2024/01/09

Ramakrishna and His Disciples by Christopher Isherwood | Goodreads

Ramakrishna and His Disciples by Christopher Isherwood | Goodreads






Ramakrishna and His Disciples


Christopher Isherwood
4.34
333 ratings34 reviews


This biography of Ramakrishna was written for the West by one of England's most talented authors. The writing is beautiful in itself, but the story of a most unusual man with unheard of spiritual yearning is what this book is really about. "This is the story of a phenomenon. I will begin by calling him simply that, rather than "holy man,""mystic,"or "saint"; all emotive words with mixed associations which may attract some readers, repel others.

"A phenomenon is always a fact, an object of experience. That is how I shall try to approach Ramakrishna . . . I only ask you to approach Ramakrishna with the same open-minded curiosity you might feel for any highly unusual human being."
Genres
Spirituality
Biography
Religion
Nonfiction
Hinduism
Biography Memoir
Sociology
 
...more
340 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1965


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Christopher Isherwood
140 books1,293 followers

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English-born American writer Christopher William Bradshaw Isherwood portrayed Berlin in the early 1930s in his best known works, such as Goodbye to Berlin (1939), the basis for the musical Cabaret (1966). Isherwood was a novelist, playwright, screenwriter, autobiographer, and diarist.

With W.H. Auden he wrote three plays— The Dog Beneath the Skin (1932), The Ascent of F6 (1936), and On the Frontier (1938). Isherwood tells the story in his first autobiography, Lions and Shadows .

After Isherwood wrote joke answers on his second-year exams, Cambridge University in 1925 asked him to leave. He briefly attended medical school and progressed with his first two novels, All the Conspirators (1928) and The Memorial (1932). In 1930, he moved to Berlin, where he taught English, dabbled in Communism, and enthusiastically explored his homosexuality. His experiences provided the material for Mister Norris Changes Trains (1935) and Goodbye to Berlin (1938), still his most famous book.

In Berlin in 1932, he also began an important relationship with Heinz Neddermeyer, a young German with whom he fled the Nazis in 1933. England refused entry to Neddermeyer on his second visit in 1934, and the pair moved restlessly about Europe until the Gestapo arrested Neddermeyer in May 1937 and then finally separated them.

In 1938, Isherwood sailed with Auden to China to write Journey to a War (1939), about the Sino-Japanese conflict. They returned to England and Isherwood went on to Hollywood to look for movie-writing work. He also became a disciple of the Ramakrishna monk, Swami Prabhavananda, head of the Vedanta Society of Southern California. He decided not to take monastic vows, but he remained a Hindu for the rest of his life, serving, praying, and lecturing in the temple every week and writing a biography, Ramakrishna and His Disciples (1965).

In 1945, Isherwood published Prater Violet, fictionalizing his first movie writing job in London in 1933-1934. In Hollywood, he spent the start of the 1950s fighting his way free of a destructive five-year affair with an attractive and undisciplined American photographer, William Caskey. Caskey took the photographs for Isherwood’s travel book about South America, The Condor and The Cows (1947). Isherwood’s sixth novel, The World in the Evening (1954), written mostly during this period, was less successful than earlier ones.

In 1953, he fell in love with Don Bachardy, an eighteen-year-old college student born and raised in Los Angeles. They were to remain together until Isherwood’s death. In 1961, Isherwood and completed the final revisions to his new novel Down There on a Visit (1962). Their relationship nearly ended in 1963, and Isherwood moved out of their Santa Monica house. This dark period underpins Isherwood’s masterpiece A Single Man (1964).

Isherwood wrote another novel, A Meeting by the River (1967), about two brothers, but he gave up writing fiction and turned entirely to autobiography. In Kathleen and Frank (1971), he drew on the letters and diaries of his parents. In Christopher and His Kind (1976), he returned to the 1930s to tell, as a publicly avowed homosexual, the real story of his life in Berlin and his wanderings with Heinz Neddermeyer. The book made him a hero of gay liberation and a national celebrity all over again but now in his true, political and personal identity.




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Nisha Sharma

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October 15, 2017

This book forms my first comprehensive introduction to Sri Ramakrishna.

It presents the story of an era where the strength of a man and his stature in society was not measured by his materialistic views and wealth but by the simplicity of his life, his devotion towards fellow beings and his spiritual advancement.

While the story is truly inspirational and lays forth the essence of Bhakti Yoga, what was really heart touching was the devotion of the Guru to his disciples and their spiritual development. Ramakrishna gives himself fully to whomsoever he meets and unleashes the divinity in him to transform the lives of his devotees. His innocence is heart touching, his devotion unparalleled, his beauty unfathomable and his teachings timeless.

I would recommend this book to any spiritual seeker and a non seeker as well, for it contains the most profound lessons of life...

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Tara

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January 2, 2011

This was a very good introduction to the Indian Saint/mystic Ramakrishna who lived in the 19th century near Calcutta. He is the teacher of Vivikenanda, who was one of the first teachers from India who came to the first Parliament of World's Religions in Chicago in 1893. Vivekenanda founded the Vedanta Society in the US and other centers in Europe and South America.

It is a bit of wild story of Ramakrishna's life, who was said to be an avatar - an incarnation of God - that comes only once in a great while. His behavior was so bizarre to others - going into Samadhi - losing consciousness of the outside world and directly experience union with God/Goddess or going into estatic singing/dancing at a drop of a hat. His friends and family called in doctors - thinking that he was insane. It was fortunate that he had early followers that supported him that recognized his greatness and because of this, his influence/teachings continue today. He lived as a priest at a temple at Dakshineswar and was able to honor the Hindu gods/goddesses but was not limited to Hindu practice itself.

It's a book for those interested and familiar with Hindu/Yoga philosophy and practice.
nonfiction
read-in-2010
spiritual

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Alex Fear

3 books · 9 followers

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November 13, 2015

It was interesting in parts and I read it to the end but a bit dry and laborious. Could've been a lot shorter, could've had a bit more feeling and not so many unnecessary detours into followers full biographies.

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David Guy

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December 13, 2018

“God has made different religions to suit different aspirants, times, and countries. All doctrines are only so many paths; but a path is by no means God himself. Indeed, one can reach God if one follows any of the paths with whole-hearted devotion…One may eat a cake with icing either straight or sidewise. It will taste sweet either way.”

― Ramakrishna, Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna



Those who are proud of their twenty-minutes-twice-a-day or forty-minutes-every-morning meditation practice would do well to read about the great Indian saints, for whom spiritual practice was virtually all they did. Ramana Maharshi is a good example, or Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj, or—perhaps most notably—Ramakrishna. It wasn’t that he scheduled periods of meditation through the day, or had any particular schedule at all. He decided as a young man to retreat to life in a temple, and from then on meditation was a way of life for him. He fell into samadhi at the drop of a hat.

Samadhi for him was not the mild feeling of being settled in sitting that it is for the rest of us. For Ramakrishna it could be quite incapacitating—his associates sometimes had to hold him up—and might take place in any posture. Several photos show him in this state, like these (of the seated photo, he said that it would serve as an inspiration for future practitioners, and would be hung in countless practice places). He might stay in the state for hours or days. He also entered a different state called ecstasy, when he might sing or dance; in one dancing state, pretty close to the end of his life, he was said to be moving so gracefully that it was as if his joints were rubber.

I grew interested in Ramakrishna when I stumbled across the quote with which I’ve led this article. More and more in my life, the things I read about different religions seem to be converging. I assume that others have noticed that the three persons of the Buddha—the Dharmakaya, Nirmanakaya, Sambogkaya—bear a striking resemblance to the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, in the same way that Hindus regard Brahma as the one God, and see other gods as aspects of his personality. Virtually every religion seems to revere a female figure, whether it’s the Virgin Mary, or the Divine Mother in Hinduism, or the Kwan Yin that Buddhists call on in times of difficulty.

John E. A. Robinson spoke of God not as a being somewhere out there, but as the ground of being, the depth of life, the same way that Buddhists speak of going deeper in meditation, and Hindus fall into deep states of samadhi. Vedantic practitioners seem to see all of us as manifestations of God in a way, but also see particular people as avatars, people who were fully realized incarnations. They saw Jesus as one such person. And there were people in Ramakrishna’s life who declared that he was an avatar. They sometimes discussed this possibility in front of him, and he listened with deep interest, as if they were discussing someone else. He didn’t seem to care one way or another.

Ramakrishna himself was famously open to other practices; when one of his teachers for a time was an Islamic practitioner, his Hindu convictions took a back seat for him, and he had a period when he actually practiced Islam, and prayed five times a day. The same thing happened when he came in contact with a man who first read to him from the Bible. This incident was the most striking one for me in the entire book.

“Ramakrishna’s thoughts began to dwell on the personality of Jesus. As it happened, he often took walks to a garden-house which was situated to the south of the Dakshineswar Temple grounds, and rested there; and the parlour of this garden-house was hung with pictures of holy personalities, including one of the Virgin Mary with the child Jesus sitting on her lap. Ramakrishna became especially attached to this picture. One day, while he was looking at it, he felt that the figures of the Mother and Child began to shine, and that rays of light struck forth from them and entered his heart. As this happened, he was aware of a radical change in his attitude of mind. He felt—just as he had felt during the time of his initiation into Islam by Govinda Ray—that his Hindu way of thinking had been pushed into the back of his mind and that his reverence for the Hindu gods and goddesses had weakened. Instead, he was filled with love for Jesus and for Christianity. He cried to Kali, ‘Oh Mother, what are these strange changes you are making in me?’, but his appeal did not alter his condition. And now he began to see visions of Christian priests burning incense and waving lights before the images of Jesus in their churches, and he felt the fervor of their prayers. Ramakrishna came back to Dakshineswar under the spell of these experiences, and for three days he did not even go into the temple to salute the Divine Mother. At length, on the evening of the third day, while he was walking in the Panchavati, he saw a tall, stately man with a fair complexion coming towards him, regarding him steadfastly as he did so. Ramakrishna knew him at once to be foreigner. He had large eyes of uncommon brilliance and his face was beautiful, despite the fact that his nose was slightly flattened at the tip. At first, Ramakrishna wondered who this stranger could be. Then a voice from within told him, ‘This is Jesus the Christ, the great yogi, the loving Son of God and one with his Father, who shed his heart’s blood and suffered tortures for the salvation of mankind!’ Jesus then embraced Ramakrishna and passed into his body. Ramakrishna remained convinced, from that day onward, that Jesus was truly a divine incarnation.”

Just the fact that Ramakrishna had undergone these experiences would have made him fascinating to me, but when I realized that the great Christopher Isherwood had written a book about him—the man who Gore Vidal said wrote the best English sentences of his generation—I was sold. Isherwood was himself quite involved in Vedantic practice, and apparently took time off from his novels and screenplays to write this rather long book. It is, like all of his work, beautifully written. (I also highly recommend My Guru and His Disciple, which details his own involvement in religious practice.)

I’m fascinated by the way different cultures perceive different religious states. Indian people believe that these deep states of samadhi exist, and so their great saints experience them, while people from other religions—Japanese Zen and Tibetan Budddhism come to mind—see things otherwise and have no such experiences. To read about the physical agonies Ramakrishna went through as he got deeper and deeper into his realization is to wonder what Jesus must have gone through in his 40 days in the desert, and to marvel at how functional he eventually became. Ramakrishna led a largely sheltered existence for most of his life, with various people looking after him at the temple where he presided. He would talk to anyone who showed up, but didn’t go out and seek people. He lived pretty much without an agenda, just did whatever came up.

There is always the question, of course, of how we should live the one life we’ve been given: should we live in a cave all our lives, in a constant state of samadhi, or is it better to be out in the world engaging with people? Ramakrishna did finally touch many people, and seemed completely content with his life. He was an oddly childlike man, who had a deep understanding of spiritual matters but not much ability to live a practical life in the world. Eventually, though, a number of disciples gathered around him, and his most famous disciple, Vivekananda, founded an order in his name. Isherwood writes brief biographies of him and any number of others. It’s fascinating to see the variety of backgrounds they come from, and the various ways they arrive at this one place.

Ramakrishna developed throat cancer when he was relatively young, at a time and place where there was virtually no treatment for it. He died at the age of 50. But as Isherwood points out, he is a saint who didn’t live in the remote past, but at a time (1836-86) when there were historical records, and plenty of people to observe and record his life, as in the massive Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna that one follower put together. Isherwood does a wonderful job of bringing these accounts together and creating an engaging narrative. He sees the man as a phenomenon. There’s no way to explain him. There are only the accounts of various people who met him, and the words he left behind.

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Rohit Shinde

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August 26, 2020

Christopher Isherwood was an American novelist and a Western disciple of Sri Ramkrishna. He was introduced to Vedanta by Alduous Huxley. Huxley himself had a very long association with Sri Ramkrishna through the Vedanta Society of Southern California. Both of these authors were disciples of Swami Prabhavananda who wrote
The Spiritual Heritage of India
. They were later initiated by the Swami as well. I write about Isherwood a bit in order to emphasize that he wasn't just a famous Westerner who had a passing association with Vedanta, but that he had a deep relationship which lasted for around 40 years until his death.

Enough about the author, onto the review! In Isherwood's own words, he calls Ramkrishna a phenomenon, rather than call him a "mystic", "holy man" or any of the numerous qualifiers generally attributed to the "gurus" in religion. He doesn't wish to compete in calling the object of his writing as the "greatest". He simply asks for an open mindedness in approaching the subject matter.

The book describes in brief the life of Ramkrishna, his teachings and his disciples. With clear language and a lucid account, he explains Indian concepts to a Western audience. Although it was written with the West in mind, it is very useful even for Indian readers. He puts in writing what most Indians might be knowing, but are unable to articulate. Specifically to Sri Ramkrishna, there are many instances where even I have some questions of mine cleared up, and I have been following that philosophy for more than a decade now. He articulates concepts which I have found extremely difficult to explain to people because it requires context. Isherwood does it effortlessly without requiring much context. His writing clearly shows that he has spent an inordinate amount of time in the company of Vedantins.

Overall, I would highly recommend this book to understand Sri Ramkrishna since it doesn't take the default route of declaring him to be holy above all else. Of course, he himself does consider Ramkrishna as immensely holy and pure. However, that's not reflected in his writings since that turns off quite a few people.
religion-philosophy

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Purushottam

17 reviews · 4 followers

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February 21, 2019

Most lucid biography of Ramakrishna Paramhansa as compared to other two,the one by Max Muller and the other by Romain Rolland.
Moreover Christopher Isherwood was one of the disciples of Swami Prabhavananda in his Vedantic circle of Ramakrishna order,along with Aldous Huxley and Gerald Heard.This makes this work particularly interesting.
Swami Prabhavananda himself wrote a short book comparing Christianity with Vedanta proper titled "Sermon on the mount according to Vedanta".

Ramakrishna was an extraordinary figure in modern times who gave an entire new definition to Hinduism. But to me he seems close to the idea of "Sanatan dharma",which in its truest terms doesnt require subscription to any religious denomination as explained in "Bhagvadgita as it is" by Prabhupad.
But still we are mortals who are within the maya of spatio temporal web and we can only have a relative viewpoint with respect to reality.So judging Ramakrishna is impossible in this context who transcended this web of Maya.
The idea of determinism of an indian kind which Ramakrishna hold comes close only to Einstein's conception of Reality and Universe which was derived from Spinoza's pantheism.
In contemporary times when the world is torn into diverse camps by fury of sectarianism,bigoted fundamentalism,religious extremism,the ideal propounded by Ramakrishna seems to be singular recourse left for tolerance.
If one wants to start from the scratch to understand Ramakrishna then one can start from here.
There are scores of other works which one might refer to if one is interested in exploring the Vedanta and future possibility of compatibility of various religions,some of them are-

Gospel of Ramakrishna by swami Nikhilananda
Perennial philosophy by Aldous huxley
Life of ramakrishna by Romain rolland
Life of Vivekananda by Romain rolland
First light by Sunil Gangopadhyay
Sadhana by Rabindranath tagore
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Gianmichael Salvato

5 books · 10 followers

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July 3, 2019

I have long been a fan of Christopher Isherwood, and this book certainly doesn't disappoint. Without trying to justify and without pretending to understand why, Isherwood paints a brilliant portrait of a brilliant sage, whose life was a mystery, even to his closest of disciples. Isherwood captures the essence of a man who feared relationships with women, and yet who was even more wholly devoted to Mother Kali than he was to the men with whom he was in love on this plane.

Overall, this portrait is just that... something of a vignette. It doesn't delve deeply into the teaching, nor attempt to interpret the teaching, leaving that to the reader and serious student to do on their own.

As one who dearly loves Sri Ramkrnsa Pôromôhongśo, whose devotion to Kali was something that deeply resonated with me throughout my formal monastic life, I think Isherwood did a fine job of paying tribute to this great sanyassin.
biography
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Amitabh Sarwate

3 reviews

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October 7, 2020

This is an exceptional book. It profiles the life of Shri Ramakrishna, widely regarded as one of the greatest saints to walk this planet in the last 150 years. He was considered an avatar of Lord Vishnu, and by some an incarnation of Jesus Christ. The book also profiles the life of his 12 closest disciples. It makes for a fascinating read because it chronicles the rise of divinity in Shri Ramakrishna and how it inspired not only his disciples but also the thousands who follow his teachings. For the spiritual seeker, it’s a gem that shouldn’t be missed.


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Joe Rodeck

825 reviews · 1 follower

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November 17, 2017

Boring, lazily paced story blandly told. This book is alternately a biography (with a dozen mini-bios) and a primer/intro on Hindu theology/mythology. The author repeatedly has to tell us how saintly, highly intelligent, and superior his subjects are. More irritating is how he often interjects himself in the first person:

"At this juncture I feel the obligation to discuss this particular matter in more detail blah blah blah . . . .



Michael Nguyen

174 reviews · 14 followers

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August 16, 2021
Incredibly underwhelming. Mystical experiences, basic conversations, watered down advaita vedanta, stories about disciples that all ended up merging into one conglomerate sameness. The most interesting part of the book is the end where it describes Vivekenanda's vision for the world and for India, as a place of Godliness and Social Justice. Rationality, a sharp thinker was Vivekenanda, but the activities of Ramakrishna seemed more like spiritual meanderings and navel gazing.
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Amazon Reviews
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Top review from Australia
Gerry ONeill
5.0 out of 5 stars Good read
Reviewed in Australia on 4 October 2015
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A great read about an eastern culture so foreign to that of the west, yet so intreging.
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Top reviews from other countries
Stanley Wroblewski
5.0 out of 5 stars Jai Sri Ramakrishna! The West has a champion for Vedanta in Christopher Isherwoood!
Reviewed in the United States on 2 September 2023
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A brilliant biography of what many considered God incarnate in Sri Ramakrishna. An added plus are the 16 pictures, 5 of the six known photographs of the Bhagavan! A must read for all followers of Advaita Vedanta.
One person found this helpful
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DeeK
5.0 out of 5 stars Must read!
Reviewed in Canada on 19 April 2022
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Amazing book. Well written. I read it slowly because I didn't want it to end. Absolutely loved it
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Somesh
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure love and blessing
Reviewed in India on 4 December 2023
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Reading this book about Sri Ramakrishna is a blessing. To get to know a spiritual "phenomenon" so deeply, and closely is a true blessing. The writer has explained a lot of spiritual terms really well and it's an easy book to read and engaging as well. It felt like I was getting to know pure love.
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ALERGANT Bernard
3.0 out of 5 stars An insight into Hinduism
Reviewed in France on 18 August 2014
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Although written by an excellent author,and even though I was interested to obtain his insight into the Hindu religion, I didn't enjoy this book much because I wasn't convinced about the central character. In fact, it may be an excellent account of the life of Ramakrishna, but I was not persuaded. I haven't finished reading the book and I do not think I shall.
One person found this helpful
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MAKdaddy
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 December 2013
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Excellent view into the masters teachings and life, found it insightful and inspring. First hand perspective on a modern day saint
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Vedanta: A Simple Introduction Vrajaprana, Pravrajika : Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Vedanta: A Simple Introduction eBook : Vrajaprana, Pravrajika: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

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Pravrajika VrajapranaPravrajika Vrajaprana
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Vedanta: A Simple Introduction Kindle Edition
by Pravrajika Vrajaprana (Author) Format: Kindle Edition

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 156 ratings

A concise, and delightful introduction to Vedanta, the philosophical backbone of Hinduism.

Written with verve and charm by a Western nun for a Western audience, this brief book gives a comprehensive overview of Vedanta philosophy while emphasizing its practical Western application.

Table of Contents:

1. Vedanta: An Overview
2. Why Are We Unaware of our Divinity?
The Concept of Maya
3. The Problem of Suffering:
Karma and Reincarnation
4 Spiritual Practice: The Yogas
5 Spiritual Basics: Ethical and Moral Virtues
6. The Harmony of Religions: "Truth is One;
Sages Call It by Various Names"
7. The Oneness of Existence: Unity in Diversity
8. God in Human Form: The Avatar
9. Revitalization of an Ancient Philosophy:
Ramakrishna, the Ramakrishna Order,
and the Vedanta Societies
10. Suggestions for Further Reading
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Print length  90 pages

====

Product description

Review
Clear, easy to comprehend, and concise, this small book is packed full of pertinent information (on)the core issues of life. --Yoga International Magazine, 1999

As a scholar and practitioner of Vedanta, I can say with confidence that this is the best introductory text on Vedanta available in the English language. It manages to communicate this subtle and complex philosophy in terms that are clear and, as the title suggests, simple. But it does so without oversimplifying. I regularly assign this text to my students (college students taking introductory courses on Indic religions) and they have consistently praised it for the clear and engaging style in which it is written. One student reported to me that when she started reading it, she could not put it down until she had read it cover-to-cover. It really is that engaging. It is, of course, an introductory text. I recommend that readers interested in the various schools of Vedanta other than the modern Ramakrishna-Vivekananda-inspired interpretation of Advaita look to other works. But for novices, and especially for those interested in Vedanta as a spiritual practice rather than from a purely scholarly perspective, this book can't be beat. --Unsolicited comments from a professor --This text refers to the paperback edition.
===
About the Author
The author is a nun at the convent of the Vedanta society of So. California in Santa Barbara. She is also the author of "Living Wisdom: Vedanta in the West " as well as the editor of Swami Shraddhananda's "Seeing God Everywhere". She has had several books published in India, including A Portrait of Sister Christine and My Faithful Goodwin, and she is the author of many articles published both in America and abroad. Her writing has been translated into numerous Indian languages, as well as Japanese and German. --This text refers to the paperback edition.

Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0031ER60Y
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Vedanta Press & Bookshop (1 May 1999)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 637 KB
Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ Not enabled
Print length ‏ : ‎ 90 pages
Best Sellers Rank: 219,660 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)118 in Christian Philosophy
123 in Other Eastern Religious Philosophies
136 in Hinduism (Kindle Store)Customer Reviews:
4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 156 ratings

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4.6 out of 5 stars

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Doug Burrow
5.0 out of 5 stars Simple Introduction
Reviewed in the United States on 26 June 2023
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A clear and concise introduction to Vedanta philosophy. If you're new to the concepts of the core teachings of Hinduism, this is a great place to start.

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vijay sadhu
4.0 out of 5 stars Four StarsReviewed in India on 4 June 2015
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good for a beginner
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Kristin King
5.0 out of 5 stars A magnificent introduction to VedantaReviewed in the United States on 8 May 2017
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I was introduced to Vedanta more than 25 years ago through the works of India's Swami Vivekananda, who brought Vedanta to the West. Since then, I've read many of his books and a few by other authors. Vivekananda was an incredibly astute individual and an articulate writer with a gift for presenting, in simple language, the intricacies of Hindu thought. Even so, I wish I'd read this text first.

 It presents Vedanta as the consciousness-raising power it is without losing the reader in the weeds of complexity. I already had some understanding of the four yogas--bhakti, jnana, karma, and raja--but this book covers them in depth. The book also lays out the ongoing, cyclic process by which, when a religious practice has become corrupt, an avatar arises to enlighten humanity (a concept the Bahai's call progressive revelation). This is a concept I'd always wondered about but never fully understood. It also elucidates why Vedanta not only recognizes but embraces the teachings and traditions of Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, and other major religions by outlining what each, in turn, has bequeathed to human spiritual understanding. I give this book five stars because I can't give it a higher rating. I highlighted many pages for my second reading. If you can read only one book about Vedanta, read this one. It will give you peace of mind and appreciation for the world as it is.

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Jeffery D. Long
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Introduction to Vedanta Available in English
Reviewed in the United States on 15 February 2005
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As a scholar and practitioner of Vedanta, I can say with confidence that this is the best introductory text on Vedanta available in the English language. It manages to communicate this subtle and complex philosophy in terms that are clear and, as the title suggests, simple. But it does so without oversimplifying. I regularly assign this text to my students (college students taking introductory courses on the religions of South Asia) and they have consistently praised it for the clear and engaging style in which it is written. One student reported to me that when she started reading it, she could not put it down until she had read it cover-to-cover. It really is that engaging. It is, of course, an introductory text. I recommend that readers interested in the various schools of Vedanta other than the modern Ramakrishna-Vivekananda-inspired interpretation of Advaita look to other works. But for novices, and especially for those interested in Vedanta as a spiritual practice rather than from a purely scholarly perspective, this book can't be beat.

I would also like to say that the reviewer who bashed this book essentially for not being a Christian work has utterly missed the point. This is not Christianity, it's Vedanta! It would be like bashing a book by a Christian author for not talking about Brahman, or samsara...
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65 people found this helpful



J. Joyner
4.0 out of 5 stars PerfectReviewed in the United States on 11 November 2010
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"A Simple Introduction" describes this little book perfectly. It is a great platform to help you branch off into deeper studies of the Vedanta. The Vedanta seeks to unify humanity by looking at the common messages amongst other religious saints. A practitioner of Thelema will find that Crowley was obviously influenced by the Vedanta a great deal and thought very highly of its values and yoga practices when it came time to establish his own magical order called the A.'. A.'. I came upon Vedanta after spending some time studying Thelema and found its influence very great in my life although I never knew it by that name!

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Pravrajika Vrajaprana - Wikipedia

Pravrajika Vrajaprana - Wikipedia

Pravrajika Vrajaprana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pravrajika Vrajaprana
Born1952 (age 71–72)
Occupation(s)Pravrajika (or sannyasini) at Vedanta Society of Southern California, Writer
Known forWriter on VedantaSwami VivekanandaRamakrishnaChristopher Isherwood.

Pravrajika Vrajaprana (born 1952) is a sannyasini or pravrajika (female swami) at the Vedanta Society of Southern California, affiliated with the Ramakrishna Order. She resides at Sarada Convent in Santa Barbara, California[1][2][3] and a writer on Vedanta, the history and growth of the Vedanta Societies.[4][5]

She is also a well known speaker and scholar on Hinduism and she speaks frequently at colleges, universities and interfaith gatherings and is the Hindu chaplain at Cottage Hospital in Santa Barbara.[6] Her works on Vedanta include, Vedanta: A Simple Introduction (1999), editor of Living Wisdom (1994). She is the co-author, with Swami Tyagananda, of Interpreting Ramakrishna: Kali's Child Revisited (2010).[7]

Pravrajika Vrajaprana was born in California in 1952. She graduated from the University of California, Santa Cruz, where she also worked briefly as Associate Professor of Literature.[8] She came in contact with Swami Prabhavananda at the Vedanta Society of Santa Barbara in 1967, while involved with anti-Vietnam war activism.[2] In 1977 she joined the Sarada Convent in Santa Barbara.[1] She took the first vows of brahmacharya in 1983 and had final vows of sannyasa in 1988.[8]

Vrajaprana was a co-speaker with the 14th Dalai Lama at the Interfaith Conference in San Francisco (2006).[9] She was a panelist in the discussion on Interpreting Ramakrishna at DANAM, held at the annual AAR meeting 2010.[10][11]

Selected works[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Jump up to:a b Bardach, Ann Louise (April 2010). "Shangri-La"LA Yoga Magazine9 (3). Retrieved 16 March 2011.
  2. Jump up to:a b Philip Goldberg (2010). American Veda. Crown Publishing. pp. 84–85.
  3. ^ Bucknell, Katherine (2010). The Sixties: Diaries:1960-1969. HarperCollins. pp. xl.
  4. ^ Eugene V. Gallagher, W. Michael Ashcraft (2006). Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 10. ISBN 9780275987176.
  5. ^ Beckerlegge, Gwilym (2004). "The Early Spread of Vedanta Societies: An Example of "Imported Localism"". NumenBrill Publishers51 (3): 301. doi:10.1163/1568527041945526JSTOR 3270585.
  6. ^ The Religion in the United States: Pluralism and Public Presence 2012 Archived 2012-07-11 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Philip Goldberg (2010). American Veda. Crown Publishing. p. 357.
  8. Jump up to:a b Anna Lännström (2004). Stranger's Religion. University of Notre Dame Press. p. xvii.
  9. ^ Kim Vo (April 16, 2006). "Dalai Lama promotes harmony of religions". Mercury News. Retrieved 2011-03-12.
  10. ^ "Panel discussion on Interpreting Ramakrishna" (PDF). Dharma Academy of North America (DANAM). Retrieved 2011-02-01.
  11. ^ Pedersen, Kusumita P. (March 2011), "Book Reviews : Interpreting Ramakrishna"Hinduism Today: 57, retrieved 3 March 2011

External links[edit]


Interfaith Incognito: What a Hindu Nun Learned From an Evangelical Christian
Having been in the back-patting position often enough myself, I propose that what works most effectively is interfaith dialogue that is not initiated for the sake of public consumption. It is spontaneous, unrehearsed and often completely unexpected.
By Pravrajika Vrajaprana, Contributor
Hindu Nun

May 24, 2012, 12:25 PM EDT
Updated Jul 15, 2012

This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

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While I have attended any number of interfaith events and have found them an interesting, even engrossing, experience, one could argue that these gatherings have limited value. I say this not from any lack of respect for interfaith dialogue. Indeed, the monastic order to which I belong, the Ramakrishna Order of India (whose Western branches are known as Vedanta Societies), has long been in the forefront of inter-religious dialogue. Ramakrishna, a Hindu saint of 19th-century India, practiced not only the various spiritual disciplines within the Hindu tradition, he also practiced spiritual disciplines in the Islamic and Christian traditions. He achieved mystic union with the divine by following each path, and thus it was from his own experience that he taught that every religion is a valid and true entryway to the ultimate Reality. That Reality is called by various names since it seen through different lenses, interpreted through various minds, and refracted through various cultures, but that one Reality is the same.


This outlook gained greater currency when Ramakrishna's disciple Swami Vivekananda spoke as the Hindu representative at the World's Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893. The Parliament was the first genuinely representative interfaith event in Western history. Vivekananda's appearance there also marked the first real introduction of Hinduism to the Western world. In his address, presciently delivered on Sept. 11, 1893, Vivekananda noted that he was "proud to belong to a religion which has taught the world both tolerance and universal acceptance. We believe not only in universal toleration, but we accept all religions as true." He concluded: "I fervently hope that the bell that tolled this morning in honor of this convention may be the death-knell of all fanaticism, of all persecutions with the sword or with the pen, and of all uncharitable feelings between persons wending their way to the same goal."
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One hundred and eight years later in New York City, the significance of Vivekananda's words became more poignant than ever. Given that, why would I suggest that the importance of interfaith gatherings is overstated? One reason is that the learning that occurs in these gatherings typically flows in one direction: I speak; you listen. Then, you speak; I listen. There is no two-way traffic here, thus the knowledge that is gained, while worthy, tends to be superficial.


The deeper, more intractable problem is that those of us who attend these gatherings are those most likely to be open-minded about other religious traditions in the first place. Preaching to the choir can be a satisfying experience because we all enjoy getting positive feedback: we all get to agree, we can all get along, we pat each other on the back and we feel good about ourselves and our enlightened motives. But I do not think that these kinds of gatherings are the best way to fundamentally change anyone -- let alone the world.


Having been in the back-patting position often enough myself, I would propose that what works more effectively as far as genuine inter-religious dialogue is what I call "interfaith incognito." By this I mean interfaith dialogue that is not initiated for the sake of public consumption. It is spontaneous, unrehearsed and often completely unexpected. These kind of encounters -- chanced upon without our official garb, without our sonorous voices chanting Sanskrit chants or Quranic surahs or Psalms of David, without our made-for-the-public explanation of our traditions -- can be much more genuine, contain much more truth and can be much more transformative. There are no speeches, just real human interaction. This kind of genuine two-way traffic can effect change, but the change is quiet, incremental and without fanfare. We are not dealing with auditoriums of hundreds or thousands of people, we are addressing one human being at a time and we are also being changed as we change others who encounter us.

I may be the only Hindu nun in the world who is also an enthusiastic choral singer. I love my Sanskrit chants but I also love my Bach B-Minor Mass. I've sung in a choral group for more than 15 years and it was during a choral rehearsal that an incognito interfaith event took place. Every rehearsal during break, I have a cup of Lemon Lift tea. One of our baritones, a kindly looking gentleman by the name of Will, liked the same tea and after some time, he began saving me a teabag, knowing I'd be looking for that vocal-clearing brew. One evening as we were sipping tea, Will said: "You know, I've been singing with you so long, but I have no idea what you do for a living." The question made me smile because I knew he would be surprised by my response. I have never attended a rehearsal in the official saffron colors of my monastic order. I wore jeans and pullovers like everyone else.


In response to Will's question I said: "Of all the people in this choir, I am the one with the strangest occupation." A soft-spoken and careful man, Will said, "No, I can't believe that! What do you do?" OK, I thought, I might as well go for it. "Will, I'm a Hindu nun." I saw the color drain from his face. "You're a what?" "A Hindu nun." "I didn't know there was such a thing." He was clearly perturbed. "Yes, not only is there such a thing, I am one." He stared at me in disbelief. I reached for a tenor walking by, one who had visited our temple: "Denny, am I a Hindu nun?" "Yeah, she's a Hindu nun all right!" Looking at me seriously, Will said: "I'm in Campus Crusade for Christ. I go to India every year and do free heart surgeries."


Now I was the one who was taken aback. Will wasn't the only one with something to learn. "Will," I said, "I'm so happy to learn that. The monastic order to which I belong, the Ramakrishna Order of India, is one of India's largest social service organizations. We have many hospitals and educational facilities -- from pre-school to university level. We have schools for the blind and for the physically and mentally disabled. We do relief and rehabilitation work for victims of famine, flood, epidemics and communal disturbances. We believe that in serving humanity we are worshipping God in the same way that we worship God in the temple."

Will listened gravely then finally said: "I see that I need to learn more about your religion." The truth is, I could have said the same thing myself, although I knew well the tenets of popular Christianity. Will listened with complete attention to every word I said. You can always tell when someone isn't listening to what you say; they may be looking at you with glazed eyes, but their minds are preoccupied as they prepare their counter-response. Will was not doing that. To my surprise, he did not attempt to dissuade me from my tradition nor did he speak slightingly of it. His humility, his humane and respectful response, his willingness to listen and learn instead of preach, taught me more than I taught him. I had attended many an interfaith gathering with Christians, but no one spoke more powerfully to his faith than Will.


And, truth be told, if I had known that Will belonged to Campus Crusade for Christ before we had shared that cup of Lemon Lift tea, I doubt that I would have looked forward to a conversation with him. If he had negative preconceptions about Hinduism, I have to admit that I also had plenty of misconceptions -- and prejudices -- about evangelical Christians. It is shameful to be involved in inter-religious dialogue and still expect narrow-mindedness in others when, in fact, it is lodged in oneself. Had my own unexamined prejudices not unexpectedly been put under the light of Will's open-hearted response, I wouldn't have known they were there.


Was Will's reaction a cosmetic response? Was he merely being polite? Nothing indicates that. We spoke more often during breaks; he was always there, saving me a teabag. His kindness, his goodness, his unselfish character came through whatever he did and said, no matter what or who he was discussing.


A cardiologist, Will developed serious heart problems himself and illness compelled him to leave the choir. After some months elapsed, he called to see how I was doing. I told him that I was praying for him and he was genuinely grateful -- just as I was grateful when he told me that I was included in his prayers. In our telephone conversations today he thanks me for my prayers. I have been on various interfaith panels with high-profile Christians, but no one has broadened my mind more than Will, no one has made me appreciate Christianity more and no one else has given me a sense of how transformative evangelical Christianity can be. And for that, I can only be grateful.

Not everyone is interested in inter-religious events. By and large the world is populated by people who either don't care whose beliefs allow no place for interfaith dialogue -- attitudes we can find in every one of our faith traditions. How we reach them is our challenge. How we change ourselves and remove our own unexamined prejudices is also the challenge. Interfaith gatherings lack the means to solve these challenges. They, like wrongly prescribed drugs, often serve to mask the symptoms without curing the illness. For after our gatherings have ended, our goodbyes have been said and the kumbaya moments have dissipated, what has changed?


The only way to genuinely effect change -- change in ourselves and change in others -- is to be what each of our religions tells us that we should be. To be a Hindu in the best way possible is to be a human being in the best way possible. It works with every faith tradition. By being our religion we do much more for interfaith work than all the speeches we've ever made put together. Do it, and make it a lifetime commitment. And try doing it incognito. You may be surprised by what you discover.


This column is an excerpt from 'My Neighbor's Faith: Stories of Interreligious Encounter, Growth, and Transformation.'

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