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The Seventh Goswami (by His Divine Grace Srila Bhakti Raksak Sridhar Dev-Goswami Maharaj. Originally published as an introduction to the first edition of Sri Nabadwip Dham Mahatmya published as The Hidden Treasure of the Holy Dhama Nabadwipa)
Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur appeared (in 1838) in a very famous Kayastha family, bearing the title Dutta. In Calcutta there is a place called Hat-khola Dutta which was named after the family. Near Birnagar there was a big village named Ula, and the family of the title Mustauphi were landowners there. Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur's mother came from this line. Bhaktivinoda Thakur was born and brought up at Ula, and he studied at Krishnanagar college. Of course, he had exceptional talent. He came into contact with the then educated society. Especially, there was a Mr. Duff, a Christian missionary who established the Scottish Church College. Duff was encouraging and attracting many of the young Bengalis of the time to take up Christianity. Gradually, Bhaktivinoda Thakur had close association with the Brahmo Society, the so-called culturally advanced followers of Ram Mohan Ray. Maharsi Devendranath Thakur's elder brother, Dvijendranath, was his very intimate friend. For his livelihood he accepted government service. He was posted at Orissa in the position of subdivisional officer. He was also posted as inspector of the Jagannath Puri Temple, where his duty was to guard against corruption. At that time he came into contact with the Srimad-Bhagavatam, and he tried to read it. He was gradually charmed by Bhagavatam, Sri Chaitanya-caritamrta and the life of Sri Chaitanyadev. The Brahmo Association had expected much of him because of his scholarly nature; he could write and debate well. But after coming into contact with the Bhagavatam, he dissociated himself from them. When he was serving in Dinajpur he gave his speech on Bhagavatam, and it was then that he completely separated himself from the Brahmo school, and he was seen to side with the Vaisnava school of thought in the line of Mahaprabhu. And gradually he also read the sastras and wrote many books on Vaisnavism. After his retirement, he wanted to go to Vrndavana and pass the rest of his life there. But he repeatedly had a dream that he must discover the actual Birthplace of Sri Chaitanyadev. He could not neglect that dream. He again entered into service at Krishnanagar, and there, he consulted the records of the locality. With the help of those records, and by his divine inspiration, he discovered the Birthplace at Yogapitha, Mayapur. Then, with deepened interest, he visited the entire Nabadwip-mandal; and with reference to the Scriptures he gave a description of both the ancient and contempory holy places in the Dhama of Mahaprabhu. He established a committee to ensure that the Service of Mahaprabhu's place of Advent continue. Lastly, he handed it over to our Prabhupada (Srila Bhakti Siddhanta Saraswati Goswami). When Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur passed away, Srila Prabhupada arranged a condolence meeting in a public hall and invited many respectable gentlemen. Amongst them were the leading scholars of the time, including Bipin Pal, the then principal of the Metropolitan School; and Satish Sarkar, Panchkari Bandopadhyay, and others. NEW THOUGHT TO THE WORLD They all spoke very highly about Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur, recognizing that he gave new thought to the society at large; his writings were of original character, not stereotyped. His investigations into Vaisnavism excelled that of all the modern Acaryas. Shishir Ghosh also once said, "We have heard of the Six Goswamis of the time of Mahaprabhu, but Bhaktivinoda Thakur's writings prove that he holds the seventh position amongst the Goswamis. He has left us such extensive and original writing about the teachings of Sri Chaitanyadev." In this way, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur left the world his literature—he is in his literature, present forever. He has delivered his writings about the Teachings of Mahaprabhu and Bhagavatam in a systematic and scientific way, suitable to the modern age. Our debt unto his Holy Feet has no end. THE PREDOMINANT GURU OF SRILA PRABHUPADA Although Prabhupada, as suggested by Bhaktivinoda Thakur, took initiation from Gaura Kisora Babaji Maharaj, he still held Bhaktivinoda Thakur as his Guru, substantially. Formally, by the order of Bhaktivinoda Thakur, he took Gaura Kisora Babaji Maharaj as Gurudeva. Bhaktivinoda Thakur selected Srila Gaura Kisora for him, but from what we have found in him, he knew Bhaktivinoda Thakur as his Guru from the internal consideration. We find his outside and inside was filled with Bhaktivinoda Thakur. Bhaktivinoda Thakur not in the physical sense, but in the spiritual sense. Prabhupada inaugurated many Maths (Ashrams and Temples), and we find that he named the Deities "Vinoda-Vilasa," "Vinoda-Rama," "Vinodananda," Vinoda-Prana," and so on. He saw everything through his Gurudeva, Bhaktivinoda Thakur. His attempt to approach Sri Sri Radha Govinda or Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu is inconceivable without Bhaktivinoda Thakur's intervention in him. I attempted to write something about Bhaktivinoda Thakur, and I thought that this was the key to Prabhupada's affection towards me. His attention was drawn to me because I tried to give the greatness of Bhaktivinoda Thakur's character to the public in a systematic way. It is my own feeling. He can give everything to one who is a little attached to Bhaktivinoda Thakur. That was his spirit. He thought himself indebted to Bhaktivinoda Thakur's holy life, so much so, that he saw Srimati Radharani and Gadadhar Pandit in him. This is the highest ideal of Guru-tattva: Gadahara Pandit in Gaura-lila, and Srimati Radharani in Krsna-lila in Madhura-rasa. He also once said, "If we raise our vision and observe, we shall find Srimati Radharani in Gurudeva." If we raise our head a little and search, then we shall find that it is Srimati Radharani Herself who is behind the function of Gurudeva; all others are channels or instrumentals, but the real source of Grace as Guru springs from the Original Source of Service, of Love. He saw Bhaktivinoda Thakur in that light.
saksad-haritvena samasta-sastrair "According to all the Scriptures, Gurudeva is directly the Lord Himself, and the pure devotees also realize the same. He is actually a simultaneously one and different Manifestation of the Lord, different in the sense that he is the Lord's dearmost servitor. I offer my obeisances unto the Lotus Feet of that Divine Master, Sri Gurudeva." We are asked to see Gurudeva not opaque, but transparent—transparent to such a degree that though him the highest end, the highest conception of Service, can be seen and attained. We can attain it there. If we are earnest, we shall find the highest link, from the very Source. So we are requested not to see Guru as limited in his ordinary personification, but as the Transparent Mediator of the highest function in his line. We can see this only if our vision is deep. According to the disciple's depth of sraddha, he will see the Lord present in his Gurudeva. The Guru Principle, Guru-tattva, is very special, very noble, very broad and very deep. So we are warned against thinking that our Gurudeva is in mortal relativity. Prabhupada showed us by his ideal conduct how much earnestness one may have for Gurudeva. We have witnessed this in his practices and teachings. Gurvvaika-nistha—exclusive adherence to the Service of Sri Guru. Bhaktivinoda Thakur was his very being. Everything was Bhaktivinoda Thakur. INFINITE COURAGE OF THE PIONEER When Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur began the Service of the Dhama and Mahaprabhu, he had to do many things to attract the public to accept his discovery of the Dhama as authentic. At that time, the place was uninhabited. Gradually a brick building was made, and the worship of the Deity of Mahaprabhu was begun. The temple came later. Generally the Brahmana cooks he required would not stay there very long because it was an isolated place and there were violent elements nearby. To ensure that the Service continued, he had to undergo many undesirable things. For example, sometimes he had to prepare ganjika (hemp) by his own hand, for the cook! Otherwise, the cook would have left. At times, when ‘respectable' persons came, he had to make arrangements for tobacco. There were many other trials. THE THAKUR'SDIVINE VISION AND FORESIGHT DEVOTEE: Srila Thakur Bhaktivinoda also had a great vision for the world. SRILA GURU MAHARAJ: Yes. He saw in his divine eye that Prema-dharma, the Religion based on Divine Love, is so self-evident in character that the intelligent could never avoid embracing such a conception of Pure Religion as the highest. Love—Prema—the fine intellect cannot but detect the purity in the Love in religion, in its highest conception. His idea was: ‘With an unbiased mind, the Western thinkers cannot but appreciate the doctrine of Divine Love, as given out by Sri Chaitanya-dev. So I am sure that in the future many of the Western scholars will come under the flag of Sri Chaitanyadev.' This was his conviction, and he mentioned this in lectures that he delivered throughout Bengal. When Sripad Bhakti Saranga GoswamiMaharaj returned from preaching in England, he brought one Mr. Burchett back with him. A meeting was held at the Bagh Bazaar Math. That meeting was presided over by a gentleman of the name Hiran Dutta, a good scholar and a Theosophist. In his talk he said, "When we were students at City College, Bhaktivinoda Thakur delivered a lecture there to the effect that in the near future Western scholars would come and join the Sankirtana under the banner of Mahaprabhu. Now, clearly, I can bear witness to the fact that his prediction is beginning to come true. I heard the lecture in my young days, and now in my old age I see the evidence—it is going to be true. I am very glad for that." DEVOTEE: Did Your Grace ever have the darsana of Thakur Bhaktivinoda? SRILA GURU MAHARAJ: No. He left the world in 1914, and I joined the mission in 1926, twelve years later. DEVOTEE: Perhaps you met other persons who had his contact? SRILA GURU MAHARAJ: There was one Parvat Maharaj who lived next door to Bhaktivinoda Thakur when he passed his old age in Godrum. "TO SPREAD THE HOLY NAME AROUND..." Parvat Maharaj said that there was only a partition wall between his house and Bhaktivinoda Thakur's. That was at Surabhi Kunja. From about three o'clock in the morning, Bhaktivinoda Thakur would rise and take the Name of Krsna, the Mahamantra, at the top of his voice. Parvat Maharaj described it like this. As though calling someone from afar—with this spirit Bhaktivinoda Thakur would chant the Holy Name. That Maharaj was astonished to see such behavior. There was a cement chair, and when Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur felt tired he took his seat and rested there awhile. And then after some time he would again wander in the garden, chanting at the top of his voice, "Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna!" With such animation in his voice he was calling—calling a person; with this spirit, and not in a formal way, but with a intense hankering, he was calling for the Lord. There was another thing I also heard about him from another source, Ram Gopal Vidyabhusana, an M.A. and Barrister-at-law. Ram Gopal Vidyabhusana told me, "Once we went to visit him. We had heard that a Government officer, an educated man, had become a Vaisnava Babaji. So we went to see him, and someone amongst us asked him, ‘Please speak something about Krsna and Krsna-nama (the Holy Name of Krsna).' "After a moment, Bhaktivinoda Thakur then said, 'Oh, you want to hear something about Krsna, you want? You want Krsna-nama?' "Then the consequence of that enquiry had such an influence on his body and mind, that as it is written by him personally in his own poem, Sri-Nama-Mahatmya: Cakse dhara—From my eyes tears flowed; dehe gharmma—my body perspired; murcchita haila mana—I fell into a faint; kari' eta upadrava—the Holy name created a great turmoil in me; citte varse sudha-drava—causing a rain of nectarine current in my heart; more dare premera sagare— and casting me into the ocean of ecstasy, of Love; kichu na bujhite dila, more ta' batula kaila—I could not feel the environment around me, and became as though mad; mora citta-vitta saba hare—I lost myself in that thought. That gentleman, Ram Gopal Vidyabhusana said, "I saw with my own eyes that all these symptoms were displayed in his body and mind, simply upon hearing our enquiry. Bhaktivinoda Thakur said, ‘You are so fortunate, you have come to hear Krsna-nama from me? Krsna—! Krsna—!' In this way, he entered into another domain, and so many symptoms and expressions appeared in his body and mind—convulsions, tears, all these things." I heard this from an eye-witness. DEVOTEE: Is it true that prior to Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur's appearance the Vaisnava tradition had become very much neglected? SRILA GURU MAHARAJ: Very few suddha Vaisnavas were to be found, just before the appearance of Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur. But he adjusted religion in a modern garb, and so it was easy for many regardful students to come forward and accept suddha Vaisnavism. It had been much molested by pseudo-followers. The real ideal had become eclipsed, and so for the inquisitive it was difficult to have real entrance and real attachment for Gaudiya Vaisnavism. The so-called Babajis were especially responsible for disturbing the ideal. They hailed from any caste, they could marry, and they simply went on taking the name with no proper practice or feeling of real earnestness for the truth. They dragged on their lives with no pure practices or pure habits, and worst of all, in the name of religion they freely mixed with women. That brought in return a hatred for them in society. Similarly, those 'Goswamis' who took up initiating disciples as their trade also lost their honor in the general respectful society, because they had some low association. The Babajis and Goswamis lost their prestige in society because of their imitative character. But Gaudiya Math came out with the real spirit of religion, and pure practices subsequently followed. So the attention of the educated enquirers after truth was drawn to Gaudiya Math and they flocked together. DEVOTEE: After hearing about Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur, we feel ourselves to be very insignificant. SRILA GURU MAHARAJ: Yes. We can but do our might, contribute our might as much as possible for the Service of Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur.
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