Great Teachers:
Chaitanya Mahaprabhu
Atmattatva das
Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu was born in Navadwip, situated on the
bank of the holy Ganges river in Begal, in February 1486, during the eclipse of
the full moon amidst the loud chanting of the Holy Name of the Lord. His
father, Jagannatha Misra and mother Sac i, were both from pious and scholarly
brahmana families originally from Sylhet. After loosing their first eight
children, all daughters, they gave birth to a son named Visvarupa, who took
sannyasa at an early age. Then Sri Chaitanya appeared from the womb of mother
Sachi and was given the name Visvambara.
Sri Chaitanya showed great attachment to the Holy name from birth.
He would often cry and could not be consoled until the people around him began
to chant Hare Krishna. He was nicknamed Nimai and would was very fond of
singing and dancing. With uplifted hands He seemed to dance in a fit of divine
madness, which enraptured all and made them dance and chant along with him.
Nimai studied under Ganga dasa Pandit, the most learned scholar in
Navadwip. Although there were many students in His school, some of which were
much older and very learned, Nimai eclipsed them all by His extraordinary
intelligence. A favorite pastime of His was challenging students from other
schools in intellectual debates on the bank of the Ganges. He would offer His
own explanation on certain Sutras and ask others to criticize it. On their
failing to find any flaw, he would Himself point out a number of flaws and
offer another explanation which he would again criticize to re-establish his
original explanation with extraordinary skill and felicity.
He acquired mastery over the different branches of Sanskrit
learning at a very early age and became known by the name Nimai Pandit. After
the death of His father he married Laksmipriya and set up a school where he
taught grammar. He was imbued with scholastic spirit and indulged in
dialectical bouts with the scholars of Nadia. In one such bout he defeated the
world conqueror (Digvijaya Pandit Kesava Kashmiri), whom the blessings of the
goddess of learning Saraswati, had made him invincible. It was later revealed
to the Pandit in a dream that the man who had vanquished him was the Lord
Himself.
When Nimai was about twenty-two years old he went on a tour to
Sylhet in East Bengal. During His absence His wife Laksmipriya died of a snake
bite. Later, at the request of His mother he was remarried to Vishnupriya.
About one year after His tour of east Bengal he went to Gaya.
There he met Isvara Puri the disciple of Madhavendra Puri of the Madhva
sampradaya. He took initiation from Isvara Puri and from that moment on He
began to show spiritual ecstasy at every moment. He returned to Navadwipa a
different person. His pride of learning and aggressive spirit were gone. He was
immersed in the thought of Krishna. Tears incessantly flowed from his eyes and
at the very name of Krishna or anything associated with Krishna sent Hi m into
trance. It became impossible for Him to teach his pupils. The only meaning He
knew of the Sutras of grammar which he was accustomed to teach, was that any
word or letter was Krishna. So He always discoursed on Krishna and in the midst
of the discourses laughed and wept and lost Himself in trance. His pupils did
not know what to do. One day in utter helplessness He had to tell his pupils,
"I always see a dark complexioned boy of exquisite beauty standing before
me and playing on His flute. I can only speak of Him and Him alone. I must
therefore stop teaching you from today. You are free to go and take your
lessons anywhere you like."
Saying this He closed His book and burst into tears. The pupils
also closed their books saying, "No more education for us Master! Only
bless us that we may remember life after life what we have learnt at your lotus
feet." Nimai was visibly moved. He took them one by one and embraced them.
Then He performed sankirtan with them. He stood in the middle singing:
haraye namah
krsna-yadavaya namah |
gopala govinda rama sri-madhusudana ||
Keeping time with His hands, the pupils went round and round
repeating the song. As the song and the dance went on their hearts were filled
with ecstasy and tears of joy flowed from their eyes. Many people from the
neighborhood were attracted to the scene and everyone who came as a spectator
was caught in the current of devotion and began to sing and dance. This marked
the beginning of the sankirtana movement of Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, the
prophesied mission of His appearance.
Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu was soon joined by His principal
associates, Nityananda, Gadadhara, Sri Advaita and Srivasa Pandit. Many
thousands of people became influenced by the sankirtana movement. In the
courtyard of Srivasa Thakura He held nightly sankirtana with His very close
associates. There He revealed His Divine Forms to His followers and indicated
that His mission was to deliver all the fallen souls of Kali-yuga.
The courtyard in the house of Srivasa Pandit became the regular
meeting place for the Vaisnavas but soon there was organized sankirtana parties
and processions of which thousands upon thousands of people participated,
parading through the streets of Nava dwip, singing and dancing and surcharging
the whole atmosphere with this unique spiritual fervor.
Once, a small but influential group, proud of their learning and
maintaining an inimical attitude towards the sankirtana movement, placed a
complaint before the Chand Kazi, the Mohamedan governor of the town. The Kazi
tried to crush the movement, breakin g mrdangas and stopping the processions.
But due to the overwhelming influence of the huge congregational gathering
organized by Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, in a defiant display of peaceful civil
disobedience, the Kazi not only came to his senses, but joined the movement of
Mahaprabhu and declared to the world that this movement will never be impeded.
At the age of twenty-four Nimai Pandit decided to take to the
renounced order of life. He accepted sannyasa initiation from Kesava Bharati
and received the name Sri Krishna Chaitanya. Soon after He journeyed to Puri
where he converted Sarvabhauma Bhattacary a, a veteran scholar of nyaya and
Vedanta. The Bhattacharya recognized Him to be the Supreme Personality of
Godhead Himself and became so attached to Him that he could bear anything in
the world but separation from Him.
Sri Krishna Chaitanya Mahaprabhu soon embarked on an extensive
journey through the south of India to the tip of Cape Comorin. Then He turned
northwards and after visiting many of the important temples and holy rivers,
returned to Puri.
His influence on the people of Orissa was epitimized when He
captured the heart of the Orian King, Pratparudra. Yearly the devotees from
Bengal would come to visit Him and this became and annual pilgrimage for the
Bengalis.
In the year 1514 Sri Chaitanya started on a pilgimage to
Vrindaban. Traveling through Bengal, Sri Chaitanya met two brothers who were
ministers in the court of the Mohamedan king Hussain Shah of Bengal. They were
known by the Mohamedan names of Saker Mali k and Dabir Khas. Won over by Sri
Chaitanya they became his disciples and given the names Sanatana and Rupa.
These two brothers along with their nephew Jiva are the great pillars of faith,
upon whose writings rests the theological and philosophical foundations of the
Gaudiya sampradaya.
Sri Chaitanya had tried going to Vrindaban a few times before with
a large accompaniment of followers. This time however He went with only two
people and traveled through the forests in order to be unnoticed by the masses.
In Vrindaban He was always over welmed in ecstacy and absorbed in the mood of
Radha and Krishna. He uncovered the sites of the divine Radha Kunda and Syama
Kunda. Everyone He met on His travels He induced to chant the holy name of
Krishna merely by the sight of Him.
Returning from Vrindaban He stayed at Allahabad for some time
during the Kumba Mela. Here he met a Vaidika brahmana named Vallabha Bhatta,
who is also known as Sri Vallabhacharya, the founder of the Vaisnava sect of
that name.
Here He also met Rupa and his younger brother Anupama, who had
renounced the world for His sake and come all the way from Bengal to receive
His instructions. Mahaprabhu gave them detailed instructions on Bhakti for ten
days and sent them to Vrindaban comm issioning Rupa to devote himself to the
preparation of foundational literature for the propogation of Bhakti.
Proceeding to Varanasi He met Sanatana, the elder brother of Rupa. Sanatana had
been imprisoned by the king, because his meeting with Sri Chaitanya had brought
a complete change in his state of mind, and he was not able to attend to the
duties of his ministerial office. He managed, however, to escape from prison
and go in disguise to Varanasi to surrender himself completely at the feet of
his maste r. Sri Chaitanya gave him elaborate discourses on bhakti and commissioned him as well with
the task of laying more secure foundations of Vaisnavism by rediscovering the
holy places in Vrindavana, building temples and producing canonical literature.
An important event at Varanasi was his triumph in theological
discussions over the Mayavadi Sannyasis, who followed the path of jnana and deprecated Bhakti as pure
sentimentalism. The result was the conversion of Prakasananda Sarasvati, the
head of the mayavadi sannyasis of Varanasi, along with many of his followers.
Sri Chaitanya returned to Puri. For six years after taking to the
sannyasa order He traveled all over the country, broadcasting the seeds of
Bhakti. These seeds having sprouted and taken root meant He could now leave the
plants to the care of His able leiutenants, and pass the remaining eighteen
years of His life in monastic seclusion at Puri. He settled permanently in the
house of Kasi Misra and all His days were spent in deep communion with the
Lord, interrupted only by the occasional conversations with a few of His most
intimate disciples.