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DIARY OF A TRAVELING
PREACHER >>
By Indradyumna Swami
Volume VI, Chapter 18
"Taking Care"
Ukraine & Hungary
August 26 - September 26, 2005
Soon after our summer festival season, Nandini
dasi and Jayatam dasa offered to organize a retreat for me so I
could recover from the strain of 61 festivals in three months.
No doubt I needed rest, but I turned the offer
down. "I need to keep active," I thought, "otherwise
the pain of separation from the festivals will be too great."
Jayatam was not happy. "Srila Gurudeva,"
he said, "you're almost 57. You should start taking better
care of yourself. It took you a long time to get over that flu recently."
Then an invitation came to a festival in the city
of Odessa, on the Black Sea in Ukraine. I jumped at the chance.
"At least take time to go swimming,"
said Jayatam. "It will do you wonders."
"Good idea," I said and threw a pair
of swimming trunks in my suitcase.
The three-day event turned out to be one lecture
and kirtan after another, and I only saw the sea from a distance.
But on the evening of the second day, my body gave me a warning.
I stepped forward to lead arotika in the main tent.
A thousand devotees had crammed in, eager for kirtan. As I reached
down to pick up a mrdanga, I felt a sharp pain shoot through my
right side. I stood up straight, and the pain slowly subsided.
"Too much lunch," I thought, and I started
to sing.
As the kirtan built up, I passed the microphone
to someone else and began dancing with the devotees. After an hour
we were all leaping high. Suddenly I felt the same sharp pain in
my abdomen. I continued dancing, trying to ignore it, but it became
too much.
I had to slow down. I took back the microphone
and starting singing again, but the pain kept getting worse. My
voice trailed off, and I had to bring the kirtan to a close.
"More kirtan!" the devotees shouted.
"More Kirtan!" I tried to smile as I turned around and
walked to the nearest chair.
A brahmacari quickly walked over to me. "Is
everything okay?" he said. "You look pale."
"I feel fine," I said. "No problem."
A few minutes later a senior devotee began lecturing
on stage, and I retired to my room.
"I'll be okay tomorrow," I thought as
I drifted off to sleep.
The next morning I was to give Srimad Bhagavatam
class. As I sat playing the harmonium and singing before the lecture,
I felt the pain in my abdomen again.
"What's happening?" I thought, and I
quickly ended the bhajan.
That afternoon, before leaving for Poland, I initiated
10 disciples in my room. Sadhumati dasi, an 85-year-old disciple
came in to receive gayatri mantra.
She had tears in her eyes. "I've waited years
for this moment," she said.
"Guru Maharaja, I've had a hard life, but
the Lord has always watched over and protected me."
As I was chanting the gayatri mantra in her right
ear, the pain in my side appeared again. I winced, and I struggled
to keep my concentration.
I was curious how Sadhumati had kept her strong
faith in the Lord throughout her life, so I asked her to tell me
about herself.
"I was born near Nikolayev, Ukraine,"
she began, "the youngest of six children. My family was very
poor, and life was austere. Even as children, we worked so hard
that we rarely had time to attend church.
"I was in my early twenties when World War
II started. I was sent to Saratov to sew clothes for the soldiers.
Those were difficult times. We got only 500 grams of bread a day.
Sometimes I cried because I was so hungry. I remember praying to
God that I wouldn't starve.
"I thought that anything would be better than
the terrible conditions we lived in, so I volunteered to fight on
the front lines. Because I was a woman, the local military commander
refused, but I insisted, and he finally agreed. The Russian army
had lost many men in the war. After three months of training, I
was sent to help defend St. Petersburg from the Nazi invasion.
"Although I was a communist, I had deep faith
in God. I saw many terrible things during the war. I often prayed,
'My Lord, if I'm killed today, please take me to You.'
"Once I had to climb a telephone pole to fix
a wire. Just at that moment two fighter planes collided above and
the falling debris knocked me down. I was severely injured, but
I survived.
"After the war I married a soldier, and we
had three children. When my eldest son grew up, he fell into bad
association and started drinking and taking drugs. To maintain these
vices, he began stealing. Finally he left home. Suddenly life had
no meaning for me at all, and I prayed desperately to the Lord to
help me.
"Then one day my son came home to visit, and
I saw many wonderful qualities in him. He'd given up his bad habits
and was peaceful and serene. He said it was due to his faith in
God. He told me he had joined a spiritual movement from India and
asked me to visit his temple. When I did, I was impressed with the
spiritual atmosphere.
"I visited the temple regularly. I was happy
in God's house, cutting vegetables and cleaning floors.
"Several years later you came to visit us,
and after your first morning class, I asked if I could become your
disciple. Now I am getting my second initiation, and I feel completely
safe in Krsna's hands."
I was amazed. "Such is the mercy of the Lord,"
I thought, "that an elderly woman from the Ukrainian countryside-a
former soldier in the Red Army-has become a brahmani Vaisnavi."
I asked her one last question. "Despite your
85 years, you look quite healthy. What is your secret?"
She smiled. "I take care of myself,"
she said.
Her answer echoed the advice Jayatam and Nandini
had given me a few days earlier: to take better care of my own health.
"In one week I'll be in Hungary," I thought,
"and I'll see a doctor about the pain in my side."
After I arrived in Budapest, the devotees quickly
arranged an appointment for me with a good doctor.
The doctor wanted me to first have a blood test
and an ultra-sound scan of my abdomen. During the scan a trainee-nurse
gasped in shock. "O my God!" she blurted out. "Your
liver is so swollen!" The older nurses admonished her with
strong looks.
"So that's were the pain is coming from,"
I said.
Several hours later, the doctor was studying the
scan. "How long have you had this condition?" he asked.
He looked concerned.
"I've felt the pain for ten days now,"
I replied.
"Ten days?" he said. "And only now
you've come in?"
I was silent.
"Have you ever had liver problems before?"
"I had hepatitis A in India 10 years ago,"
I said.
A devotee who had come with me spoke up. "And
he assisted a senior devotee in our movement, Sridhar Swami, in
his final days. Sridhar Maharaja had hepatitis C. Indradyumna Swami
ate something that Maharaja had eaten."
The doctor looked worried.
"You can only get Hepatitis C from contaminated
blood," I said to the devotee.
"Or food contaminated from blood in the mouth
of a patient with the virus," the devotee replied. "Maharaja's
gums were bleeding toward the end."
The possibility that I could be seriously ill suddenly
hit me, and I began to sweat.
"Hepatitis C," I thought. "Can kill."
I felt weak.
"We need to see the results of the blood tests
tomorrow," the doctor said in a professional tone. "There's
no use discussing this any further until then."
On the way back to the temple I was quiet. Back
in my room, I sat on a bed.
"Is this the beginning of a long drawn-out
disease?" I thought. I shook my head. "No, no," I
thought. "It's much too early to start thinking like this.
The doctor said we should wait for the results of the blood tests."
But the persistent pain, the worried look on the
doctor's face, and the devotee's words had all affected me.
"If it actually turns out that I have a serious
disease," I thought, "I'll keep preaching as long as I
can and try to deepen my own Krsna consciousness at the same time.
And I'll make a serious effort to renounce everything that's not
essential to awakening my love for Krsna."
I looked around the room and managed a small laugh.
"I doubt whether such nice facilities as these will have any
relevance when death is just around the corner," I thought.
I shook my head and began to talk softly to myself.
"Shame on you," I said. "You're probably more aware
of Hurricane Katrina and the war in Iraq than Krishna's pastimes
in Vrindavan."
I caught my reflection in a nearby mirror. "And
you've put on weight," I said.
I reached for a pen and paper. "Eat frugally,"
I wrote.
"And how have I been spending my spare time?"
I thought.
"Socializing," I said softly, answering
my own question. "But better to use that time in study, chanting
the holy names, and prayer."
Someone knocked on the door, and I awoke from my
self-analysis.
"Come in," I said.
A devotee opened the door and peeked in.
"Maharaja," he said, "what did the
doctor say?"
"Not much," I replied. "He's waiting
for the results of my blood tests, but it could be serious."
"I really hope not, Maharaja," he said
and closed the door.
"Me too," I said under my breath. "But
what if it's the beginning of the end?"
As I lay down that night, the pain came back, and
I tossed and turned trying to find a comfortable position.
After some time I sat up straight. "Am I ready
to die?" I said to myself. "I should be. A devotee's whole
life is preparation for that final moment."
I remembered a Bengali Proverb:
bhajan kara sadhana kara-murte janle hoy
"Whatever bhajan and sadhana one has performed
throughout his life will be tested at the time of death.
[Srila Prabhupada lecture, Mumbai January 11, 1975]
I lay back down, and as I finally drifted off to
sleep I made a promise to myself: "Whatever comes of this,
I'm going to try and become a better devotee."
Five hours later I awoke, thinking I'd had a nightmare
about being sick. But the pain in my side came back, and I remembered
the reality at hand.
The morning dragged on as I waited to go back to
the clinic. Finally, 10 AM came, and when we entered the doctor's
office, I saw the results of my blood tests on his desk. He was
on the phone, a serious look on his face. I became nervous. After
what seemed like an eternity, he finished the call and picked up
the results. He slowly turned around in his chair.
It was a tense moment.
He looked over the results. Then he smiled. "I
see we're not dealing with anything sinister," he said. "There's
no virus, infection, or tumor."
A wave of relief came over me.
"My opinion is that your liver was already
weak from the hepatitis you had years ago, and combined with your
present state of exhaustion, the long influenza you had, and perhaps
the medication you were taking, it has become swollen.
"The swelling will gradually reduce over one
month, but only if you take complete rest, eat properly, and do
some moderate exercise."
As we came out of the office the devotee with me
heaved a sigh of relief.
"That was a close call, Maharaja," he
said.
"More like a wakeup call," I said.
"To take care better care of yourself?"
he said.
"Yes," I said, "and to take Krsna
consciousness more seriously."
His face brightened. "Soon you'll be just
like before," he said.
I was going to agree, when I suddenly remembered
my realizations the night before. "Actually," I said,
"I don't think things will ever be the same again."
His smile vanished. "What do you mean?"
he said. "The doctor said you'll be fine in one month."
"Last night I made some promises to myself,"
I said, "and I feel they are as valid now as they were when
I thought I was facing a long illness."
The devotee raised his eyebrows.
"There will come a time when a medical exam
won't be so favorable," I said. "And no doubt, one day
I'll have to die. I need to make some adjustments in my spiritual
life. A sannyasi is meant to be the emblem of renunciation.
"A fish can swim in water, but if he tries
to swim in milk he'll drown. Similarly, one in the renounced order
should live a simple life. If he accepts too much opulence he can
fall down.
"While I recuperate, I'll use the time to
increase my hearing and chanting about the Lord. It will help me
and help my preaching. A sadhu shouldn't be like a cow - always
giving nectarean milk but only eating grass."
"Where will you go to recuperate?" the
devotee asked.
"For my body," I said, "I'll go
immediately to Durban, South Africa, and rest for a month in our
temple there. And for my soul, I'll go to Vrindavan during Kartika.
I'll take shelter of the devotees there and try to remember the
transcendental pastimes of the Lord."
svantar bhava virodhini vyavahrtih sarva sanais
tyajyatam
svantas cintita tattvam eva satatam sarvatra sandhiyatam
tad bhaveksanatah sada sthira care nya drk tiro bhavayatam
vrindaranya vilasinor nisi dasyotsave sthiyatam
"One by one, give up all activities that are
averse to your internal mood. Always meditate on the subject matter
that is firmly fixed in your heart. Consider all the animate and
inanimate living entities of Vrindavan to be absorbed in thoughts
of Radha and Krsna. In this way always reside in Vrindavan in a
festive mood in the service of the youthful divine couple."
[Srila Prabodhananda Saraswati,Sri Vrindavan Mahimamrta,
Sataka 3, Text 1]
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