Varnasrama Dharma and ISKCON
A Mission Unfulfilled
By Ravindra Swarup Prabhu
A
paper presented at the Conference “30 Jahre ISKCON-Deutschland”Koln, Germany 29
January, 1999
On the eleventh of July, 1966, in New
York, Srila Prabhupada incorporated the International Society for Krsna
Consciousness. By then, Prabhupada had already discovered an audience for his
exposition of Srimad Bhagavatam,
which he characterized as “a cultural presentation for the respiritualization
of the entire human society” (S. Bh. Canto 1, preface). Now, in a further step
toward the culture of “respiritualization,” he established ISKCON. ISKCON was
to be that exemplary society within which the culture of Srimad Bhagavatam would be realized and by which it would be spread
to the rest of the world.
While this understanding of ISKCON has
always been bedrock truth to its members, it is a fact that over ISKCON’s
thirty-three years, their ideas of what exactly ISKCON is, in terms of its
internal articulation, and of how it should relate itself to the surrounding
society have been fluid. The ideas of its members have undergone changes. It
seems that even Prabhupada’s ideas changed.
The reason for this unsettled state has
to do with the accommodations theory must make to reality whenever it would
actualize itself in practice. Prabhupada’s own tradition recognizes the need
for practical accommodation by the maxim that even absolute truth must be
fine-tuned to the relativities of desa-kala-patra
-- “the circumstantial environments of place, object and time” (S.
Bh.1.6.26-30, purport). The often hard-won expertise in doing this is what we
call “wisdom” (in Sanskrit, vijnana).
In the application of principle to practice we frequently must have recourse to
the method of “trial-and-error.” “You learn from experience,” Prabhupada is
often quoted as saying. “And experience means you make mistakes.”
We followers of Prabhupada have been
trying to find ways to establish what Prabhupada called an “ideal society”
within the modern world. I hope to acquaint you, in the time allotted me, with
some of the history of our experience and of our mistakes. I hope you will also
find exhibited herein the beginnings of a little hard-won wisdom. I also hope you
will gain a fair idea of some of the difficulties we are confronting.
In order for you to understand these
matters, you need to become acquainted with two contrasting social ideals or
models transmitted to us by Srila Prabhupada. The first is that of a society of
Vaisnavas, of transcendental, liberated devotees who conduct themselves
spontaneously in accord with the principles called sanatana-dharma. The second is that of a society of materially
conditioned human beings who strictly conducted themselves in obedience to the
injunctions of the Vedas under the system called varnasrama-dharma.
To understand both systems, you need to
be clear about what is meant when we say that someone is bound or condition, on
the one hand, and liberated or transcendental, on the other. This is presented
clearly in the Bhagavad-gita. (The
entire fourteenth chapter is devoted to this exposition.) To be a bound or
conditioned soul means to be bound or conditions by the three gunas, or “modes” of material nature;
they are termed sattva-guna, the mode
of goodness or purity; rajo-guna, the
mode of passion; and tamo-guna, the
mode of ignorance or darkness.
The three modes are most readily
recognizable in the tripartite cycle of nature: We see that things come into
being, they endure for a while, and then they undergo destruction. Then the
products of destruction furnish the raw material for a new phase of creation as
the cycle begins again. In the Vedic understanding, these three phases
exemplify fundamental categories for understanding the material world. When
things are being created, nature is said to be acting in the mode of passion, rajo-guna. When things are being
maintained, nature is acting in the mode of goodness, sattva-guna. And when things are undergoing destruction, nature is
acting in the mode of ignorance, tamo-guna.
According to the Bhagavad-gita, these same modes also function to
determine, or condition, the human personality. Thus we have a three-fold
psychological typology. The mode of goodness is manifest by an attitude that is
detached, dispassionate and interested in knowledge for its own sake. The mode
of passion is evident in the hankering and longings that impel strenuous
efforts to obtain objects of desire. The mode of ignorance is manifest in
apathy, indifference, obliviousness, and bewilderment. When, for example,
consciousness is conditioned by sattva-guna,
it will be alert and attentive (toward nearly any subject presented) and, at
the same time, detached and disinterested. Consciousness condition by rajo-guna is excited and narrowly
focused upon the object of desire. Consciousness conditioned by tama-guno is unaware, inattentive,
easily distracted, and disposed toward chronic misperception.
I suspect that most of us can recognize
these three psychological states from our own experience. We have probably
spent some time in each of the modes. For all three modes are present in each
person, and among them there is always “a competition for supremacy,” as the Bhagavad-gita says (14.10).
Nevertheless, there is a tendency for a particular mode or combination of modes
to predominate naturally in a given individual, conducting him in its own
programmatic manner to its characteristic end.
Thus, the Bhagavad-gita says that the mode of goodness conditions a person to
happiness or satisfaction, and it results in knowledge. The mode of passion
conditions one to selfishly motivated activity, and it results in misery
(because passionate desires never cease multiplying and goading us into action,
never producing satisfaction). The mode of ignorance binds one to delusion, and
it results in systematic delusion or madness.
Prabhupada characterized the three “pure
types” of the modes like this: “One is happy, another is very active, and
another is helpless” (Bh. G. 14.6, purport).
We have all of us encountered various
organized structures of thought-whether cultural, philosophical, religious,
scientific, or ideological--which present to us systems of abstract categories
by means of which we can apprehend and understand the world. When we school
ourselves in such a system-often trying to get inside of it by the method of
sympathetic projection or Hineinfuhlung-we
sometimes find that the system illuminates or makes intelligible certain areas
of experience that we had not before particularly noticed or considered
relevant. If we then apply that system to our practical endeavors and find
ourselves newly enabled to deal with the world in a manner that seems
consistently fruitful and productive, we award the system that highest of
accolades, truth.
Thus it was for me-and many
devotees-with the Bhagavad-gita, as
Prabhupada presented it. I looked at society--and at myself--through the lenses
of the Bhagavad-gita, and, once the gunas had been pointed out, I could see
them plainly. While these categories might not be fruitful to the endeavors of
an atomic scientist or an agronomist, say, they were indeed germane to the goal
of most who were attracted to ISKCON: We were seeking liberation,
transcendence. And transcendence meant, concretely, to transcend the modes of
material nature.
This was possible, Prabhupada said, for
anyone:
. . . if one wants, he can develop, by
practice, the mode of goodness and thus defeat the modes of ignorance and
passion. . . . Although there are these three modes of material nature, if one
is determined he can be blessed by the mode of goodness, and by transcending
the mode of goodness he can be situated in pure goodness, which is called the vasudeva state, a state in which one can
understand the science of God.
(Bh. G. 14.10, purport)
The initial result of the proper culture
of Krsna consciousness should be the disappearance in the practitioner of the
symptoms of the modes of ignorance and passion. Lust, greed, anger, and the
like should vanish from the heart. In this way, one becomes established in the
mode of goodness. The mode of goodness is the existential condition necessary
for a person to be able to understand and experience spiritual reality. Thus
the mode of goodness is the material platform, the launching pad, as it were,
from which one can make the final voyage into transcendence, where there is
neither creation nor destruction, but everlasting existence, or, in other
words, pure, unalloyed sattva.
In this way, the theory of the modes
provided devotees a road map of the material world, with the way out clearly
marked.
The theory of the modes also provided
the basis for another set of categories, that of the four varnas. Just as the human body is equipped by nature with head,
arms, belly, and legs, so the social body is constituted in the same natural
way by the four occupational groups: the brahmanas
who comprise the thinkers and teachers (head); the ksatriyas, the governors and protectors (arms); the vaisyas, the producers and traders
(belly); and the sudras, the workers
and general assistants (legs). Every society requires the specific contribution
of these specialists in thinking, governing , producing, and working. Krsna
states in the Bhagavad-gita (4.13)
that this ordering is generated by God, such that each person is naturally
disposed toward a particular category by virtue of guna, or controlling mode of nature, and karma, specialized activity and means of livelihood.
The system in which guna and karma thus
determine varna Prabhupada calls daiva-varnasrama-dharma, the divinely
established system. This godly system he explicitly contrasts to the standard
Hindu caste system in which birth is the sole determinant of membership;
Prabhupada calls that asura-varnasrama-dharma,
or the diabolically created system (see, e.g., the purport to Cc. Madhya 3.6).
Prabhupada and his predecessor teachers condemned this hereditary system as a
corruption of the authentic system, viewing it as the major source of social
injustice and turmoil in India. In several lectures Prabhupada even traces the
cause of the partitioning of India back to the injustices spawned by the
degraded principle of “hereditary brahmanism” (see, e.g., lecture on S.
Bh.1.2.2: Rome, May 26, 1974).
A brahmana
must factually be in the mode of goodness, for varna is determined by guna.
A good way to think of the system is to imagine the gunas distributed along a continuum, with goodness at one end,
ignorance at the other, and passion in the middle. At a somewhat arbitrary line
when goodness become sufficiently mixed with passion the demarcation between brahmanas and ksatriyas occurs. Similarly, when passion becomes sufficiently
mixed with ignorance, there is a demarcation between ksatriyas and vaisyas.
When ignorance sufficiently predominates over passion there is a division
between vaisyas and sudras. The individuals situated in the
boundary regions could, in principle, be occupationally engaged on one side or
the other, according to variables such as education, training, or aptitude.
The categories of the gunas and of the varnas are important in understanding what Prabhupada conceived as
a primary social mission of ISKCON. Once in the early 70s I was present when
Prabhupada was interviewed by the press after his arrival at a New York
airport. A reporter asked, “Why have you come to the West?” “I have come,”
Prabhupada replied, “to give you a brain. Your society,” he continued, “is
headless.” Using the analogy of the human body, he explained the articulation
of human society into four varnas. He
then asserted that modern Western society was malformed. “There are a few vaisyas and everyone else is sudra.” In other words, those now
engaged in research and education, in government and defense, are, knowingly or
unknowingly, in the employ of a handful of vaisyas.
(Prabhupada’s perception is perhaps supported by the report that in America,
five percent of the families now control ninety percent of the wealth.) There
are no proper brahmanas or ksatriyas.
Prabhupada’s intention was to re-create
a class of genuine brahmanas. This
would help rectify the deformities of modern society and ameliorate the
spiritual, psychological, social, political, and ecological problems spawned by
a hypertrophy of economic development and other outgrowths of unrestrained rajo-guna. Prabhupada notes: “Modern
civilization is considered to be advanced in the standard of the mode of
passion. Formerly, the advanced condition was considered to be in the mode of
goodness” (Bh. G. 14.7, purport). Genuine brahmanas,
he hoped, would help reset the priorities of advanced civilization.
Yet Prabhupada’s mission of creating brahmanas was in a sense derivative, a
kind of automatic by-product of the primary mission of producing Vaisnavas. The
word Vaisnava in the strictest sense
denotes a pure devotee of God, one who is accordingly transcendental to all the
modes of nature. Brahmanas, however,
are conditioned by the mode of goodness, and Prabhupada wanted to produce
liberated souls. Such liberated Vaisnavas are more advanced than even brahmanas. Nevertheless, his Vaisnavas
would function socially primarily as brahmanas.
It should be recognized that
historically speaking the Vaisnava traditions
in India all have propagated a socially and spiritually radical teaching.
Vaisnavism fostered the spiritual enfranchisement of previously disenfranchised
groups, and, in so doing, undercut the spiritual (and social) prerogatives of
the hereditary brahminical caste. Hence in the Bhagavad-gita (9.32) Krsna cites groups traditionally considered
unqualified for spiritual advancement-he mentions women, vaisyas, and sudras-and
says that by practicing devotion to Him they can “attain the supreme
destination.” In the Bhagavatam it is
stated that even an outcaste (svadah-a
dog-eater), if engaging in devotional practices, becomes immediately qualified
to perform Vedic sacrifice (traditionally, of course, the monopoly of brahmana males)(S. Bh.3.33.6).
Such statements reflect the conviction
that devotional service to Krsna, or bhakti-yoga,
is so spiritually powerful that it can quickly uplift even the most morally and
spiritually debased people. Thus facilitated, one does not need to spend many
lifetimes transmigrating up the caste hierarchy to reach the brahminical
platform. Bhakti-yoga can take sudras and those even less qualified and transform them into Vaisnavas
and brahmanas. Prabhupada’s own
Bengali Vaisnava tradition, as reformed by Caitanya at the beginning of the
sixteenth century, paid great respect to this spiritual egalitarianism. So
schooled, Prabhupada came to try this principle out in the West--in the United
States in the 1960s. It was, of necessity, a kind of experiment.
Prabhupada discovered, rather to his
surprise, that the main audience for his teachings tended to be drawn from the
counterculture, and Prabhupada was not impressed by the counterculture. He
described hippies in various places as “morose” (S. Bh. 4.25.11,
purport),”distressed, “ “wretched,” “unclean,” “without shelter or food,” (S.
Bh. 4.25.5, purport), “irresponsible and unregulated” (S. Bh. 5.6.10, purport),
“lying idle, without any production,” (Bh. G. lecture, 1976), and so on. We
should recognize this as a precise catalogue of the characteristics of tamo-guna, the mode of ignorance. When
in 1971 Prabhupada remarked to Kenneth Keating, the then American ambassador to
India, that his service to America was “turning hippies into happies” (Letter
to Damodara: 3 December, 1971), Prabhupada was in a witticism stating that he
was taking people in the mode of ignorance and elevating them to the mode of
goodness.
Early after his arrival in America,
Prabhupada wrote of his mission in these terms:
Though a person be even the most sinful
man, he can at once be purified by systematic contact with a pure Vaisnava. A
Vaisnava, therefore, can accept a bona fide disciple from any part of the world
without any consideration of caste and creed and promote him by regulative
principles to the status of a pure Vaisnava who is transcendental to
brahminical culture. The system of caste, or varnasrama-dharma, is no longer regular even amongst the so-called
followers of the system. Nor is it now possible to reestablish the
institutional function in the present context of social, political and economic
revolution. Without any reference to the particular custom of a country, one
can be accepted to the Vaisnava cult spiritually, and there is no hindrance in
the transcendental process.
(S. Bh. 2.4.18, purport)
Here, Prabhupada expresses his doubts
about the feasibility of a varnasrama system.
Yet even without it, he thought he could produce Vaisnavas who could perform
the brahminical function of spiritual guide to the people. He makes the same
points emphatically in a early Bhagavad-gita
lecture:
So at the present moment, there is no
possibility of persons following the principles of varnasrama-dharma, either here or anywhere. . . . .Therefore this
is the panacea, to engage everyone in Krsna consciousness, chanting Hare Krsna.
He comes above the highest principle of brahmanism. This is the greatest gift
to the humanity, that even [if] he is in . . . the most degraded position, he
can be raised to the highest position simply by chanting. This is the only
remedy. Now you cannot again introduce this system of varnasrama. It is not possible. But if one takes to Krsna
consciousness, automatically he becomes immediately a brahmana and above the brahmana.
A Vaisnava is above the brahmana.
(Lecture on Bh. G. 3.18-30: Los Angeles,
30 December 1968)
It is also clear that by 1974,
Prabhupada had changed his mind about instituting the varnasrama-system. One major reason for his doing so is clearly
disclosed in this 1977 conversation concerning a sannyasi who had fallen down from his celibacy vows:
Prabhupada:
Just
like our (name withheld). He was not fit for sannyasa but he was given sannaysa.
And five women he was attached, and he disclosed. Therefore varnasrama-dharma is required. Simply
show-bottle will not do. So the varnasrama-dharma
should be introduced all over the world, and--
Satsvarupa: Introduced
starting with ISKCON community?
Prabhupada: Yes. Yes. Brahmana, ksatriyas. There must be regular education.
Hari-sauri: But in our
community, if the--being as we're training up as Vaisnavas--
Prabhupada: Yes.
Hari-sauri: --Then how will
we be able to make divisions in our society?
Prabhupada: Vaisnava is not
so easy. The varnasrama-dharma should
be established to become a Vaisnava. It is not so easy to become Vaisnava.
Hari-sauri: No, it's not a
cheap thing.
Prabhupada: Yes. Therefore
this should be made. Vaisnava, to become Vaisnava, is not so easy. If Vaisnava,
to become Vaisnava is so easy, why so many fall down, fall down? It is not
easy.
And later in the same conversation:
Hari-sauri: Where will we
introduce the varnasrama system,
then?
Prabhupada:
In
our society, amongst our members.
Hari-sauri: But then if
everybody's being raised to the brahminical platform--
Prabhupada:
Not
everybody. Why you are misunderstanding? Varnasrama,
not everybody brahmana.
Hari-sauri: No, but in our
society practically everyone is being raised to that platform. So then one
might ask what is---
Prabhupada: That is--
Everybody is being raised, but they're falling down.
(Room Conversation: Mayapura, 14
February 1977)
It had become clear to Prabhupada, after
some years of experience in the West, that the elevation of his followers to
the brahminical platform of goodness, what to speak of the Vaisnava
transcendental platform, was not going to happen universally or swiftly. His
earliest hopes were unfulfilled.
Since the time Prabhupada began speaking
extensively about implementing varnasrama
dharma, there has been much discussion in ISCKON on the way to go about it.
I can report that there is still little, if any, consensus. In 1981 one leader,
convinced that “after ten years of rigorous thought” (p. vii) he had it figured
out, published what he considered a authoritative 215-page book to persuade
“the intelligent leaders and thinkers of modern society” (p. 214) to embrace
the varnasrama revolution. The Varnasrama Manifesto for Social Sanity
by Harikesa Swami Visnupada is, I find, spectacularly unpersuasive, and I can
best characterize it by borrowing Alan Greenspan’s phrase “irrational
exuberance.” This now famous expression was, of course, used by the American
Federal Reserve Chairman to describe market investors in the grip of a foolish
and dangerous over-confidence. The phrase aptly fits this so-called Manifesto. It should be noted the work
was so controversial within ISKCON that ISKCON’s Governing Body Commission-of
which Harikesa Swami was a member--passed a resolution in 1982 disowning the
work, stating that it “represents the realization of the author and does not
represent the official view or policies of the International Society for Krsna
Consciousness.” And in 1996, the author himself issued an apologetic statement
that concluded, “I have grown and matured in my conceptions and also become
more realistic and less idealistic in my viewpoint. Therefore even I do not
stand anymore behind some of the concepts mentioned in the book and I feel
sorry that I wrote some of the things that I wrote.”
I also have my own views on the
application of varnasrama-dharma, for
I too have thought about the subject, but I assure you, that whatever I speak
or write will not go uncontested by someone else in ISKCON.
Nevertheless, I will venture here to
propose the major reasons why ISKCON is having such a difficult time coming to
grips with this matter. The first and foremost is that ISKCON-I put it
starkly--has no brain. Or, at least the brain it has is underdeveloped.
You will recall that Prabhupada
originally thought that ISKCON would perform the brahminical function for the
rest of society-”I have come to give you a brain.” Prabhupada based this effort
on books. By books he could transmit the Vedic heritage, and through books he
could instruct and train large numbers of followers, who, by studying his
writings systematically and practicing their teaching, could advance to the
mode of goodness and beyond. At the same time, by having those same followers
distribute the books to others, Prabhupada would engage them in preaching and
teaching to the general public. Book distribution is one type of sankirtana, congregational glorification
of God, and sankirtana is described
in scripture as the particular form of sacrifice authorized for this age. Moreover,
devotees would be able to maintain themselves and their activities by donations
received though book distribution. In this way, ISKCON members would performed
the six engagements enjoined upon a brahmana: yajana, yajana, paöhana, paöhana, dana and pratigraha. A brahmana
performs sacrifice and engages others in sacrifice, studies the Vedas and
teaches the Vedas, receives in charity and gives in charity.
We have already noted Prabhupada’s
disappointment when many devotees turned out to have great difficult in
steadily following the strict principles of Krsna consciousness. Another,
related, difficulty, was also noted by Prabhupada. For example, this exchange
took place during a 1972 lecture:
Prabhupada: Similarly, the
GBC member means they will see that in every temple these books are very
thoroughly being read and discussed and understood and applied in practical
life. That is wanted, not to see the vouchers only, "How many books you
have sold, and how many books are in the stock?" That is secondary. . . .
. Now, suppose you go to sell some book and if somebody says, "You have
read this book? Can you explain this verse?" then what you will say? You
will say, "No. It is for you. It is not for me. I have to take money from
you. That's all." Is that very nice answer?
Devotee:
No,
Srila Prabhupada.
Prabhupada: Then? "We
have written this book for your reading, not for our reading. We are simply
collect money." That's all.
(Lecture on S. Bh. 2.9.2: Melbourne, 5
April 1972)
Prabhupada often brought up the point
when a devotee seemed ignorant of verse:
Do you remember, any one of you, this
verse from the Bhagavad-gita? Eh? But
you don't read. So I am writing all these books simply for selling, not for
reading. This is not good. And if somebody asks you, "You are so much
eager to sell your books. Do you read your books?" Then what you will say?
"No, sir, we don't read. We sell only. Our Guru Maharaja writes, and we
sell." That is not good business. You must read. Why I am writing so many
books?
(Lecture on S. Bh. 1.16.24: Hawaii, 20
January 1974)
And, in an exchange in which Prabhupada
implicitly links karma and guna in his student:
Prabhupada: You do not
read Bhagavad-gita, you are
publishing for selling. It will be read by others. We are simply to make money?
These [the qualities of a brahmana]
are in the Bhagavad-gita. Don't you
read it?
Devotee: Yes I read it.
The qualities of a brahmana is given,
along with the qualities of all the other varnas.
Prabhupada: We have [in
ISKCON]-taking sacred thread [who] has qualities less than sudra. Camaras, cobblers.
Camara means expert in skin. I am
white, I am black, I am this, I am that. That is camara. Expert in skin.
(Morning Walk: Vrndavana, 16 March 1974)
I know from my own experience how sankirtana in America tended to become
less and less of a brahmincal preaching activity and more and more of a vaisya commercial activity, with books
eventually being replaced by secular paraphernalia. This shift from preaching
to fund-raising after Srila Prabhupada’s demise has been well documented by E.
Burke Rochford in Hare Krsna in America (New
Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1986). While the movement prospered
financially, it declined spiritually. Prabhupada’s misgivings proved sound.
In 1987 ISKCON in America fortunately
changed course. The North American leaders resolved to stop all sales of
secular items by the temples and to return them to what was, in effect, a
brahminical mode of maintenance, depending mainly upon donations from the
congregation and working residents. All the temples in North America quickly
went broke. However, there has been since then a slow but steady recovery, both
spiritual and financial. Both depend, in my view, on turning the temples into
exemplary brahminical institutions. The brief history I’ve recounted
illustrates the truth-and the prescience--of Prabhupada’s perception.
Let me note another important indication
of ISKCON’s failure to organize brahminical training. In 1976 Prabhupada
ordered a gradated system of examinations to be instituted in ISKCON. To this
day this order is unfulfilled.
This is from a letter Prabhupada had his
secretary send out the GBC members to conveying Prabhupada’s directions:
Re: Examinations for awarding titles of
Bhakti-sastri, Bhakti-vaibhava, Bhaktivedanta and Bhakti-sarvabhauma.
. . . .Srila Prabhupada has requested me
to write you in regard to the above examinations which he wishes to institute.
Here in India many persons often criticize our sannyasis and brahmanas as being
unqualified due to insufficient knowledge of the scriptures. Factually, there
are numerous instances when our sannyasis and brahmanas have fallen down often
due to insufficient understanding of the philosophy. This should not be a point
of criticism nor a reason for falldown, since Srila Prabhupada has mercifully
made the most essential scriptures available to us in his books. The problem is
that not all the devotees are carefully studying the books, the result being a
fall down or at least unsteadiness.
His Divine Grace therefore wishes to
institute examinations to be given to all prospective candidates for sannyasa
and brahmana initiation. In addition he wishes that all present sannyasis and
brahmanas also pass the examination. Awarding of these titles will be based
upon the following books:
Bhakti-sastri - Bhagavad-gita, Nectar of
Devotion, Nectar of Instruction, Isopanisad, Easy Journey To Other Planets, and
all other small paperbacks, as well as Arcana-paddhati (a book to be compiled
by Nitai Prabhu based on Hari-bhakti-vilasa on Deity worship)
Bhakti-vaibhava - All of the above plus
the first six cantos of Srimad-Bhagavatam
Bhaktivedanta - All of the above plus
cantos 7 through 12 of Srimad-Bhagavatam
Bhakti-sarvabhauma - All the above plus
the entire Caitanya-caritamrta
Anyone wishing to be initiated as a
brahmana will have to pass the Bhaktisastri exam and anyone wishing to take
sannyasa will have to pass the Bhaktivaibhava examination as well. This will
prevent our Society from degrading to the level of so many other institutions
where, in order to maintain the Temple, they accept all third class men as
brahmanas. Any sannyasis or brahmanas already initiated who fail to pass the
exams will be considered low class or less qualified. Anyone wishing to be 2nd
initiated will sit for examination once a year at Mayapur. Answers will be in
essay form and authoritative quotations will be given a bigger score. During
the exams books may not be consulted.
Srila Prabhupada wishes to begin this
program at this year's Mayapur meeting. He requests that you all send your
opinions and comments here immediately so that everything may be prepared in
time.
(Letter to “All Governing Body
Commissioners”: Nellore, South India, 6 January 1976)
A Bhakti-sastri examination was held in
Mayapura in 1977 (a year late), but after Prabhupada’s demise later that same
year, the examinations soon disappeared. Only within in the last five years or
so have Bhakti-sastri courses and examinations been regularized in some places
in ISKCON. To this day neither curricula nor examinations exist for the other
three degrees.
Finally, let me briefly note a second
major reason ISKCON has had difficulty understanding and instituting varnasrama-dharma. This is the fact that
the system can neither be understood nor practiced within the material and
conceptual framework of an industrial society. Prabhupada taught that the
modern industrial economy was artificial, unnatural, and harmful to the human
and non-human world. In one way or another it would one day have to be
sized-down and scaled back. Humanity would have to develop a new economy in
which the family would be restored as a unit of production and in which local
self-sufficiency-most importantly in the matter of food supply--would become a
major value. Therefore, from the very beginning Prabhupada wanted ISKCON to
establish self-sufficient, rural communities, not only to construct the
material basis necessary for varnasrama-dharma,
but also to provide working examples of an alternative when the inevitable
transition to a neo-agrarian economy began to impose itself upon the
industrialized world.
ISKCON has established a number of these
rural communities in advanced industrial countries. Many devotees have moved to
them to “learn to live off the land” and practice “plain living and high
thinking.” Yet over the course of time these projects have evolved largely into
suburban-style Hare Krsna communities. We still await the self-sufficient
agrarian community in practice. Although there are social and economic reasons
why this ideal has failed in practice, I suspect a necessary condition for its
future success will be the contribution of genuine brahmanas, whose creation is still ISKCON unfulfilled mission.
My proposal, therefore, for establishing
varnasrama-dharma in ISKCON, and even
in the society at large, is first of all to take the first step and do
everything needed to form a proper community of brahmanas. According to Bhagavad-gita
(18.42), two of the traits evinced by brahmanas
are jnana and vijnana, that is, they have genuine knowledge of the Absolute Truth
and they posses the wisdom to apply that knowledge appropriately. If this first
step is taken, and ISKCON is thus given a brain, then I am sure we shall be in
a better position to know where to go further.
As I speak today I am happy to report
that a movement is gaining strength among the leaders to make ISKCON an
organization primarily dedicated to education and training. If we continue in
this way, I am sure we will become eligible to receive Prabhupada’s legacy and
empowered to convey it to the rest of humankind.