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About Gurudeva >>
Biography of His Holiness Indradyumna Swami
 H.H. Indradyumna Swami appeared in this world
on May 20th, 1949 in Palo-Alto (California, USA).
Leaving aside his university studies at an early
age, Indradyumna Swami devoted himself to the search for spiritual
knowledge. He finally reached his goal in 1970, when he discovered
the International Society for Krishna Consciousness in Detroit,
Michigan. After several months of associating with devotees, he
joined the temple on East Jefferson near the center of the city.
Within a week of joining, he began participating
in and even leading harinam (congregational chanting of the Lord’s
Holy Names) and book distribution parties. That same year, Indradyumna
Swami met his eternal spiritual master, His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta
Swami Prabhupada, Founder-Acarya of the International Society for
Krsna Consciousness, and received both harinam and brahminical initiation
from him.
Following the instruction of his spiritual master
to “preach boldy and have faith in the holy names,” Indradyumna
Swami left the USA in 1971 (only a year after joining) and headed
for Europe where he would assist devotees in opening new centers.
Srila Prabhupada’s desire was that noble and educated
men should dedicate there lives to spreading Krishna consciousness
all over the world. In order to fulfill this desire of his spiritual
master, Indradyumna Swami took sanyassa (renounced order of life)
in 1979, at the age of 29. In 1983, he served as temple president
for a few years at the New Mayapur Project in France.
Since 1986, Indradyumna Swami has been traveling
and spreading the message of Krishna Consciousness throughout the
world in countries such as the USA, Poland, South Africa, Australia,
New Zealand, Hungary, Ukraine, Russia and South America. He is well-known
as one of ISKCON’s most active preachers.
A shining example of his large-scale preaching
is the traveling Festival of India tour which he organizes every
year in Poland. These festivals attract thousands of people, who
learn about and relish the nectar of Krsna Consciousness through
music, dance, drama, spiritual discussion, and prasadam (food that
is first offered to the Lord).
Since 1995, Indradyumna Swami has been writing
his Diary of a Traveling Preacher, which describes many of his adventures
and realizations while continuously traveling. The following autobiographical
essay, “Shelter Beyond Duality,” was published in the 1993 edition
of ISKCON’s Back to Godhead Magazine.
"Shelter Beyond Duality"
By Indradyumna Swami
This is the story of my life. Or better yet, the
story of two lives: the one my spiritual master saved me from, and
the one he gave me. Both concern the same person, but one life was
temporary, ignorant, and full of suffering, and the other is eternal
and full of knowledge and bliss. This is the story of the miracle,
for me at least, of how I was delivered from the ocean of material
life.
You could say my story
begins within the womb. But I know it goes back many lifetimes,
to a past too distant for me to know or understand. If cameras had
existed that long ago, I imagine we'd see on these pages photos
of kings and paupers, animals and men, the famous and the infamous
— all dying and then being born again. But this chapter of my story
begins, like all life stories, from the day I was delivered anew,
with a mother and father, sisters and brothers, cousins and nephews.
Life was tough from the start... a slap on the
backside. But at age four came my first hard taste of reality: I
contracted spinal meningitis. The doctors were experimenting with
new drugs, but none of them had proved reliable. I remember seeing
my mother cry when they told her what I had. All I knew was a raging
fever and lonely months in the hospital ward as doctors desperately
tried to save my life. I remember once hearing nurses whispering
about my inevitable death. Anxious for shelter, I wondered, "Where
is my mother now?"
But after some months the medicines proved effective.
I left the hospital a little wiser. I was only four, but I knew
more what to expect. Life wasn't going to be all what the storybooks
said.
When I was six, Old Yellar died. He was the neighborhood
hound, the best friend of all the boys on the block, our constant
companion until the day he crossed the road a little late. The car
that hit him didn't even stop. Some of the boys ran after it throwing
rocks. The rest of us cried at Old Yellar's side as we watched his
life ebb away. We pleaded to Mr. Franklin, who came by in his ice
cream truck, to save Old Yellar. He just stood motionless, because
it was too late. Again a distant thought came into my mind: "Who
can we turn to for help?"
As I grew, I mostly learned how to survive. School
seemed irrelevant. I became disillusioned quickly, my mind pondering
the dualities of birth and death, happiness and distress. Nothing
would last. That I had seen—not the shelter of the womb, Old Yellar,
or for that matter even me.
I began to see that others were also perplexed
and suffering. Not only people, but animals as well.
But not everyone was sympathetic to how I looked
at things. At twelve years old in school we were asked to draw what
we'd like to see on the table at the upcoming Thanksgiving Feast.
I drew vegetables, no turkey or meat. My classmates saw it as hilarious;
my teachers thought it odd. And the day I refused to eat meat my
father figured I was downright impolite, and he sent me to bed without
supper. As I lay in bed, I thought how hard life is, even if you
try to do things right.
At sixteen I made the break. "Maybe it isn't
like this everywhere," I thought. Perhaps somewhere else I
could find a really satisfying life. Sometimes I'd felt I'd come
close, especially when my friends and I surfed the waves at Stinson
Beach, near San Francisco. Out there, we were free and moving.
With great hope and expectations we packed our
gear that summer and headed south. Perhaps in Mexico we'd find the
perfect wave. But even as we left, my friends chided me when I said,
"But it won't last forever."
At San Blas we were thrilled
when we caught waves that gave rides a mile long. But the real challenge
was around the point, at Rodger's Bay. There the waves broke in
perfect formation. The curl was flawless—you could shoot the tube!
It seemed perfect. But there was one problem—the waves broke onto
a coral reef.
I don't really know what impelled me to paddle
toward the reef that day. Some boys challenged me; others pleaded
with me not to go. Perhaps I was desperate.
I caught the wave with ease. It was big, beautiful,
and long. I quickly turned left, crouched, and suddenly found myself
racing into the tube. I was thrilled, exhilarated—this was it! But
in my excitement I lost my concentration and slipped... right into
the deadly reef.
I remember screaming for help as the coral tore
into my skin. But in the back of my mind I thought again, "Who
can help me now?"
I rolled and tumbled across the rocks and landed
close to the beach. Some villagers came and pulled me out. I was
fortunate; except for a large gash on my left leg, I had mostly
minor cuts and bruises. But my surfboard was finished, and so was
my search for the perfect wave.
Back in the States, I reflected that if I couldn't
save myself, maybe I could save others. So I enlisted in the Marine
Corps, America's top fighting unit. My country was fighting in Vietnam
to stop the spread of communism. I thought if we could win in Vietnam,
perhaps we could bring peace and happiness to the world.
It's been said that we can see heaven and hell
even in this life. That year I saw hell as I went through the ordeal
of becoming a killer. But often as we'd fix our bayonets for a practice
duel my mind would object, "You don't really believe in the
war, do you? Be honest with yourself—you're only here for name and
fame. And you might well lose your life for it."
One day I approached my authorities and refused
to fight. The next several days in jail gave me time to think. "It's
easy to kill but so hard to know what to live for."
By the time I received my discharge papers, I didn't
know whether to go left or right. I wandered in desperation, thinking
how each time I made a step in life I met with frustration and despair.
One day in the privacy of my room, I called out to God. "My
Lord, I'm in a world of distress! If You're really there, please
give me shelter."
The next afternoon I wandered into a museum, intent
on forgetting myself by browsing through antiquities. An exhibit
on India's culture and traditions caught my eye. As I surveyed the
paintings and artifacts, my eyes fell upon the most beautiful painting,
marked "Krsna and His Milkmaids." The scene captivated
my attention, and I moved closer to read the text that went with
it:
"This scene depicts heaven, where God enjoys
eternal life."
"Yes," I thought, "that's what I'm
looking for—eternal life, a place beyond the dualities of the world.
But could it be like this? Who is Krsna, and what is a 'milkmaid'
anyway?"
I looked around
for someone to explain the painting in more depth. But a guard announced
that the museum was about to close. Disappointed, I walked out the
main entrance and came upon a most amazing sight. Seated on the
lawn before me were orange-robed monks with large staffs in their
hands. They were speaking intently to a crowd around them.
I inched forward to hear better and was stunned
when the tallest monk told the crowd about Krsna and the spiritual
world. I learned later that what he was speaking is found in the
ancient Vedic scripture Brahma-samhita:
Krsna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead. He
lives forever in the spiritual world, beyond the dualities of material
life. His transcendental land of Vrndavana is populated by goddesses
of fortune, who appear as milkmaids and who love Krsna beyond anything
else. The trees there fulfill all desires, and the waters of immortality
flow through land made of wish-fulfilling stone. There all speech
is song, all walking is dancing, and the flute is the Lord's constant
companion. Cows flood the land with abundant milk, and everything
is luminous like the sun. Since every moment in Vrndavana is spent
in loving Krsna, there is no past or future.
"That's it!" I yelled out.
Surprised, the monk turned toward me. "That's
what?" he asked.
"That's what I'm looking for!" I replied.
"I prayed last night. Then I saw the painting in the museum...and
now I've found you!"
"He's
probably on LSD," remarked a woman to my left.
I composed myself, a bit embarrassed that the entire
crowd was staring at me.
But I was determined. Never before had I heard
such knowledge, and so concisely explained. I introduced myself
to the monk.
"I'm Visnujana Swami," he said, "and
we've come to take you home."
And so it began—this new life, my life as a devotee
of Krsna-way back in 1971. If I could show you all that's happened
since then, you'd see many
photos on this page—of singing the holy names and dancing, of
feasts and illuminating discourses too numerous to mention or explain.
Let it suffice to say that on that day I started home again, beyond
the dualities of birth and death, to the shelter of the eternal
realm.
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