Hare Krsna Leaders Meet India’s President

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A look at the worldwide activities of the
International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON)

Hare Krsna Leaders Meet India’s President

President Giani Zail Singh of India (second from right) chats with His Holiness Lokanatha Swami (at far left), His Holiness Nava-yogendra Swami (on the president's right), and Srila Gopala Krsna Goswami.
President Giani Zail Singh of India (second from right) chats with His Holiness Lokanatha Swami (at far left), His Holiness Nava-yogendra Swami (on the president’s right), and Srila Gopala Krsna Goswami.

New Delhi—Recently the president of India, His Excellency Sri Giani Zail Singh, cordially received three leaders of the Hare Krsna movement. They are Srila Gopala Krsna Goswami, who oversees the affairs of the movement in western India and Canada and who is one of the movement’s present spiritual masters; His Holiness Lokanatha Swami, president of the Hare Krsna center in New Delhi; and His Holiness Nava-yogendra Swami, president of the center in Chandigarh, India. They gave President Singh a set of Srila Prabhupada’s books in Hindi and a painting of Lord Krsna, both of which he gladly accepted.

President Singh commended the Hare Krsna movement for its work in India and abroad, and he especially applauded the movement’s scriptural basis. “Whereas modern-day Indians are turning to materialistic philosophers of the West,” he said, “your people are sticking to the ancient scriptures of the Vedic tradition. I think this is a source of strength for your movement.”

Two New Hare Krsna Schools Open in India

Manipur, India—Two new gurukula schools have been opened in India by Srila Bhaktisvarupa Damodara Swami, one of the Hare Krsna movement’s present spiritual masters and the director of the Bhaktivedanta Institute, a group of devotees with academic degrees who investigate the nature and origin of life and consciousness from the Vedic perspective.

Christian missionaries in Imphal, Manipur, are concerned because many parents are preparing to withdraw their children from mission schools and enroll them in the new gurukula there. For 188 positions, the school has already received applications for more than four hundred students. When construction on the three-story school is completed in January, all the applicants will be admitted.

In Tirupati, a pilgrimage site in the south Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, Srila Bhaktisvarupa Damodara Maharaja has opened a gurukula with an initial enrollment of two hundred. Within a decade he plans to expand the school to include a multifaceted college program. A 22-member panel that includes Tirupati’s leading citizens oversees the school’s affairs.

“There is nothing wrong with becoming a scientist, but you must be a Krsna conscious scientist,” says Srila Bhaktisvarupa Damodara Maharaja. “There is nothing wrong with earning the Nobel Prize, but you must be a Krsna conscious Nobel-Prize-winner. There is a need for lawyers, but they must be Krsna conscious. We plan to make facilities available for training such Krsna conscious professionals.”

Hare Krsna Guru At Westminster Abbey

Westminster, Great Britain—Westminster Abbey was recently the site of an ecumenical dialogue featuring an address by Srila Bhagavan Goswami, one of the present spiritual masters in the Hare Krsna movement. He officially represented England’s two million Hindus.

Leading life members of the movement and The Very Reverend Dr. Edward Carpenter, Dean of Westminster Abbey, sponsored the dialogue to give British clergymen a broader understanding of Krsna consciousness and its role in English society. The theological assembly was part of Britain’s summer-long Festival of India, a series of events co-patroned by Prime Ministers Margaret Thatcher and Indira Gandhi.

Dean Carpenter warmly praised Srila Bhagavan Maharaja, expressing deep appreciation for his presentation of Vedic philosophy and commenting on his “superb handling of all questions raised.”

After Srila Bhagavan spoke, the ninety conferees enjoyed a sumptuous feast of prasadam (food offered to Krsna) and performances of devotional Indian dance and song—all arranged by the devotees. Finally, the devotees led the congregational chanting of Hare Krsna.

Book on Reincarnation, Two Others Published

Los Angeles—The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust here has published a book on the science of reincarnation. Based on the ancient Vedic scriptures as taught by His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, Coming Back contains several discussions on reincarnation from Srila Prabhupada’s books, a clear explanation of what reincarnation is, and a historical overview of belief in reincarnation in the West.

In Brazil, the Portugese BBT has published two new books: O Livro de Solucoes (A Book of Solutions), featuring a conversation between Srila Hridayananda dasa Goswami and the Dom Elder Camara, Archbishop of Recife, Brazil, and Illumincao pelo Camino Natural (Enlightenment from the Natural Path), which consists of excerpts from Srila Hridayananda Maharaja’s English translation of the Eleventh Canto of Srimad-Bhagavatam.

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