does not occur in the source).564 All this leads Kripal to
conclude that these women were actually eunuchs, even though Datta clearly describes them as
“strilokera”, that is “women”. Ramchandra writes: “Ei strilokera barangana nahe” (“These
women are not prostitutes”), that is, they are not professional whores but ordinary women of
society. In Kripal’s imagination women with a repugnant lifestyle and yet not prostitutes must be
eunuchs. The Kartabhajas’ “secret practices” with eunuchs make them homosexuals. Ergo, the
pandit was a queer. The conclusion is finally made that Ramakrishna, a natural homosexual, was
befriended by a fellow gay, the Kartabhaja Vaisnavacharan, who influenced the paramahamsa’s
early tantric practices. Kripal completely bypasses the consideration that Ramakrishna’s
apparent fondness for young devotees could possibly have functioned as a sublimatory
compensation for his unrequited and repressed sexuality due to his personal psychosomatic
condition.565 The spirituality of “Kali’s child” is thus grounded and validated in his tantric
Moreover, on his own admission, the Tantrika Ramakrishna did not care for the tantric
concern for sadachakra or karanabari. On the other hand, he was relieved to hear from a
Tantrika visitor at Dakshineshwar that the ultimate secret of Tantra sadhana is faith (vishwas),567
and insightful comparative analysis of the life and work of the Master and Shrichaitanya.568
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Swami Prabhananda, arguably one of the most scholarly researchers of the Ramakrishna Order,
has convincingly demonstrated the Master’s vaisnavic orientation. The Swami has analyzed
Ramakrishna’s Harilila at Sihore sometime in 1880 that inspired even the conservative and
puritanical Vaisnava Goswamis of the region in the spontaneous outburst of divine eroticism.
Ramakrishna most certainly was a Sahajiya Vaisnava. Dr. Dasgupta has noted how the esoteric
yogic practices as part of the Brahmanic Hindu subculture came to be allied with “the
speculation of the esoteric vaisnavic cult, known as the Vaisnava Sahajiya movement.”569
Even the Master himself believed that “the One who in past ages had incarnated Himself as
Rama, Krishna, Gauranga, and others, descended on earth in his own person.”571 According to
Saradananda, Ramakrishna was especially devoted to his family deity Rama and he worshipped
this god (aka Raghuvira) every morning with flowers plucked by himself from the garden before
taking his first meal of the day (jalagrahan).572 Saradananda further informs that after his
darshan of the Mother of the Universe (Jagadamba, an appellation of Kali), Ramakrishna’s mind
turned to his family deity Raghuvira on whom he meditated with the constant devotion of
Hanuman.573 Ramakrishna even confided to Bhairavi Yogeshwari about his miraculous vision of
two playful pretty boys coming out of his body and, after having chatted and played with him,
vanishing inside his body. The brahmani interpreted this reported vision as proof that
Ramakrishna was a joint incarnation of Shri Chaitanya and Nityananda. 574 He, reportedly, used
to dance almost every morning and evening singing “Jai Govinda, jai Gopal, Keshava Madhava
dina dayal. Hare Murare Govinda, Vasu-Daivakinandana Govinda. Hare Narayana Govinda
Prabhananda has noted the Master’s contributions to Bengali culture by renewing, rejuvenating,
and modernizing Chaitanya’s influence. In fact, says, Prabhananda, Shri Ramakrishna was a
new Gauranga (navagauranga), as it were.576 Ramakrishna, on his part, was perfectly aware of
the distinction between a Shakta and a Vaishnava. He once reported an encounter between
Bhagavati (Goddess Kali), in which the latter was terribly upset with the pandit’s preference for
Krishna. The Master understood the cause of his irate employer’s reaction and observed:
The Vaisnava Sahajiyas, Dimock writes, are a kind of social deviants like their Tantrika
counterparts. But while the former flaunt the accepted social values, they continue to live within
society. “Tantrism does not affirm the basic social order; it rather provides an alternative to
it.”578 The Vaishnava Sahajiya could live in society when his personal ideals would coincide with
those of the society. But he would always harbor his “unofficial self,” his Sahajiya self, which
will remain as “not only its own moral arbiter but which...goes against all normal standards.”
does appear a Sahajiya of the Vaisnava variety, in spite of his alleged experience with Tantra and
his fortuitous but lifelong association with Kali. In fact M once observed that Ramakrishna
displayed the state of sahaja. The Master did not contradict his disciple but referred to the
Sahajiyas of Ghoshpara who preached that “one cannot recognize sahaja unless one becomes a
sahaja.”580 Shashibhusan Ghosh is nearer the mark when he concludes: “Judging from his [the
Master’s] talk we realize that he associated with several sects like the Kartabhaja, Baul, and
others and appropriated and assimilated the spiritual moods of their adepts.” 581
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II
Ramakrishna’s spiritual influence, if any, was more visual and visceral than cerebral or
conceptual. His God was a concrete anthropomorphic figure—he even made the abstract
Sachchidananda a tangible entity who behaved with him like a happy playmate—who could be
touched, fed, talked and loved. It must also be recognized that one of his lasting appeals
consisted in his devotional songs addressed to Goddess Kali. His three mentors whose repertoire
and rhetoric he imitated were Shrichaitanya, Ramprasad Sen (1720-81), and Kamalakanta
Bhattacharya (d. 1820).582 From Ramprasad, whose songs made him ecstatic and whom he
considered a realized saint, Ramakrishna borrowed the model of mother and child.583 From
Chaitanya, whose frenzied dance was his most preferred and popular spiritual performance
throughout his life and whom he considered a divine incarnation, he borrowed his other model—
that of a female lover of God. Even his universalism and eclecticism for which he has been justly
famous have been part of Hindu religious heritage. According to Bipin Pal,
the Bengalee Shakti worshippers who attained this highest stage of realization, rose above all particularistic sectarian
limitations. They realized their Kali in every object of human worship. In mediaeval times these advanced seers saw their
special deity, Kali for instance, in Krishna, the Vaishnavic deity also. This was the kind of Universalism reached by
Though the Master often illustrated his sermons with a number or two from Kamalakanta
Ramakrishna”585—he never referred to Antony (Antonio) Phiringi (d. 1836) of Gareti. It was
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Antony Kabial, a half-caste Portuguese, who had dedicated some of his delightful pieces to
Goddess Kali:
Antony had built a Kali temple at the Bowbazar area of central Calcutta, the famous Phiringi
Kali which still stands today, and though he never gave up Christian religion, he had announced
a simple eclecticism long before Ramakrishna’s formula of yata mat tata path:
III
Ramakrishna’s bawdy humor, pranks, mimesis, and madness mark him off more as a
jester than a yogi, more as a capricious and cantankerous but fun-loving caste Brahmin than as a
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sober and somber saint who had realized the divine in his solitude. Indeed, in one sense, in spite
of his “sublime wackiness,” he was not a religious person at all. “Religion is what the individual
does with his solitariness,” Whitehead wrote, “and if you are never solitary, you are never
religious.”587 Padmalochan Tarkalankar once advised Ramakrishna: “Give up the desire for the
company of devotees; otherwise people of all sorts will come to you and make you deviate from
your spiritual ideal.”588 The Master, of course, paid little heed to this admonition. He could be
narcissistic personality in Phlip Spratt’s. “The man who is predominantly erotic will give first
preference to his emotional relationships to other people,” Freud wrote. “The narcissistic man,
who inclines to be self-sufficient, will seek his main satisfaction in his internal mental
processes.”589
Ramakrishna's crazy endeavor to pronounce himself God and his provisional life of
childlike innocence and saintlike bonhomie distinguished him from those mystics who had said
“Ein begriffener Gott ist kein Gott” (“a God who is understood is no God”), 590 but endeared him
permanently to his contemporaries and to posterity. He in fact has been the archetypal prophet of
or fatuous, have imitated his ecstasies and samadhis, borrowed his vocabulary, developed a close
personality like him—an erotic ascetic who loved good life sans active sexual practices but
preached renunciation and indifference to mundane possessions. Hans Jacobs met a “spiritual
seeker” in India who could be a replica of Ramakrishna in many respects and who adorned
himself with all kinds of precious stones, used perfumes, and ate exquisite foods. He lived a life
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of luxury because he identified himself with Radha. As Jacobs found out, “he had many
devotees, chanted Vedic hymns most beautifully...and lived the strict life of religious study” and
Sumit Sarkar has argued that “the cult that developed around Ramakrishna remained an
essentially bhadralok affair in Bengal.” Sarkar’s point is well taken, but then he goes on to
observe further that the urban middle class (bhadralok) that was attracted to the rustic mystic of
Dakshineshwar was “plagued with a sense of alienation from roots.” Even though he seems to
be quite aware that the educated and successful professional middle class of Calcutta “remained
more or less immune from the spell of Dakshineswar in the saint’s own life-time,” he
nevertheless overlooks, unwittingly, the social and economic (as well as personal) background of
the Master’s clientale.592 Of his fifteen monastic disciples only two had college degrees
(Vivekananda and Vijnanananda), one (Saradananda) passed the First Arts examination (that is,
he completed two years of college studies), one (Trigunatitananda) studied upto F.A., one
Premananda, Niranjanananda, Subodhananda, and Shivananda) read up to high school level, and
one (Adbhutananda) was totally illiterate.593 The Master’s two householder apostles—Girish
Ghosh and Ram Datta—could hardly qualify as intellectuals, though Datta did a lot to beat the
paramahamsa drum [dhak pitie bedachhe].594 The former did not complete his high school
education, though he later composed plays and also acted on the stage. The latter, reputed to be a
chemist, a medical doctor, or a scientist, failed to make use of any rational argument in his three
lectures on Ramakrishna. He may have had some certificate which landed him his job and he
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certainly was literate in Bengali with a smattering of English, but he cannot be considered an
Hardly any Westernized and alienated Bengali other than Bankim and Michael
Madhusudan ever visited Dakshineshwar. Even then, the evidence suggests that theirs was a
one-time visit and the paramahamsa’s perorations on God, kamini-kanchana, or bhakti did not
leave much of an impression on them. On the other hand, they were impressed by his song,
samadhi, and dance. One of the respected Bengali intellectuals of the time, Vidyasagar,
remained quite lukewarm about Ramakrishna’s devotionalism. He, of course, never took the
initiative to visit the Master. Among the Westernized, that is “Western educated,” visitors to
Dakshineshwar and the Cossipore garden house, as well as the followers of the Master, four
names stand out: ShriM, Keshab Sen, Narendranath, and Dr. Mahendralal Sarkar. Sumit Sarkar
third in the B.A. examinations of 1874” and was headmaster of a school in northern Calcutta.595
Actually, Mahendranath did not quite like his job and found a nice diversion at Dakshineshwar
where an interesting man was entertaining his devotees and admirers with his funnily crazy talk,
devotional music, and ecstatic dance. M’s employer Vidyasagar warned him that his negligence
of the duties of headmaster resulted in poor student performance in the Entrance Examination of
1886.596 Sarkar further considers Ramakrishna’s dicta against chakri or service somewhat
ideological. Really speaking, the lovable Kali’s child was a pleasure-seeking idler (cf. sukher
payra) who was averse to any rigor, regularity, responsibility, or discipline. “I’ll eat, shit, and
sleep, and that’s all; I can’t do any other stuff” [ami tomar khabo-dabo thakbo, ami tomar khabo
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shobo ar bahye jabo. Ami osab parboni], he frankly told his brahmo admirer (or discoverer)
Keshab Sen.597
Keshab met the Master in 1875 at the retreat of their common acquaintance, Jaigopal Sen,
and found Ramakrishna’s ecstatic devotionalism quite useful for his own sect and utilized the
the Brahmo movement. Ramakrishna’s greatest disciple, Narendranath, first visited the Master
by the impulsive mystic’s insistence on seeing him on a regular basis. He did not show much
enthusiasm for the Master’s spiritual discourse. It was only at Cossipore and then after
movement. Dr. Sarkar was fond of the child-like mystic but quite critical of his ecstatic
excesses. In general, Ramakrishna’s bhadralok devotees came to him to have a good time and
not necessarily spiritual insights, though some definitely did and said so, such as Shri M, Ram
Shambhucharan, Adhar, Suresh, Balaram, and Ram—all belonged to the castes of Mahisya,
Suvarnavanik, Kayastha, or Teli, the so-called low-caste section of a Brahmin dominated society
Mahendranath, Narendranath, Rakhal, Ram, Girish, Baburam, even Purna, Paltu and a number of
others—hailed from lower castes. The paramahamsa phenomenon was first publicized by
Keshab, a Brahmo from the Vaidya caste, and the Master’s avatara reputation was popularized
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by Ram Datta, a Kayastha and a Vaishnava, and Girish Ghish, the famous playwright and a
Kayastha and a “born again” Hindu. The paramahamsa’s first full-length biographies in prose
and verse were written by Ram and another Kayastha devotee, Akshay. Curiously enough, in
spite of his acute caste consciousness or perhaps precisely because of it, the Master succeeded in
eliciting the attention of a handful of educated and influential lower caste men of Calcutta whose
prominence in a hierarchic and superstitious society owed a good deal to their association with a
IV
owed to a great extent to his personality as well as to the ambiance of his abode. Free from the
bliss,” sheltering an extended sacred family presided over by a “male-mother”598 figure, who
made no demand upon his visitors. The latter, especially the adolescents among them, on the
other hand, found in their older mentor the proverbial leprechaun, a trusting friend and a
from the demands of the adult world for education, work or marriage.599 They also found the
saint an exceedingly funny individual who treated them as equals and kept them amused with his
songs, stories, sermons, and samadhis. Kedarnath Bandyopadhyay saw about seventeen or
eighteen “very bright and jolly” young boys with the Master who “spoke to them in a lighter,
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more humorous vein, cutting jokes with them and testing them by asking some of them to go
home and to marry. And he reminded them that anybody who relieves a poor man by marrying
his daughter attains some virtue.” 600 “How happy we were with the Master,” Brahmananda
recalled in his advanced years. “We used to have a cramp due to constant laughter....He could
figure out anyone’s mental distress by looking at him and make him forget his misery by
touching his chest.”601 “I can’t stand a sad face,” he used to say.602 The paramahamsa himself
was aware of the secrets of his attraction to the young men. As he said: “I don’t just distribute
non-vegetarian [dishes] to them but on occasions give them a little water in which fish is
cleansed. Otherwise, why should they come?”603 On seeing Latu’s enlarged testicles (most
probably a case of hydrocele) he sang merrily “It’s something that swings without a
shove” (holang kimba dolang, ‘tare na dulale apni dole’) and drove his audience into a
young initiate called Sachchidananda that “what the Bengal Club is to the worldly men the Math
is to the devotees.”605
furnished by Satyacharan Mitra. As he writes, once Ramakrishna saw someone approaching him
and figured that he was coming to test the Master’s spiritual knowledge. In order to avoid
conversation with the visitor he pretended to be crazy and closing his eyes began to utter:
Bhud bhud bhuduk, bhud bhud bhudut. Phud phud phudut. Kud kud kudut [denoting words that phonetically describe the
sound of bubbling, fluttering, and chewing]. Am I possessed by a ghost? Would anyone call a shaman? People think that I
am a realized saint but they do not know that I am crazy. Bhud bhud bhudut. Phud phud phudut. Kud kud kudut.606
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And it worked! The potential troublemaker simply spirited away. Ramakrishna’s Brahmo
admirer Girish Sen observed that the Master “had a tremendous sense of humour and remarkable
presence of mind.”607
Most people, it would seem, came to Dakshineshwar not only to behold a naked adult
male sing, swoon, and dance, but also to participate in the holy man’s circulation of grace.608
Undoubtedly a few of his devotees and admirers savored the Master’s ministrations, but most
came to have some fun, good time, so to speak. What Swami Premananda confessed in Dacca
by way of telling his visitors about the Master’s attraction seems to be the case: most youngsters
rushed to Dakshineshwar to be treated with rasagolla. 609 In fact the Master himself considered
eating sweets more important than prayer. Once on his birthday, Ram Datta distributed simple
prasada of yogurt, sugar, and parched rice. Disappointed with this austere snack, the Master
began singing a song invoking the names of rich and savory sweets such as monda, khaja,
khurma, gaja, and the like. When a devotee interjected by shouting the name of Hari,
Ramakrishna burst out in mock anger: “That shala is such a dumbo that he calls Hari instead of
crying ‘rasagolla’”610 In spite of its stark devotionalism, the comment made by Swami
Atulananda (who never saw the Master but heard about him) is perhaps most appropriate in
respect of Shri Ramakrishna’s impact on his erotic community of Dakshineshwar: “Let us think
of R.K. [Ramakrishna] as joy....We have nothing to fear, for he is all joy.”611 Ramakrishna’s song
and dance also had a therapeutic value. As he said: “Keshab Sen’s mother and sister called on
me. I had to dance a while. What to do? They had suffered bereavement.612 Ramakrishna made
it a point to stay naked and sing and dance ecstatically to sustain his public image of the pagal
Under normal state Paramahamsa Moshai appeared as an uneducated rustic. He conversed in patois [Bengali]
which was often vulgar. His speech included many words spurned by the educated Calcuttans; even his behavior
and gait displayed unsocial streaks. He came across as a bucolic moron oblivious of the world. But when his mind
ascended to a higher realm, his appearance, voice, and movement underwent a massive metamorphosis and such
power emanated from his person as to make us feel that we are in the presence of a very great man.613
There are reports of women staring at him. Once at Suresh Mitra’s home, the Master was
having meal and conversing with a large group of men and women gathered round him. He told
them that he had learnt to take care of his clothes and so never stayed naked as before. At this
they began to laugh and then, reportedly, he looked at himself only to discover that he had been
sitting there and eating without any clothes on which were folded and tucked under his arm. The
embarrassed paramahamsa exclaimed: “Oh shit [are chya]! I could never improve! I just can’t
remember to wear clothes!” 614 It is clear that his nudity was not the result of a syncopated
condition. He was a habitual nude and knew that his nudity accounted for part of his attraction.
He similarly told his devotees: “Since the coming of you folks...the Young Bengal, I have
become so civilized that I always keep my wearing cloth on me.” However, on being told that he
still was naked, he replied with the naivete of a child: “On my mother [mairi balchi], I have
become civilized.” When somebody touched his body and told him that he really was naked he
confessed with a sad face: “I want to be civilized, but Mahamaya does not allow me to keep
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Shorn of all his mystique of divinity with which the real man has been covered and made
into a paramahamsa the godman, Ramakrishna appears to be a charismatic religious leader with
an extraordinary capacity for persuasion and control.616 To be sure, he had had his shortcomings,
and he was a bit of a baby and a bit of a booby. Yet these human qualities or frailties do not
prevent us from recognizing Ramakrishna's monumental success as a cultural icon. He did make
some real contributions to the cultural history of fin-de-siècle Bengal. Appearing on the scene at
a time when Hinduism, weakened by centuries of inertia617 faced a two-pronged assault from the
Christian evangelical enterprise and the reformist secessionist group, the brahmos, he reversed
the process by popularizing traditional Hindu eclecticism in simple vernacular idioms: yata mat
tata path [“as many views, so many venues”].618 This, however, did not really reflect the
Master’s eclecticism in respect of all religions but only in respect of the various Hindu sects.
Even if we include Islam and Christianity within the ambit of mat-path, we must recognize that
Ramakrishna, basically, argued that one could reach god by only practicing one’s own sectarian
faith sincerely. For example, he could practice Islam and Christianity only after he was
mandated by the Goddess Kali. Also his Vaisnavic, Tantric, Islamic, and Christian practices were
undertaken to realize (in fact, visualize) the Mother Goddess, who possessed infinite moods and
startlingly simple. As he said, “the divine could be apprehended through sincerity irrespective of
any religious path.”620 He thus brought the Brahmos, the Brahmins, the Christians, the Moslems,
the Sikhs, and the Buddhists into one grand fold of devotionalism and, like the sixteenth-century
Saxon reformer Martin Luther, announced a simple formula for attaining moksa: sola fide, sola
Indeed, as Charles White has argued, the great religious leaders of India from
Rammohan Roy onward “made a distinctive intellectual contribution: whether it served the
purposes of some purist view of what Hinduism is or was [,] is of little consequence to Hinduism
philosophy of life mirrored the outlook of “a person living in a traditional folkloristic society.”622
derived both from Hindu metaphysical-philosophical heritage and from Western rationalist-
philosophical repertoire, sought to construct “a new religion for urban domestic life” of the
Bengali bhadralok. This new religion was the response of the enlightened colonial middle class
to the hegemonic culture of the British and thus a cultural weapon in the emerging Indian
nationalist movement.623
Ramakrishna, the mischievous mimic, who could don the garb of a monk or a monkey
with equal felicity, has been responsible for a spiritual movement that bears his name but which
he could never fully visualize himself. Schneiderman has demonstrated how the idiosyncratic
and otherwordly Ramakrishna succeeded in becoming “the unique vehicle for expressing and
satisfying the psychological needs of his disciples” and laying the foundations, as it were, of “a
service-oriented organization” such as the Ramakrishna Mission.624 It must be noted that neither
the Master nor his holy consort had any inkling of starting a movement but they did find
nature.”625
Admittedly, the objectives of the Ramakrishna Mission were something the Master would
never have understood nor endorsed: promotion of Vedantic study as well as of the arts, sciences,
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and industries; teacher training, mass literacy and education; establishment of schools, colleges,
orphanages, workshops, laboratories, hospitals, dispensaries, nursing homes for the invalids, and
famine relief works, and finally, printing and marketing of literature.626 Yet, as Geoffrey
Parrinder has remarked, “the Ramakrishna Mission stands out as the representative of liberal,
enterprise under the influence of the Ramakrishna movement. Though the Ramakrishna
movement has remained politically quiescent, it did (through Vivekananda’s writings and
speeches) inspire nationalist aspirations, provide moral support to those who struggled for India's
Internationally, the Ramakrishna Order could boast of numerous spiritually and socially active
branches. According to the General Report of 1987, the Ramakrishna Order can boast of ninety-
three branches in India and thirty-one abroad (eleven in the United States).628 Indeed there is
much substance in the inspired boast of a monk of the Order, who declared that the various
maths and missions “all over the world are like the power substations or the transformers” and
“pointed to a lit-up globe indicating the locations of the Ramakrishna Mission Centers.”629
Perhaps the Master realized toward the end of his life that he had in fact succeeded in
developing a large following possessing the capacity for a greater potential. At least he was
shrewd enough to anticipate the enormous following he would acquire posthumously. He told
Sarada with uncanny accuracy: “I shall be worshipped in every house hereafter; I say this upon
oath, so help me God.”630 Part of the reasons for this success lay in the Master’s methods of
teaching and preaching. He declared that one does not need training, learning, or a sudden
illumination or realization to reach the divine. What one requires is faith or what Christianity
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celebrates as fiducia. As he taught, “the path of bhakti is good for Kaliyuga because it’s easy.”631
Indeed bhakti blossoms in the heart of a devotee spontaneously and easily—it’s that easy, that
sahaja. Love of God is possible in this world which is a “hunk of fun”, “majar kuti”, as the
legendary Aju Gosai had posited in a doggerel duel with Ramprasad Sen and which Ramakrishna
loved to recite.632 Here one could live and love and yet keep detached from crass worldliness—
like the mud fish (pankal machh) that swims in dirty water without getting muddy633—and take a
dip in the ocean of Sachhcidananda singing and dancing in the name of God, both sakara (“with
form”, personal) and nirakara (“formless”, impersonal) 634. This is the message of Godmad
Gadadhar, Jung’s classic Indian, who “does not think,” but like a worthy primitive, “perceives
the thought,” and who “has transformed...his gods into visible thoughts based upon the reality of
the instincts,” and thereby “rescued his gods,” who “live with him.”635 Ramakrishna said: “To
see is better than to hear. Actual vision dispels all doubts. Admittedly many things are recorded
in the scriptures; but all is futile until God is realized, or devotion to His lotus feet aroused, or
mind purified.”636
“To assess the reasons behind Ramakrishna’s emerging success with certain social groups
especially by the early 1880s,” obvserves Amiya Prasad Sen, “one must rely on an imaginative
understanding of [the]...many-layered personality and the diverse possibilities latent in his life
and message. In him one finds the ingenious story-teller with fairly well-developed skills of
personality; a rustic, paternal figure distinctive for his kindness and compassion and a greatly
inspiring religious teacher apparently able to transform philosophical queries about God to
tangible communication with God himself.” To quote Dr. Sen once more, “many men who
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otherwise remained quite sceptical of certain aspects of his life and teachings were nonetheless
drawn to him for his charming simplicity, kindness and some profound observations about Man
and ethical standard that transcended the established codes of genteel society, yet offering a
sanctorum at Dakshineshwar purveyed a wild dream of divine vision and provided what Peter
Brown has said in respect of Christian saints “the resilience of bonds of invisible friendship with
invisible protectors and with the company of the righteous...a sense of resources lodged deep
within ...”.639 Through his theatrical and often amusing performances, his dances, trances,
sometimes banal and sometimes bizarre parables, his frenzied kirtanas, and dramatically
described secret visions (guhya katha)—in other words, by a unique amalgam of gentle force,
harmless fraud, and unlimited fun—this uneducated and half-formed crazy lover of Kali, Radha,
Krishna, and Rama “cut the hinges of the heavens and released the fountains of divine bliss.”640
This “Great Goose” or holy Hanswurst may not claim equal status with Alexander the Great,
probably was devoid of a global consciousness—but he would have been ecstatic in the company
of the Shinto priest of Japan, who once told an inquiring Christian visitor: “We do not have
* Part of this chapter draws freely from Narasingha Sil, “Is Ramakrishna Vedantist, Tantrika, or Vaishnava?”
539 Walter G. Neevel, Jr., “Transformation of Ramakrishna,” 53-97; H. Zimmer, Philosophies of India, 560-80 (see
especially 562-64).
540 “Tantra in Ramakrishna Math and Mission,” p. 46. This article is based on Blichfeldt's doctoral dissertation “Tantric
544 See Swami Purnatmananda’s (untitled) explanation of the “sketch” and the “scribbling” done on 11 February 1886 in
Udbodhan, 284.
549Shrishriramakrishnakathamrita (One vol. ed.), 223. Diary of 2 June 1883. Puzzlingly, part of this diary is
missing from KM, II, 44-46. Diary of 2 June 1883. However, it appears in Nikhilananda's translation (GR, 226).
551 Page 57. I thank Surath Chakravarti for the use of this book.
552 Ibid., 58. Dev must have meant “Brahman vision” rather than “Brahmo” vision.
555 LP, II (Sadhakabhava), 259-60 cited in Chakravarti, “Sakar O Nirakar Upasana,” 84.
557 LP, V (Thakurer Divyabhava O Narendranath), 224 cited in Chakravarti, “Sakar O Nirakar Upasana,” 82-83.
560 In an incisive field work the noted Bengali anthropologist Bholanath Bhattacharya has provided a graphic
description of sublimated ritual intercourse, the bindu game, practiced by the Kartabhaja Sahajiya gurus—Bhairavas
or Avadhutas—and their sadhikas. There is not a shred of evidence that these tantrika or Vaishnava sahajiyas ever
entertain any insinuation even of same sex intercourse or intercourse with eunachs (hijras). See “Erotic Cults of
563 Ibid., 305. Kripal does not reference this information as obviously it emanates from his homosexual mindset.
According to a historian of the Kartabhajas, “in spite of their use of some tantric terminologies, the Kartabhajas do
not seem to have been influenced by any tantric practices.” Debendranath De, Kartabhaja Dharmer Itibritta, 51.
307
564 Kripal cites (ibid., 224) from the JV (5th ed., 37). The actual Bengali sentence is: “Kintu tahader dharmer e
prakar jaghannya bhav ye, taha sadharaner nikat prakash karite aparag haitechhi” (“However, their religion
imparts too repugnant an attitude to reveal publicly”). Kripal expectedly and ingeniously translates “tahader
dharme .. jaghannya bhav” (“repugnant attitude imparted by their religion”) as their “way of life”. The Bengali for
566 KC, 322 (“Let me be very clear: without the conflicted energies of the saint's homosexual desires...there would
have been no ‘Ramakrishna’"). A tantra sadhaka is essentially heterosexual. See Knut A. Jacobsen, “Female Role
of Godhead in Tantrism.”
569 S. B. Dasgupta, Obscure Religious Cult, 33-34 cited in Prabhananada, AM, 11. See the chapter titled “Harililay
572 LP, I (Purvakatha O Valyajivan), 33. Jalagrahan literally means drinking of water, but actually signifies food in
general.
576 AM, 116. See also Swami Prabhananda, “Shrichainayottar Bhumikay Shriramakrishna” in ibid., 136-62. For a
detailed analysis of Ramakrishna’s bhakti based on piety see Narasingha P. Sil, “Kali’s Child and Krishna’s Lover:
580 KM, IV, 122 (GR, 505). Diary of 3 August 1884. The word sahaja is derived from saha (“together”) and ja
(“born”) and thus means “born together” or “one self” or “innate.” A true Sahajiya is characterized by a sense of
illumination, equipoise, sponteneity, freedom, and harmony—the qualities of a mentally healthy personality. See
J.S. Neki, “Sahaja,” 6-7. However, the Sahajiya sect of Bengal (which had been influenced by the Vamachari
Buddhists) may be called naturalist school of the Tantrikas as well as the Vaishnavas. The word sahaja also implies
“unspoiled” or “unconditioned” as a metaphysical term. See Per Kvaerne, Anthology of Buddhist Tantric Songs, 61-
64: “An Essay on the Concept of Sahaja.” Ramakrishna’s Radhabhava may also be said to have been derived from
the Sahajiya notion of transformation (aropa). Dimock, Place of Hidden Moon, 164.
582 For a succinct biographical sketch of Ramprasad see Swami Vamadevananda, Ramprasad; Malcolm McLean,
583 KM, IV, 209-10 (GR, 599). Diary of 5 October 1884. A general background of Ramprasad’s lyrics may be found
in Edward J. Thompson, trans. Bengali Religious Lyrics, Sakta. See also Sinha, Rama Prasada’s Devotional Songs.
585 M.D. McLean, “Ramakrishna” in Purusottama Bilimoria & Peter Fenner, eds. Religions and Comparative
Thought, 170.
586 Cited in Harisadhan Mukhopadhyay, Kalikata, 211. “Phiringi” is a colloquial Bengali term for “foreigner,”
usually designating “European.” Shiba (Shiva) is the feminine form of Shib (Shiva). Matangi is one of the ten
Mahavidyas. See David Kinsley, Tantric Visions of Divine Feminine; Narendra N. Bhattacharyya, History of Sakta
Religion, 135-36. For more information on Antony see Asitkumar Bandyopadhyay, Bangla Sahityer Itibritta, IV,
17. I thank Rachel McDermott for supplying reference to these volumes. The kabi poetry continued to be very
popular up to 1880. Sushilkumar De, History of Bengali Literature, 383. See also Bharatakosa, eds. Sushilkumar
De et al., I, 423. It must be recalled that Antony remained a Christian all his life even though he married a Hindu
wife and built a Kali temple in Calcutta. See Dinesh C. Sen, History of Bengali Literature, 707-8.
587 Alfred N. Whitehead, Religion in the Making, 16. I have borrowed the phrase “sublime wackiness” from Mark
589 Sigmund Freud, Civilization and Its DiscontentsI, 83-84 cited in Storr, Feet of Clay, xiii.
590 Gerhard Tersteegen (1697-1769) cited in Otto, Dionysus, xix: translator's Introduction. See also Edward F.
592 “ ‘Kaliyuga,’ ‘Chakri,’ and ‘Bhakti’,” 1543-44. Sarkar echoes John Rosselli’s observation in this regard made
almost a decade earlier in his “Ramakrishna and Educated Elite of Bengal.” See also Sarkar, Exploration of
593 Barbara Southard, “Neo-Hinduism and Militant Politics in Bengal, 1875-1910,” 288-89. However, Southard's
598 The phrase is borrowed from the American poet Robert Bly. See the conversation between Bly and Bill Moyers in
605 M. Apostle & Evangelist, IV, 98: ch. VI: “Math—the Bengal Club of Bhaktas.”
608 For the idea of “circulation of grace” see Ernest Troeltsch, Social Teachings of Christian Churches cited in
616 Ramakrishna could be classified as what Agehananda Bharati called a “sant,” that is, an “institutionally unaligned
‘leader’...a ‘product’ of the so-called Little Traditions,” who became religious leaders due to their personal charisma.
“Role of Leaders in Indian Sects,” Peter Gaeffke & David A. Utz, eds. Identity and Division in Cults and Sects in
618 It must be noted that this universally acknowledged and acclaimed maxim of Ramakrishna as it stands does not
represent his actual words which are ananta path-ananta mat [“infinite are the paths and infinite the opinion.”
Nikhilanadna’s translation]. KM, V, 21 (GR, 158). Diary of November 26 1882.See also Ranabir Samaddar,
“Ramakrishna O Vivekananda;” Wilhelm Halbfass, India and Europe, ch. XIII; Rameshchandra Majumdar,
Glimpses of Bengal in Nineteenth Century, 77; Kamalkumar Ghatak, Hindu Revivalism in Bengal, chs. I-II, IV-V&
621 “Sai Baba Movement,” 877. This sane and sober insight of distinguished scholar stands in sharp contrast with the
postmodernist cliché of his younger cohort who seeks to examine “in some textual detail [this a good one]
[Ramakrishna’s] comparative, deconstructive, and dialectical experiments with religious differences, that is, his own
comparative mystics [whatever they are].” Jeffrey J. Kripal, Serpent’s Gift, 96.
625 Ibid., 67. See also Sil, Swami Vivekananda, chs. IV & VIII.
626 Nikhilananda, Vivekananda, 22-23. See also Rosselli, “Ramakrishna and Educated Elite of Bengal,” 205, 208-9.
Prabhananda’s claim that “a healthy combination of work and contemplation constituted the essence of the Neo-
628 Nandalal Bhattacharya, Amritasya Putrah, II, 3 (see “Uttarkathan,” 17-53). See also Prabhananda, More About
636 KM, III, 75 (GR, 476). Diary of 30 June 1884. Amal Ray observes that Ramakrishna never internalized the true
meaning of the Advaita maxim “He has become everything” (tiniy sab hoyechen), but created “a compassionate God
of his own imagination and endeavored to realize that artificial deity.” VP, 73.
637 Hindu Revivalism in Bengal, 310-11. This otherwise excellent study, however, seeks to present a purposive,
639 “The Saint as Exemplar in Late Antiquity” in Hawley, ed. Saints and Virtues, 12.
640 Joseph Campbell, “Sri Ramakrishna,” reprinted in Lokeshwarananda, ed., World Thinkers on Ramakrishna-
Vivekananda, 12.
316
641 Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Philosophy of History, Section III, ch. 2, paragraph 35.
Appendix: A
The Professor and the Pujari: Martin Luther and Ramakrishna Compared
I
Although comparison, especially facile comparison, could be often invidious, yet
Ramakrishna’s (aka Gadadhar or Gadai) spiritual struggle offers multiple parallels as well
as significant contrasts with that of the early modern German theologian Martin Luther (or
Kamarpukur village in a poor Brahmin priest’s family and Martin in the home of a copper
miner of Eisleben, Saxony, Holy Roman Empire. Both sought to establish direct liaison
with God, albeit in their respective culturally determined way, and both struggled to
overcome their human frailties and faults. Both also made a major impact on their
western and central Europe triggered by the Renaissance Humanism and Ramakrishna at
the advent of modernity in colonial Calcutta inspired by the Bengal Renaissance. And yet
the puzzling irony of this comparative analysis is that both were so dissimilar in their
personal background, their attitude to human sexuality, their understanding of the divine,
II
Both Ramakrishna and Luther have been credited and discredited respectively with
miraculous birth, the former reputed to be conceived by a divine source or force while the
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felt herself heavy (pregnant) following a forcible penetration of a draft of wind emanating
from the Shiva lingam in the shrine she had visited for purposes of worship. At this time
Chandra’s husband Kshudiram had been away from home traveling to Gaya in Bihar. The
particular by his hostile biographer Johannes Cochlaeus. According to this story, Martin’s
mother Margaret (Hanna) Luder née Lindemann was a bath maid at Eisleben and was
impregnated by the Devil and Martin was conceived as result of this ghastly union. Hence,
though really human, Martin Luther was but a child of Satan—in Cochlaeus’s idiom, “the
propagated by his devotees and disciples probably with a view to bringing him at par with
divine connection. Thus we have both men born mysteriously but affected differently—
the Saxon a victim to the salacious canard of his adversaries while the Bengali an object
between the early lives of both individuals, there is a fundamental similarity in their
spiritual quest. Both Luther and Gadadhar were assailed by an ontological guilt complex.
Luther constantly fought to overcome his Devil (Genpest), his Adamic sin, to qualify for
the divine grace of salvation; Gadadhar fought against lust and lure, in his pithy expression,
kamini-kanchana [woman and wealth], in order to realize the divine. And yet there is an
Luther, we are told, was constantly fighting the Devil or Satan in order to make
himself worthy in the eye of his God. A powerful argument has it that the Devil in fact
contributed significantly to the ultimate resolution of Luther’s spiritual crisis and thus to his
theology of faith that was inspired by his awareness of the diabolical presence of the
there is no way to grasp Luther’s milieu of experience and faith unless one has an acute sense of
his view of Christian existence between God and the Devil: without a recognition of Satan’s power, belief in
Christ is reduced to an idea about Christ—and Luther’s faith becomes a confused delusion in keeping with
To the Devil’s demand that Luther acknowledge the “fact” that he was a sinner, the
reformer declared that indeed he was one, but he was also a sinner who knew that all his
sins belong to Christ. “This wonderful gift of God I am not prepared to deny [in my
response to the Devil], but want to acknowledge and confess,” he averred.645 Ramakrishna
constantly professed his ongoing struggle against his twin devils, kamini-kanchana and
papapurusa. He strove to overcome the former while, to his utter relief, he had a vision of
the papapurusa—“a jet black person with red eyes and a hideous appearance”—emanate
from his body and killed by another apparition coming out of his body, a veritable
III
320
respective spiritual crisis offers striking parallels. Actually Luther’s career in religion was
concatenation of accidents. A brilliant student since his childhood, Luther attended a good
high school at his mother’s home town of Eisnach,, and thereafter obtained his Bachelor’s
and Master’s degrees in the studia humantatis and in philosophy from the University of
Erfurt in January 1505 en route to pursuing legal studies, as his father Hans had wished.
However, during the middle of the spring semester of Luther’s first term in the law school
at Erfurt he suddenly dropped out of school and entered the convent of the Brothers of
Common Law, an Eremetical Monastic Order of St. Augustine in Erfurt, in the same year to
train as a monk. As Luther explained later, his change of mind was prompted by his
obligation to honor his vows made to St. Anne (the presiding saint of the Saxon miners)
and Virgin Mary in 1503 and 1505 respectively. On both occasions he had confronted
deadly situations and sought protection from these divine figures. He was ordained a priest
at the monastery in May 1507 and began teaching moral philosophy at the newly
established university in Wittenberg, the principal city of electoral Saxony, in 1508 and also
ascetic practices, prayers, and repentance to earn the righteousness demanded by his God as
well as to his search for certainty of God’s merciful judgment. He tried all the means at his
disposal to pacify his troubled conscience. He found the priest’s utterance—deinde, ego te
absolvo a peccatis tuis [“thereupon, I absolve you of your sins”]—utterly useless and
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untrue. His Occamist education at Erfurt taught him that man’s salvation was simply the
arbitrary choice of God. Luther thus felt an overpowering fear of God. The terrible just
God became a Devil: “When I looked for Christ it seemed to me I saw the Devil.”647
Naturally he felt alienated from this demonic deity. In order to overcome his spiritual
conflict, he began practicing the rigors of monasticism all the more vehemently. As he
recalled:
In the monastery, I did not think about women, or gold, or goods, but my heart trembled, and doubted how
God could be gracious to me. Then I fell away from faith and let myself think nothing less than that I had
come under the Wrath of God, whom I must reconcile with my good works. 648
Thereafter, Luther entered into a career of intense academic and spiritual work,
concentrating primarily on the Bible and the Augustinian corpus. From the winter semester
of 1513/14 he began his interpretation of biblical literature—a study that would continue
until 17 November 1545. His study was the east tower room on the second floor of the
interpreted the Book of Psalms. Unable to find any certainty divine mercy the exasperated
monk began to search the original meaning of divine righteousness. The reading and re-
reading of the Psalm with their familiar phrase in justitia tua libera me [“emancipate me in
your justice”] disturbed Luther profoundly. He had been convinced that any meeting of his
sinful self with God would result only in a catastrophic confrontation. When he read the
twenty-second Psalm, the monk noticed Christ’s Anfechtung on the cross: Deus meus,
quare me derelequisti? [“My God, why have you forsaken me?”]. Why did a pious and
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pure personality suffer from Anfechtung? The only answer must be that he had taken to
himself the sin of man. Instead of a terrible judge on the rainbow (the typical
Luther was familiar) Luther beheld a new Christ, still a judge, but one who, in judging, was
suffering with those who he must condemn. This new view of Christ was also a new view
of God. The divine Genpest now appeared as the merciful deity. Thus Luther read St.
Paul’s Epistle to the Romans 1:17: “enim Dei in eo revelatur ex fide in fidem: sicut
scriptum est: Justus ex fide vivit” [“The justice of God is revealed there, from faith to faith,
as it is written. The just man liveth by faith.”].649 Luther saw the absentee deity [deus
absconditus], who had tormented him during his days of Anfechtung, become a revealed
reflection and mystical imagination. Overwhelmed by this Epiphany the monk wrote in
ecstatic joy:
At this I felt myself to be born anew, and to enter through open gates into
paradise itself. From here, the whole face of the Scriptures was altered. I ran
through the Scriptures as memory served, and collected the same analogy in
other words as opus dei, that which works in us; virtus dei, that in which makes
us strong; sapientia dei, in which he makes us wise; fortitudo dei, salus dei,
Gloria dei.650
IV
consciousness temporarily. Though reputed as a bright child who had embarrassed many
scholars in debates on the religious and scholarly texts, Gadadhar was in fact barely literate
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in the vernacular. He was totally innocent of Sanskrit and even his Bengali was less than
adequate, though he was fluent in patois. However, he earned respect and accolade of his
deposition, his first loss of consciousness occurred in a field where he (at that time
probably seven years old) was munching perched rice [mudi] alone and was overwhelmed
with fear and fascination at the sight of flying cranes against dark clouds enveloping the
firmament. Apparently, this experience of the boy did not possess any spiritual content,
though over the years, the hagiographic tradition of the Ramakrishna Order has been
interpreting it as one charged with deep spiritual meaning. Ramakrishna’s next reported
bhavatanmayata [emotional seizure that was later considered samadhi] occurred when on
his way to Anud village, the site of the temple of Vishalakshi (Goddess with enormous
eyes), the eight year old boy, romping and frolicking with the adoring village women in the
the party approached the shrine. This state was thought to be the Goddess’ possession
[bhar] of the child and the latter opened his eyes, smiling, as the awestruck women began
uttering Vishalakshi’s name. As Goddess incarnate Gadai gorged all the ritual offering
[naivedya] the worshippers were carrying. It is truly difficult to consider this ingenious
prank [ranga] of the mischievous Gadai to gobble up sweets and stuff as a spiritual state.
When Gadadhar turned 17, it became clear to his elder brother and guardian
Ramkumar that his education had not progressed well in the village pathshala, and so he
was brought to Calcutta. Following his father’s death in 1852, Ramkumar had taken up
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part-time job as priest in several households in the Jhamapukur region of north Calcutta.
emphasis on religious texts]. Gadai took the priest’s chore thereby enabling his elder
brother to concentrate on the tol. Here, too, he elicited the attention and adoration of the
women of the neighborhood for his sweet melodies and friendly disposition. He, of course,
remained impervious to education, as usual. His ingenious plea in this respect was his
was not interested in a priestly training for the sake of bundling up prasada of rice and
Sometime in 1856, Gadadhar was introduced to the owners of the Kali temple at
Dakshineshwar, who were looking for a priest for the newly founded temple (1855). Their
low caste status (Rani Rasmani, the dowager proprietress of the temple, belonged to the
Shudra caste of Kaivarta) was a hindrance to obtaining the services of a Brahmin priest, but
Ramkumar, importuned by the Rani as well as pressed by the need for a job for sustenance
of the family, agreed to accept the priest’s job.652 Following his brother’s sudden death
Gadadhar was approached by the temple manager Mathuranath who had been impressed by
the young man’s devotion for the River Ganges (Hooghly River), his expertise as a clay
modeler, his musical skill, and above all, his charming personality. However, being totally
innocent of ritual worship, he had to be initiated into Kali mantra by an expert named
Kenaram Bhattacharya. Even then, the maverick pujari showed his indifference to rituals
as he was by nature averse to any disciplined regularity and he began to treat the effigy of
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the Goddess as a live and loving mother and hold conversations with the stone deity (the
Gadadhar probably figured out a strategy to prove that he was so intimate with the
Goddess that he did not have to follow any ritualized worship. He thus made use of his
apparently creative deviancy was that he came to be regarded as a wacky holy man who
had special access to divinity. There is, however, a dubious (albeit popular) account of
Ramakrishna’s experience of epiphany. We are told by Saradananda that the Master’s desire
to meet his Ma (Kali) was so vehement that he one day flung himself violently on the
ground, rubbing his face against it and filling all corners with piteous wailings. He gasped
for life due to shortness of breath. He took no notice of the fact that his whole body was
cut, bruised, and bloodied.653 The Swami cites Ramakrishna’s personal recollection of the
incident:
I felt as if my heart was being squeezed like a wet towel [gamchha]. I was overpowered with a great
restlessness and a fear that it might not be my lot to realize Her in this life. I could not bear the separation
from Her any longer. Life seemed to not worth living. Suddenly my glance fell on the sword that was kept in
the Mother’s temple. I determined to put an end to my life. When I jumped up like a madman and seized it,
suddenly the blessed Mother revealed Herself….[T]he room, the doors, the temple—all disappeared. I beheld
an infinite effulgent ocean of consciousness. As far as the eye could see, the shining billows were madly
rushing at me from all sides with a terrific roar, to swallow me up! I was panting for breath. I was caught in
the rush and collapsed, unconscious. I had no idea of what was happening in the world outside, but inside me
there was a steady flow of undiluted and unprecedented bliss and I felt the presence of the Divine Mother. 654
with spirituality as is conventionally understood but was predicated upon his performance
—dances, trances, and sacred eccentricity. His realization of the Divine Mother was
clearly visual, rather than visceral, more magical and anagogical, than metaphysical or
metaphorical. What is not so clear is the authenticity of the report of his experience. It is
noteworthy that ShriM had no clue as to its veracity (see ch. 8 above). It also puzzling that
even after his vision of the Goddess Kali Ramakrishna confided to his Brahmo visitor
Trailokyanath Dev that he was harassed by that deity, who for a long time had been giving
him a run around without pointing to the right path and that is why he had stopped visiting
the sanctum and seeing the face of the effigy of the Goddess. He even abused his Divine
Mother by calling her “Shali” [somewhat akin to “bitch” in the Western sense].655
monastery in 1524, married a former nun (Katherine Vora), and led a most contented family life.
He in fact maintained that human sexuality is a gift from God. He loved the simple pleasures of
life. He would have avoided the later Puritans with horror and disdain. He enjoyed “good
natural joshing, beer drinking, and food (“If our Lord is permitted to create nice, large pike [a
species of succulent fish] and good Rhine wine, presumably I may be allowed to eat and drink”).
For his time, he also had an elevated estimation of women. He loved his wife, sired six children,
and raised eleven orphaned relations as well.656 He lived a contented married life and lived
happily surrounded by students, professors, admirers and followers, until toward the end of his
life he suffered from kidney disorder and died an extremely painful death.
327
After his vision of the Goddess, his realization of the divine, Ramakrishna
continued to caution his young devotees, those pure souled boys [shuddhasattwa], against
marriage and encourage them to pursue an ascetic career. Though himself a married man, he
dreaded and despised the idea of or a suggestion for consummating his marriage. He was
paranoid about procreating children.657 Thus Ramakrishna remained a married celibate. A sickly
male suffering from chronic alimentary ailments (due perhaps to his unbridled gluttony), and
nervous disorder, manifested in his frequent bouts of samadhi or seizure, he was a victim of
ritual masturbation in his youth. However, Ramakrishna seems to have devised a way to
sublimating his condition—some sort of a self-cure—by disparaging lust through his plea for
eschewing kamini-kanchana that became the leitmotif of his spiritual and moral sermons.
On the other hand, his married life was uneventful and uncomplicated as he was
duly attended by his wife who happily looked after all his daily mundane needs, cooked for him
and his flock every day, and nursed him during his terminal illness. Ramakrishna’s celibate
married life did not seem to oppress his wife Saradamani and as a pious Hindu woman she
regarded her husband as divine, an attitude that was reinforced by his reputation as a godman.
Like Luther, Ramakrishna passed his days in the company of devotees, disciples, and scores of
visitors singing, dancing, and dining together in the sacred community he created at
Dakshineshwar. Unfortunately, however, this “pigeon of pleasure” (sukher payra) died of throat
Both Luther and Ramakrishna bore the distinct stamp of their unsophisticated
rustic characteristics. Both had a penchant for scatology in their expression—words such as shit
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(goo, bahye), piss (mut, pechhab), fart (pedo or podo), wit of a whore’s son (randiputir buddhi),
swine, ass, and the like. Both were also innately conservative. In spite of his defiance of the
Pope and the traditional practices of the Church Universal (i.e., the Catholic Church), Luther was
a social and political conservative in general. He denounced the Peasants’ Revolt of 1525
(Against the Robbing and Murdering Hordes of Peasants, 1525) and professed his loyalty to the
secular authority for maintaining law and order in society (To the Princes of Saxony concerning
the Rebellious Spirit, 1524). Likewise, despite his eclecticism popularized in his dicta, yata mat
tata path, Ramakrishna remained a diehard religious conservative, a firm believer in the efficacy
the brahmanical priestcraft and held some Hindu scholars such as Shashadhar
Brahmin. He also adamantly opposed working for a living or doing social work because, as he
admonished, these were distractions for man whose sole purpose and exertion ought to be the
VI
Ramakrishna of Renaissance Bengal claim our attention for their preaching and practice of
caritas—their love of God—through fides and bhakti. Luther realized that all anthropological
resources are utterly powerless before God. Only the intellectus and affectus of faith and hope
can substantiate and confirm man’s life in the midst of sin and death. Hence he declared: Homo
spiritualis nititur fide [“The spiritual man is born in faith”].661 Though Luther has often been
actually did not debunk the merits and power of man. As he wrote in his comments of Genesis
God creates him…He does not leave it to the earth to produce him, like the animals and the trees. But he himself
shapes him according to His image as if he were God’s partner and one who would enjoy God’s rest.662
It may be concluded that Luther, in recognizing God’s potential, actually reaffirmed the ultimate
possibilities of man. Luther’s sickness of the soul stemmed from his mortal fear of God who
appeared as a savage—a capricious and malicious deity—but whom he came at last to view as
Even though Ramakrishna was a priest of the Shakta deity Kali, his spiritual
orientation and identity were clearly vaisnavic. The peasant society of his native village of
Kamarpukur was deeply influenced by Chaitanyite Vaishnavism.663 The simple vaisnavic piety
was easily accessible to the hardworking agrarian laborers who had little education and who
enjoyed the devotional lores recited by the kathaks or enacted by the yatra that had tremendous
entertainment value as contrasted with dry sermons or complex and costly rituals. Ramakrishna
grew up in this pietistic milieu and in a family devoted to the worship of Raghuvira or Rama
(considered as an incarnation of Lord Vishnu). Indeed most members of the Master’s family,
whose chosen household deity was Rama, had “ram” as part of their first name: Manikram,
his relationship with the divine. Free from the constraints of ratiocination and intellection, his
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clarion call as man of God was not sapere aude [“dare to know”], but ludére aude [“dare to
play”]. Ramakrishna lived in the serene and charming atmosphere of the temple precinct at
dancing, eating good food, and being ecstatic to everybody’s wonderment. “This world is a hunk
of fun. I eat (and drink) and make merry”—ei samsar majar kuti, ami khai dai ar maja luti—he
loved to repeat this doggerel often.665 In his wonderfully crazy way he told his Brahmo admirer
Keshabchandra Sen: “Why should I cry ‘Brahman Brahman’! I’ll call on Him in every bhava—
shanta [calm], dasya [service], vatsalya [childlike naiveté], sakhya [companionship], and
idiot betray similar characteristics.”667 Hence his spiritual battle-cry: “Be mad! Be crazy with
love of God!”668 Nearly a century ago, the Protestant missionary and scholar John Nicol
capable of only a single motive, namely a passion for God that ruled him and filled him.”669
The lesson of Ramakrishna is that man must approach the divine without guile—openly in wonder, with the simple
faith of a child….[I]n man’s love affair with the divine he is free to behave…like a child…and finally…that God is
like a child [who need to be amused ] in superfluous sport and aimless dalliance.670
331
645 Ibid., 105-6: Luther’s Tischreden [Table Talk]. For an analysis of Luther’s spirituality see the classical study by Erik
H. Erikson, Young Man Luther and an anthology devoted to a critique of this study , Roger A. Johnson, ed., Psychology
647 James Atkinson, Martin Luther, 71. The Occamist school specializing in nominalism is named after the English
649 St. Paul (or Saul), a Jew of Tarsus (d. 67? C.E.), quotes the Hebrew prophet Habakkuk’s (c. 7th century B.C.E.)
dictum: “The just live by faith” (Habakkuk 2:4). The Holy Bible (trans. from the Latin Vulgate: The Old Testament,
Douay 1609; the New Testament, Rheims 1582. Rev. by Richard Challoner.
650 Cited in Rupp, Luther’s Progress, 33. See also Bengt R. Hoffman, Luther and Mystics.
652 Ramkumar was introduced to Rasmani by his village acquaintance Maheshchandra Chattopadhyay, a clerk working
654 Ibid., 113-14. I used Nikhilananda’s excellent translation of the passage in GR, 13-14: Introduction with some
modifications for better clarity. For a discussion about the veracity of this account see ch. 8 above.
659 Akshaychaitanya, Ramakrishna, 367-69; KM, III, 90 (GR, 488). Diary of 30 June 1884.
660 KM, III, 3, 6-7, 10, 16 (GR, 100-2, 104, 109). Diary of 5 August 1882.
Appendix: B
Kathamrita on the Dock
As early as 1930 Maheshchandra Ghosh had voiced the critics’ concern in his review of the first
volume of ShriM’s Gospel of Ramakrishna (M’s own English translation in two volumes of his
KM prepared from the notes of his diary) that “the Ramakrishna as depicted by...Babu
Mahendranath Gupta...is not the real Ramakrishna but the Ramakrishna of ‘M’—a revised,
modified, expurgated and magnified version of the real Ramakrishna.”671 Maheshchandra further
pointed out several instances of interpretation, omission, and alteration in the English edition that
was based on M’s Bengali version of the KM. The reviewer found the first volume of the Gospel
(260-61, 278-79, 287-321) containing sentences and passages incongruent with the Bengali
version and concluded that “these examples are more than enough to condemn the book.”672
M’s report on the meeting between Bankimchandra and the Master has been subjected to
severe scrutiny by Gopal Ray. Arguing that the Bankim episode in the KM is a fabrication, Ray
cites an article by Kumudbandhu Sen in Bangashri (Ashwin, 1348 B.E.) to inform that M had
written Girish Ghosh that he was present at Adhar Sen’s residence where Ramakrishna met the
famous man of letters. However, M never mentioned his presence during the meeting in KM (V.
Appendix: chs. 1-6) most certainly because, as he had explained himself, he usually included in
the appendix materials from his diary culled from hearsay accounts.673 He, however, referred to
1309 B.E.).
Ray discusses Bankimchandra’s style of conversation and points out that it would be
unlikely that the latter would respond to the Master’s query “What’s the purpose of life?” with
335
such a cavalier and, from Bankim’s perspective, somewhat uncouth, statement as “The purpose
of life is eating, snoozing, and mating.” Ray painstakingly documents M’s inconsistencies,
imaginative glosses, and use of hearsay accounts in the KM. His critique of M first appeared in
Hiranmayananda in Udbodhan (Kartik & Chaitra, 1394 B.E.). Ray’s Ramakrishna, Bankim O M
is a lengthy and persuasive rejoinder to this review by a distinguished and powerful monk of the
has demonstrated, the report of Goswami’s falling at the Master’s feet and placing them on his
chest (KM, I, 226 [GR, 881]. Diary of 25 October 1885) was inconsistent with M’s account of
Ramakrishna’s confession to Dr. Mahendralal Sarkar that he habitually placed his feet on others
during his bhàva that bordered on madness (ibid., 254 [GR, 905]. Diary of 27 October
1885).675 Most probably, M deliberately wished to show that the Brahmos considered his Master
as their spiritual mentor. For example, Gupta reported how once Keshab picked up a bunch of
flowers dedicated to Ramakrishna’s feet and prostrated himself before the Master uttering
the accounts of four meetings between the paramahamsa and the pandit: at the residence of
Bhudhar Chattopadhyay (I, 136-45. Diary of 25 June 1884); at Dakshineshwar (III, 72-90.
Diary of 30 June 1884); at Balaram’s home (IV, 103-14. Diary of 3 July 1884); at
tarkachudaamani first and the pandit paid three subsequent visits to the Master. At the first
meeting Ramakrishna is reported to have asked the scriptural scholar, a very popular public
speaker of Calcutta, if he had been “mandated” (by God) for the job (“kono adesh peyecha ki
na”). He is further supposed to have told the tarkachudamani that “any Tom, Dick, or Harry
[“henji penji loke”] can’t accomplish anything by giving lectures. Unless they have the mandate
Shri Nrisimharamanuja Das (pen name Banicha) argues that the above conversation is a
fabrication. Shashadhar’s host Bhudhar, at whose College Street residence Ramakrishna met the
tarkachudamani, published the report of the meeting in his magazine Vedavyas (Magh 1294
B.E.). This report does not contain the Master’s talk about Shashadhar’s “chapras.” On the
other hand, Chattopadhyay writes that Ramakrishna said that he had come to meet the pandit at
the behest of the Goddess Jagadamba. Indeed it is unlikely that the Master, who met Shashadhar
at Kali’s command, would want to know whether the tarkachudamani had the divine mandate to
lecture on religion. 679 Even the pandit himself protested in a letter to his disciple Padmanath
that the paramahamsa neither had the right to ask him about any authorization for his work nor
The problem with the KM account lies in the fact that M never wrote down the Master’s
logia “on the spot.” On being asked by Swami Madhavananda of Belur Math how he wrote his
diary, M said that he always wrote from memory, and that sometimes he would keep late hours at
night. When the Swami pointed out some discrepancies in Ramakrishna’s conversations, the
famous diarist responded: “It's not something surprising. If you read the Bible, you’ll notice
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that the four Gospels do not agree with one another. Sometimes we used to write about one
‘sitting’ [with the Master] for seven days, recalling the sequences of songs and samadhis.”681
Madhavananda marveled at M’s skill in expanding even the most cryptic note of his
diary. For instance, he expanded the expression “blacksmith's iron” (diary of 1 January 1882)
Why can’t this happen in the world? Because, our mind is mortgaged to kamini-kanchana. Our
mind is like the blacksmith’s iron. It's red hot as long as it is in fire; once taken out of fire, it’s just
a piece of iron. One should either keep holy company or stay alone. The mind dries up when
alone just like the water in the clay cup. However, if you keep the clay cup in a jar filled with
Madhavananda noticed that M could create a text of four pages out of a source quarter page
long.682
There has not been any collation or careful comparative analysis of M’s notes in his
diaries and the KM. A comparison between a leaf from M’s diary of 18 June 1883 reprinted by
Mausumi Prakashan and the relevant volume of the KM shows how numerous new entries have
made their intrusion in the printed transcript. Since he wrote the KM, fifteen, twenty, or fifty
years after the brief notes had been jotted in the diary, it is quite likely that some extraneous
details have been added to the account written a long time after the event and based solely on
memory. Even M himself admitted that he had effected some “addition alteration” in the proofs
of the KM. As evidence one just has to compare the KM account serialized by M in the
Padmanath Bhattacharya argues that the shrewd (chatur chudamani) compiler of the KM
purposely kept his diaries unpublished even though he had been convinced of the
paramahamsa’s divine identity and logia. This is all the more puzzling in view of the
publication of Ramakrishna’s sayings by others during the Master's lifetime. Even when the KM
began to be published following the paramahamsa’s death, M’s diaries did not follow the normal
chronological sequence. For example, the twelfth chapter of the first bhaga contains materials of
1884 or the first chapter of the second bhaga deals with 1882. The diarist retained the option to
publicize the Master’s divinity in stages. The first edition of the first bhaga cautiously avoided
proclaiming Ramakrishna’s incarnational status. But six years later, the preface to the fourth
edition of the first bhaga (1314 B.E.) declared that the paramahamsa was the model for the
whole world and that sheer contemplation of him constituted the most important sadhana. The
preface to the first edition of the fourth bhaga (1316 B.E.) announced: “There is a good tiding
for the devotees. The Master is praying ‘Ma, let the sincere visitors to this place obtain full
realization.’ All devotees are urged to bear this sacred promise [of the Master] in mind.” With a
view to guarding himself against any charge of critics, the second edition of the fourth bhaga
(1321 B.E.) cited Saradamani’s endorsement of the veracity of the KM. It is uncertain if the
Holy Mother had ever been present during her husband’s conversations with devotees and
visitors and yet she has been made to “certify” M’s work as an authentic reporting of the
Master’s talk.684
Bhupendranath Datta alludes to some murmurs among the monks of the Belur Math
against the KM serialized in Udbodhan. Datta had a discussion on the subject with several
monks during which Swami Brahmananda is reported to have remarked: “We too lived with him
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[Ramakrishna] for three years. This piece of writing [that is, KM] tastes like unsalted egg
[‘labanhin dim’]. Datta also talked with Swami Niranjanananda and was told by the latter that
he had lent M some of his personal notes which the compiler of the KM used without
673 Nityatmananda, ShriM-Darshan, IX (1379 B.E.), 147-48 cited in Ray, Ramakrishna, Bankim O M, 42.
680 Shashadhar’s letter of Paus 25, 1327 B.E. in Bhattacharya, Ramakrishna Vibekananda Prasanga, p. 5.
681ShriM-Darshan, VI (conversation between M and Madhavananda, 20 March 1924) cited in Banicha, “Shashadhar,”
176.
684RV, 128-32. See also Sumit Sarkar, “Kathamrita as Text;” KC, Appendix: Some Historical and Textual Aspects of
Appendix: C
Biographical Abstracts
Abhedananda, Swami (1866-1939): monastic name of Kaliprasanna Chandra who had been a
young devotee and later disciple of Ramakrishna. He was a Vedanta enthusiast and hence
nicknamed Kali Vedanti by his monastic brethren. He lectured in London for some months in
1896 and thereafter spent several years in the United States (1897-1920).
Adbhutananda, Swami (d. 1920): a native of Bihar, his premonastic name was Rakhturam. He
had been an erstwhile domestic servant in the household of Ramchandra Datta and later became
a devotee of Ramakrishna and was called Latu (or Leto) by the Master. Illiterate but extremely
devoted and kind-hearted, the Swami was admired and loved by all his
Advaitananda, Swami (c. 1828-1902): monastic name of Gopalchandra Ghosh and the
seniormost disciple of Ramakrishna. He was nicknamed Budo Gopal for he was even older than
the Master and “Hutko” Gopal because he used to disappear from and reappear at Ramakrishna’s
community from time to time. He is reported to have distributed gerua cloth to his gurubhais
Advani, Hirananda Saukiram (1863-93): fondly addressed by Ramakrishna as “a very fine boy,”
Hiranand, a native of Hyderabad, Sindh, was a journalist and editor of the Sindh Times (English)
and Sind Sudhar (Sindhi). He hailed from an illustrious and educated family. Hius elder brother,
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Dewan Navalrai, was drawn to Keshab’s Brahmo Samaj and founded a Brahmo Mandir in
Hyderabad in 1870. Hiranand came to Calcutta for higher education and he was admitted into
the Presidency College. He met Ramakrishna in 1882 and admired the paramahamsa’s charming
and childlike simplicity. He died at 30, victim of a epidemic. The noted Brahmo leader Protap
disciple of Ramakrishna and a parivràjak monk who traveled extensively in northern India
Basu, Balaram (1842-90): Ramakrishna’s householder disciple and a wealthy Bengali landlord of
Orissa. He became one of the Master’s rasaddars and was noted for his generosity toward all
Basu, Chunilal (1849-1936): an employee of the Calcutta Municipality, Chuni met Ramakrishna
in 1881. He befriended the Master’s devotee and patron Balaram. He was a religious soul who
effeminate young man of whom Ramakrishna was very fond and whom he regarded as a
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paramahamsa. He was one of the fourteen disciples of the Master to be initiated as a monk at
Biswas, Mathuranath (1817-71): also known as Mathuramohan or Mathurmohan, he was the son-
in-law of Rani Rasmani of Janbazar, Calcutta and proprietress of the Kali temple at
Daskshineshwar (Biswas first married the Rani’s third daughter Karunamayi and, following her
death, the fourth daughter Jagadamba). Mathur was attracted by the good looks and artistic skill
of Gadadhar and persuaded him to take up employment at the temple. He in fact doted on the
young priest who went about naked and gave him many valuable gifts and took him along with
him on his tours to his estates. Mathur arranged for two pandits to assess Ramakrishna’s
divinity.
Ramakrishna's most favorite disciples. Brahmananda was held in high esteem by Vivekananda
and became the first President of the Ramakrishna Math and Mission in 1902 following
and intellectual, who is reported to have scandalized Ramakrishna in 1884 by boldly declaring
that man's duties consisted in “eating, sleeping, and mating.” His poem was later adopted as the
Ramakrishna’s devotee and admirer. The Master regarded the young man as a nityasiddha and
an embodiment of Narayan. Bhavanath was one of the Master's devotees to attend on him during
Datta, Narendranath (1863-1902): premonastic name of Swami Vivekananda, who had been a
follower of the Brahmo Samaj since early youth. He met the Master in 1881 and became the
latter's most beloved devotee and disciple. He earned renown abroad (U.S. and U.K.) as a
popular Hindu preacher following his debut at the World's Parliament of Religions at Chicago in
September 1893. He founded the Ramakrishna Order and was responsible for popularizing the
Datta, Ramchandra (1851-99): one of the most influential householder disciples of Ramakrishna
and an elder cousin of Swami Vivekananda. Datta was one of those devotees who had declared
Ramakrishna’s divinity and authored the Master’s first full-blown biography, the JV, in 1890. He
was also the first individual to build a temple for the regular worship of his Master’s relics at his
retreat called Yogodyan at Kankurgachhi on the north-eastern suburb of Calcutta. Datta was the
Dakshineshwar.
Devi, Lakshimani (1864-1924): she was the daughter of Ramakrishna’s second elder brother
Rameshwar. Both Ramakrishna and Saradamani were very fond of her and the neighbors
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regarded her as an incarnation of the goddess Shitala. She was married at an early age but after a
couple of years was abandoned by her husband who simply disappeared from her life. On her
own admission, Lakshmi was a witness to the Master’s madhura state. She also attended on her
Dutt, Michael Madhusudan (1824-1873): perhaps the most brilliant poet of nineteenth century
Bengal and originator of a new rhyme in Sanskritized Bengali, the amritaksar chanda. He
Since childhood, Mridani had been a devotee of Kali. She went to an English medium school
where she did extremely well academically. However, she never wished to get married and
hence left home and became a roving nun. She met the Master around 1882 and became his
devotee and constant attendant. She founded the Saradeshwari Ashrama at Barrackpur in 1894.
Ghimiray, Vishwanath Upadhyay: a Hindu from Nepal, Captain (Kapten) Upadhyay was the
manager of a timber yard in Howrah belonging to the State of Nepal. He met the Master
Viswanath relented in his orthodoxy after his contact with the paramahamsa.
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Calcutta in the late nineteenth century. A householder disciple of Ramakrishna, Girish along
with Ram Datta, had declared the Master to be an avatara. He was an intimate friend of
Vivekananda.
Ghosh, Purnachandra (1871-1913): one of the six direct disciples of Ramakrishna who were
declared as ishwarakotis (somewhat like the bodhisattvas) by the paramahamsa, the other five
Vivekananda and Brahmananda, Purna was perhaps the most favorite young man of the Master
who literally doted on him. Ghosh, however, never became a monk but remained a successful
householder having abiding interest in the Ramakrishna Order. He was elected to the post of
Ghosh, Tulsiram (b. 1856): elder brother of Baburam (Premananda) and brother-in-law of
Balaram Basu. Because of his connections he was closely acquainted with Ramakrishna and his
flock.
Golap-ma (d. 1924): popular appellation of Golapsundari Devi who was born in a poor Brahmin
family of north Calcutta. She was a neighbor of Yogin-ma who took her to the ailing
described Golap as “tall and powerful in build, conservative, orthodox, and uncompromising”
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who “acted as gendarme to Mother” but who was altogether a kind-hearted, simple, and loving
soul. A devotee of Saradamani, Golap is reported to have said to her in Benares: “I do not want
from his friend Vijaykrishna Goswami, a Brahmo devotee of the Paramahamsa. He met the
Master sometime in 1884 and devoted the rest of his life to preaching his message.
later founded the splinter organization called the Sadharan Brahmo Samaj following a schism in
1878. Goswami was an admirer of the Master and often participated enthusiastically in the
latter's dancing and singing. He is reputed to have had a vision of Ramakrishna in Dacca, eastern
Bengal, and was one of those to declare that the Master was an incarnation of God.
schools and by the time he met Ramakrishna (February 1882), he had become Headmaster of the
Shyambazar branch of the Vidyasagar Institution. A householder disciple of the Master, ShriM is
the celebrated diarist who wrote the KM in five parts (bhagas), published during 1902-32.
Manindra was related to ShriM and Keshab Sen. He met Ramakrishna for the first time in 1882.
The Master was greatly attracted to the teenager and, sometime in 1885, wept out of love for
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him, touched him fondly, and went into samàdhi. Manindra was householder disciple of the
Gupta, Nagendranath (1861-1940): writer and journalist and a younger cousin of Mahendranath
Gupta (ShriM). He is the author of Reflections and Reminiscences (1947)--a work of much first-
(Ramakrishna's native village) called Mahmudpur and, in spite of his critical attitude, a devotee,
of Ramakrishna, Hazra was quite idiosyncratic, even somewhat eccentric, in his habits, though
he was an intelligent individual. Narendranath admired him and was his intimate friend,
Kar, Pramathanath (1864-1937): alias Paltu, Kar, son of a deputy magistrate of Calcutta, was one
Majumdar, Devendranath (1844-1911): was a devotee of Ramakrishna but was refused initiation
into sannyasa by the Master. Nevertheless, Majumdar continued in his devotion and later built a
Mallik, Manilal: a wealthy businessman of Sinduriapati, Mani belonged to the caste of teli
(oilman). Though a veteran Brahmo, he admired Ramakrishna and often invited the Master to
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his home. The Master once incensed Mallik by his aspersions on the lower castes. In fact,
Ramakrishna had little qualms in accusing the Mallik’s as very “worldly people” whose food
Mallik, Shambhucharan (d. 1877): also known as Shambhunath, he belonged to the caste of
suvarnavanik (gold merchant) and hailed from the famous Mallik family of Sinduriapatti,
Calcutta. He owned a retreat near Dakshineshwar where he spent his time often. He worked for
a European firm and befriended the Brahmo leader Keshab Sen. Ramakrishna told Mallik that
he was mandated by the goddess Kali to be his patron--rasaddar, supplier of victuals. Shambhu
read the Bible to the Master. The latter, however, never approved of Mallik’s desire to spend
Mallik, Yadulal (1844-98): a scion of the Malliks of Sinduriapati, Yadu owned a garden house
quite close to the Dakshineshwar temple. Ramakrishna was a regular visitor to Mallik's retreat
and had a vision of Jesus while looking at the painting of Madonna and the Child on the wall
there. Though Yadulal loved and respected Ramakrishna, he, nevertheless, refused to support the
Mishra, Pabhudayal (b. c.1850): born in a Brahmin family and later converted to Christianity,
Prabhudayal became a follower of the Quaker sect. He met the Master in 1885 and at once
recognized the paramahamsa as Lord Jesus. Ramakrishna was highly impressed by the young
visitor’s manliness and had a vision of him standing in the posture of a vira in the latrine.
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Mitra, Manomohan (1851-1903): a cousin of Ram Datta and the son of a successful phyusician.
He was drawn to the Brahmo Samaj in his early youth but after he met Ramakrishna in
information from Ramakrishna about his early life and supplied it to Ram who used it to write
the JV.
his residence that Narendranath was invited to sing a few songs in honor of his guest
Mozoomdar, Protap Chunder (1840-1905): Brahmo scholar whose article on Ramakrishna in the
Theistic Quarterly Review (October-December 1879) was one of the earliest to proclaim the
purity of the paramahamsa among readers. He had been to the United States in 1883 as a
lecturer of Vedanta as well as Brahmoism prior to his participation in the World Parliament of
accepted Vivekananda’s late application without a letter of invitation and allowed him to
participate in the Parliament by classifying the Swami as a representative of the Hindu monastic
order.
Mukhopadhyay, Hridayram (1840-99): Ramakrishna’s cousin and his childhood companion and,
since 1855, his factotum, Hriday followed the Master’s elder brother Ramkumar to
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priest’s position at Dakshineshwar. Hriday probably procured the Bhairavi Yogeshwari for his
cousin’s Tantrika sadhana. He also had a first hand experience of the Master’s bhavas and
samadhis. He was habitually greedy and often fleeced many visitors desiring to see
Ramakrishna. He was kicked out of his job and his shelter after he was found performing sodasi
the adjacent garden house of Yadulal Mallik, a devotee of Ramakrishna. In later life Hriday
Müller, Friedrich Max (1823-1900): the famous German Sanskrit and Vedic scholar of Oxford
whom Vivekananda met in May 1896. Max Müller wrote a biographical article on Ramakrishna
(“A Real Mahatman,” Nineteenth Century, 1886) and later Ramakrishna: His Life and Sayings
Brahmoism at an early age. He met Ramakrishna in 1882 and became an ardent devotee of the
Pal, Bipinchandra (1858-1932): a member of the Sadharan Brahmo Samaj and an acute observer
of his time, Pal authored, among others, an immensely interesting and informative
Basu, and a disciple of Ramakrishna. He was an ardent follower of the paramahamsa and
disciple of Ramakrishna. As a college student, he had been attracted to the Brahmo Samaj and in
fact came to know about the paramahamsa through the Brahmo press. He was a close associate
of Vivekananda and solely responsible for the daily rituals at Baranagore Math. When the Math
shifted to Alambazar, his responsibilities increased and his preoccupation at the monastery
acknowledged in a letter that Shashi “is the only faithful and true man there.” He went to
Madras in 1897 at the behest of Swamiji and organized the Order in Madras and Bangalore. He
returned to Calcutta due to an attack of tuberculosis and died in August of that year.
Rasmani, Rani (1793-1861): born in a poor farmer’s family of the village of Kona about thirty
miles north of Calcutta and nicknamed Rani (“queen”) by her mother, Rasmani attracted the
attention of the Calcutta landlord Rajchandra Das and was married to him. After her husband’s
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death in 1836, Rasmani inherited his vast estates which she managed with the help of her
youngest son-in-law Mathrumohan. She built the Kali temple at Dakshineshwar (1847-55) and
employed Ramakrishna’s elder brother Ramkumar as the temple priest on May 31, 1855.
Sanyal, Vaikunthanath (1857-1937): a devotee of Ramakrishna and the author of the LM (1936)
which provides, inter alia, intimate details of the Master’s longing for Narendranath. This work
Saradamani (1853-1920): wife of Ramakrishna and also known as the Holy Mother or ørãmà.
Though married to the Master, she never had any conjugal relations with her husband on his own
choice, but was a companion to him and looked after him as well as his male devotees and
admirers.. Reportedly, sometime in 1872, Ramakrishna worshipped her as Goddess Kali as part
of his Tantrika sadhana. She was regarded as Sanghajanani--the mother of the Ramakrishna
Order founded by Vivekananda. Sister Nivedita was very fond of the Holy Mother.
disciple. He visited England and the United States in 1896 to carry on Vivekananda's Vedantic
mission there. He was appointed Secretary to the Ramakrishna Mission by Swamiji. He was not
only a deft organizer who founded the Order on a sure footing, but more famously, he was the
Sen, Adharlal (1855-85): one of Ramakrishna’s most intimate householder disciples and
rasaddars, Adhar had been a distinguished student of the University of Calcutta and a skeptic,
until his meeting the paramahamsa of Dakshineshwar in March 1883. Though a civil servant
treatises in Bengali. His brilliant life came to a sudden end following his death from an injury
Sen, Akshaykumar (1854-1923): nicknamed “shankhcunni” or goblin by his friend and gurubhai
Narendranath, Sen was a devotee of Ramakrishna and wrote the paramahamsa’s biography in
Sen Keshabchandra (1838-84): a Brahmo leader and the organizer of the Brahmo Samaj of India
(1868) and later of the splinter association called New Dispensation or Navavidhan.
Ramakrishna met Sen in 1875 and both admired each other. Keshab publicized Ramakrishna’s
spiritual behavior and recognized the Master as a paramahamsa in his Paramahamser Ukti
(1878).
Shankaracharya (c. 788-820): also known as Shankara, the most powerful exponent of Advaita
Vedanta, he was born in the village of Kalati or Karati in Kerala State of India. Modern
researchers place his life during 650-775. He was a man of prodigious learning who also was a
Shankara’s original contribution lies in his organization of the Hindu monastic order (as spelt out
in his Mahanushasana) and in his teaching that stressed cultivation of wisdom as the way to
reach the pinnacle of religious life. He either died at Kanchi or in the Himalayas where,
Shastri, Shivanath (1847-1919): a Brahmo devotee of Ramakrishna and author of History of the
Brahmo Samaj, 2 vols. (1912) and Men I Have Seen (1919), which provide interesting
disciples. He was an indefatigable Ramakrishna enthusiast till the last day of his life.
most probably, he was the reviver of Krishna worship in Bengal and the sytematizer of the
theology of Krishna. Born in Navadwip in Bengal in 1486, he began his own school where he
taught logic and grammar. He underwent a conversion experience at Gaya in Bihar and in 1508
assumed leadership of a group of Krishna devotees who spent their time singing songs (kirtana)
in praise of Krishna and dancing. He became a monk in 1516 and settled in Puri in Orissa.
Thereafter he toured south India (1510-12) and parts of north India, notably Benares and
nicknamed as Khoka Maharaj in the Ramakrishna Order. He was one of the direct disciples of
Tagore, Devendranath (1817-1905): a member of the aristocratic Tagore family of Jorasanko area
of north Calcutta. He was the organizer of the Brahmo movement and founder of the Brahmo
Samaj. He is the father of the poet Rabindranath. Ramakrishna met the great patriarch of the
Tagore clan and was much impressed by him. Devendranath, on the other hand, found the
Tarkachudamani, Shashadhar (1850-1928): was the great Hindu scholar whose learned lectures
on the scriptures made him a celebrity in Calcutta. Born in Faridpur, eastern Bengal, Shashadhar
studied Sanskrit and the shastras from his father and from Durgaprasad Tarkalankar, the famous
logician of Vikrampur, Dacca. He was initiated by Viswarupswami of Benares who also taught
him the Upaniùads. Shashadhar admired Ramakrishna as a bhakta but refused to recognize him
as a paramahamsa who had ralized the divine through samadhi and sadhana.
Ramakrishna. He traveled to the States in 1903 and worked with the Vedanta Society of
California at San Francisco and Los Angeles till his death in 1915.
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paramahamsa. He was a close friend of Swamiji and accompanied him to the West during his
second voyage. He founded the Shanti Ashrama in the San Anton Valley near San Jose.
Vidyasagar, Ishwarchandra (1820-91): one of the greatest social reformers and a Hindu scholar
becoming the only primer of Bengali language at school. Ramakrishna visited Vidyasagar but
the latter remained lukewarm to the Master's samadhi and sermons. Ramakrishna harbored a
respectful disdain for the scholar who never showed much enthusiasm for the ecstatic bhakta
from Dakshineshwar.
next to Narendranath, an actual college graduate to become Ramakrishna’s devotee and disciple.
He met the Master in 1883 and later learnt from him that Ramakrishna indeed was Ram as well
as Krishna. Hariprasanna subsequently trained as an engineer and became the District Engineer
at Ghazipur. He joined the Alambazar monastery sometime in 1895. He rose to the rank of
President of the Ramakrishna Math and Mission in 1937, the year he also laid the foundation of
Raychaudhuri), Ramakrishna’s disciple and a dedicated devotee of the Holy Mother. He hailed
from the illustrious Chaudhuri family of Dakshineshwar. After Ramakrishna’s death, Yogen
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became the caretaker of the Master’s widow, Saradamani, and was initiated into sannyasa by her.
Along with Premananda, Yogananda once questioned Swamiji’s refusal to regard the Master as
an incarnation.
gynecologist physician of north Calcutta, Dr. Prasannakumar Mitra. She was related to Balaram
Basu through her marriage to Ambikacharan Biswas. She met the paramahamsa sometime in
1883 and became his ardent devotee. Religious by inclination, Yogindramohini was also
initiated into nunhood by a Tantrika named Ishwarchandra Chakravarti. The Master was very
Glossary
Adhyatma Ramayana: a poem in 4200 double verses dating from the fifteenth century and
combining a tantric purpose with the moral of the Ramayaa (q.v.). This is a Ramayana on the
plane of the atman containing a dialogue between Shiva and Shakti on the divine character of
Avadhuta: the aspirant who is free from all prejudices and who has knowledge of his own self.
Avatara: meaning “descent,” that is, the descent of God as an incarnation on earth. Also means
Bhadralok: a member of the genteel society. Generally designates the educated upper midle and
Bhagavadgita: literally means “song of the Lord,” a part of the Mahabharata (q.v.). It contains
Bhairavi: a tantric priestess or a shamanesss who participates in numerous esoteric rituals of the
Tantra.
Bhava: literally it connotes “mood,” but in the mystic literature it stands for a “spiritual mood”
or a state in which one is aware of the phenomenal world as waves of the Cosmic Mind. This
Brahman: derived from the Sanskrit root brh, meaning “to be great,” it is the Upanisadic
concept of one Divine Being hidden in all beings, the Self within all beings. He is the Only One,
free from qualities, and makes the one seed manifold. Brahman is also considered as the
impersonal Spirit, the Divine Essence, the Absolute. The chief attibutes to be linked with this
name are sat (being), chit (awareness), and ananda (bliss): Sachchidananda (utter reality, utterly
Brahmani: a female of the Brahmin (q.v.) caste. In the text this word refers to Bhairavi (q.v.)
Yogeshwari.
361
Brahmin: the highest of the four Hindu castes, usually the caste of priests (not to be confused
with Brahman).
Dakshineshwar: a village situated some four to five miles north of Calcutta and the site of the
Ramakrishna worked as a priest and later gathered his devotees as the famous paramahamsa
(q.v.).
Hanuman: known also as Mahavira (“Great Hero”) is the fabled simian factotum of Lord Rama
Hookah: a wooden tobacco pipe with a water bowl and a clay container of tobacco on charcoal
fire attached to it. It is so constructed to draw the smoke through a hole in the water bowl.
Ishwara: is the most popular concept of a Supreme Being creating, maintaining, and destroying
the world and the only principle of the comprehension and attainment of grace through bhakti or
Ishwarakoti: literally, “of the level of god.” Ramakrishna used the word to designate his
favorite young devotee a “divine being” born on earth to carry out God’s plan for mankind.
Jagannath: “Lord of the World,” an appellation of Vishnu and a popular deity of Orissa and West
Kabial: or kabiwala, a poet performer who improvises rhetorical repartees in public contest with
each other. The kabi (leterally, a “poet”) poetry became very popular in Bengal in the first half
Kali: also known as Jagajjanani (“Mother of the Universe”), Kali (literally meaning a “black
female”) represents Shakti or Energy and is worshipped as Shiva's consort. She also manifests,
Kaliyuga: the last (1200 years of gods, each divine year being 360 human years) of the four ages
in Indian mythological tradition, the first three being Krita or Satya, Treta and Dwapara,
Kamarpukur: ancestral village of Ramakrishna situated in the Bankura district of West Bengal.
Kamini-kanchana: literally “woman and gold” but standing as a metaphor for lust and lure.
Ramakrishna popularized the phrase in his numerous sermons on the absolute necessity of
According to Kaivalyatantra, wine is the cause (karana) of dharma, artha, kama, and moksa.
Kathak: popular religious instructor through the recital and interpretation of scriptures and
devotional texts.
Kaupina: a strip of loincloth worn by Hindu monks just for being in public.
Kirtana: devotional song (popularized by the Vaisnavas) sung in chorus and often accompanied
by dancing.
Krishna: an incarnation of Vishnu and one of the principal characters of the Mahabharata, most
Kundalini: literally “coiled,” referring to the Divine Person lying dormant at the base of the
spine in all individuals, until it is aroused and until it ascends through the susumna, passing on its
way through six centers of chakras within the body, ultimately merging in the sahasrara, the
Lila: play of the divine, and in Vaishnavism, the lila of Krishna at Vrindavana. According to the
Chaitanyacharitamrita, the reason behind God’s lila is his own desire to relish the sweetness of
the love of his associates for Him and to make them relish his own sweetness.
Mahabharata: one of the two Indian epics (the other and the earlier being the story of Rama, the
Ramayana, q.v.), composed perhaps throughout the first millennium B.C., though probably
taking its final shape from between the fourth and the second century B.C.
Maharsi: meaning a great (maha) sage (risi)--a respectable appellation for a religious leader of
great learning.
365
Kamarpukur (q.v.).
Manusmriti: Manu is the Hindu Adam, the primordial man who received the revelation of the
Brahman’s designs and promulgated smriti or “memorized tradition.” Manu’s teachings are
Nyangta: a vulgar Bengali word, meaning “naked,” designating a sect of Hindu monks, the
Naga Sannyasis, who stay naked. In the text nyangta refers to Ramakrishna’s putative Vedanta
Paramahamsa: means “great embodied soul” or jiva, and the word has been in use since the
Taxila Golplated Inscriptions of the first century A.D. The word hamsa (literally “swan”)
represents the supreme (parama) essence or one who has realized that essence. I thank Dr.
Pahalaharini Kali puja: worship of Goddess Kali in her aspect as phalaharini, that is, as the
Prahlada: a character in the Bhagavata Purana, the son of an arrogant but successful ascetic
demon king called Hiranyakashipu, who endured tortures for his love for Krishna.
Prasada: leavings of the foods offered to a god or a godman for the holy consumption of the
bhakta or disciple.
Purana: the Puranas or “antiquities” are versified texts containing details on the creation of the
world, the genealogy of gods, human prehistory, and royal dynasties, and originating from the
beginning of the Christian era to the tenth century and even later. There are 18 principal Puranas
Rani: literally “queen,” can also be a first name or a nickname for a Hindu woman.
Ramakrishna’s employer Rasmani was known as Rani Rasmani, here the prefix being honorific.
367
Rasagolla: fried cheese ball dipped in sugar syrup and reputedly the most famous of the Bengali
sweets.
Rudraksa: a kind of dried fruits used as beads. The rosary is called rudraksamala.
Sadachakra: or satchakra, denoting six nerve-cycles. According to the tantric scheme, there are
six nerve-cycles within the human body: muladhara (rectal region), swadhisthana (genital
region), manipura (region of the navel), anahata (region around the heart), vishuddha (the region
connecting the spinal cord and the lower portion of the medulla oblongata, and ajna (region
between the eyebrows). The highest region is known as sahasrara. The kundalini shakti, that is,
Shakti as serpent-power, remains latent in the muladhara. By yogic exercises this Shakti is
pushed up through the two main nerves, ida and pingala, to the sahasrara.
Shakti: the Mother Goddess, power, or energy, originating, perhaps, in the non-Aryan culture of
the Indus Valley. Mythologically, Shakti is equated with the Goddesses Kali, Parvati, and Durga,
all consorts of Shiva. The cult of Shakti flourished since the fifth century A.D.
368
Shinto: Japan's ancient religious tradition having simple prayers and rites performed at natural
shrines such as the sacred sakaki tree. The divine word would be uttered through the shaman in a
Shiva: also known as Maheswara or Mahadeva (“Great God” of destruction), is one of the great
Hindu Trinity, the other two being Brahma (the Creator) and Vishnu (the Sustainer). In the
Puranas Shiva is the benign aspect of Maheshwara or the Vedic god Rudra.
Shudra: the lowest caste in Hindu society, whose occupation is chiefly manual labor.
form of the Mother of the Universe. The worship of the Mother in human form is sanctioned by
the scriptures, especially the Tantras, though the usual symbols are pictures, pitchers (ghata),
Tantra: system of religious philosophy in which Shiva, Vishnu, or the Divine Mother is the
Ultimate Reality, differentiated, respectively, as Shaiva, Vaishnava, and Shakta tantras. Also
Tarkachudamani: literally means the “jewel among the holders of debater’s crown.” It is usually
Upanisads: Hindu spiritual; treatises, about one hundred twelve in number, the oldest of which
were composed between 800 and 400 B.C. The central vision of the Upanisads is Brahman.
The Upanisads provide a spiritual interpretation to the ideas and rituals of the Vedas (q.v.).
Vaisnava: a Hindu sect worshipping Lord Visnu as his other incarnational forms.
Vedanta: literally meaning “the end or the epitome of the Vedas,” Vedanta sprang from the
Upanisads with the central Upanisadic doctrine of the Brahman. Its founder was Badarayana,
the author of the Brahmasutra (also known as Uttara-mimamsa) and its greatest exponent was
370
the eighth-century south Indian mystic Shankaracharya (Shankara). The Vedanta designates a
system of metaphysics comprising the Brahmasutra, the Bhagavadgita, and the Upanisads.
Yatra: open-air Bengali opera emphasizing mythological, religious, or didactic themes and
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