New Havan Kund at The Meditation Center
Transcription
New Havan Kund at The Meditation Center
AHYMSIN NEWSLETTER, ISSUE - 14, OCTOBER - NOVEMBER ' 2009 Table of Contents o o o o o o o o o o Meditation Center Consecrates Its New Havan Kund (Sacred Fire Pit) The Cows are Here! SRSG Receives New Residents Sitting with the Swami October 2009 TTP Report Planting the Precious Seed - Children and Yoga An Insight – Seeing Tour Around Himalayan Temples Vedic Sacred Art Upcoming Events Full Moon Meditation Dates Location of SRSG on the Globe New Havan Kund at The Meditation Center On Tuesday, October 20, 2009, Pandit Hari Shankar Dabral made a brief but informative visit to The Meditation Center of Minneapolis. His main mission: to inform the local community about the traditional, ritual customs and etiquette of the sacred fire ceremony. Earlier in the season, September 13, 2009, The Meditation Center consecrated its new Havan Kund (Sacred Fire Pit). Emilio Bettaglio spearheaded the project with the help of several volunteers who assisted in the construction over the summer months. Dozens of people came together to participate in the consecration ceremony led by Emilio Bettaglio and Swami Ritavan Bharati. Overall, it was a great success! There was much talk about doing several more ceremonies in the future. However, a very highly respected sage by the name of Swami (self-proclaimed Nitpicky) Veda immediately pointed out some very important customs that were lost during the consecration ceremony! – At least from what he could tell in documentary photos that started to circulate around the global community. Immediately, he recommended that The Meditation Center summon Pandit Hari Shankar Dabral to show the community first hand how to conduct these sorts of ceremonies in the future. Pandit Dabral led an extensive satsang around the topic of the Sacred Fire Ceremony. He began by explaining the ways in which these sorts of ritual practices are ingrained and taught to individuals in India, starting from birth - primarily through the observation of parents and elders, as examples, while simultaneously participating in the rituals. These sorts of rituals are integral to the cultural context from which they originate; therefore it typically isn’t something that is taught primarily through words, but though observation and awareness to details from those who are experienced in the actions. By bringing the understanding within, there develops an internal philosophical understanding and the desire to question becomes less and less. That being said, Panditji strongly encouraged the community to ask many questions even if they seem stupid or childish, because we all have to start from somewhere. By following some important principals, we begin to experience things differently. Panditji went on to talk about the importance of integrating the Yamas and Niyamas in our daily practice, particularly the principle of Saucha (Cleanliness). He went into extensive detail about the importance of bathing the body daily and wearing clean clothing (ideally before meditation and participation in ritual activities). Often-times, we spend a great deal of time making ourselves look clean and nice when we go out to a party or want to impress someone etc. but what about the Divine? How would you like to look and feel when you meet Divinity? He also emphasized the importance of keeping one’s meditation space immaculately clean and pretty at all times – with the idea that a sage could come to visit you, unannounced, at any time. By conducting ourselves in a way that is vigilantly clean and tidy we begin to treat our bodies and our entire lives as a sacred shrine. This is why we participate in ritual, not to become overly superstitious, to condemn ourselves and/or others as impure, nor to simply act out a dramatic event for our own amusement. We participate in ritual so that we can practice the action of treating something as sacred and precious - so that we can expand that to our lives and take nothing for granted. Before participating in the sacred fire ceremony, Pandit Dabral recommends that we follow the following procedures with the principal of saucha : Keep the inside and outside of the kund (fire pit) clean. 1. Always try to evoke the Guru. 2. Try to fast the day of the ceremony within your own capacity. 3. Use pure wood (ideally with an aromatic quality such as wood from a mango tree). 4. Bathe the body and wear clean (preferably sattvic) clothing that covers the arms and legs. 5. Immediately before the ceremony, again wash your hands, face and mouth. 6. Do not go near the kund with shoes (out of respect for Agni (the fire deity) and in attempts to maintain the sanctity of the place). 7. Make all offerings with the right hand because the energy force is different therefore utilizing the right hand creates a certain energy flow and the energy of different elements in the body due to the body alignment. 8. Avoid using the index (pointer finger) when making offerings, offering samaghri (mixture of herbs) etc 9. Sit properly (do not put your feet toward the kund out of respect and reverence for the divine.) 10. Make all offerings gently and offer them in the way that you would like to be offered things (do not trough things sloppily, with anger, excitement or lack of awareness). 11. Begin by evoking the spirit of Agni and paying homage to that which is the path of light and righteousness. 12. Pay homage to Guru. Start with the recitation of the Guru mantra at least 3 times (each time ending with an offering of Ghee) 13. Pay homage to Ganesha (deity of the root charka) to bring us solidity in our practice so that we will not be moved from concentration. 14. Do personal prescribed practice (ityukta, gayatri, mahamrityungaya etc) 15. End again by paying homage to Agni and internalizing the fire and light within. 16. Clean the kund (all debris that is left on the top step is swept into the fire, all of the rest that falls on the second or third tiers are unsuitable for the fire and can be spread in the forest). “The ritual of worshiping Agni (the Fire Deity) is to evoke and acknowledge that presence within ourselves,” Panditji stated. Agni is the primordial force that brings us to move and act, to burn and to purify our samskaras and all negativity that we carry with us. We participate in these rituals to acknowledge the path of fire and light so that we may shine in this lifetime and become as pure as gold. We begin by evoking and acknowledging the external fire and paying homage to it. But overtime we internalize that experience and worship our own internal fire within our navel center. Then we no longer need the elaborate ritual of the physical fire because we can worship the Havan Kund within ourselves. These are the tools given to us by the sages. Sometimes we are not able to understand exactly why we should follow these ritual practices, but over time we will see that certain actions create a particular energy field that is conducive to certain things we wish for in our lives. Submitted by Lela Pierce The cows are here! The cows are here! The cows are here! The cows are here! The excitement continued all day Wednesday, October the 28th after Bhagawan Dev, Swami Sukhmit and the new ashram cows arrived here at SRSG after a grueling fifteen hour long journey from Rajasthan. Sadly, the denizens of our newly built luxury Gaushala (cow shed) were not as excited to see us as we were to see them; reluctant, to say the least. It took long hours to get them to leave the truck and almost as long to convince them to walk from the truck to their new home! Eventually however it was done, and except for two rogue cows who are still at large all were properly welcomed, blessed and given prasad by our beloved Swami Veda. The reverence with which the Ashramites welcomed the arrival of the cows was as if a reverence for “Mother.” The cow is a symbol of the divine mother, representing life and the sustenance of life. Lord Krishna is associated with cows, as two of his names reflect: “Govinda” (finder of cows) and “Gopala” (protector of cows). In Krishna’s aspect as a child, he is often depicted crawling on his hands and knees or dancing, often with butter in his hands. As a mischievous child he was called Makhan Chor (butter thief). Of course, the cows will fulfil a very practical purpose of providing milk for Swamiji and the ashram. In India, other “products” of the cow are used extensively. Cow dung is known for its disinfectant and insect repellent qualities and is used to line the floors and walls of mud homes. It is also one of the major fuel sources for households in the villages and rural areas of India. The therapeutic use of cow urine and its use in curing diseases has been highly regarded in India since historic times. Is it any wonder then, that many consider the arrival of the cows as filling a missing element at SRSG; one that was necessary to make our Ashram complete. Sitting with the Swami I wanted to sit there longer. On Swami Veda Bharati's left at the head table two Saturdays ago at University of West Indies’ new Daaga Hall in St Augustine, I heard each breath he took. They were deep, calm, and measured. His hands rested lightly, if not on the table, on each of his thighs. He held his back straight. Swaddled in subtle orange, he blinked infrequently, his eyes lowered and focused. It was, I suppose, a meditative state that, after decades of study, training and contemplation under Swami Rama of the Himalayas, was now his normal condition. The Swami was here to lecture and launch his book, Wanam-India and Africa: A Spiritual Dialogue. Interested people had formed a Committee and the Behavioural Sciences Department at UWI saw the value of his presence and work so they arranged a symposium and a book launch. Those sensible to the philosophy of intercultural commonalities gathered at the Hall to listen and be inspired. I was fortunate to be seated next to him, and to hear his words, practised as he is in the philosophies of spiritual traditions across the world and sensitive as he is to the similarities among those traditions. This, in fact, was the thesis of his lecture: that differences among ethnic groups are artificial; they all share common spiritual philosophies and rituals. Specifically, he spoke to us about Indian and African spirituality, identifying the similarities and suggesting that we confront each other because we do not know our traditions and have allowed our perception of ourselves and each other to become distorted by imperial impositions. He had made several visits to Africa, his most recent was to Benin and Burkina Faso, a trip arranged through his spiritual son and disciple, Ouedraogo Idriss Raoua from Burkina Faso, who turned up at the Swami's ashram, a man whom the Swami described as having a saumya (an endnote explains that this is a common word in the languages of India expressing the character and nature of a person by looking at whom the same feeling arises in the heart as when looking at a full moon) face and mien. From this trip, and others that took him to East and South Africa, the Swami offered himself as a visitor to these parts. He had spent some years in Guyana as a spiritual guide so he understood the ethnic divisions there, in Suriname and in Trinidad. He asked to be invited here; he wanted to share what he had seen of African spirituality and what he knew of Indian spirituality. He wanted to make an intervention here in a moment of political and social tension; he wanted to educate and meditate. He did not go to study Africa, he said; he went to revere Africa. How can one study without sentiment, he asked in his critique of anthropology. Herein is his distinguishing philosophy and from this base, he spoke of many things, including the word "Harambee" in the Swahili vocabulary. Harambee is a concept of people and communities pulling together to build a new nation. The word and concept were as applied and popularised by Jomo Kenyatta. It is Kenya's Independence national motto. Harambee, the Swami had researched, is an expression of praise to Ambee Mata, a manifestation of the tigerriding Hindu Goddess Durga. Indian labourers building Kenya's railway had to lift heavy loads. They would coordinate their breathing by shouting "Har Har Ambee" and lift on the final syllable. The word Harambee entered the Swahili vocabulary and this concept of people pulling together to lift the loads that would build an independent nation was adapted by Kenyatta in 1963. He traced the etymology of the word "witch" in a number of languages as part of his treatise on vodou and shamanism. In Europe,he argued, these people would be respected as wise men and women; in Africa and India, they are labeled witches and shamans. All this and more he delivered in a low, even tone so that sitting next to him, I too felt calmed. Others in Hall must have been similarly affected; when the Swami took us through a breathing meditation exercise at the end of his lecture, a man at the back of the Hall snored. But then mid-week, I read about the Chandresh Sharma and Neil Parsanlal exchange during the budget debate, Sharma head-counting to make a point about anti-Indian discrimination, and Parsanlal crying shame that "...on every occasion this has to descend to race..." Except that Parsanlal was the one who paraded his dougla ethnicity in the same Parliament, using his biology as evidence that his political party was multi-ethnic compared to the people he observed on the Opposition benches. Now, the Swami having left, I am bereft of the calm he inspired but strengthened, for now, against the disingenuous nonsense we masquerade as national debate. Submitted by Sheila Rampersad Sunday, September 20th 2009 "Also published at http://www.ahymsin.org/main/index.php/Other-Authors/sitting-with-the-swami.html" October 2009 TTP Report Namaskar Dear Readers We have had a most auspicious month here at Swami Rama Sadhaka Grama, especially for the two weeks of our recent TTP. On Diwali, the ashram basked in the light of the little deepaks placed all around, while the final day of the retreat was lit by the silvery full moon. Several of our Himalayan Yoga Tradition Teacher students came early to participate in a wondrous trip to the Himalayans. The six day tour brought the travelers into the heights and the homes of the ancient sages. They returned awe struck by the beauty of the Himalayas they had seen. The travelers told of everything from awesome mountain peaks with stunning sunsets to the five-star tenting with white sheets and porcelain sinks and toilets. Everyone would do it again!! Be sure to find more information from our offices about the next trip being planned prior to the March Training. A total of twenty-seven students participated in the training; fourteen in Level One and thirteen in Level Two. It was an truly international group with a large representation from Taiwan. The participants and their home countries are listed below. Level One Alannah Dore - Australia Lori Smith - Canada Yet Héman - Holland Sopa Tamachotipong - Thailand Kim Severijnen - Holland Patricia Desrousseaux - France/Indonesia Elena Ravasi - Italy Vinod Grover - India Manuel Fernandez - Chile Bramhachari Bharat Shree(Karki) - Nepal Swami RishiKumar Panchasheel - Nepal Sunil Trikha - India Wong Lai Siew ( SUE WONG) - Malaysia Vikas Sharma - India Level Two International Seval Aksoy - Turkey Daniel Jalba - Romaina/ Australia Pierre Lefebvre - Canada/ India Diane Speer - New Jersey , USA Taiwan Group Level Two Ms. Jen, Wei-Hui – Taiwan Mr. Huang, Cheng-Hsun Ms. Huang, Yun-Ju Ms. Liang, Hsiu-Ling Ms. Lin, Shu-Chin Ms. Ou, Pei-Chun Ms. Su, Hsiu-Ning Ms. Tai, Hsiao-Mei The class schedule was packed full, as usual. Our amazing teaching staff led the students to experience the phenomenal depth of the teachings of the tradition. Many reported learning what it takes to be still to meditate. Thank you, dearest staff, for your love and detailed attention to the functions of the body and the mind . Our group had a special outing to The Himalayan Institute Hospital Trust, (HIHT), and learned about the impressive work of the many programs there including a recently established University. What a testament to the vision of Swami Rama who established the hospital in the mid-1990’s. We visited the Ayurvedic Center and then had a wonderful lunch on the grass in the sun while being entertained by our HIHT guide, Sunil Kumar. Thank you, Sunil, for your gracious hospitality, an informative tour of the facilities at the hospital and all your great jokes. The moon waxed had waxed full by the last day of our 14 days together; a very bright globe which lit up the ashram. It then led us into the global meditation with Swami Veda in the morning. The closing ceremony for the students was a lovely event. Alana Dore, accompanied by several other students, sang a divine Christian chant which touched the hearts of everyone. The Taiwan group performed a lovely dance choreographed by Radhika, and Swami Panchasheel shared words of wisdom. We were honored with Swamiji’s presence and one of his many gifts to us was to lead us into a still and powerful meditation. Thank you Swamiji for your deeply felt love. Do remember to check the web for details about our next retreat, March 6th -14th, 2010. This is a great time to come and coordinate your stay with some of the other very special events in February and March at the Ashram: the final fire offerings of Ityukta, AHYMSIN elections, Sarva Yoga Retreat, the Kumbha Mela, Insight Touring, etc. Please visit our website, www.hyt-ttp.com , for details about the March 2010 retreat at SRSG in India and the July 25 – August 8, 2010,Teacher Training Program in Minneapolis. Submitted by Maryon Maass, TTP International Office, Rishikesh Planting the Precious Seed - Children and Yoga Dearest Family, Within the last several months a number of members in our global community have made glorious efforts to gather children into their local communities and serve them with the teachings of Gurudev. Swami Veda has communicated that he is very pleased to see these sorts of projects happening all around the globe and would like to encourage all of us to take the initiative to welcome the younger generation into our tradition by offering more children, youth and family based activities in our centers. As you may already know, Swami Veda is planning to gather all of the children and youth together on Dec. 22-31, 2011 for the International Yoga Youth and Children's Retreat (YYCR) in Rishikesh, India. If you haven't done so already please help spread the word to all "young people" in your local community and offer them continual reminders to plan ahead for this event. With honest effort and intention, starting from now, all children will be able to attend this retreat with Swami Veda Bharati and meet children from The Himalayan Tradition found all around the world! It is very important that we plant this seed from now and prepare the younger generation, not only to make this pilgrimage to India, but to know how to make the most of their time there, so that they can continue to live and share the teachings with others in the future. At this time, we are predicting that there will be hundreds of children attending this event, from various countries, speaking many different languages. As you can imagine, there will be quite a diversity of Cultures. Children from various countries will interact very differently with the environment, the adults, and each other etc. Please keep these things in mind while preparing yourselves and your children to attend. If you haven’t done so already please contact here to tentatively reserve your space. (Formal Registration Coming soon!) In the meantime we invite you to please view our new website children.ahymsin.org (soon to be a multilingual site!). To submit news articles and share your photos contact lila here. An Insight – Seeing Tour Around Himalayan Temples The newly born Travel Department of the Ashram (SRSG Travels) organized a unique tour around interesting temples in the Kedarnath range of the Garhwal Himalayas. “Base camp” was a new tourist facility 300 meters above Guptakashi, which is a 170 kilometers, 9 hour drive from Rishikesh through an inspiring landscape. The quality of the base camp was a pleasant surprise: spacious tents secured on a concrete base with electricity and fully equipped attached bathroom. And what a view from the tents: snow covered peaks of the Himalaya over the full horizon, and eagles circling above our heads. And in the daytime, when it was really quiet, monkeys played hide and seek around the tents. Participants were in India to follow the Teacher Training Programme coming from Thailand, the Netherlands and France. From the Travel Department, Silvia Baratta was coordinating the activities with Mr. Manish Khanduri. Together they had planned the trip. Mr. Khanduri directed much of the staff and took care of the participants in an incredibly empathetic way. The pleasant surprises included a hot water bottle delivered to your tent at bed time (the nights cooled down to 8 degrees C) and hot snacks and tea served upon returning from day excursions. The trips made included the Omkarewshwar Shiva temple, which is the winter seat of the famous Kedarnath shrine, the Kalimath temple devoted to the Goddess Kali, the Vishwanath temple at Guptakashi, the Tunganath Shiva temple at a 3 km trek and 800 meter upward climb from Chopta Village, the Lord Vishnu temple at the village of Triyuganarayan, and as an incredible dessert the Kartik Swami temple, a 3 kilometer trek from Kanakchowry. Indeed a dazzling number of temples, which might have been too much for non-Hindu’s when visited in isolation. What made it so exciting for all of us was the breath taking scenery all the way up and down, and above all the villages that we passed on the trek and the countryside with friendly peasant working on the fields, harvesting or threshing the grain. After all, about 80% of Indians still live in the countryside, and when do we foreigners get the occasion of getting in touch with them and see a glimpse of their lives? Thanks to the local guides that were hired, the villagers got explanations about who we were and why we were there. They were taken seriously and we were less seen as intruders. This created some very heartwarming encounters that were certainly among the highlights of the tour. To sum up, this tour, however relatively certainly worth every rupee of it, a short confrontation with Indian culture, past place in an exciting landscape while being incredibly attentive way. Insight-seeing, chosen. expensive, was but intensive and present, taking taken care of in an those words were well By Allman Metten – Guest at the Ashram, participant of the Insight tour, from the Netherlands. Vedic Sacred Art The Vedic Sacred Art program is a tool to help meditators in their concentration and inner energy experiences. It combines the essence of fine-art, of wisdom and of yoga-meditation, to learn to artfully express the inner self. Our emotions are the bridge between the body, the soul and the infinite realms of spirits, so the spiritual creativity reveals spheres of joy and happiness. The Vedic Art program was first presented in 2005 at SRSG, and since then many students and guests have participated in the training. The workshop program includes the design of chakras and yantras, the 51 Sanskrit sounds in and on the body, and the bijas and their effects on the psyche. Participants create their own personal “Holistic Mandala Chakra Painting” for use in supporting their meditational practice. The teacher-artist, Radhika Rosalia Hummel, will conduct workshops in Bali in January-February 2010 and hopes to visit other areas in South-East Asia. Worldwide Events 21st - 26th Febuary2010 Mystic-Asia Ayurvedic retreat in Mauritius with Dr. Sharma click here for more information At the SRSG/India Ashram: Nov 29 - Dec 5 February 1-14, 2010 February 12 February 18 - 25, 2010 March 6 - 20, 2010 February / March 2011 December 22-31, 2011 February 2012 Yoga Camp for Indian Citizens Ity-uktaa final fire offerings, AHYMSIN meetings For more information click here Shiva Ratri Sarva Yoga Conference 18-19 Pre Conference Activities; 20-25 Conference For more information click here TTP Levels 1, 2 & 3 for more information click here Yoga Nidra: Conscious Sleep Conference Yoga-Youth and Children’s Retreat for more information click here Yoga and Meditational Cultures Conference Where is Swami Veda? 2009 7-13 December 2009 2010 1st – 14th February 1 June 24-30 June 2-8 July 12-18 July 24 July – 17 August 18-23 August 1st – 8th Oct 10th Oct 15 Oct onwards May attend conferences as follows: 8-10 January 2010 28th January – 1st February 2010 Copenhagen, Conference of Religious Leaders in conjunction with United Nations Conference on Environment. 3 year completion, fire offerings of Ityukta Mantra at Sadhaka Grama leave Sadhaka Grama, Rishikesh. AHYMSIN European Retreat, Florence, Italy. Contact : Christina Nobile AHYMSIN programmes, Budapest, Hungary.Contact : Papp József Toronto, Canada. Contact : Chander Khanna 17 August, Meditation Center, Minneapolis 26 July, Guru Purnima For full programmes in Minneapolis please visit www.themeditationcenter.org Chicago Rancho la Puerta, Mexico. Contact: Dr. Mehrad Nazari, www.rancholapuerta.com Washington to be finalized re gathering on Washington Mall organized by Powerofone 101010. in Residence at Sadhaka Grama Ashram Ramakrishna Mission, Kolkatta. Conference on Scientific Studies of Consciousness. Auroville, Pondicherry. International – Sufi Dialogue. Full Moon Meditation Dates 2009 2010 JAN 10 FEB 09 JULY 07 AUG 05 MAR 10 SEPT 04 APRIL 09 OCT 04 MAY 08 NOV 01 JUNE 07 DEC 02 JAN 30 FEB 28 JULY 26 AUG 24 MAR 29 SEPT 23 APRIL 28 OCT 23 MAY 27 NOV 21 JUNE 26 DEC 21 DEC 30 For more details please visit : www.globalmeditations.org , www.swamiveda.org , www.ahymsin.org , www.bindu.org , www.yogaineurope.eu , www.themeditationcenter.org etc. TIMINGS: 7 AM in India (IST), surrounding countries adjust the time accordingly, for example Iran is 5 AM. 8 PM in East Asia, 8 PM Singapore time. Australia, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand etc. adjust their times to coincide with Singapore time 8 PM. 8 PM in U.K. (Greenwich Mean Time).Those in all European, and all African time zones, please adjust your sitting time to coincide with 8 PM United Kingdom (GMT). 10 PM in New York. Surrounding countries and regions of South, Central and North America and the Caribbean to match their time to 10 PM New York time. WHEN IS THE FULL MOON ? The dates of the Full Moon Meditations are announced after our Ashram Pandits have worked out the exact hours and minutes of the full moon each month. The hours of the full moon span two calendar days in western time. By Swami Veda’s request, the date with the most full moon hours is chosen for the Full Moon Meditation. Location of Swami Rama Sadhaka Grama on the Globe Below image shows the location of Swami Rama Sadhka Grama (SRSG) on the globe. Also visit this link to know the exact location of Swami Rama Sadhaka Grama (SRSG) in the world http://maps.google.co.in/maps?q=Swami+Rama+Sadhaka+Grama&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&ie=UTF8&hl=en&mid=1237030782
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