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Sri Ramakrishna - 1
by Lowell Brams
"His Life enables us to see God face to face"-Mahatma
Gandhi
The spirirual giant known as Sri Ramakrishna was born Gadadhar
Chattopadhyaya to poor Brahmin parents in Kamarpukur, a Bengali
village about 80 miles northwest of Calcutta, not far from the
birthplace of Sri Sarada Devi. As a child, Gadadhar would fall
into meditative ttances. The first of these occurred at the age
of six or seven as he, by chance, looked up to see snow-white
cranes fly across a dark, thundercloudfilled sky. Although he
readily learned to read and write and easily recounted stories
he heard from Hindu mythology and the epics, the education his
caste dictated held little interest for him. Upon the death of
his father, when Gadadhar was just seven years old, his realization
of the impermanence of life deepened Gadadhar's spiritual quest.
At the age of sixteen when his brother took him to Calcutta to
study, Gadadhar rebuked him saying, "What shall I do with
a mere breadwinning education? I would rather acquire that wisdom
which will illumine my heart and give me satisfaction for ever."
Having abandoned academics for spirirual contemplation and worship,
Gadadhar devoted himself to his duties as priest. In time, through
a labyrinthine set of circumstances, Gadadhar became priest at
the Dakshineswar temple dedicated to the worship of
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Mother Kali. There he gave himself
whole-heartedly to achieving a vision of the Divine Mother and
began, in earnest, his night-long meditation vigils in nearby
cremation grounds. The intensity of his spiritual practices led
some to believe he was drunk or insane, but later de\'otees came
to recognize this strange behavior as his all-consuming desire
for God that renders outward appearance and action insignificant.
During this intense period of spirirual awakening and realization,
Gadadhar acquired the name by which we recognize him today, Sri
Ramakrishna Paramahansa. He began to attract disciples and to
teach the basic truths of religion through parables, metaphors
and his own profound observations of life.
Meanwhile, in 1858, unnerved by his strange behavior, and eager
to return their son's attention to worldly responsibilities, Sri
Ramakrishna's parents arranged his marriage to the young Sarada
Mukhapadhyaya. His wife was not to join him at Dakshineswar for
another 14 years, in early 1872. Moreover, when Sri Sarada Devi
joined Ramakrishna, Sri Ramakrishna's parents' intentions were
only partially fulfilled, as he began to worship her as the Holy
Mother. Likewise, her devotion to him as an incarnation of God
created a most unique spirirual union.
Sri Ramakrishna's relentless desire to experience God in every
possible manifestation moved him to transcend the barriers of
gender and religion. He taught that the devotion to God as Mother
was naturally derived from the freedom and comfort all children
feel in the presence of their own mothers. Immersed in the study
of Hinduism, Christianity and Islam, Ramakrishna adopted various
forms of worship and gave the message of inter-faith harmony.
His sadhana revealed the divine truth of all religions, and he
remarked, "God is realized through personal experience rather
than through doctrine, and those who have seen Him do not argue
about details." Sri Ramakrishna's profound life and teaching
stimulated a progressive Hinduism in India, and through the ministry
of his disciple Swami Vivekananda, captured the attention of the
Western World. The work of the monastic orders founded by Holy
Mother and Swami Vivekananda continue to bless humankind over
a century after Sri Ramakrishna's Mahasamadhi. His spirirual calling
and devotion to the divine in all beings resound clearly through
the years. Among his words as recorded by his disciples is this
prayer: "Mother, I am the instrument, you are the mover;
I am the room, Thou art the tenant; I am the sheath, Thou art
the sword; I am the chariot, Thou art the charioteer, I do as
Thou makest me do; I speak as Thou makest me speak; I behave as
Thou within me behavest; not I, not I, but Thou." |