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DIARY OF A TRAVELING
PREACHER >>
By Indradyumna Swami
Volume VI, Chapter 17
"The Last Festival"
Poland
August 11 - 25, 2005
By the time I returned to Poland after my short
visit to Ukraine, the devotees had broken down Krsna's Village of
Peace at Woodstock and returned to our summer base on the Baltic
coast.
They greeted me with a small reception, and I spoke
about our plans for the next two weeks. This would be the final
leg of our festival tour. The devotees had been holding festivals
almost every day since May, and they were tired, but when I mentioned
that the season was drawing to a close, many of them had tears in
their eyes.
For all of us here, the festivals are our life
and soul. Though we had experienced many obstacles in the past months,
endured many austerities, and bore witness to the sufferings of
many people, the pleasure of giving Krsna consciousness to others
far outweighed any inconvenience we had undergone.
As in every other year, hundreds of thousands of
people had attended our festivals. I thought about the magnitude
of what we had done, and I did not know how to repay the devotees.
Then I remembered the dream about Srila Prabhupada I had had in
Ukraine, and I shared it with the devotees. They listened spellbound.
"What we accomplished this year was a team
effort," I said. "Therefore the embrace that Srila Prabhupada
gave me in the dream is meant to be shared with all of you."
Though rainstorms were predicted, the weather remained
perfect throughout the next two weeks, so we lengthened the hours
of Harinama, causing the attendance at the festivals to increase.
Each summer we hold our final event in the town
of Pobierowo. As we were setting up the grounds there, the mayor
came by on her bicycle and spoke with Jayatam dasa.
"When people heard that your last festival
would be here," she said, "many extended their vacation
an extra three days. Our office has been flooded with inquiries
about the program. You can expect a very big crowd."
I heard about her prediction, and I decided to
make it come true, so I took the Harinam party out to the beach
early that day. Even in the morning it was so crowded that our group
of 110 devotees had difficulty maneuvering through the people lying
on the sand.
At one point I noticed a man following us, and
after some time I went and spoke with him.
"Are you enjoying the chanting?" I asked
him.
"Very much," he said. "I've been
hearing about your festival for years, but my wife and I could never
get enough money together to come up to the coast to see it, but
last week I convinced 18 of my neighbors to pool their resources
with ours so we could all come."
He motioned with his head toward some people sitting
in the sand nearby. I looked over at them, and they smiled and waved.
"I was so excited I couldn't wait for the
festival this afternoon," he continued, "so I decided
to join you people singing here on the beach. Many of the townspeople
say it's as good as the festival itself."
An hour later, I noticed another man following
us. And I wasn't the only one. A number of young people on the beach
were pointing at him excitedly. I took the liberty of approaching
him, and he introduced himself.
"I'm the bass player in a famous rock band
in Poland," he said. "When your group passed by on the
beach, I was impressed with the man singing and playing the accordion.
He's one of the best musicians I've ever heard. What's his name?"
"Sri Prahlada das," I replied.
I could not hold back a smile. "But he's not
for hire," I added.
As we moved along, people kept stopping us, asking
if they could take a photo with us. Posing for photos with people
was a daily affair for us on the beaches, and as they snapped away,
we smiled and waved, happy that our colorful procession would be
remembered back home after vacation was over.
A little further down the beach I was startled
by an unexpected sight. A seal, lying in the sand, jumped up and
lumbered into the water. I had never seen a seal in the Baltic Sea
before in all the years we had been doing Harinam there.
"The locals say he's been here all summer,"
said a devotee. "They think he must have wandered in from the
North Sea."
I thought that was the end of it and continued
the Harinam party, keeping close to the shore, but then I noticed
the seal swimming alongside us. I thought he would pull away after
a few moments, so I called out to the devotees, "Look at that!"
The devotees laughed and raised their eyebrows,
and the seal kept swimming beside us in the water. Every once in
a while he would let out a loud bark.
Soon the crowds noticed this and people started
following us. As we kept chanting and dancing down the beach, the
seal continued to swim along, perking its head up every few meters
to look at us. The crowd following us became larger and larger.
When we reached the end of the beach we turned
around to go back, and sure enough, the seal turned and followed
us. Finally, a young woman entered the water and started swimming,
and the seal turned and followed her, a few meters behind. That
was the last we saw of him.
"It's like you mentioned the other day, Guru
Maharaja," said a devotee. "The beach is no place for
brahmacaris."
On the way back to the festival site a devotee
stopped in a camera store to have her film developed.
A few minutes later she came running up to me.
"Maharaja," she said, "the store owner was really
happy to meet me. He even shook my hand. He said that practically
every roll of film he's developed in the last few days has pictures
of us with people standing next to our kirtan party on the beach."
I entered our festival grounds with mixed feelings.
I had no doubt it would be a big festival, as the mayor had said,
but it would be the last of the year. The hours were passing, and
soon the tumultuous roar of the holy names would come to an end.
As I approached the stage, two young girls, about
nine years old, came running up to me.
"Do you remember me?" said one, almost
out of breath.
"Well, no," I said. "I can't say
that do. I'm so sorry."
"I was at the festival last year," she
said, "and the year before, and the year before that. I live
in this town, and I wait all summer for the festival to come. This
is my friend, Agnieska. It's her first time."
Agnieska smiled. "I was supposed to go to
Italy today with my grandparents on vacation," she said, "but
I told my Mom I'd rather stay back and come to the festival."
"Really?" I said. "You stayed back
for the festival instead of going to Italy?"
"Yep," she replied, "and I'm really
glad I did 'cause I heard there's going to be a wedding today."
"Yes," I said, "there will be a
wedding."
"Can we be in the wedding?" the girls
said in unison. "Please! Please!"
Their enthusiasm made me smile. "Sure,"
I said, "as a matter of fact, we were just looking for two
little girls to escort the bride through the crowd onto the stage
and to bring the rings out when the couple exchange their vows.
So you'll have to run over to the fashion booth and get dressed
in saris real quick."
In half a moment they were there.
A short while later, people started pouring into
the festival. Before we even started, the tents were filled with
the curious, while the restaurant was filled with the hungry, and
the seats in front of the stage with those eager for entertainment.
It was just like all the other festivals of the summer ... except
that it would be the last.
I tried to forget that the end of the season was
near and kept walking toward the stage to tell the devotees to start
the opening bhajan. The hundreds of seats in front of the stage
were already full, and there was still 20 minutes to show time.
As I got closer, Nandini dasi came up to me.
"Srila Gurudeva," she said, "something
wonderful just happened."
"What was that?" I said.
"As I was driving to the festival an hour
ago," she said, " a desperate-looking young man ran up
to the window of the car and begged me to stop. 'My girlfriend is
about to commit suicide,' he said. 'Please take me to her.'
"I asked him where she was, and he said, 'The
train station.'
"I said I would take him and we drove off.
I was not in devotee dress because I had been doing legal work in
some offices. As we drove along he told me how grateful he was.
"In order to take his mind off the stressful
situation, I asked him what his interests in life were. 'The Festival
of India,' he said. 'I visit their website regularly. What these
people do is simply incredible. I came to meet them personally,
but my girlfriend just had an argument with her mother and wants
to do something really stupid.'
"I tried to change the subject again, and
I asked him if he was a student.
'Yes,' he said, 'I'm studying philosophy at the
university in Krakow. But it's all very boring compared to the philosophy
I read on the Festival of India website. The Hare Krishnas understand
the bigger picture of life: karma, reincarnation, the material world,
and the spiritual world. And they have a really pure lifestyle.'
"I was amazed. Then he told me, 'Actually,
I'd like to become a volunteer and help them spread their message.'
He paused and studied me curiously for a moment. Then he turned
his head to look in the back seat and saw the samosas I was bringing
to the restaurant. He looked at me with his eyes opened wide. 'Are
you a member of the festival group?' he said.
"I smiled and told him I was.
"'Wow!' he said. 'This is incredible! I got
to meet one of you personally. Now I can see that you really do
care for people. After I deal with my girlfriend, I'll come straight
back to the festival. Can you help me become a volunteer?'
"I told him I could, and with that he jumped
out of the car, just as we came up to the train station. I'm waiting
for him to come back to show him how he can become a volunteer."
After speaking with Nandini, I continued towards
the stage. As I walked along, I noticed we had the biggest crowd
of the summer. But rather than make me happy, it only gave me more
pain as I thought about the end of the season.
Soon the stage program started. An hour later when
Tribuvanesvara dasa, our master of ceremonies, announced the wedding,
the shops and restaurant quickly emptied and people hurried forward
to watch.
I started toward the stage. "They won't understand
if I look sad," I thought, so I forced myself to smile. Then
I walked onto the stage with my translator and welcomed the huge
crowd.
"We're honored that so many of you have come
to participate in this traditional Indian wedding," I said,
my voice bellowing out over the sound system. "We're pleased
to share this very colorful and joyful occasion with all of you.
"Our bride and groom, Kunja-kishori dasi and
Dayal Nitai dasa, are from St. Petersburg, Russia. They're part
of our international group of devotees who have been putting on
this festival for 16 years on the Baltic coast."
I suddenly felt overcome with emotion and had to
stop. I took a few deep breaths and continued.
"It has been Kunja-kishori's and Dayal Nitai's
dream for several years to be married at our festival. I'm sure
they will appreciate that so many of you have come to encourage
them."
I paused for a moment. "But I must mention
one thing," I said. The crowd became silent as the tone of
my voice changed.
"The bride is blind," I said slowly.
"She won't be able to see anything that takes place on the
stage today."
Many people looked startled.
"But she told me that she's never felt her
blindness a handicap," I said.
"She perceives the world fully through hearing.
If anything, she told me, her blindness is a mixed blessing, as
it has brought her closer to God.
"I told her how many of you have come to her
wedding today, and she is thrilled. My request is that you help
her enjoy this auspicious occasion in a way she can understand:
by loudly applauding the special moments of her wedding."
Many people nodded their heads.
Then we began. First Dayal Nitai walked to the
stage from the back of the festival through the crowd, accompanied
by his friends, all chanting Hare Krishna and playing musical instruments.
The crowd looked pleased as he walked up onto the stage.
But they were really waiting for Kunja-kishori.
Soon she appeared, walking slowly on the same path with her girlfriends
and the two little girls in their new saris. The entire audience
stood up and gave her a round of thunderous applause.
She came onto the stage and circumambulated her
husband seven times with the help of a friend. Then she stood before
the crowd to another round of loud applause. "Bravo! Bravo!"
yelled a man.
When Dayal Nitai lifted Kunja-kishori's veil, revealing
her lovely face, the crowd burst into applause again and continued
for a long time. When the couple exchanged garlands, the crowd applauded
even louder.
When, on behalf of her father, I gave her away
to the groom, the crowd applauded yet again and roared with approval.
And so it went at every stage of the wedding. I
couldn't remember ever having participated in a public presentation
of Krsna consciousness where the crowd participated so eagerly.
At the end of the wedding, Dayal Nitai helped Kunja-kishori down
the stairs and off the stage, where they were met by hundreds of
people, all applauding.
As I stood on the stage watching it all happen,
I remembered Srila Prabhupada's words:
"India will conquer the world by this Krsna
culture. Rest assured."
[Pandal lecture, Mumbai March 31, 1971]
Then once again I remembered that the festival
season was coming to a close, and my joy at seeing so many people
appreciating Krsna consciousness faded into sadness. I went behind
the stage curtain and sat alone for a few minutes, trying to regain
my composure.
After I came down from the stage, I met Nandini
and Jayatam. I could see by the looks on their faces that they were
feeling the same emotions as I. Just at that moment, a well-dressed
older couple approached us.
"That was a beautiful wedding," the man
said, "as is everything else you are presenting here."
"Thank you," I said.
"One of your members told me you've been doing
this festival for 16 years," he continued." Is that true?"
"Well we started out simple," I said,
"but yes, this is the 16th year."
He looked at me for a moment and then put his hand
out. As I shook it he said, "May your festivals go on until
the end of time and one day more!"
I was so touched I couldn't reply.
As he and his wife left I turned to Jayatam and
Nandini. "That's the only reward we want for our service,"
I said. "Whatever difficulties we've undergone this summer,
that one handshake makes it all worthwhile."
The next couple of hours went quickly. Before I
began the final kirtan on stage I opened my heart to the thousand
people standing in front of me.
"Ladies and gentleman" I began, "this
is a very emotional moment for all of us here at the Festival of
India. This next performance, the singing of Hare Krishna, will
be the last of the season.
"We have enjoyed sharing with you and others,
this wonderful spiritual culture of India. It has much to offer
the world. We live in troubled times, but this Krsna consciousness
movement is teaching the best way to live in this world, while preparing
us to return home, to the spiritual kingdom."
The crowd was listening to every word. I didn't
have to convince them of much. The festival itself had already done
that.
"We look forward to seeing you again at another
one of our festivals," I continued. "God willing, we'll
be back again next year. The following kirtan is dedicated to all
of you. Without your enthusiastic participation this festival wouldn't
be the great event that it is."
When I stopped they applauded, just as they had
so done many times throughout the program.
"They're appreciating Krsna consciousness,"
I thought, "by the mercy of Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu."
I paused for a few seconds before beginning the
last kirtan. As I looked out at the sea of people, I prayed to the
Lord that I might envision that moment when I leave my body. It
was everything I had worked for in life.
Then fighting back tears, I began the final kirtan.
I took shelter of the holy names knowing that deep feelings of separation
would soon overcome the other devotees and me when the program finished.
What would life be without the festivals, which bring joy to the
lives of hundreds of thousands of people?
saiveyam bhuvi dhanya gauda nagari velapi saivam
so'yam sri purusottamo madhupates tany eva namani tu
no kutrapi niriksyate hari premotsavas tadrso
ha caitanya krpa nidhana tava kim viksye punar vaibhavan
"The fortunate town of Navadvipa remains.
The seashore remains. The city of Jagannatha Puri remains. The holy
names of Lord Krsna remain. But alas, alas! Nowhere do I see the
same kind of festival of pure love for Lord Hari that I saw before.
O Lord Caitanya, O ocean of mercy, will I ever see Your transcendental
glory again?"
[Srila Prabodhananda Saraswati, Sri Caitanya Candramrta,
text 140]
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