Today's Thought |
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Ramakrishna Darshanam |

Inauguration
by Ex-Governor of Gujarat Shri K. P. Mishra |

Visit
of Ex-Governor |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s father, Sri Kshudiram, gets a divine dream
of his future son as an incarnation of Lord Vishnu
Kshudiram Chattopadhayaya, the father of Sri Ramakrishna,
visited Gaya in 1835. He offered worship to Lord Gadadhar
(Sri Vishnu). One night he had a dream. He saw himself in
the holy temple, in the act of offering worship to his forefathers,
at the feet of Lord Gadadhar. Pleased by his prayer and worship
that Divine Being then spoke to him, 'Kshudiram, your extraordinary
devotion has made me very happy. I bless you. I shall be born
as your son and be the object of your loving care.' Soon after
this Sri Ramakrishna was born. Kshudiram became convinced
that it is Lord Vishnu as Gadadhar who has been born as his
son. The boy was therefore named Gadadhar or Gadai. |
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Gadadhar,
the divine child in his birthplace Kamarpukur
Gadai or Gadadhar, the childhood name of Sri Ramakrishna,
was a child of unusual grace and beauty. The neighbours rushed
to look at the child. Those who saw him once were filled with
an indescribable joy and love for the child as their very
own. They came to see him again and again, even forgetting
their own children. Even the people of the neighbouring villages
used to come to watch the divine child singing and dancing.
Gadai would often sing songs about Shiva, Shyama and Krishna,
and whoever would listen to him singing would be moved. The
women of the village used to give him sweets, and then ask
him to sing for them. Especially, the widows used to set aside
for Gadai whatever they could procure. |
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Child
Gadai plays with Hanumanas – the black-faced monkeys
One day, with his mother, Gadai was going to his maternal
uncle's. On the way, they came to a place where a large number
of hanumanas (black-faced monkeys) were seated on a tree.
The child Gadai became excited seeing those monkeys. He ran
towards the group of monkeys and started chasing them. Those
wild beasts did not attack him; instead they came down from
the branches to the ground and started playing happily with
Gadai. They were playing and dancing with a three-year-old
human child! Gadai was buried in the joy of dancing with them.
The monkeys recognized the presence of Lord Sri Rama in the
form of the child Gadai. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s first divine ecstasy-samadhi-at the age
of six
As a young boy, when Gadadhar was one day walking through
the rice field in his village, he first experienced samadhi,
which was to become the natural habitat in his future life.
About this first vision he said, 'There appeared a beautiful
black cloud charged with rain. I was looking at it while eating
parched-rice. Very soon the cloud covered almost the whole
sky, when a flock of milk-white cranes flew against that black
could. It looked so beautiful that I became very soon absorbed
in an extraordinary mood. I was overwhelmed with bliss and
my external consciousness was lost. I fell down and the rice
got scattered near the balk. People saw it and carried me
home.' |
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Boy
Gadadhar’s total absorption in Shiva on Shivaratri festiva
Once on Shivaratri, a drama on Shiva was to be staged in Kamarpukur.
The boy who was to play Shiva's role fell ill. The elder people
approached Gadai to play Shiva's role and he agreed. Gadai
entered the stage with calm and slow steps. Then he stood
motionless! The audience felt an indescribable but distinct
divine emotion. They were filled with joy and wonder when
they saw Gadadhar in that dress, his body smeared with ashes
and his head with matted hair. He stood there with streams
of tears flowing down his cheeks without external consciousness.
He was carried home and he regained normal consciousness only
the next day after sunrise. |
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The
child Ramakrishna breaks caste restrictions by accepting food
from a blacksmith mother
Dhani, a widow of blacksmith caste in Kamarpukur was the first
person to see Sri Ramakrishna, as a midwife after his birth.
To the boy Gadai she told one day that she would consider
herself blessed, if at the time of his sacred thread ceremony,
he would accept food from her and call her 'mother'. The boy
promised to fulfill her desire. On the day of the ceremony,
Gadadhar put on the sacred thread and went to his beloved
blacksmith mother Dhani for food. The widow felt blessed.
Her long-cherished desire was fulfilled. The blacksmith mother,
Dhani was now respected as a spiritual mother of Gadadhar. |
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The
poor villager Chinu Shankhari first worshipped Gadadhar as
an incarnation of God
Chinu was a poor old man of the village Kamarpukur belonging
to the caste of conch-sellers. He was extremely fond of young
Gadai. One day Chinu prepared a beautiful garland of flowers.
In the meantime, Gadai arrived at his place. Seeing him Chinu
was overjoyed. He went to the market to buy some choicest
sweets. They came to a solitary spot near a tree at the end
of the village Kamarpukur. Then Chinu knelt down at Gadai’s
feet in a mood of worship, and put the garland round his neck.
Then with tears of joy in his eyes, his voice choked with
emotion, Chinu fed Gadai with the sweets. After Gadai ate,
with folded hands Chinu addressed him, 'I have grown old and
my days are numbered. I shall not live to witness the divine
play you are going to perform. That is my greatest regret.
But keep me in your mind and bless this servant of yours.'
It was Chinu, the conch-seller of Kamarpukur, who first recognized
the presence of an incarnation of God in Sri Ramakrishna even
when he was a child. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s intense yearning brings him the vision
of Kali
Kali, the black-goddess, standing on the body of Shiva, is
an ancient Hindu goddess. With a severed demon head in hand,
she stands victorious over evils. A chain of human hands round
her waist symbolizes that mother can destroy our accumulated
karmas. Her long protruded tongue destroys all the rajas or
the intensity of active life. When Sri Ramakrishna became
a priest of Kali temple he thought, 'is this image of Kali
only stone, or is it alive?’ His passion for the Mother
turned into an unbearable anguish in his heart. Then came
the great moment. In Sri Ramakrishna’s words, “My
eyes suddenly fell upon the sword that was there in the Mother’s
temple. I made up my mind to put an end to my life with it
that very moment. Like one mad, I ran and caught hold of it,
when suddenly I had the wonderful vision of the Mother.’
Later on he described the great overwhelming vision, “I
found a continuous succession of effulgent waves coming forward,
raging and storming from all sides with great speed. Very
soon the waves from a luminous sea of consciousness fell on
me and made me sink to the abysmal depths of infinity. I had
the immediate knowledge of the light that is Mother.”
When he regained consciousness, he first uttered the word
'Mother' in a vice choked with emotion. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna sees a living and beloved God in the stone image
of Krishna
It was the end of A.D. 1855 when young Ramakrishna had just
come to the Dakshineswar temple as a priest. The priest, Kshetranath,
while taking the image of Krishna, suddenly fell down, and
one leg of the image broke. Instantly, there arose a great
commotion in the temple over the event. They created much
noise and finally agreed that no worship of the deity was
permissible with a broken part. Sri Ramakrishna in an ecstatic
mood asked the Rani, 'Why do you discard the broken image?'
Sri Ramakrishna asked her to ask the pundits this simple question,
'If a woman's husband has broken his leg, what would be the
course of action? Should she then discard the leg or the husband
himself or arrange for treatment?' Finally they decided to
accept the decision of Sri Ramakrishna. The Rani now requested
Sri Ramakrishna to mend the broken leg. Sri Ramakrishna agreed
and mended the broken leg and everybody was amazed that no
flaw could be detected in the image. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna practises tantric sadhana under the guidance of
Bhairavi Brahmani
Bhairavi Brahmani, whose real name was Yogeshwari, was a scholarly
woman of aristocratic descent. She dedicated her life for
tantric practice as a wandering nun. The Brahmani made Sri
Ramakrishna undertake, one by one, all the disciplines prescribed
in the main sixty-four Tantras, all difficult to accomplish.
Due to this tantra sadhana, Sri Ramakrishna saw the vision
of Divine Mother in every single entity of this universe,
especially in all women. After the tantra sadhana, he was
permanently converted to a child. Sri Ramakrishna became Paramahamsa
of the highest order for whom this world with all its holy
and unholy things turned into a world of purity, holiness
and God. |
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With
Sri Ramakrishna’s love the stone image of child Rama
becomes living
There came to Dakshineswar temple a Vaishnava sadhu, Jatadhari
by name. His whole soul was absorbed in worshipping a small
metal image of the child Rama or Ramalala. After many years
of worship the Babaji actually saw, out of devotion, that
Ramalala ate or wished to eat something, or wanted to go for
a walk or insisted on satisfying some fancy or other. Sri
Ramakrishna was now drawn to the image, his love for Ramalala
increased. He was now inspired with Rama mantra from Jatadhari.
Sri Ramakrishna described his own experience, "I actually
saw, as I see you before me now, Ramalala dancing, sometimes
in front of me, sometimes behind. Sometimes he would insist
on being carried in my arms. Again, of took him up he would
not stay there. He jumped down to run here and there collecting
flowers in thorny jungles." |
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Sri
Ramakrishna practices Nirakara sadhana under Tota Puri
Sri Ramakrishna developed a desire to experience the formless
(Nirakara) dimension of God. There came to Dakshineswar a
wandering monk named Tota Puri, who had experienced the formless
aspect of God. Tota Puri and Sri Ramakrishna soon fell in
love with each other. Tota asked the new monk now to meditate
on Neti Neti (not this not this) or the unreality of the phenomenal
world and the reality of Brahman. Finally, at his Guru's instruction,
Sri Ramakrishna cut asunder the relative form of his Mother
with the sword of knowledge, and entered the realm of the
Absolute—the true abode of his mother Kali, in a state
of deep samadhi. Tota who had already experienced Nirvikalpa
samadhi became astounded and thought, if this great soul had
actually realized in a day what he could experience in forty
years of austere sadhana! Tota then began to bring back the
disciple's consciousness of the external world, with loud
chanting of 'Hari Aum', which filled the sky of the Panchavati. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna practises Sufi Islam sadhana under Govinda Ray
A Sufi seeker of God, Govinda Ray, came one day to the Kali
temple at Dakshineswar. Sri Ramakrishna was charmed by Govinda's
sincere faith and love for God, and his mind was gradually
attracted towards Sufi Islam. He decided to be initiated by
Govinda Ray and practice Sufi Islam. Govinda initiated him
in Sufi faith. Sri Ramakrishna then engaged himself in practicing
Sufism according to its prescribed rules. He devotionally
repeated the holy syllable 'Allah', wore cloth like the Muslims,
said Namaz in a local mosque thrice daily. Sri Ramakrishna
spent three days in that mood, and had the full realization
of man's divinity through Sufi faith. Ramakrishna at first
had the vision of an effulgent, impressive personage with
a long beard; he had the mystic experience of the all-pervading
God everywhere in this universe. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s vision of Mother Sita and Hanumana, the
servant of Rama
One of Sri Ramakrishna's visions with eyes wide open was about
Sita and Hanumana. It came to Sri Ramakrishna when he practiced
the Dasya-bhakti or the spiritual attitude of a servant of
God as practised by Hanumana as an eternal servant of Sri
Rama. Sri Ramakrishna described, "One day I was sitting
under the Panchavati—not meditating, merely sitting—when
an incomparable, effulgent female figure appeared before me
illumining the whole place. The extraordinary, spirited and
solemn expression of that face, manifesting love, sorrow,
compassion and endurance, was not generally seen even in the
figure of goddesses. I wondered who she might be, when a black-faced
monkey came suddenly, nobody knew from where, and fell prostrate
at her feet and some one within my mind exclaimed, 'Sita,
Sita.' Calling her as 'Mother' repeatedly, I was then going
to fling myself at her feet, when she came quickly and entered
this (showing his own body)." |
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Through
Sri Radha’s grace Sri Ramakrishna gets the vision of
Sri Krishna
Sri Radha, Indian devotional scriptures say, is the supreme
example of prema, divine love based on the greatest purity
and intensity. The God-intoxicated mind of Sri Ramakrishna
at one time turned to Sri Radha's love for Sri Krishna. And
soon he had the vision of Sri Radha 'who shone with a bright
yellow splendour, like the stamens of the Nagakeshara flower'.
The divine relationship of pure love with Sri Krishna, which
was the essence of Sri Radha, now possessed Sri Ramakrishna.
His love for Sri Krishna slowly intensified. Soon he had the
vision of Sri Krishna. After this vision he was buried in
the thought of Sri Krishna for two or three months and sometimes
he looked on all beings as different forms of Sri Krishna,
who became alive thenceforward in Sri Ramakrishna's life. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s vision of child Jesus in the lap of Mary-
the Motherhood of God
Sri Jadu Mallick, a rich man of Calcutta was devoted to Sri
Ramakrishna. When Sri Ramakrishna went to Mallick's garden
house he had a strange experience. A painting of Madonna and
child, artist now unknown, hung in Jadu Mallick's parlour.
Sri Ramakrishna was in that parlour looking intently at this
picture. The child Jesus in the lap of Mother Mary instantly
ignited a spontaneous love for Mother as God in Sri Ramakrishna,
a child of Kali. Suddenly he felt that both Mother and child
in the picture became luminous and alive and both of them
entered into his own body. Sri Ramakrishna had the vision
of Christ not on the Cross, but on the lap of Mother Mary.
He was identified with God as Mother. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s vision of Jesus, the Son of God
After the vision of Child Christ on the lap of Mother Mary
in the garden house of Jadunath Mallick, Sri Ramakrishna came
back to Dakshineswar temple and remained constantly absorbed
in the new vision. He forgot altogether to go to the temple
of Mother Kali and offer salutations to Her. At last, when
the third day was about to close, Sri Ramakrishna saw, while
walking in Panchavati at Dakshineswar that a marvelous God-man
of very fair complexion was coming towards him, looking steadfastly
at him. As soon as Sri Ramakrishna saw that person, the person
approached him, and from the bottom of Sri Ramakrishna's pure
heart came out the words, 'Jesus! Jesus the Christ, the great
Yogi, the loving Son of God and one with the Father.' Jesus,
the God-man, then embraced Sri Ramakrishna and disappeared
into his body. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s vision of Shiva in the cremation ground
of golden Kashi
During 1869 Sri Ramakrishna went on a pilgrimage along with
Mathur Babu to the Holy city of Kashi, the spiritual capital
of India. In Varanasi, one sees the sights of the temples
better on boat tours. On one such tour, with Mathur and Hriday,
Sri Ramakrishna came to a point opposite to the Manikarnika
Ghat, the well-known cremation ground of Varanasi. On the
steps of this cremation ground, Sri Ramakrishna had the vision
of the majestic Shiva. He later said, 'I saw a tall white
person with tawny matted hair walking carefully to each Jiva
(the dead body) and imparting into his ear the mantra of supreme
Brahman. Sri Ramakrishna's bodyhair stood on end, and he walked
out of the cabin of the boat, to its very edge. The boatman
cried to Hriday to catch hold of him, but Sri Ramakrishna
was seeing only the Lord Shiva, standing on the steps, 'embodying
in himself,' he later said, 'all the solemnity of the world'.
Finally, the figure of Shiva approached Sri Ramakrishna and
merged in him. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s vision of Sri Chaitanya and Sri Nityananda
at Navadwip
Sri Ramakrishna used to say that God incarnated as Sri Chaitanya
for preaching the redeeming power of God's name. Sri Ramakrishna
used to go to trance while singing the glories of the two
brothers, Sri Chaitanya and Sri Nityananda. Once he went by
boat to Navadwip, the birthplace of Chaitanya, in order to
fell the presence of the two mighty souls even after hundreds
of years. Sri Ramakrishna went here and there. He felt dejected
and regretted his going there. Then Sri Ramakrishna said,
'I was going to step into the boat for my trip back, when
I saw a wonderful vision; Two beautiful boys of tender age-
I never saw such beauty' they had complexion of molten gold-each
having an orb of light round his head, raising their hands
and looking at me, were running towards me through the sky.
And I cried out immediately, 'There they (Sri Chaitanya and
Sri Nityananda) come, there they come.' scarcely had I uttered
these words before they came and entered here (his own body);
I lost normal consciousness and fell down.' |
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Sri
Ramakrishna realises Lord Buddha as an incarnation of God
There was a stone statue of Buddha in the living room of Sri
Ramakrishna in Dakshineswar. On 24th May, 1884 Sri Ramakrishna
while in his living room at Dakshineswar said to a devotee,
'I have heard a great deal about Buddha. He is one of the
ten Incarnations of God. Brahman is immovable, immutable,
inactive, and of the nature of Consciousness. When a man merges
his buddhi, his intelligence in Bodha of Consciousness, then
he attains the Knowledge of Brahman; he becomes Buddha, the
enlightened.' On another occasion when someone pointed out
that Buddha was an atheist, Sri Ramakrishna said, 'Why should
he be an atheist? He could not express in ordinary language
that great experience of final enlightenment which is beyond
words.' |
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Sri
Ramakrishna sees God in human beings: Sri Krishna in an English
boy
Once Sri Ramakrishna had the vision of Sri Krishna in a European
boy. Perhaps, it was at this time, that Sri Ramakrishna was
taken to the maidan (vast open field) in Calcutta, for 'fresh
air' or to see balloon ascension. There was a great crowd.
'Suddenly', he tells us, 'I saw an English boy leaning against
a tree. As the boy stood there his body was bent in three
places. The vision of Krishna came before me in a flash. I
went into samadhi.' This is the famous tribhanga posture in
which the Krishna is known to be playing on His flute in Vrindavan.
All distinctions between a white-skinned English boy and the
black cowherd of Vrinavan were obliterated. Only God remained. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna gets the divine command to remain in the realm
of both the Absolute and the Relative
Sri Ramakrishna was blessed for the first time with the vision
of the Divine Mother, but many in the temple distrusted his
visions. One day Sri Ramakrishna's cousin, Haladari, a pundit
in scriptures, who was always skeptical about those visions,
pointed out, that these visions were illusions, as God was
beyond existence and non-existence. Extremely anxious, he
cried with the feeling of a wounded son and said to Mother
Kali, 'Should thou, O Mother, deceive me so, because I am
unlettered and ignorant? Some time afterwards I saw a fog
like smoke, rising suddenly from the floor and filling some
space in front of me. I saw in that smoke a beautiful living
face of golden complexion, with beard reaching to the breast!
That figure looked steadfastly at me and said with a profound
voice, 'My child, remain in the state of Bhavamukha.' Remain
in the state of 'Bhavamukha'-Remain in both the worlds, the
Absolute and the Relative. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna asks rich Mathur to serve the poor, the living
Gods, at Vaidyanath
Sri Ramakrishna was on his way to the pilgrimage of Varanasi,
Vrindavan and other holy places with his disciple and temple
steward Mathur. In Bihar, Sri Ramakrishna's heart was filled
with pain after seeing the poverty and misery of the village
people. When he was going through a village near Vaidyanath
Shiva temple, he told Mathur that he was only a manager of
Mother's estate and he must give those people oil for both,
a piece of cloth, and one good meal to each of them. Seeing
such compassion in Sri Ramakrishna, Mathur brought cloth from
Calcutta and served the poor as his Master asked him to do.
Sri Ramakrishna was now filled with joy to see the villagers
happy and started his journey to Varanasi. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna brings divine bliss to the common masses
Phului-Shyambazar is a simple Bengal village situated a few
miles away from Sihor, the native village of Hriday, Sri Ramakrishna's
nephew. Accompanied by Hriday, he went there lived there for
seven days and enjoyed the devotional music. Then he went
to common people of Shyambazar. Hearing the news of Sri Ramakrishna's
coming, many music parties from villages around gathered and
he started singing with them night and day and frequently
went info samadhi. People forgot food and sleep by listening
to Sri Ramakrishna's song. Anxious to see him in samadhi,
many climbed up trees and got on the roofs of houses. People
began to talk of Sri Ramakrishna in samadhi as a devotee of
God who dies and revives many times a day. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna worships his young wife, Sri Sarada Devi as the
Divine Mother
It was the new-moon day in May, 1873, the holy occasion of
the worship of the Phalaharini Kali, or the Kali. Sri Ramakrishna
had made special preparations on that day to worship Mother
Kali not in the temple, but in his own room. Sri Sarada Devi
who had just completed eighteen years was asked to sit on
the wooden seat meant for the Kali image. Afterwards, Sri
Ramakrishna worshipped Kali in the person of Sarada Devi with
all the necessary rituals and after that offered forever at
her feet the results of his sadhanas, his rosary etc. with
the prayer 'O Thou, the auspiciousness of all auspicious,
things! O doer of all actions! O refuge! O the three-eyed
One! O the fair complexioned spouse of Shiva! O Narayani!
I bow down to thee, I bow down to thee!' |
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Sri
Ramakrishna sees the Divine Mother Kali and his own mother,
in his wife Sri Sarada Devi
One day in Dakshineswar, while Sri Sarada Devi, the Holy Mother,
was massaging Sri Ramakrishna's feet, she asked him, 'How
do you look on me?' He replied, 'The same Mother who is in
the temple, the same Mother who has given birth to this body
and is now living in the music tower-it is the same Mother
who is now massaging my feet. Truly, I always look upon you
as a form of the blissful Divine Mother.' Later on, Sri Ramakrishna
spoke about her; 'She is my Shakti'. Again he said, 'She is
Sarada, she is Sarasvati, the goddess of learning. She has
come to give knowledge.' |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s vision of Nara-Narayana in Narendranath
Accompanied by a devotee and a few friends, Narendra one day
came to Dakshineswar and entered the small room of Sri Ramakrishna.
He came by the western door, as Sri Ramakrishna described
afterwards, careless about his body and dress, and unlike
other people, not mindful of the external world. On Sri Ramakrishna's
request, he began singing a Brahmo song, 'Shortly after I
sang the song; he suddenly rose and, taking me by the hand,
led me to the northern veranda, shutting the door behind him.
He said, 'Ah, you have come so late! How could you be so unkind
as to keep me waiting so long! My ears are well nigh burnt
by listening to the profane talk of worldly people.' 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, born on earth to remove the miseries of mankind.' |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s epochal message of Shivajnane Jivaseva
- Serve living beings as Shiva
Some time in 1884, in Dakshineswar Sri Ramakrishna was sitting
in his room surrounded by the devotees. Narendra also was
present there. There arose the topic of the Vaishnava religion
in the course of the conversation. Speaking on the essence
of Vaishnava doctrine, Sri Ramakrishna said, 'That doctrine
teaches that one should always be careful to observe three
things, namely, a taste of God's name, kindness to all beings
and the worship of Vaishnavas. No sooner had he uttered the
words, 'compassion for all beings,' than Sri Ramakrishna suddenly
went into ecstasy. Regaining partial normal consciousness
in a short while, he continued, 'Talk of compassion for beings!
Will you, a little wretch, bestow compassion on human being?
Is not a human being God Himself? No, no; not compassion to
Jivas, but service to all living beings as Shiva Himself—Shivajnane
Jivaseva.' |
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Sri
Ramakrishna prophesies to Keshab Sen that his message would
travel far and wide
The Brahmo leader Keshab Chandra Sen stirred England and India
with his eloquent lectures. He was honoured by even Queen
Victoria as one of the most eminent religious leaders of nineteenth
century India. In January 1881, during the winter festival
(Maghotsava) of the Brahmos, Keshab went to visit Sri Ramakrishna
at Dakshineswar. He offered two bouquets at Sri Ramakrishna's
feet and bowed down to him. Sri Ramakrishna also saluted him.
Sri Ramakrishna gave no publicity, held no meetings, yet people
of all faiths and from all walks of life flocked to him, turning
his room every day into 'a parliament of religions'. Sri Ramakrishna
spoke in parables full of similes culled from everyday life.
Yet they would immediately reveal deep spiritual truths in
a single flash of illumination. |
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At
Girish Ghosh’s theatre Sri Ramakrishna blesses sixteen
actresses rejected as fallen by the society
Girish Ghosh was a well-known dramatist-actor-poet of Bengal.
His play on Sri Chaitanya stirred Calcutta and a large area
of Bengal. One day, Girish was very happy to welcome Sri Ramakrishna
at his theatre. Fully conscious of Sri Ramakrishna's divinity,
he called all the actors and actresses to come to Sri Ramakrishna
and take his blessings. On his call, everyone assembled there;
the male actors came and took the dust of his feet. Being
assured by Girish's call, the prostitutes who were actresses
in his theatre, came in a group. There were sixteen of them,
all in their full youth, nicely dressed. Seeing them Sri Ramakrishna
was seized with a divine mood and started singing with his
sweet voice a song about Mother Kali. Listening to his song,
all those women were spell bound. One of them, Binodini by
name, dropped unconscious on the ground under Sri Ramakrishna's
feet and a divine lustre began to glow on her face. Sri Ramakrishna
blessed them all. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s grace for the neglected ones: Rasik -
the sweeper of Dakshineswar
Rasik was a sweeper in the temple garden of Dakshineswar.
He used to call Sri Ramakrishna 'Father'. One day when Sri
Ramakrishna was returning from the direction of the Panchavati,
absorbed in a spiritual mood, Rasik prostrated before him
and prayed with folded hands, 'Father, why don't you bless
me? What will happen to me?' Sri Ramakrishna assured him,
'You have no need to fear. You will see me at the time of
death.' And that is exactly what happened. To be freed from
brahminic pride, he cleaned the open drain of the sweeper
Rasik's house with his own hair while praying, 'Mother, destroy
my pride of being a Brahmin.' |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s grace on the ruffian Manmatha in the house
of Yogin-ma
Yogin-ma or Yogindra Mohini Devi was a great woman devotee
of Sri Ramakrishna, who met him at a moment of terrible torment
in her family. Once when Yogin offered flowers at his feet,
Sri Ramakrishna touched her head and chest. When for the first
time Yogin-ma invited Sri Ramakrishna to her house, her brother
Hiralal asked Manmatha, a local ruffian, to be present on
order to frighten Sri Ramakrishna away. But Manmatha, after
seeing Sri Ramakrishna and hearing a few of his words, fell
at his feet and wept, saying, 'My Lord, I am guilty. Please
forgive me.' When Manmatha went to Dakshineswar Sri Ramakrishna
treated him very kindly touched his body and asked him to
put on the Brahmin's sacred thread. Manmatha went to see Sri
Ramakrishna for the last time in Calcutta. Sri Ramakrishna
asked one disciple to bring a photograph and with his own
hand gave it to Manmatha. Without speaking a word to anyone
Manmatha ran out repeating, 'Priya Nath, Priya Nath (Beloved
Lord, Beloved Lord).' Shortly after Manmatha died of cholera. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna reveals himself as a mighty incarnation power
before Gauri Pundit and Vaishnav Charan at Dakshineswar
One day, Sri Ramakrishna had gone to the Kali temple accompanied
by Gauri Pundit. As soon as he came near the temple, Sri Ramakrishna
began to feel divinely intoxicated. At that time, Mathur arrived
there and soon after was followed by Vaishnav Charan, the
well-known Vaishnava saint, whom Mathur had invited at the
wish of Sri Ramakrishna. As Sri Ramakrishna saw Vaishnav Charan,
he at once gave a loud cry, and ascended, as if in a trance,
on Vaishnav's shoulder. By Sri Ramakrishna's touch it appeared
that Vaishnav was empowered with some supernatural power.
A divine consciousness now dawned upon him. He began to compose
there itself new hymns in praise of Sri Ramakrishna. Gauri,
the tantric pundit hearing the beautiful hymn just composed
by Vaishnav Charan, became silent with wonder and was silently
contemplating the significance of Sri Ramakrishna's actions.
Gauri now rolled on the ground again and again at Sri Ramakrishna's
feet. He was yearning for Sri Ramakrishna's grace. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna’s self revelation as divine incarnation
on 1st January, 1886
It was the first day of January 1886 in Cossipore garden house.
Sri Ramakrishna who was suffering from throat cancer felt
rather well that day. He expressed a desire to come out of
his room and have a walk in the garden for sometime. More
than thirty devotees like Girish Chandra Ghosh, Ram Chandra
Dutta, Akshay Kumar Sen and others gathered in the garden.
As soon as they saw Sri Ramakrishna coming out, all got up
and bowed down to him. The fervent utterance of the devoted
Girish immediately brought an exalted divine mood in Sri Ramakrishna
and he blessed all the devotees assembled there with the words,
'What more shall I say to you? May you all be illumined!' |
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Sri
Ramakrishna distributes ochre cloth and rosary among his young
disciples
Every year during the Indian festival of Makara-Sankranti
monks and pilgrims from all over India go to the pilgrimage
of Gangasagar, which is the confluence of the Ganga and the
Bay of Bengal. Gopal, an aged disciple of Sri Ramakrishna
had a little money and wanted to acquire virtue by offering
cloth to holy people on the auspicious day. On Tuesday, 12th
January 1886 the auspicious day of Makara-Sankranti, Gopal
gave the ochre cloths and rosaries to Sri Ramakrishna who
sanctified them with a mantra. He himself then distributed
them among his young disciples. They put on the ochre cloths
and saluted Sri Ramakrishna who was pleased to see them in
monastic cloths and blessed them. The disciples who received
the ochre cloths were: Narendra, Rakhal, Niranjan, Baburam,
Shashi, Sharat, Kali, Jogin, Latu, Tarak and Gopal. The twelfth
cloth and rosary, according to Sri Ramakrishna's instruction,
was set aside for Girish Ghosh. |
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Sri
Ramakrishna reveals himself to Naren as an incarnation of
Sri Rama & Sri Krishna
As the days of Sri Ramakrishna's passing away came near, his
emaciated body frightened many. The earlier self-revelations
of Sri Ramakrishna were getting eclipsed. One night while
standing by his bed at night, the doubt arose in Naren's mind,
'Sri Ramakrishna has said many a time that he is an Incarnation
of God. If he now says in the midst of the throes of death,
in this terrible moment of human anguish and physical pain,
'I am God incarnate', then I will believe.' No sooner had
Naren thought this than Sri Ramakrishna said, 'O my Naren,
are you yet not convinced? He who was Sri Rama, He who was
Sri Krishna, He Himself is now Ramakrishna in this body: but
not in your Vedantic sense.' |
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