Dhananjaya das Remembers Srila Prabhupada: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Remembering Srila Prabhupada]]
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[[Category:Living Devotees Remembering Srila Prabhupada]]
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==Prabhupada Memories==
===Interview 01===


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'''Dhananjaya:''' At 5:00 a.m. on Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur’s  Disappearance Day in December 1970, a stretch white Mercedes stretch  limousine with blacked out windows came to our temple. The chauffeur, with his  cap, his dark suit and his polished black shoes, had a piece of paper with my  name on it. I was called out of the temple room. I identified myself and the  chauffeur said, “I’ve been told to take you to the fruit and vegetable market.” I  said, “Who told you to do this?” He said, “George Harrison is with John Lennon  on a yacht on the Thames, and he remembered it was an auspicious spiritual  master’s day, so he gave me 100 pounds. John gave permission to use his  Mercedes and I’m to take you to the fruit and vegetable market to get fruits and  vegetables for a feast.” While partying with his friends on a yacht, George  spontaneously decided to do this.  Srila Prabhupada wrote to me, “How is the preaching in London?” That year  so many boys and girls joined our temple that the brahmachari and  brahmacharini rooms were overflowing. About 65 devotees were living in a  property meant for 10 or 12. I reported this to Prabhupada and he wrote back,  “Contact our good friend Mr. George Harrison and ask him to help us to find a  bigger property.” George Harrison happened to be in town at the time—that year  he recorded the album later called “Living in the Material World,” which had an  insert of a big color print of Krishna and Arjuna, the same picture that’s on the  cover of Bhagavad-gita As It Is. When I visited George, I’d take him all his  favorite types of prasadam, like deep-fried potatoes, cauliflower and deep-fried  curd soaked in sour cream, samosas, cauliflower pakoras, different kinds of  sweets like burfi, sandesh and Simply Wonderfuls, as well as the strawberry  buttermilk nectar that we became famous for. I was seeing him once a week until  he said, “If you keep bringing all this stuff you have an open invitation to come as  often as you want.” Then I began visiting him three or four times a week and  when I felt it was the right opportunity I said, “George, now we have so many  devotees in our temple that we’re running out of space. Could you help us find a  bigger place?” Without hesitating he said, “Sure. No problem. Visit different  estate agents, see different properties and if you find something really good, call  me and I’ll come with you to check it out.”  George was an exceptional person, and he constantly thought about how to  spread Krishna consciousness. For instance, although it’s a single album, his  album cover for Living In the Material World is double—it folds out—because  George wanted to put a set of japa beads, a bead bag and a set of instructions how  to use them into the other slipcover to be sold along with the record. And a lot of  the lyrics on that album are Krishna conscious. One of the songs, called “The  Lord Loves the One Who Loves the Lord,” George was very clear for whom that  song was meant. He said, “I wrote that for Srila Prabhupada.”  George told me he got inspired when I interrupted him with my visits to his  studio. Once he said, “Every time you come here I can’t get any recording done.  This recording studio costs 3,000 pounds a day but when you come, I don’t get  anything done. We sit down, eat prasadam and talk about Prabhupada and  Krishna consciousness.” He loved distributing Prabhupada’s Gita to his friends,  and we’d supply him with beads and bead bags so his friends could chant japa.  He had the mood of giving to others the wonderful opportunity of Krishna  consciousness that he had received from Srila Prabhupada and the devotees.  When I asked him, “Why don’t you take initiation from Prabhupada?” He said, “I  don’t need to, I’ve already got a spiritual name.” I said, “What do you mean  you’ve got a spiritual name?” He said, “My name’s Hari’s son, son of Hari,” and  then he laughed—that was his Liverpudlian dry humor.  When I went with him to visit different properties, he would have one hand  on the steering wheel, steering the car, and the other hand in his bead bag,  chanting.  Once in 1972 an older English devotee called Bhakti Pramode, who worked  as a security manager for the world-famous Midland Bank, drove Shyamasundar,  Prabhupada and me in his car to see one of the properties that I’d arranged for  George to see. It was called Runnymede Farm on the banks of the River Thames.  Runnymede is where King John, the King of England, signed the Magna Cart in  the early 13th century. The farm hadn’t been used for three or four years and was  overgrown. George came from Friar Park in his Porsche, walked around the  property and said, “They should call this Runnydown Farm, not Runnymede  Farm.”  Bhakti Pramode was an intriguing person who loved to fuss around  Prabhupada. He never called Prabhupada “Prabhupada,” but he called  Prabhupada “Your Grace.” He would say, “How is Your Grace this morning? Are  you feeling cold? I’ve got a travel blanket I’d like to tuck around your legs so you  don’t get cold.” He also liked Scottish highland dancing. Once he and his wife,  Yasodamayi, came for Prabhupada’s evening darshan at Bury Place when Bhakti  Pramode was wearing his full highland dress kit—with a tweed jacket and a kilt  and the sporran and the long stockings and the sgian dubh, that little knife  tucked into the top of the stockings with a kilt. He and his wife paid their  obeisances and sat on the floor. Since he was elderly—in his mid to late 50s—  Bhakti Pramode couldn’t sit cross-legged properly. He had his knees up in the air  and Prabhupada was looking straight up his kilt. Prabhupada said, “What is that  you’re wearing?” He said, “This is a typical Scottish dress, Your Grace, because  we’ve just come back from some highland dancing.” Prabhupada said, “You are  feeling comfortable in that skirt, or would you prefer to sit on a chair?” because  he was kind of exposing himself to Srila Prabhupada. Anyway, this Bhakti  Pramode was Prabhupada’s driver. He drove Prabhupada to Ratha-yatra or  wherever Prabhupada wanted to go and sometimes he would try to get  Prabhupada to go on little tours around London. He wanted to take Prabhupada  to see Londinium, the first city the Romans established where there’s still some  Roman ramparts, and he showed Prabhupada Buckingham Palace and London  Bridge. Prabhupada liked Bhakti Pramode.  Anyway, there we were in Runnymede Farm. We walked up to the main  house, which wasn’t a standard farmhouse but was a small stately home with  impressive column pillars in the front, high vaulted ceilings and a beautiful  staircase. George and the rest of us stood with Srila Prabhupada, discussing the  possibility of moving onto this property. Prabhupada said, “Before we move in,  we will build a bank beside this house,” he pointed to Bhakti Pramode and  continued, “You will be the bank manager because you have some experience in  banking.” Then Prabhupada pointed to George and said, “And George, you will  deposit all your money in that bank and we will spend everything in Krishna’s  service.” George, taken aback, said, “All my money will be. . . ?” We all laughed  because what Prabhupada said was completely unexpected.  By the end of 1972 nothing had happened. Prabhupada wrote to me, “Better  to take the upper hand and begin very energetically attempting to get some place.  Expending energy for Krishna, that is appreciated and not the actual result of our  energy. But if there is lack of energy being devoted for some purpose, then  everything will be delayed and possibly stopped. Better to seize the iron while the  fire is hot, that my guru maharaj used to tell me.” Prabhupada presumed that the  iron was getting a little cold. Then in January of 1973, in a freezing cold,  miserable British winter, we got information about a property called Piggot’s  Manor in Letchmore Heath, 17 miles from central London. This was the one and  only time I didn’t go as a devotee, with a shaved head, dhoti, tilak and kurta, but  went disguised with trousers, coat and hat. The previous property George and I  had looked at was an amazing health spa outside of the city of Oxford with an  indoor heated swimming pool, a beautiful conservatory, saunas and mud baths  and more than a hundred acres of land. The asking price was 330,000 pounds.  After George saw that property he said, “This is a bit rich for you people, isn’t it?  You’re supposed to be renunciants. Even I would have a hard time remaining  Krishna conscious in this environment.” Then we got the details on the Manor,  which was being sold for 220,000 pounds—110,000 pounds cheaper than the  previous property. This time George didn’t come but I phoned him from a pay  phone in what is now the Manor temple room, and I described the details and the  price. He said, “It’s a lot cheaper than the previous property. What do you think?”  I said, “I think it’s a fabulous place.” He said, “All right, I trust your judgement.  I can’t come to see it because we’re having some meetings in Los Angeles  with Allen Klein, our financial advisor, about selling the Apple Company.” George  gave me the names and phone numbers of legal people who could do the paper  work to buy the property, and said, “Phone them up, tell them that you want to  secure this property, and when the transaction is complete, I’ll come and see it.”  The paperwork took about six months. George had set up a foundation called the  Material World Charitable Foundation. He said, “The profits from the Living In  the Material World LP album will go towards paying for that property, but it’ll go  through my foundation.” And that’s what happened—the Material World  Charitable Foundation paid for the property, and the agreement was that we  would pay 10 pounds a year rent, which is called a peppercorn rent. It’s the  absolute minimum that you can pay for a costly property.  We acquired the Manor from a Scottish lady, Mrs. Ruffles, who was from  Aberdeen, a city in northern Scotland. The story is that the Scots are quite mean,  but even in Scotland, people from Aberdeen are called Aberdonians, and are  considered extremely mean. Before we moved into the property, Mrs. Ruffles  removed every single doorknob from every single door. She removed a pair of  brass lion’s head doorknockers from the front doors to the house. She removed  all the pelmets and siphoned off all the diesel fuel (for the central heating) from  the tanks. Mrs. Ruffles took away all the coal for the fireplaces. When  Prabhupada went on an inspection, there were a couple of doors we couldn’t open  because there were no doorknobs or door handles or any way to open the doors,  so we had to show him those rooms later on. When we showed him his quarters  upstairs, with its huge living room, a huge old-fashioned bathroom and a  comfortable bedroom, he was happy. He said, “Yes, this is a nice facility for the  spiritual master.”  All this time the Deities that had been sent from India were in our temple  sewing room. Generally when there’s a new temple project, first we get the land  and house and then the Deities come. But in this situation, the Deities came one  year before we acquired Bhaktivedanta Manor. When Prabhupada came in the  summer of 1973, he asked me, “Where are the Deities that came to England in  1972?” I said, “They’re stored in Bury Place.” Prabhupada said, “We will install  those Deities in this property.” And that’s what happened. On Janmastami Day of  1973, Srila Prabhupada installed the Deities and he named Them Sri Sri Radha-  Gokulananda. He had intended to call the community New Gokula, and the bliss  of Gokula is Radha-Gokulananda.  One of the first things George did when he returned from Los Angeles was  visit the Manor. We took him on a tour of all the rooms because by that time we’d  gotten door handles and doorknobs and we showed him the gardens and the lake  and all the other places. George was curious about everything. He liked the  Manor and thought it was a good value for the money. Then Shyamasundar  brought George to the temple room and said, “Wouldn’t some crystal chandeliers  look great here?” George said, “Yeah, that would be really nice,” and George  bought a pair of beautiful chandeliers for 3,000 pounds—after he had just bought  the Manor for us.  When Prabhupada first came to the Manor in 1973, it was raining and at that  time he told me three things. First, he said, “This property is like gold kept in a  dark place. To appreciate the value of gold requires bright light, especially  sunshine, because gold naturally shines. But if you keep it in a dark place, then  who can appreciate it? Similarly, this is a valuable property. But because of the  weather, who can appreciate it?” The British weather is typically raining and  cloudy and miserable. Occasionally, for a week or two, it would be sunny and we  have beautiful photographs and films from the Manor of Prabhupada sitting on  the lawn on sunny days.  Second, because he was shrewd, Prabhupada also said, “This property is like  a white elephant. A white elephant is something rare and valuable, but it is  expensive to maintain. Similarly, this property will be very expensive to run.”  That turned out to be very true.  And finally he said that he wanted the Manor to be famous for cow  protection. He said that we should teach the British the importance of cow  protection, go-raksya, and keep 150 cows there. At that time we had 17 acres of  land and only 6 acres of it was an arable field suitable for cows. I said,  “Prabhupada, it’s not practical to keep 150 cows on 6 acres of land because each  cow requires at least one acre.” Prabhupada said, “So purchase 150 acres for the  cows. What is the difficulty? But that’s the minimum number of cows you should  keep. If you need to purchase another 150 acres for those cows, then purchase it.”  We didn’t acquire more land until 1997, when we got permission to put in a new  approach road and got another 55 acres with that, so now we have about half the  amount of land that Prabhupada said we should have in 1973—and now we have  25 cows. Prabhupada also wanted us to buy a double-decker red London  transport bus, drive it into the center of London, fill it up with people  interested in the Manor, and bring them there for some time.  Srila Prabhupada’s vision was always long range, and sometimes we have a  hard time fulfilling it. There is no place in the UK where Krishna conscious cow  protection is practiced. Prabhupada wanted us to be self-sufficient in ghee and  milk, to sell ghee to the visitors, and for us to be engaged in handicrafts like  spinning, weaving cloth, making brass Deities and so forth. I said, “What about  the Indian community? Should we focus on the Indian community?” At that time  Prabhupada said, “No, we don’t need to bother with the Indian community, they  are already Krishna conscious. We have to focus our attention on the British  community, they know nothing about Krishna.”  Once, George came to see Prabhupada with Ravi Shankar. As he usually did,  George offered his full dandavats to Prabhupada. Ravi Shankar had presumed  that George was his own disciple, but George never offered his dandavats to  Ravi. He only did that to Prabhupada, and Prabhupada immediately sensed that  Ravi Shankar was a little envious. After speaking with George, Prabhupada said,  “You must be hungry. Go to the kitchen and get prasadam,” and Prabhupada  asked a devotee to accompany George. When George had left, Prabhupada talked  with Ravi Shankar and that placated Ravi Shankar’s false ego. Their conversation  centered on plane tickets, travel and the best airline to travel on because  Prabhupada understood that Ravi Shankar was not interested in spiritual  philosophy. So Prabhupada related to Ravi Shankar in a way that he could keep  up the conversation. Prabhupada was expert at dealing with everybody. He knew  George’s love for prasadam and he knew that Ravi Shankar needed attention.  When George visited Prabhupada at the Manor in 1976 he said, “Do you  think I should move into the ashram, shave up, and wear tilak and a dhoti?”  Prabhupada said, “No.” At that meeting George came with Ravi Shankar’s niece,  Laksmi Shankar, and had just made the musical arrangements and written the  words for a song called “Krishna, Where Are You?” that she had sung. George  played that song for Prabhupada. Prabhupada listened to it and said, “Yes, this is  the mood of the six Goswamis. Krishna, where are You? I have not captured You.  I would love to capture You, I would love to have You in my vision eternally, but  You are always disappearing from my sight. This feeling of separation, called  vipralambha, is very pleasing. Go on writing lyrics and music like this. This is  your service to Krishna. It will not be good for you to live in the ashram. You can  do much more preaching and reach many more people if you remain outside.”  Prabhupada was very understanding.  By 1980 we’d been living at the Manor, worshipping Radha-Gokulananda,  for seven years and many Indian businessmen wanted to get involved. There was  a lot of restoration and repair work to do and we needed a car park. But these  businessmen didn’t want to give their money because they knew that George’s  foundation, not ISKCON, owned the property. They would say, “Can we trust  George? One day he could decide he didn’t like you Hare Krishnas anymore and  say, ‘Get out.’ There’s no binding legal document and we’d have given donations  for nothing. We don’t want to do that.” At the time Vicitravirya was the temple  president and we had had the Manor property appraised by Lloyd’s Bank and  Barclay’s Bank and we’d also been advised by our solicitor. Vicitravirya said to  me, “Ask George how he feels about us and about this property.” I called George  and he came over. I said to George, “We want to stay here and many people want  to give sizable donations—10,000, 20,000 pounds or more—but they know that  we don’t own the property. So what we want is either to pay rent and get a 100-  year lease from you, or to pay for the property in installments over 10 or  15 years.” We walked around, and since by that time George was into gardening  and identified himself as a gardener, he didn’t like how we hadn’t maintained  the gardens. I’d seen his place, Friar Park, and over the years it was  amazing what a wonderful job he’d done on his property. He’d learned the Latin  names of every plant and herb. Our gardens were full of weeds because our  qualified devotees were on the streets selling books, not gardening and weeding  and trimming hedges and planting, and our place was a terrible mess. George  said, “I’m getting a headache just walking around here. You haven’t looked after  this place.” I was very nervous. He said, “Give me a week to think about it and I’ll  let you know.” A week later he called and said, “I’ve spoken with Allen Klein, and  what he’s come up with is this. You put 45,000 pounds towards the cost of the  property and from my side I’ll put another 145, which makes a total of 190. And  we’ll show that we sold the property to you at a loss. I know you can’t afford 190  but if you can come up with 45,000 within a week, the place is yours. Then I don’t  need to think about it anymore.” He wanted to give the place as a donation but he  couldn’t legally because a charitable foundation can’t donate property to another  charity—there has to be some financial transaction. Since the property cost 220,  through the books he was making a loss of about 30,000. But by 1980 the two  banks had appraised the property at 1.5 million pounds. So we got the 45,000  pounds together, gave it to him, he signed the deeds over to ISKCON, and from  that day the Manor belonged to ISKCON.  The last time George associated with a large group of devotees was when he  and his wife, Olivia, visited the Manor in the summer of 1997. We had invited him  to a celebratory dinner a few days after we got permission to build the new  approach road. This dinner was held shortly after we had another amazing fundraising  dinner called “Prabhupada’s Dream”, during which guests and patron  members of the Manor were invited to raise funds to buy the land for the  approach road. That evening the target was to raise one million pounds. We  rented a large circus tent with a stage, set many tables, and served a nice dinner.  There was a positive response—within two hours we raised 800,000 pounds—but  we were 200,000 short until Michael, an Irish businessman patron member who  imported Indian clothing, so appreciated Prabhupada’s Dream of having 150  acres of land for 150 protected cows, that he pledged 200,000 pounds. Michael  had only once before been to the Manor and at that time he had taken part in  arati and heard a lecture, but that evening was the first time he had attended a  special patron’s dinner and he pledged more than any other patron member.  What he pledged was a substantial amount of money for anyone, especially for a  person of non-Indian origin. It was an auspicious evening.  George agreed to come to our second dinner, but we didn’t know if his wife  would come. Both were invited but Olivia never attended our public functions.  She wasn’t a great fan of the Hare Krishna devotees—she followed somebody  else—and she left it up to her husband to go to such things. But this time she  came. A Gujarati disciple of Shivaram Swami named Sruti Dharma and I went to  the car park at the Manor to welcome them. They had brought rubber Welly  boots with them because they were enthusiastic to walk through the fields to see  where the new approach road was going to be built, and we did that. We walked  from where the main gate would be all the way to the Manor property, which is  about a half a mile. We stopped to talk along the way and George observed the  fields, “How far does the property extend on this side of the road? How far on the  other side of the road? Are you going to have any kind of hedges or trees so that  the road doesn’t look ugly, so it doesn’t spoil the overall beauty of the farmland?”  We got into the details and when we were returning George said, “If you want to  have a successful business, I suggest you start a garden center.” In England,  garden centers are usually incredibly successful. Families who’ve just moved into  their home buy trees and shrubs, flowers and herbs. George said, “If you do that,  I don’t think you need planning permission for this.” He’d put a lot of thought  into this idea and as I said, he identified himself as a gardener first and a  musician second. He said, “I’ll help you set it up and with whatever you need.”  We were happy that he was so open-minded about our project. Then we took him  to the temple with Radha-Gokulananda’s altar, Sita-Rama, Laksman, and  Hanuman’s altar and the little Gaura-Nitai Deities between Them. George offered  his full dandavats to the Deities, Olivia offered her pranams and they both took  charanamrita. Then we went into the dining room.  The history behind this dinner is that in 1982 the local District Council  decided that it didn’t want to have the Manor as a public place of worship because  the building hadn’t been planned as such. They wanted to close down the Manor.  Our 15-year campaign to keep the Manor open was basically a freedom of religion  case. During that time reporters were always interviewing the devotees. We were  in newspapers, on television, and on the radio. At one time the Manor had been  owned by Saint Bartholomew’s Hospital, an old hospital in London, for a nurse’s  training college. Mrs. Ruffles had bought it from Saint Bart’s with the idea of  turning it into a nursing home, but she couldn’t carry the financial burden and so  she sold it. Then we moved in and suddenly festivals were going on with  thousands of visitors and many cars were in the village. We didn’t want the  villagers to be irate with our festivals—we wanted to take the strain off the village.  After a long, hard battle, in 1996, the British Government’s Secretary of State for  the Environment, John Gummer, announced on television that, “the government  gave permission for the construction of an access driveway which by-passed the  local village, plus full planning permission for the Manor to be used as a place of  public worship.” Before that neither the government nor the District Council had  recognized us. That was a great victory for us and that’s why we had this victory  dinner, which was a nice feast cooked by my wife, Bala Gopala.  Everybody who had been involved in the campaign—over 200 people—were  there, all VIP guests including some MP’s, legal people, newspaper people and so  on. Akhandadhi mentioned all the different guests that were present and praised  and honored everybody. Finally he came to George and said, “We have to thank  George because this would never have happened if he hadn’t agreed to donate  this property.” George was an honored guest, but he wasn’t expected to say  anything. But before he spoke, Olivia stood up and said, “I am deeply touched by  what I’ve heard and seen tonight, and I feel impelled to say that George has got  true friends here, and I feel happy for him. And I feel happy that I didn’t miss the  opportunity to witness this amazing gathering.” This was the only time that Olivia  had come to the Manor. Before, when I called George and she answered the  phone, she would be rude. I used to pray that she didn’t answer the phone. She  would try to stop me from intruding into their privacy by visiting her husband.  Olivia didn’t like us until that evening. After she sat down, Shyamasundar and  Mukunda presented George with a little Prabhupada murti with a Prabhupada  hat and glasses and a bead bag and a little book rest and a miniature size  Bhagavad-gita, a little vyasasana and a sannyasi danda, and a little pair of  kartals and a little pair of glasses. It was cute. George cradled Prabhupada and  said, “I’m going to take Prabhupada home with me tonight.” It really touched  him. He said, “I didn’t want to say anything, but I feel I’ve got to. First of all, I feel  ashamed that I never participated in this campaign.” George hadn’t given any  support, either verbally or in the press or in any other way. He said, “But I was  following it on television or in the papers. I knew what was going on. In the back  of my mind I thought if it didn’t work out, if you had to close the Manor, you  could move over to my place in Henley and take over Friar Park—that could be  your new temple.” He was so moved by what he had heard that evening that he  was talking from his heart. Everybody started clapping like anything. 
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'''To view the entire unedited video go to [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WehHxfVsmPg Memories 09 - The English Yatra]'''
===Interview 02===
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'''Dhananjaya:''' At 5:00 a.m. on Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur’s  Disappearance Day in December 1970, a stretch white Mercedes stretch  limousine with blacked out windows came to our temple. The chauffeur, with his  cap, his dark suit and his polished black shoes, had a piece of paper with my  name on it. I was called out of the temple room. I identified myself and the  chauffeur said, “I’ve been told to take you to the fruit and vegetable market.” I  said, “Who told you to do this?” He said, “George Harrison is with John Lennon  on a yacht on the Thames, and he remembered it was an auspicious spiritual  master’s day, so he gave me 100 pounds. John gave permission to use his  Mercedes and I’m to take you to the fruit and vegetable market to get fruits and  vegetables for a feast.” While partying with his friends on a yacht, George  spontaneously decided to do this.  Srila Prabhupada wrote to me, “How is the preaching in London?” That year  so many boys and girls joined our temple that the brahmachari and  brahmacharini rooms were overflowing. About 65 devotees were living in a  property meant for 10 or 12. I reported this to Prabhupada and he wrote back,  “Contact our good friend Mr. George Harrison and ask him to help us to find a  bigger property.” George Harrison happened to be in town at the time—that year  he recorded the album later called “Living in the Material World,” which had an  insert of a big color print of Krishna and Arjuna, the same picture that’s on the  cover of Bhagavad-gita As It Is. When I visited George, I’d take him all his  favorite types of prasadam, like deep-fried potatoes, cauliflower and deep-fried  curd soaked in sour cream, samosas, cauliflower pakoras, different kinds of  sweets like burfi, sandesh and Simply Wonderfuls, as well as the strawberry  buttermilk nectar that we became famous for. I was seeing him once a week until  he said, “If you keep bringing all this stuff you have an open invitation to come as  often as you want.” Then I began visiting him three or four times a week and  when I felt it was the right opportunity I said, “George, now we have so many  devotees in our temple that we’re running out of space. Could you help us find a  bigger place?” Without hesitating he said, “Sure. No problem. Visit different  estate agents, see different properties and if you find something really good, call  me and I’ll come with you to check it out.”  George was an exceptional person, and he constantly thought about how to  spread Krishna consciousness. For instance, although it’s a single album, his  album cover for Living In the Material World is double—it folds out—because  George wanted to put a set of japa beads, a bead bag and a set of instructions how  to use them into the other slipcover to be sold along with the record. And a lot of  the lyrics on that album are Krishna conscious. One of the songs, called “The  Lord Loves the One Who Loves the Lord,” George was very clear for whom that  song was meant. He said, “I wrote that for Srila Prabhupada.”  George told me he got inspired when I interrupted him with my visits to his  studio. Once he said, “Every time you come here I can’t get any recording done.  This recording studio costs 3,000 pounds a day but when you come, I don’t get  anything done. We sit down, eat prasadam and talk about Prabhupada and  Krishna consciousness.” He loved distributing Prabhupada’s Gita to his friends,  and we’d supply him with beads and bead bags so his friends could chant japa.  He had the mood of giving to others the wonderful opportunity of Krishna  consciousness that he had received from Srila Prabhupada and the devotees.  When I asked him, “Why don’t you take initiation from Prabhupada?” He said, “I  don’t need to, I’ve already got a spiritual name.” I said, “What do you mean  you’ve got a spiritual name?” He said, “My name’s Hari’s son, son of Hari,” and  then he laughed—that was his Liverpudlian dry humor.  When I went with him to visit different properties, he would have one hand  on the steering wheel, steering the car, and the other hand in his bead bag,  chanting.  Once in 1972 an older English devotee called Bhakti Pramode, who worked  as a security manager for the world-famous Midland Bank, drove Shyamasundar,  Prabhupada and me in his car to see one of the properties that I’d arranged for  George to see. It was called Runnymede Farm on the banks of the River Thames.  Runnymede is where King John, the King of England, signed the Magna Cart in  the early 13th century. The farm hadn’t been used for three or four years and was  overgrown. George came from Friar Park in his Porsche, walked around the  property and said, “They should call this Runnydown Farm, not Runnymede  Farm.”  Bhakti Pramode was an intriguing person who loved to fuss around  Prabhupada. He never called Prabhupada “Prabhupada,” but he called  Prabhupada “Your Grace.” He would say, “How is Your Grace this morning? Are  you feeling cold? I’ve got a travel blanket I’d like to tuck around your legs so you  don’t get cold.” He also liked Scottish highland dancing. Once he and his wife,  Yasodamayi, came for Prabhupada’s evening darshan at Bury Place when Bhakti  Pramode was wearing his full highland dress kit—with a tweed jacket and a kilt  and the sporran and the long stockings and the sgian dubh, that little knife  tucked into the top of the stockings with a kilt. He and his wife paid their  obeisances and sat on the floor. Since he was elderly—in his mid to late 50s—  Bhakti Pramode couldn’t sit cross-legged properly. He had his knees up in the air  and Prabhupada was looking straight up his kilt. Prabhupada said, “What is that  you’re wearing?” He said, “This is a typical Scottish dress, Your Grace, because  we’ve just come back from some highland dancing.” Prabhupada said, “You are  feeling comfortable in that skirt, or would you prefer to sit on a chair?” because  he was kind of exposing himself to Srila Prabhupada. Anyway, this Bhakti  Pramode was Prabhupada’s driver. He drove Prabhupada to Ratha-yatra or  wherever Prabhupada wanted to go and sometimes he would try to get  Prabhupada to go on little tours around London. He wanted to take Prabhupada  to see Londinium, the first city the Romans established where there’s still some  Roman ramparts, and he showed Prabhupada Buckingham Palace and London  Bridge. Prabhupada liked Bhakti Pramode.  Anyway, there we were in Runnymede Farm. We walked up to the main  house, which wasn’t a standard farmhouse but was a small stately home with  impressive column pillars in the front, high vaulted ceilings and a beautiful  staircase. George and the rest of us stood with Srila Prabhupada, discussing the  possibility of moving onto this property. Prabhupada said, “Before we move in,  we will build a bank beside this house,” he pointed to Bhakti Pramode and  continued, “You will be the bank manager because you have some experience in  banking.” Then Prabhupada pointed to George and said, “And George, you will  deposit all your money in that bank and we will spend everything in Krishna’s  service.” George, taken aback, said, “All my money will be. . . ?” We all laughed  because what Prabhupada said was completely unexpected.  By the end of 1972 nothing had happened. Prabhupada wrote to me, “Better  to take the upper hand and begin very energetically attempting to get some place.  Expending energy for Krishna, that is appreciated and not the actual result of our  energy. But if there is lack of energy being devoted for some purpose, then  everything will be delayed and possibly stopped. Better to seize the iron while the  fire is hot, that my guru maharaj used to tell me.” Prabhupada presumed that the  iron was getting a little cold. Then in January of 1973, in a freezing cold,  miserable British winter, we got information about a property called Piggot’s  Manor in Letchmore Heath, 17 miles from central London. This was the one and  only time I didn’t go as a devotee, with a shaved head, dhoti, tilak and kurta, but  went disguised with trousers, coat and hat. The previous property George and I  had looked at was an amazing health spa outside of the city of Oxford with an  indoor heated swimming pool, a beautiful conservatory, saunas and mud baths  and more than a hundred acres of land. The asking price was 330,000 pounds.  After George saw that property he said, “This is a bit rich for you people, isn’t it?  You’re supposed to be renunciants. Even I would have a hard time remaining  Krishna conscious in this environment.” Then we got the details on the Manor,  which was being sold for 220,000 pounds—110,000 pounds cheaper than the  previous property. This time George didn’t come but I phoned him from a pay  phone in what is now the Manor temple room, and I described the details and the  price. He said, “It’s a lot cheaper than the previous property. What do you think?”  I said, “I think it’s a fabulous place.” He said, “All right, I trust your judgement.  I can’t come to see it because we’re having some meetings in Los Angeles  with Allen Klein, our financial advisor, about selling the Apple Company.” George  gave me the names and phone numbers of legal people who could do the paper  work to buy the property, and said, “Phone them up, tell them that you want to  secure this property, and when the transaction is complete, I’ll come and see it.”  The paperwork took about six months. George had set up a foundation called the  Material World Charitable Foundation. He said, “The profits from the Living In  the Material World LP album will go towards paying for that property, but it’ll go  through my foundation.” And that’s what happened—the Material World  Charitable Foundation paid for the property, and the agreement was that we  would pay 10 pounds a year rent, which is called a peppercorn rent. It’s the  absolute minimum that you can pay for a costly property.  We acquired the Manor from a Scottish lady, Mrs. Ruffles, who was from  Aberdeen, a city in northern Scotland. The story is that the Scots are quite mean,  but even in Scotland, people from Aberdeen are called Aberdonians, and are  considered extremely mean. Before we moved into the property, Mrs. Ruffles  removed every single doorknob from every single door. She removed a pair of  brass lion’s head doorknockers from the front doors to the house. She removed  all the pelmets and siphoned off all the diesel fuel (for the central heating) from  the tanks. Mrs. Ruffles took away all the coal for the fireplaces. When  Prabhupada went on an inspection, there were a couple of doors we couldn’t open  because there were no doorknobs or door handles or any way to open the doors,  so we had to show him those rooms later on. When we showed him his quarters  upstairs, with its huge living room, a huge old-fashioned bathroom and a  comfortable bedroom, he was happy. He said, “Yes, this is a nice facility for the  spiritual master.”  All this time the Deities that had been sent from India were in our temple  sewing room. Generally when there’s a new temple project, first we get the land  and house and then the Deities come. But in this situation, the Deities came one  year before we acquired Bhaktivedanta Manor. When Prabhupada came in the  summer of 1973, he asked me, “Where are the Deities that came to England in  1972?” I said, “They’re stored in Bury Place.” Prabhupada said, “We will install  those Deities in this property.” And that’s what happened. On Janmastami Day of  1973, Srila Prabhupada installed the Deities and he named Them Sri Sri Radha-  Gokulananda. He had intended to call the community New Gokula, and the bliss  of Gokula is Radha-Gokulananda.  One of the first things George did when he returned from Los Angeles was  visit the Manor. We took him on a tour of all the rooms because by that time we’d  gotten door handles and doorknobs and we showed him the gardens and the lake  and all the other places. George was curious about everything. He liked the  Manor and thought it was a good value for the money. Then Shyamasundar  brought George to the temple room and said, “Wouldn’t some crystal chandeliers  look great here?” George said, “Yeah, that would be really nice,” and George  bought a pair of beautiful chandeliers for 3,000 pounds—after he had just bought  the Manor for us.  When Prabhupada first came to the Manor in 1973, it was raining and at that  time he told me three things. First, he said, “This property is like gold kept in a  dark place. To appreciate the value of gold requires bright light, especially  sunshine, because gold naturally shines. But if you keep it in a dark place, then  who can appreciate it? Similarly, this is a valuable property. But because of the  weather, who can appreciate it?” The British weather is typically raining and  cloudy and miserable. Occasionally, for a week or two, it would be sunny and we  have beautiful photographs and films from the Manor of Prabhupada sitting on  the lawn on sunny days.  Second, because he was shrewd, Prabhupada also said, “This property is like  a white elephant. A white elephant is something rare and valuable, but it is  expensive to maintain. Similarly, this property will be very expensive to run.”  That turned out to be very true.  And finally he said that he wanted the Manor to be famous for cow  protection. He said that we should teach the British the importance of cow  protection, go-raksya, and keep 150 cows there. At that time we had 17 acres of  land and only 6 acres of it was an arable field suitable for cows. I said,  “Prabhupada, it’s not practical to keep 150 cows on 6 acres of land because each  cow requires at least one acre.” Prabhupada said, “So purchase 150 acres for the  cows. What is the difficulty? But that’s the minimum number of cows you should  keep. If you need to purchase another 150 acres for those cows, then purchase it.”  We didn’t acquire more land until 1997, when we got permission to put in a new  approach road and got another 55 acres with that, so now we have about half the  amount of land that Prabhupada said we should have in 1973—and now we have  25 cows. Prabhupada also wanted us to buy a double-decker red London  transport bus, drive it into the center of London, fill it up with people  interested in the Manor, and bring them there for some time.  Srila Prabhupada’s vision was always long range, and sometimes we have a  hard time fulfilling it. There is no place in the UK where Krishna conscious cow  protection is practiced. Prabhupada wanted us to be self-sufficient in ghee and  milk, to sell ghee to the visitors, and for us to be engaged in handicrafts like  spinning, weaving cloth, making brass Deities and so forth. I said, “What about  the Indian community? Should we focus on the Indian community?” At that time  Prabhupada said, “No, we don’t need to bother with the Indian community, they  are already Krishna conscious. We have to focus our attention on the British  community, they know nothing about Krishna.”  Once, George came to see Prabhupada with Ravi Shankar. As he usually did,  George offered his full dandavats to Prabhupada. Ravi Shankar had presumed  that George was his own disciple, but George never offered his dandavats to  Ravi. He only did that to Prabhupada, and Prabhupada immediately sensed that  Ravi Shankar was a little envious. After speaking with George, Prabhupada said,  “You must be hungry. Go to the kitchen and get prasadam,” and Prabhupada  asked a devotee to accompany George. When George had left, Prabhupada talked  with Ravi Shankar and that placated Ravi Shankar’s false ego. Their conversation  centered on plane tickets, travel and the best airline to travel on because  Prabhupada understood that Ravi Shankar was not interested in spiritual  philosophy. So Prabhupada related to Ravi Shankar in a way that he could keep  up the conversation. Prabhupada was expert at dealing with everybody. He knew  George’s love for prasadam and he knew that Ravi Shankar needed attention.  When George visited Prabhupada at the Manor in 1976 he said, “Do you  think I should move into the ashram, shave up, and wear tilak and a dhoti?”  Prabhupada said, “No.” At that meeting George came with Ravi Shankar’s niece,  Laksmi Shankar, and had just made the musical arrangements and written the  words for a song called “Krishna, Where Are You?” that she had sung. George  played that song for Prabhupada. Prabhupada listened to it and said, “Yes, this is  the mood of the six Goswamis. Krishna, where are You? I have not captured You.  I would love to capture You, I would love to have You in my vision eternally, but  You are always disappearing from my sight. This feeling of separation, called  vipralambha, is very pleasing. Go on writing lyrics and music like this. This is  your service to Krishna. It will not be good for you to live in the ashram. You can  do much more preaching and reach many more people if you remain outside.”  Prabhupada was very understanding.  By 1980 we’d been living at the Manor, worshipping Radha-Gokulananda,  for seven years and many Indian businessmen wanted to get involved. There was  a lot of restoration and repair work to do and we needed a car park. But these  businessmen didn’t want to give their money because they knew that George’s  foundation, not ISKCON, owned the property. They would say, “Can we trust  George? One day he could decide he didn’t like you Hare Krishnas anymore and  say, ‘Get out.’ There’s no binding legal document and we’d have given donations  for nothing. We don’t want to do that.” At the time Vicitravirya was the temple  president and we had had the Manor property appraised by Lloyd’s Bank and  Barclay’s Bank and we’d also been advised by our solicitor. Vicitravirya said to  me, “Ask George how he feels about us and about this property.” I called George  and he came over. I said to George, “We want to stay here and many people want  to give sizable donations—10,000, 20,000 pounds or more—but they know that  we don’t own the property. So what we want is either to pay rent and get a 100-  year lease from you, or to pay for the property in installments over 10 or  15 years.” We walked around, and since by that time George was into gardening  and identified himself as a gardener, he didn’t like how we hadn’t maintained  the gardens. I’d seen his place, Friar Park, and over the years it was  amazing what a wonderful job he’d done on his property. He’d learned the Latin  names of every plant and herb. Our gardens were full of weeds because our  qualified devotees were on the streets selling books, not gardening and weeding  and trimming hedges and planting, and our place was a terrible mess. George  said, “I’m getting a headache just walking around here. You haven’t looked after  this place.” I was very nervous. He said, “Give me a week to think about it and I’ll  let you know.” A week later he called and said, “I’ve spoken with Allen Klein, and  what he’s come up with is this. You put 45,000 pounds towards the cost of the  property and from my side I’ll put another 145, which makes a total of 190. And  we’ll show that we sold the property to you at a loss. I know you can’t afford 190  but if you can come up with 45,000 within a week, the place is yours. Then I don’t  need to think about it anymore.” He wanted to give the place as a donation but he  couldn’t legally because a charitable foundation can’t donate property to another  charity—there has to be some financial transaction. Since the property cost 220,  through the books he was making a loss of about 30,000. But by 1980 the two  banks had appraised the property at 1.5 million pounds. So we got the 45,000  pounds together, gave it to him, he signed the deeds over to ISKCON, and from  that day the Manor belonged to ISKCON.  The last time George associated with a large group of devotees was when he  and his wife, Olivia, visited the Manor in the summer of 1997. We had invited him  to a celebratory dinner a few days after we got permission to build the new  approach road. This dinner was held shortly after we had another amazing fundraising  dinner called “Prabhupada’s Dream”, during which guests and patron  members of the Manor were invited to raise funds to buy the land for the  approach road. That evening the target was to raise one million pounds. We  rented a large circus tent with a stage, set many tables, and served a nice dinner.  There was a positive response—within two hours we raised 800,000 pounds—but  we were 200,000 short until Michael, an Irish businessman patron member who  imported Indian clothing, so appreciated Prabhupada’s Dream of having 150  acres of land for 150 protected cows, that he pledged 200,000 pounds. Michael  had only once before been to the Manor and at that time he had taken part in  arati and heard a lecture, but that evening was the first time he had attended a  special patron’s dinner and he pledged more than any other patron member.  What he pledged was a substantial amount of money for anyone, especially for a  person of non-Indian origin. It was an auspicious evening.  George agreed to come to our second dinner, but we didn’t know if his wife  would come. Both were invited but Olivia never attended our public functions.  She wasn’t a great fan of the Hare Krishna devotees—she followed somebody  else—and she left it up to her husband to go to such things. But this time she  came. A Gujarati disciple of Shivaram Swami named Sruti Dharma and I went to  the car park at the Manor to welcome them. They had brought rubber Welly  boots with them because they were enthusiastic to walk through the fields to see  where the new approach road was going to be built, and we did that. We walked  from where the main gate would be all the way to the Manor property, which is  about a half a mile. We stopped to talk along the way and George observed the  fields, “How far does the property extend on this side of the road? How far on the  other side of the road? Are you going to have any kind of hedges or trees so that  the road doesn’t look ugly, so it doesn’t spoil the overall beauty of the farmland?”  We got into the details and when we were returning George said, “If you want to  have a successful business, I suggest you start a garden center.” In England,  garden centers are usually incredibly successful. Families who’ve just moved into  their home buy trees and shrubs, flowers and herbs. George said, “If you do that,  I don’t think you need planning permission for this.” He’d put a lot of thought  into this idea and as I said, he identified himself as a gardener first and a  musician second. He said, “I’ll help you set it up and with whatever you need.”  We were happy that he was so open-minded about our project. Then we took him  to the temple with Radha-Gokulananda’s altar, Sita-Rama, Laksman, and  Hanuman’s altar and the little Gaura-Nitai Deities between Them. George offered  his full dandavats to the Deities, Olivia offered her pranams and they both took  charanamrita. Then we went into the dining room.  The history behind this dinner is that in 1982 the local District Council  decided that it didn’t want to have the Manor as a public place of worship because  the building hadn’t been planned as such. They wanted to close down the Manor.  Our 15-year campaign to keep the Manor open was basically a freedom of religion  case. During that time reporters were always interviewing the devotees. We were  in newspapers, on television, and on the radio. At one time the Manor had been  owned by Saint Bartholomew’s Hospital, an old hospital in London, for a nurse’s  training college. Mrs. Ruffles had bought it from Saint Bart’s with the idea of  turning it into a nursing home, but she couldn’t carry the financial burden and so  she sold it. Then we moved in and suddenly festivals were going on with  thousands of visitors and many cars were in the village. We didn’t want the  villagers to be irate with our festivals—we wanted to take the strain off the village.  After a long, hard battle, in 1996, the British Government’s Secretary of State for  the Environment, John Gummer, announced on television that, “the government  gave permission for the construction of an access driveway which by-passed the  local village, plus full planning permission for the Manor to be used as a place of  public worship.” Before that neither the government nor the District Council had  recognized us. That was a great victory for us and that’s why we had this victory  dinner, which was a nice feast cooked by my wife, Bala Gopala.  Everybody who had been involved in the campaign—over 200 people—were  there, all VIP guests including some MP’s, legal people, newspaper people and so  on. Akhandadhi mentioned all the different guests that were present and praised  and honored everybody. Finally he came to George and said, “We have to thank  George because this would never have happened if he hadn’t agreed to donate  this property.” George was an honored guest, but he wasn’t expected to say  anything. But before he spoke, Olivia stood up and said, “I am deeply touched by  what I’ve heard and seen tonight, and I feel impelled to say that George has got  true friends here, and I feel happy for him. And I feel happy that I didn’t miss the  opportunity to witness this amazing gathering.” This was the only time that Olivia  had come to the Manor. Before, when I called George and she answered the  phone, she would be rude. I used to pray that she didn’t answer the phone. She  would try to stop me from intruding into their privacy by visiting her husband.  Olivia didn’t like us until that evening. After she sat down, Shyamasundar and  Mukunda presented George with a little Prabhupada murti with a Prabhupada  hat and glasses and a bead bag and a little book rest and a miniature size  Bhagavad-gita, a little vyasasana and a sannyasi danda, and a little pair of  kartals and a little pair of glasses. It was cute. George cradled Prabhupada and  said, “I’m going to take Prabhupada home with me tonight.” It really touched  him. He said, “I didn’t want to say anything, but I feel I’ve got to. First of all, I feel  ashamed that I never participated in this campaign.” George hadn’t given any  support, either verbally or in the press or in any other way. He said, “But I was  following it on television or in the papers. I knew what was going on. In the back  of my mind I thought if it didn’t work out, if you had to close the Manor, you  could move over to my place in Henley and take over Friar Park—that could be  your new temple.” He was so moved by what he had heard that evening that he  was talking from his heart. Everybody started clapping like anything.   
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'''To view the entire unedited video go to [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wDKOA4AL50k Memories 64 - The New Talavan Clan +3]'''
'''To view the entire unedited video go to [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iebdGcgxLr8 Memories 39 - Dhananjaya]'''


'''The full Prabhupada Memories Series can be viewed [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-Ajeil3NjKKgeN9-fxeWwQ here] and also at [https://www.prabhupadamemories.com www.prabhupadamemories.com]'''
'''The full Prabhupada Memories Series can be viewed [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-Ajeil3NjKKgeN9-fxeWwQ here] and also at [https://www.prabhupadamemories.com www.prabhupadamemories.com]'''
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==Following Srila Prabhupada==
===Interview DVD 01===
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'''Dhananjaya:'''  So this initiation took place on the property of John Lennon, which is known as Tittenhurst Park, about 25 miles outside of London. There were supposed to be four of us taking initiation that particular time. And to my right there was this English fellow called Jimmy Doody. He was a businessman. He was quite wealthy and he had this really pretty girlfriend, and he hadn’t actually shaved up. When Prabhupada was just about to start putting the colors for the fire yajna, Jimmy Doody’s girlfriend appeared at a window just to the right of Prabhupada. She didn’t want to participate, but she wanted to catch Jimmy Doody’s attention. Finally he looks up and sees her. So he stands up, goes over to Prabhupada and whispers in Prabhupada’s ear and he says, “Excuse me, Prabhupada, I just have to step outside a moment. Is that all right?” Prabhupada just casually nodded his head and didn’t say anything, and that was the last we saw of Jimmy Doody. So when I got the name Dhananjaya, Prabhupada explained…this means, obviously, ‘the winner of wealth.’…he said that “Money is flying in all directions,” and he started making some gestures with his hands. And he told me, “In this life, you will have no difficulty with money.”
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===Interview DVD 03===
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'''Dhananjaya:'''  In 1972 I was the temple president in London, and Srila Prabhupada noticed that there were so many boys and girls staying in the temple. In fact, in the morning sometimes you’d have to step over sleeping bodies to get down the stairs.
Here we’re looking at one particular property called Runnymede Park, which is very close to the River Thames. So when George saw the place, and it hadn’t been occupied for some years and it was quite overgrown, he said, “This should be called Runnydown Park because it hasn’t been maintained for so long.”
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===Interview DVD 05===
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'''Dhananjaya:'''  A lot of devotees don’t know this, but actually Prabhupada did name the land New Gokula and that’s why he named the Deities Radha Gokulananda. And he wanted the main activity there to be goraksha, cow protection. He wanted 150 cows kept on the property and I said, “But that’s not very practical because of the 17 acres of land, there’s only 6 acres which is pasture land.” I said, “You need at least one acre per cow,” and he said, “So you buy another 150 acres of land. What is the difficulty? This is the most important duty, to look after the cows and explain the importance of cow protection.” He said also we should purchase a double-decker bus and drive the bus into central London and fill the bus up with Western tourists, Western people, and bring them out to the Manor so they can be educated in simple living and high thinking. He said besides showing them how the cow is protected, we should also be producing milk for sale and butter and yogurt and also ghee. He said, “If we make our own ghee, so many people will want to purchase the ghee because there’s nothing like homemade ghee.” And he said that the other activities the devotees should be doing there is spinning and weaving and different handicrafts. This is what he wanted to happen there. Then I asked him about the Indian community. I said, “Should we cultivate the Indian community?” and he said, “They are already Krishna conscious.” He said we should concentrate on the British community. He said, “They know nothing about Krishna.”
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===Interview DVD 06===
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'''Dhananjaya:'''  This particular footage was taken in May of 1974. It was the very first big public festival program that Prabhupada was present at. It was held in Hotel Parco dei Principi, which is a five-star hotel in a beautiful park called Villa Borghese right in the heart of Rome. The auditorium had seating for 500. So I was thinking in the back of my mind that day, “What if only 25 or 30 people show up? It’s going to be a terrible impression.” It just so happened that I was with Prabhupada the whole day, and we got there quite late. Actually when we got to the hall, the lights were down and we were showing “The World of Hare Krishna.” So then after about 5 or 10 minutes we were called that the film had just finished, so could we please immediately come onto the stage. And when we got onto the stage and the lights went up, I noticed that every single seat had been taken. It was absolutely amazing. Then I noticed that there were people standing at the back of the hall, there were people down the two sides of the hall, and there was even people sitting in the aisle in the middle. So I reckon there must have been at least 800 came to that program. Prabhupada turned to me and he said, “Oh, these Italians, they are very interested in Krishna consciousness. They want to hear.” So after the kirtan, Prabhupada started to speak and the translator was this very nice Italian devotee called Alikrsna. So Prabhupada spoke for 45 minutes. Then he asked for questions, and there was a forest of arms shot up. It was just amazing. There were hundreds of people wanted to ask a particular question. Prabhupada turned to me again and he said, “Oh, just see, they really want to understand. I am very happy that they have this enthusiasm for learning Krishna consciousness.” So Prabhupada spent about an hour answering questions. Then we had another kirtan, we distributed prasadam, and then we went back to the temple on Via Mistretta.
We went for different morning walks in different historical parts of Rome, the Colosseum. He turned to me and he said, “What is this?” I said, “Well, this is an old Roman ruin where they used to hold games, entertainment. It’s like a big entertainment theater.” Prabhupada said, “What is the purpose of it now?” I said, “It’s considered an historical monument.” Then Prabhupada asked me, “Are there any toilets inside?” I said, “No, there’s no toilets.” He said, “What is the point of maintaining such a huge building and you can’t even go to the toilet?” He was just joking obviously. Then we took him to this place called EUR, which is a new development that came up during the time of Mussolini, and it’s a type of architecture called fascist architecture. There were very tall buildings there, and Prabhupada commented. He said, “Just see, they have not learned from their mistakes. They have this big historical building which is useless called the Colosseum, and still they’re making big skyscrapers. And what is the use of these skyscrapers? They are simply increasing their eating, sleeping, mating and defending. This is useless civilization. They are not learning anything. This is just simply chewing the chewed.” We had this house that Prabhupada stayed in. He stayed with us for nine days. It was a detached house with its own garden, and Prabhupada very much liked the weather there. All the neighbors on that small street where the temple was on Via Mistretta would come every morning, knowing exactly what time Prabhupada was going to go for his morning walk, and they would be standing in line ready to offer Prabhupada a freshly picked flower from their gardens. Some were also offering fruits to him too. They were so respectful. Prabhupada had a very nice impression. Actually he said the Italians, they are religious by nature. They desire the blessings of God, and it’s up to us as devotees to teach them how to become qualified to get those blessings.
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===Interview DVD 08===
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'''Dhananjaya:'''  Here Prabhupada is giving Bhagavad-gita class. He actually wanted Bhagavad-gita class to be held in the courtyard. There was one Indian who joined. His name was Prem Yogi, and he told him that he should give class in Hindi every evening. Then there was also an Indian couple, Pranav and his wife, Vanamali, and he told him that he should also give Hindi class and his wife should sing bhajans. Then Pranav said, “Actually my wife is more intelligent than me. Better that she gives the class. She speaks from Bhagavad-gita.” Prabhupada said, “That’s all right. If she can do that, she can give the class.” These people here, these are students from Nepal, and Prabhupada wanted them to chant the Purusha Sukta every day. This is the Hindi teacher. Prabhupada wanted us to learn Hindi. One morning I tried to demonstrate my Hindi. So I said, “Prabhupada, I am learning from this teacher,” and he said, “So what have you learned?” I said, “Ek balak chata he,” which means “one boy is walking.” Then Prabhupada said, “Do you know how to say in Hindi two boys are walking?” I said, “No,” and then he laughed. He said, “You will never learn Hindi.” So I took that as an instruction.
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Latest revision as of 14:52, 30 January 2022


Prabhupada Memories

Interview 01


Dhananjaya: At 5:00 a.m. on Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur’s Disappearance Day in December 1970, a stretch white Mercedes stretch limousine with blacked out windows came to our temple. The chauffeur, with his cap, his dark suit and his polished black shoes, had a piece of paper with my name on it. I was called out of the temple room. I identified myself and the chauffeur said, “I’ve been told to take you to the fruit and vegetable market.” I said, “Who told you to do this?” He said, “George Harrison is with John Lennon on a yacht on the Thames, and he remembered it was an auspicious spiritual master’s day, so he gave me 100 pounds. John gave permission to use his Mercedes and I’m to take you to the fruit and vegetable market to get fruits and vegetables for a feast.” While partying with his friends on a yacht, George spontaneously decided to do this. Srila Prabhupada wrote to me, “How is the preaching in London?” That year so many boys and girls joined our temple that the brahmachari and brahmacharini rooms were overflowing. About 65 devotees were living in a property meant for 10 or 12. I reported this to Prabhupada and he wrote back, “Contact our good friend Mr. George Harrison and ask him to help us to find a bigger property.” George Harrison happened to be in town at the time—that year he recorded the album later called “Living in the Material World,” which had an insert of a big color print of Krishna and Arjuna, the same picture that’s on the cover of Bhagavad-gita As It Is. When I visited George, I’d take him all his favorite types of prasadam, like deep-fried potatoes, cauliflower and deep-fried curd soaked in sour cream, samosas, cauliflower pakoras, different kinds of sweets like burfi, sandesh and Simply Wonderfuls, as well as the strawberry buttermilk nectar that we became famous for. I was seeing him once a week until he said, “If you keep bringing all this stuff you have an open invitation to come as often as you want.” Then I began visiting him three or four times a week and when I felt it was the right opportunity I said, “George, now we have so many devotees in our temple that we’re running out of space. Could you help us find a bigger place?” Without hesitating he said, “Sure. No problem. Visit different estate agents, see different properties and if you find something really good, call me and I’ll come with you to check it out.” George was an exceptional person, and he constantly thought about how to spread Krishna consciousness. For instance, although it’s a single album, his album cover for Living In the Material World is double—it folds out—because George wanted to put a set of japa beads, a bead bag and a set of instructions how to use them into the other slipcover to be sold along with the record. And a lot of the lyrics on that album are Krishna conscious. One of the songs, called “The Lord Loves the One Who Loves the Lord,” George was very clear for whom that song was meant. He said, “I wrote that for Srila Prabhupada.” George told me he got inspired when I interrupted him with my visits to his studio. Once he said, “Every time you come here I can’t get any recording done. This recording studio costs 3,000 pounds a day but when you come, I don’t get anything done. We sit down, eat prasadam and talk about Prabhupada and Krishna consciousness.” He loved distributing Prabhupada’s Gita to his friends, and we’d supply him with beads and bead bags so his friends could chant japa. He had the mood of giving to others the wonderful opportunity of Krishna consciousness that he had received from Srila Prabhupada and the devotees. When I asked him, “Why don’t you take initiation from Prabhupada?” He said, “I don’t need to, I’ve already got a spiritual name.” I said, “What do you mean you’ve got a spiritual name?” He said, “My name’s Hari’s son, son of Hari,” and then he laughed—that was his Liverpudlian dry humor. When I went with him to visit different properties, he would have one hand on the steering wheel, steering the car, and the other hand in his bead bag, chanting. Once in 1972 an older English devotee called Bhakti Pramode, who worked as a security manager for the world-famous Midland Bank, drove Shyamasundar, Prabhupada and me in his car to see one of the properties that I’d arranged for George to see. It was called Runnymede Farm on the banks of the River Thames. Runnymede is where King John, the King of England, signed the Magna Cart in the early 13th century. The farm hadn’t been used for three or four years and was overgrown. George came from Friar Park in his Porsche, walked around the property and said, “They should call this Runnydown Farm, not Runnymede Farm.” Bhakti Pramode was an intriguing person who loved to fuss around Prabhupada. He never called Prabhupada “Prabhupada,” but he called Prabhupada “Your Grace.” He would say, “How is Your Grace this morning? Are you feeling cold? I’ve got a travel blanket I’d like to tuck around your legs so you don’t get cold.” He also liked Scottish highland dancing. Once he and his wife, Yasodamayi, came for Prabhupada’s evening darshan at Bury Place when Bhakti Pramode was wearing his full highland dress kit—with a tweed jacket and a kilt and the sporran and the long stockings and the sgian dubh, that little knife tucked into the top of the stockings with a kilt. He and his wife paid their obeisances and sat on the floor. Since he was elderly—in his mid to late 50s— Bhakti Pramode couldn’t sit cross-legged properly. He had his knees up in the air and Prabhupada was looking straight up his kilt. Prabhupada said, “What is that you’re wearing?” He said, “This is a typical Scottish dress, Your Grace, because we’ve just come back from some highland dancing.” Prabhupada said, “You are feeling comfortable in that skirt, or would you prefer to sit on a chair?” because he was kind of exposing himself to Srila Prabhupada. Anyway, this Bhakti Pramode was Prabhupada’s driver. He drove Prabhupada to Ratha-yatra or wherever Prabhupada wanted to go and sometimes he would try to get Prabhupada to go on little tours around London. He wanted to take Prabhupada to see Londinium, the first city the Romans established where there’s still some Roman ramparts, and he showed Prabhupada Buckingham Palace and London Bridge. Prabhupada liked Bhakti Pramode. Anyway, there we were in Runnymede Farm. We walked up to the main house, which wasn’t a standard farmhouse but was a small stately home with impressive column pillars in the front, high vaulted ceilings and a beautiful staircase. George and the rest of us stood with Srila Prabhupada, discussing the possibility of moving onto this property. Prabhupada said, “Before we move in, we will build a bank beside this house,” he pointed to Bhakti Pramode and continued, “You will be the bank manager because you have some experience in banking.” Then Prabhupada pointed to George and said, “And George, you will deposit all your money in that bank and we will spend everything in Krishna’s service.” George, taken aback, said, “All my money will be. . . ?” We all laughed because what Prabhupada said was completely unexpected. By the end of 1972 nothing had happened. Prabhupada wrote to me, “Better to take the upper hand and begin very energetically attempting to get some place. Expending energy for Krishna, that is appreciated and not the actual result of our energy. But if there is lack of energy being devoted for some purpose, then everything will be delayed and possibly stopped. Better to seize the iron while the fire is hot, that my guru maharaj used to tell me.” Prabhupada presumed that the iron was getting a little cold. Then in January of 1973, in a freezing cold, miserable British winter, we got information about a property called Piggot’s Manor in Letchmore Heath, 17 miles from central London. This was the one and only time I didn’t go as a devotee, with a shaved head, dhoti, tilak and kurta, but went disguised with trousers, coat and hat. The previous property George and I had looked at was an amazing health spa outside of the city of Oxford with an indoor heated swimming pool, a beautiful conservatory, saunas and mud baths and more than a hundred acres of land. The asking price was 330,000 pounds. After George saw that property he said, “This is a bit rich for you people, isn’t it? You’re supposed to be renunciants. Even I would have a hard time remaining Krishna conscious in this environment.” Then we got the details on the Manor, which was being sold for 220,000 pounds—110,000 pounds cheaper than the previous property. This time George didn’t come but I phoned him from a pay phone in what is now the Manor temple room, and I described the details and the price. He said, “It’s a lot cheaper than the previous property. What do you think?” I said, “I think it’s a fabulous place.” He said, “All right, I trust your judgement. I can’t come to see it because we’re having some meetings in Los Angeles with Allen Klein, our financial advisor, about selling the Apple Company.” George gave me the names and phone numbers of legal people who could do the paper work to buy the property, and said, “Phone them up, tell them that you want to secure this property, and when the transaction is complete, I’ll come and see it.” The paperwork took about six months. George had set up a foundation called the Material World Charitable Foundation. He said, “The profits from the Living In the Material World LP album will go towards paying for that property, but it’ll go through my foundation.” And that’s what happened—the Material World Charitable Foundation paid for the property, and the agreement was that we would pay 10 pounds a year rent, which is called a peppercorn rent. It’s the absolute minimum that you can pay for a costly property. We acquired the Manor from a Scottish lady, Mrs. Ruffles, who was from Aberdeen, a city in northern Scotland. The story is that the Scots are quite mean, but even in Scotland, people from Aberdeen are called Aberdonians, and are considered extremely mean. Before we moved into the property, Mrs. Ruffles removed every single doorknob from every single door. She removed a pair of brass lion’s head doorknockers from the front doors to the house. She removed all the pelmets and siphoned off all the diesel fuel (for the central heating) from the tanks. Mrs. Ruffles took away all the coal for the fireplaces. When Prabhupada went on an inspection, there were a couple of doors we couldn’t open because there were no doorknobs or door handles or any way to open the doors, so we had to show him those rooms later on. When we showed him his quarters upstairs, with its huge living room, a huge old-fashioned bathroom and a comfortable bedroom, he was happy. He said, “Yes, this is a nice facility for the spiritual master.” All this time the Deities that had been sent from India were in our temple sewing room. Generally when there’s a new temple project, first we get the land and house and then the Deities come. But in this situation, the Deities came one year before we acquired Bhaktivedanta Manor. When Prabhupada came in the summer of 1973, he asked me, “Where are the Deities that came to England in 1972?” I said, “They’re stored in Bury Place.” Prabhupada said, “We will install those Deities in this property.” And that’s what happened. On Janmastami Day of 1973, Srila Prabhupada installed the Deities and he named Them Sri Sri Radha- Gokulananda. He had intended to call the community New Gokula, and the bliss of Gokula is Radha-Gokulananda. One of the first things George did when he returned from Los Angeles was visit the Manor. We took him on a tour of all the rooms because by that time we’d gotten door handles and doorknobs and we showed him the gardens and the lake and all the other places. George was curious about everything. He liked the Manor and thought it was a good value for the money. Then Shyamasundar brought George to the temple room and said, “Wouldn’t some crystal chandeliers look great here?” George said, “Yeah, that would be really nice,” and George bought a pair of beautiful chandeliers for 3,000 pounds—after he had just bought the Manor for us. When Prabhupada first came to the Manor in 1973, it was raining and at that time he told me three things. First, he said, “This property is like gold kept in a dark place. To appreciate the value of gold requires bright light, especially sunshine, because gold naturally shines. But if you keep it in a dark place, then who can appreciate it? Similarly, this is a valuable property. But because of the weather, who can appreciate it?” The British weather is typically raining and cloudy and miserable. Occasionally, for a week or two, it would be sunny and we have beautiful photographs and films from the Manor of Prabhupada sitting on the lawn on sunny days. Second, because he was shrewd, Prabhupada also said, “This property is like a white elephant. A white elephant is something rare and valuable, but it is expensive to maintain. Similarly, this property will be very expensive to run.” That turned out to be very true. And finally he said that he wanted the Manor to be famous for cow protection. He said that we should teach the British the importance of cow protection, go-raksya, and keep 150 cows there. At that time we had 17 acres of land and only 6 acres of it was an arable field suitable for cows. I said, “Prabhupada, it’s not practical to keep 150 cows on 6 acres of land because each cow requires at least one acre.” Prabhupada said, “So purchase 150 acres for the cows. What is the difficulty? But that’s the minimum number of cows you should keep. If you need to purchase another 150 acres for those cows, then purchase it.” We didn’t acquire more land until 1997, when we got permission to put in a new approach road and got another 55 acres with that, so now we have about half the amount of land that Prabhupada said we should have in 1973—and now we have 25 cows. Prabhupada also wanted us to buy a double-decker red London transport bus, drive it into the center of London, fill it up with people interested in the Manor, and bring them there for some time. Srila Prabhupada’s vision was always long range, and sometimes we have a hard time fulfilling it. There is no place in the UK where Krishna conscious cow protection is practiced. Prabhupada wanted us to be self-sufficient in ghee and milk, to sell ghee to the visitors, and for us to be engaged in handicrafts like spinning, weaving cloth, making brass Deities and so forth. I said, “What about the Indian community? Should we focus on the Indian community?” At that time Prabhupada said, “No, we don’t need to bother with the Indian community, they are already Krishna conscious. We have to focus our attention on the British community, they know nothing about Krishna.” Once, George came to see Prabhupada with Ravi Shankar. As he usually did, George offered his full dandavats to Prabhupada. Ravi Shankar had presumed that George was his own disciple, but George never offered his dandavats to Ravi. He only did that to Prabhupada, and Prabhupada immediately sensed that Ravi Shankar was a little envious. After speaking with George, Prabhupada said, “You must be hungry. Go to the kitchen and get prasadam,” and Prabhupada asked a devotee to accompany George. When George had left, Prabhupada talked with Ravi Shankar and that placated Ravi Shankar’s false ego. Their conversation centered on plane tickets, travel and the best airline to travel on because Prabhupada understood that Ravi Shankar was not interested in spiritual philosophy. So Prabhupada related to Ravi Shankar in a way that he could keep up the conversation. Prabhupada was expert at dealing with everybody. He knew George’s love for prasadam and he knew that Ravi Shankar needed attention. When George visited Prabhupada at the Manor in 1976 he said, “Do you think I should move into the ashram, shave up, and wear tilak and a dhoti?” Prabhupada said, “No.” At that meeting George came with Ravi Shankar’s niece, Laksmi Shankar, and had just made the musical arrangements and written the words for a song called “Krishna, Where Are You?” that she had sung. George played that song for Prabhupada. Prabhupada listened to it and said, “Yes, this is the mood of the six Goswamis. Krishna, where are You? I have not captured You. I would love to capture You, I would love to have You in my vision eternally, but You are always disappearing from my sight. This feeling of separation, called vipralambha, is very pleasing. Go on writing lyrics and music like this. This is your service to Krishna. It will not be good for you to live in the ashram. You can do much more preaching and reach many more people if you remain outside.” Prabhupada was very understanding. By 1980 we’d been living at the Manor, worshipping Radha-Gokulananda, for seven years and many Indian businessmen wanted to get involved. There was a lot of restoration and repair work to do and we needed a car park. But these businessmen didn’t want to give their money because they knew that George’s foundation, not ISKCON, owned the property. They would say, “Can we trust George? One day he could decide he didn’t like you Hare Krishnas anymore and say, ‘Get out.’ There’s no binding legal document and we’d have given donations for nothing. We don’t want to do that.” At the time Vicitravirya was the temple president and we had had the Manor property appraised by Lloyd’s Bank and Barclay’s Bank and we’d also been advised by our solicitor. Vicitravirya said to me, “Ask George how he feels about us and about this property.” I called George and he came over. I said to George, “We want to stay here and many people want to give sizable donations—10,000, 20,000 pounds or more—but they know that we don’t own the property. So what we want is either to pay rent and get a 100- year lease from you, or to pay for the property in installments over 10 or 15 years.” We walked around, and since by that time George was into gardening and identified himself as a gardener, he didn’t like how we hadn’t maintained the gardens. I’d seen his place, Friar Park, and over the years it was amazing what a wonderful job he’d done on his property. He’d learned the Latin names of every plant and herb. Our gardens were full of weeds because our qualified devotees were on the streets selling books, not gardening and weeding and trimming hedges and planting, and our place was a terrible mess. George said, “I’m getting a headache just walking around here. You haven’t looked after this place.” I was very nervous. He said, “Give me a week to think about it and I’ll let you know.” A week later he called and said, “I’ve spoken with Allen Klein, and what he’s come up with is this. You put 45,000 pounds towards the cost of the property and from my side I’ll put another 145, which makes a total of 190. And we’ll show that we sold the property to you at a loss. I know you can’t afford 190 but if you can come up with 45,000 within a week, the place is yours. Then I don’t need to think about it anymore.” He wanted to give the place as a donation but he couldn’t legally because a charitable foundation can’t donate property to another charity—there has to be some financial transaction. Since the property cost 220, through the books he was making a loss of about 30,000. But by 1980 the two banks had appraised the property at 1.5 million pounds. So we got the 45,000 pounds together, gave it to him, he signed the deeds over to ISKCON, and from that day the Manor belonged to ISKCON. The last time George associated with a large group of devotees was when he and his wife, Olivia, visited the Manor in the summer of 1997. We had invited him to a celebratory dinner a few days after we got permission to build the new approach road. This dinner was held shortly after we had another amazing fundraising dinner called “Prabhupada’s Dream”, during which guests and patron members of the Manor were invited to raise funds to buy the land for the approach road. That evening the target was to raise one million pounds. We rented a large circus tent with a stage, set many tables, and served a nice dinner. There was a positive response—within two hours we raised 800,000 pounds—but we were 200,000 short until Michael, an Irish businessman patron member who imported Indian clothing, so appreciated Prabhupada’s Dream of having 150 acres of land for 150 protected cows, that he pledged 200,000 pounds. Michael had only once before been to the Manor and at that time he had taken part in arati and heard a lecture, but that evening was the first time he had attended a special patron’s dinner and he pledged more than any other patron member. What he pledged was a substantial amount of money for anyone, especially for a person of non-Indian origin. It was an auspicious evening. George agreed to come to our second dinner, but we didn’t know if his wife would come. Both were invited but Olivia never attended our public functions. She wasn’t a great fan of the Hare Krishna devotees—she followed somebody else—and she left it up to her husband to go to such things. But this time she came. A Gujarati disciple of Shivaram Swami named Sruti Dharma and I went to the car park at the Manor to welcome them. They had brought rubber Welly boots with them because they were enthusiastic to walk through the fields to see where the new approach road was going to be built, and we did that. We walked from where the main gate would be all the way to the Manor property, which is about a half a mile. We stopped to talk along the way and George observed the fields, “How far does the property extend on this side of the road? How far on the other side of the road? Are you going to have any kind of hedges or trees so that the road doesn’t look ugly, so it doesn’t spoil the overall beauty of the farmland?” We got into the details and when we were returning George said, “If you want to have a successful business, I suggest you start a garden center.” In England, garden centers are usually incredibly successful. Families who’ve just moved into their home buy trees and shrubs, flowers and herbs. George said, “If you do that, I don’t think you need planning permission for this.” He’d put a lot of thought into this idea and as I said, he identified himself as a gardener first and a musician second. He said, “I’ll help you set it up and with whatever you need.” We were happy that he was so open-minded about our project. Then we took him to the temple with Radha-Gokulananda’s altar, Sita-Rama, Laksman, and Hanuman’s altar and the little Gaura-Nitai Deities between Them. George offered his full dandavats to the Deities, Olivia offered her pranams and they both took charanamrita. Then we went into the dining room. The history behind this dinner is that in 1982 the local District Council decided that it didn’t want to have the Manor as a public place of worship because the building hadn’t been planned as such. They wanted to close down the Manor. Our 15-year campaign to keep the Manor open was basically a freedom of religion case. During that time reporters were always interviewing the devotees. We were in newspapers, on television, and on the radio. At one time the Manor had been owned by Saint Bartholomew’s Hospital, an old hospital in London, for a nurse’s training college. Mrs. Ruffles had bought it from Saint Bart’s with the idea of turning it into a nursing home, but she couldn’t carry the financial burden and so she sold it. Then we moved in and suddenly festivals were going on with thousands of visitors and many cars were in the village. We didn’t want the villagers to be irate with our festivals—we wanted to take the strain off the village. After a long, hard battle, in 1996, the British Government’s Secretary of State for the Environment, John Gummer, announced on television that, “the government gave permission for the construction of an access driveway which by-passed the local village, plus full planning permission for the Manor to be used as a place of public worship.” Before that neither the government nor the District Council had recognized us. That was a great victory for us and that’s why we had this victory dinner, which was a nice feast cooked by my wife, Bala Gopala. Everybody who had been involved in the campaign—over 200 people—were there, all VIP guests including some MP’s, legal people, newspaper people and so on. Akhandadhi mentioned all the different guests that were present and praised and honored everybody. Finally he came to George and said, “We have to thank George because this would never have happened if he hadn’t agreed to donate this property.” George was an honored guest, but he wasn’t expected to say anything. But before he spoke, Olivia stood up and said, “I am deeply touched by what I’ve heard and seen tonight, and I feel impelled to say that George has got true friends here, and I feel happy for him. And I feel happy that I didn’t miss the opportunity to witness this amazing gathering.” This was the only time that Olivia had come to the Manor. Before, when I called George and she answered the phone, she would be rude. I used to pray that she didn’t answer the phone. She would try to stop me from intruding into their privacy by visiting her husband. Olivia didn’t like us until that evening. After she sat down, Shyamasundar and Mukunda presented George with a little Prabhupada murti with a Prabhupada hat and glasses and a bead bag and a little book rest and a miniature size Bhagavad-gita, a little vyasasana and a sannyasi danda, and a little pair of kartals and a little pair of glasses. It was cute. George cradled Prabhupada and said, “I’m going to take Prabhupada home with me tonight.” It really touched him. He said, “I didn’t want to say anything, but I feel I’ve got to. First of all, I feel ashamed that I never participated in this campaign.” George hadn’t given any support, either verbally or in the press or in any other way. He said, “But I was following it on television or in the papers. I knew what was going on. In the back of my mind I thought if it didn’t work out, if you had to close the Manor, you could move over to my place in Henley and take over Friar Park—that could be your new temple.” He was so moved by what he had heard that evening that he was talking from his heart. Everybody started clapping like anything.

To view the entire unedited video go to Memories 09 - The English Yatra

Interview 02


Dhananjaya: At 5:00 a.m. on Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur’s Disappearance Day in December 1970, a stretch white Mercedes stretch limousine with blacked out windows came to our temple. The chauffeur, with his cap, his dark suit and his polished black shoes, had a piece of paper with my name on it. I was called out of the temple room. I identified myself and the chauffeur said, “I’ve been told to take you to the fruit and vegetable market.” I said, “Who told you to do this?” He said, “George Harrison is with John Lennon on a yacht on the Thames, and he remembered it was an auspicious spiritual master’s day, so he gave me 100 pounds. John gave permission to use his Mercedes and I’m to take you to the fruit and vegetable market to get fruits and vegetables for a feast.” While partying with his friends on a yacht, George spontaneously decided to do this. Srila Prabhupada wrote to me, “How is the preaching in London?” That year so many boys and girls joined our temple that the brahmachari and brahmacharini rooms were overflowing. About 65 devotees were living in a property meant for 10 or 12. I reported this to Prabhupada and he wrote back, “Contact our good friend Mr. George Harrison and ask him to help us to find a bigger property.” George Harrison happened to be in town at the time—that year he recorded the album later called “Living in the Material World,” which had an insert of a big color print of Krishna and Arjuna, the same picture that’s on the cover of Bhagavad-gita As It Is. When I visited George, I’d take him all his favorite types of prasadam, like deep-fried potatoes, cauliflower and deep-fried curd soaked in sour cream, samosas, cauliflower pakoras, different kinds of sweets like burfi, sandesh and Simply Wonderfuls, as well as the strawberry buttermilk nectar that we became famous for. I was seeing him once a week until he said, “If you keep bringing all this stuff you have an open invitation to come as often as you want.” Then I began visiting him three or four times a week and when I felt it was the right opportunity I said, “George, now we have so many devotees in our temple that we’re running out of space. Could you help us find a bigger place?” Without hesitating he said, “Sure. No problem. Visit different estate agents, see different properties and if you find something really good, call me and I’ll come with you to check it out.” George was an exceptional person, and he constantly thought about how to spread Krishna consciousness. For instance, although it’s a single album, his album cover for Living In the Material World is double—it folds out—because George wanted to put a set of japa beads, a bead bag and a set of instructions how to use them into the other slipcover to be sold along with the record. And a lot of the lyrics on that album are Krishna conscious. One of the songs, called “The Lord Loves the One Who Loves the Lord,” George was very clear for whom that song was meant. He said, “I wrote that for Srila Prabhupada.” George told me he got inspired when I interrupted him with my visits to his studio. Once he said, “Every time you come here I can’t get any recording done. This recording studio costs 3,000 pounds a day but when you come, I don’t get anything done. We sit down, eat prasadam and talk about Prabhupada and Krishna consciousness.” He loved distributing Prabhupada’s Gita to his friends, and we’d supply him with beads and bead bags so his friends could chant japa. He had the mood of giving to others the wonderful opportunity of Krishna consciousness that he had received from Srila Prabhupada and the devotees. When I asked him, “Why don’t you take initiation from Prabhupada?” He said, “I don’t need to, I’ve already got a spiritual name.” I said, “What do you mean you’ve got a spiritual name?” He said, “My name’s Hari’s son, son of Hari,” and then he laughed—that was his Liverpudlian dry humor. When I went with him to visit different properties, he would have one hand on the steering wheel, steering the car, and the other hand in his bead bag, chanting. Once in 1972 an older English devotee called Bhakti Pramode, who worked as a security manager for the world-famous Midland Bank, drove Shyamasundar, Prabhupada and me in his car to see one of the properties that I’d arranged for George to see. It was called Runnymede Farm on the banks of the River Thames. Runnymede is where King John, the King of England, signed the Magna Cart in the early 13th century. The farm hadn’t been used for three or four years and was overgrown. George came from Friar Park in his Porsche, walked around the property and said, “They should call this Runnydown Farm, not Runnymede Farm.” Bhakti Pramode was an intriguing person who loved to fuss around Prabhupada. He never called Prabhupada “Prabhupada,” but he called Prabhupada “Your Grace.” He would say, “How is Your Grace this morning? Are you feeling cold? I’ve got a travel blanket I’d like to tuck around your legs so you don’t get cold.” He also liked Scottish highland dancing. Once he and his wife, Yasodamayi, came for Prabhupada’s evening darshan at Bury Place when Bhakti Pramode was wearing his full highland dress kit—with a tweed jacket and a kilt and the sporran and the long stockings and the sgian dubh, that little knife tucked into the top of the stockings with a kilt. He and his wife paid their obeisances and sat on the floor. Since he was elderly—in his mid to late 50s— Bhakti Pramode couldn’t sit cross-legged properly. He had his knees up in the air and Prabhupada was looking straight up his kilt. Prabhupada said, “What is that you’re wearing?” He said, “This is a typical Scottish dress, Your Grace, because we’ve just come back from some highland dancing.” Prabhupada said, “You are feeling comfortable in that skirt, or would you prefer to sit on a chair?” because he was kind of exposing himself to Srila Prabhupada. Anyway, this Bhakti Pramode was Prabhupada’s driver. He drove Prabhupada to Ratha-yatra or wherever Prabhupada wanted to go and sometimes he would try to get Prabhupada to go on little tours around London. He wanted to take Prabhupada to see Londinium, the first city the Romans established where there’s still some Roman ramparts, and he showed Prabhupada Buckingham Palace and London Bridge. Prabhupada liked Bhakti Pramode. Anyway, there we were in Runnymede Farm. We walked up to the main house, which wasn’t a standard farmhouse but was a small stately home with impressive column pillars in the front, high vaulted ceilings and a beautiful staircase. George and the rest of us stood with Srila Prabhupada, discussing the possibility of moving onto this property. Prabhupada said, “Before we move in, we will build a bank beside this house,” he pointed to Bhakti Pramode and continued, “You will be the bank manager because you have some experience in banking.” Then Prabhupada pointed to George and said, “And George, you will deposit all your money in that bank and we will spend everything in Krishna’s service.” George, taken aback, said, “All my money will be. . . ?” We all laughed because what Prabhupada said was completely unexpected. By the end of 1972 nothing had happened. Prabhupada wrote to me, “Better to take the upper hand and begin very energetically attempting to get some place. Expending energy for Krishna, that is appreciated and not the actual result of our energy. But if there is lack of energy being devoted for some purpose, then everything will be delayed and possibly stopped. Better to seize the iron while the fire is hot, that my guru maharaj used to tell me.” Prabhupada presumed that the iron was getting a little cold. Then in January of 1973, in a freezing cold, miserable British winter, we got information about a property called Piggot’s Manor in Letchmore Heath, 17 miles from central London. This was the one and only time I didn’t go as a devotee, with a shaved head, dhoti, tilak and kurta, but went disguised with trousers, coat and hat. The previous property George and I had looked at was an amazing health spa outside of the city of Oxford with an indoor heated swimming pool, a beautiful conservatory, saunas and mud baths and more than a hundred acres of land. The asking price was 330,000 pounds. After George saw that property he said, “This is a bit rich for you people, isn’t it? You’re supposed to be renunciants. Even I would have a hard time remaining Krishna conscious in this environment.” Then we got the details on the Manor, which was being sold for 220,000 pounds—110,000 pounds cheaper than the previous property. This time George didn’t come but I phoned him from a pay phone in what is now the Manor temple room, and I described the details and the price. He said, “It’s a lot cheaper than the previous property. What do you think?” I said, “I think it’s a fabulous place.” He said, “All right, I trust your judgement. I can’t come to see it because we’re having some meetings in Los Angeles with Allen Klein, our financial advisor, about selling the Apple Company.” George gave me the names and phone numbers of legal people who could do the paper work to buy the property, and said, “Phone them up, tell them that you want to secure this property, and when the transaction is complete, I’ll come and see it.” The paperwork took about six months. George had set up a foundation called the Material World Charitable Foundation. He said, “The profits from the Living In the Material World LP album will go towards paying for that property, but it’ll go through my foundation.” And that’s what happened—the Material World Charitable Foundation paid for the property, and the agreement was that we would pay 10 pounds a year rent, which is called a peppercorn rent. It’s the absolute minimum that you can pay for a costly property. We acquired the Manor from a Scottish lady, Mrs. Ruffles, who was from Aberdeen, a city in northern Scotland. The story is that the Scots are quite mean, but even in Scotland, people from Aberdeen are called Aberdonians, and are considered extremely mean. Before we moved into the property, Mrs. Ruffles removed every single doorknob from every single door. She removed a pair of brass lion’s head doorknockers from the front doors to the house. She removed all the pelmets and siphoned off all the diesel fuel (for the central heating) from the tanks. Mrs. Ruffles took away all the coal for the fireplaces. When Prabhupada went on an inspection, there were a couple of doors we couldn’t open because there were no doorknobs or door handles or any way to open the doors, so we had to show him those rooms later on. When we showed him his quarters upstairs, with its huge living room, a huge old-fashioned bathroom and a comfortable bedroom, he was happy. He said, “Yes, this is a nice facility for the spiritual master.” All this time the Deities that had been sent from India were in our temple sewing room. Generally when there’s a new temple project, first we get the land and house and then the Deities come. But in this situation, the Deities came one year before we acquired Bhaktivedanta Manor. When Prabhupada came in the summer of 1973, he asked me, “Where are the Deities that came to England in 1972?” I said, “They’re stored in Bury Place.” Prabhupada said, “We will install those Deities in this property.” And that’s what happened. On Janmastami Day of 1973, Srila Prabhupada installed the Deities and he named Them Sri Sri Radha- Gokulananda. He had intended to call the community New Gokula, and the bliss of Gokula is Radha-Gokulananda. One of the first things George did when he returned from Los Angeles was visit the Manor. We took him on a tour of all the rooms because by that time we’d gotten door handles and doorknobs and we showed him the gardens and the lake and all the other places. George was curious about everything. He liked the Manor and thought it was a good value for the money. Then Shyamasundar brought George to the temple room and said, “Wouldn’t some crystal chandeliers look great here?” George said, “Yeah, that would be really nice,” and George bought a pair of beautiful chandeliers for 3,000 pounds—after he had just bought the Manor for us. When Prabhupada first came to the Manor in 1973, it was raining and at that time he told me three things. First, he said, “This property is like gold kept in a dark place. To appreciate the value of gold requires bright light, especially sunshine, because gold naturally shines. But if you keep it in a dark place, then who can appreciate it? Similarly, this is a valuable property. But because of the weather, who can appreciate it?” The British weather is typically raining and cloudy and miserable. Occasionally, for a week or two, it would be sunny and we have beautiful photographs and films from the Manor of Prabhupada sitting on the lawn on sunny days. Second, because he was shrewd, Prabhupada also said, “This property is like a white elephant. A white elephant is something rare and valuable, but it is expensive to maintain. Similarly, this property will be very expensive to run.” That turned out to be very true. And finally he said that he wanted the Manor to be famous for cow protection. He said that we should teach the British the importance of cow protection, go-raksya, and keep 150 cows there. At that time we had 17 acres of land and only 6 acres of it was an arable field suitable for cows. I said, “Prabhupada, it’s not practical to keep 150 cows on 6 acres of land because each cow requires at least one acre.” Prabhupada said, “So purchase 150 acres for the cows. What is the difficulty? But that’s the minimum number of cows you should keep. If you need to purchase another 150 acres for those cows, then purchase it.” We didn’t acquire more land until 1997, when we got permission to put in a new approach road and got another 55 acres with that, so now we have about half the amount of land that Prabhupada said we should have in 1973—and now we have 25 cows. Prabhupada also wanted us to buy a double-decker red London transport bus, drive it into the center of London, fill it up with people interested in the Manor, and bring them there for some time. Srila Prabhupada’s vision was always long range, and sometimes we have a hard time fulfilling it. There is no place in the UK where Krishna conscious cow protection is practiced. Prabhupada wanted us to be self-sufficient in ghee and milk, to sell ghee to the visitors, and for us to be engaged in handicrafts like spinning, weaving cloth, making brass Deities and so forth. I said, “What about the Indian community? Should we focus on the Indian community?” At that time Prabhupada said, “No, we don’t need to bother with the Indian community, they are already Krishna conscious. We have to focus our attention on the British community, they know nothing about Krishna.” Once, George came to see Prabhupada with Ravi Shankar. As he usually did, George offered his full dandavats to Prabhupada. Ravi Shankar had presumed that George was his own disciple, but George never offered his dandavats to Ravi. He only did that to Prabhupada, and Prabhupada immediately sensed that Ravi Shankar was a little envious. After speaking with George, Prabhupada said, “You must be hungry. Go to the kitchen and get prasadam,” and Prabhupada asked a devotee to accompany George. When George had left, Prabhupada talked with Ravi Shankar and that placated Ravi Shankar’s false ego. Their conversation centered on plane tickets, travel and the best airline to travel on because Prabhupada understood that Ravi Shankar was not interested in spiritual philosophy. So Prabhupada related to Ravi Shankar in a way that he could keep up the conversation. Prabhupada was expert at dealing with everybody. He knew George’s love for prasadam and he knew that Ravi Shankar needed attention. When George visited Prabhupada at the Manor in 1976 he said, “Do you think I should move into the ashram, shave up, and wear tilak and a dhoti?” Prabhupada said, “No.” At that meeting George came with Ravi Shankar’s niece, Laksmi Shankar, and had just made the musical arrangements and written the words for a song called “Krishna, Where Are You?” that she had sung. George played that song for Prabhupada. Prabhupada listened to it and said, “Yes, this is the mood of the six Goswamis. Krishna, where are You? I have not captured You. I would love to capture You, I would love to have You in my vision eternally, but You are always disappearing from my sight. This feeling of separation, called vipralambha, is very pleasing. Go on writing lyrics and music like this. This is your service to Krishna. It will not be good for you to live in the ashram. You can do much more preaching and reach many more people if you remain outside.” Prabhupada was very understanding. By 1980 we’d been living at the Manor, worshipping Radha-Gokulananda, for seven years and many Indian businessmen wanted to get involved. There was a lot of restoration and repair work to do and we needed a car park. But these businessmen didn’t want to give their money because they knew that George’s foundation, not ISKCON, owned the property. They would say, “Can we trust George? One day he could decide he didn’t like you Hare Krishnas anymore and say, ‘Get out.’ There’s no binding legal document and we’d have given donations for nothing. We don’t want to do that.” At the time Vicitravirya was the temple president and we had had the Manor property appraised by Lloyd’s Bank and Barclay’s Bank and we’d also been advised by our solicitor. Vicitravirya said to me, “Ask George how he feels about us and about this property.” I called George and he came over. I said to George, “We want to stay here and many people want to give sizable donations—10,000, 20,000 pounds or more—but they know that we don’t own the property. So what we want is either to pay rent and get a 100- year lease from you, or to pay for the property in installments over 10 or 15 years.” We walked around, and since by that time George was into gardening and identified himself as a gardener, he didn’t like how we hadn’t maintained the gardens. I’d seen his place, Friar Park, and over the years it was amazing what a wonderful job he’d done on his property. He’d learned the Latin names of every plant and herb. Our gardens were full of weeds because our qualified devotees were on the streets selling books, not gardening and weeding and trimming hedges and planting, and our place was a terrible mess. George said, “I’m getting a headache just walking around here. You haven’t looked after this place.” I was very nervous. He said, “Give me a week to think about it and I’ll let you know.” A week later he called and said, “I’ve spoken with Allen Klein, and what he’s come up with is this. You put 45,000 pounds towards the cost of the property and from my side I’ll put another 145, which makes a total of 190. And we’ll show that we sold the property to you at a loss. I know you can’t afford 190 but if you can come up with 45,000 within a week, the place is yours. Then I don’t need to think about it anymore.” He wanted to give the place as a donation but he couldn’t legally because a charitable foundation can’t donate property to another charity—there has to be some financial transaction. Since the property cost 220, through the books he was making a loss of about 30,000. But by 1980 the two banks had appraised the property at 1.5 million pounds. So we got the 45,000 pounds together, gave it to him, he signed the deeds over to ISKCON, and from that day the Manor belonged to ISKCON. The last time George associated with a large group of devotees was when he and his wife, Olivia, visited the Manor in the summer of 1997. We had invited him to a celebratory dinner a few days after we got permission to build the new approach road. This dinner was held shortly after we had another amazing fundraising dinner called “Prabhupada’s Dream”, during which guests and patron members of the Manor were invited to raise funds to buy the land for the approach road. That evening the target was to raise one million pounds. We rented a large circus tent with a stage, set many tables, and served a nice dinner. There was a positive response—within two hours we raised 800,000 pounds—but we were 200,000 short until Michael, an Irish businessman patron member who imported Indian clothing, so appreciated Prabhupada’s Dream of having 150 acres of land for 150 protected cows, that he pledged 200,000 pounds. Michael had only once before been to the Manor and at that time he had taken part in arati and heard a lecture, but that evening was the first time he had attended a special patron’s dinner and he pledged more than any other patron member. What he pledged was a substantial amount of money for anyone, especially for a person of non-Indian origin. It was an auspicious evening. George agreed to come to our second dinner, but we didn’t know if his wife would come. Both were invited but Olivia never attended our public functions. She wasn’t a great fan of the Hare Krishna devotees—she followed somebody else—and she left it up to her husband to go to such things. But this time she came. A Gujarati disciple of Shivaram Swami named Sruti Dharma and I went to the car park at the Manor to welcome them. They had brought rubber Welly boots with them because they were enthusiastic to walk through the fields to see where the new approach road was going to be built, and we did that. We walked from where the main gate would be all the way to the Manor property, which is about a half a mile. We stopped to talk along the way and George observed the fields, “How far does the property extend on this side of the road? How far on the other side of the road? Are you going to have any kind of hedges or trees so that the road doesn’t look ugly, so it doesn’t spoil the overall beauty of the farmland?” We got into the details and when we were returning George said, “If you want to have a successful business, I suggest you start a garden center.” In England, garden centers are usually incredibly successful. Families who’ve just moved into their home buy trees and shrubs, flowers and herbs. George said, “If you do that, I don’t think you need planning permission for this.” He’d put a lot of thought into this idea and as I said, he identified himself as a gardener first and a musician second. He said, “I’ll help you set it up and with whatever you need.” We were happy that he was so open-minded about our project. Then we took him to the temple with Radha-Gokulananda’s altar, Sita-Rama, Laksman, and Hanuman’s altar and the little Gaura-Nitai Deities between Them. George offered his full dandavats to the Deities, Olivia offered her pranams and they both took charanamrita. Then we went into the dining room. The history behind this dinner is that in 1982 the local District Council decided that it didn’t want to have the Manor as a public place of worship because the building hadn’t been planned as such. They wanted to close down the Manor. Our 15-year campaign to keep the Manor open was basically a freedom of religion case. During that time reporters were always interviewing the devotees. We were in newspapers, on television, and on the radio. At one time the Manor had been owned by Saint Bartholomew’s Hospital, an old hospital in London, for a nurse’s training college. Mrs. Ruffles had bought it from Saint Bart’s with the idea of turning it into a nursing home, but she couldn’t carry the financial burden and so she sold it. Then we moved in and suddenly festivals were going on with thousands of visitors and many cars were in the village. We didn’t want the villagers to be irate with our festivals—we wanted to take the strain off the village. After a long, hard battle, in 1996, the British Government’s Secretary of State for the Environment, John Gummer, announced on television that, “the government gave permission for the construction of an access driveway which by-passed the local village, plus full planning permission for the Manor to be used as a place of public worship.” Before that neither the government nor the District Council had recognized us. That was a great victory for us and that’s why we had this victory dinner, which was a nice feast cooked by my wife, Bala Gopala. Everybody who had been involved in the campaign—over 200 people—were there, all VIP guests including some MP’s, legal people, newspaper people and so on. Akhandadhi mentioned all the different guests that were present and praised and honored everybody. Finally he came to George and said, “We have to thank George because this would never have happened if he hadn’t agreed to donate this property.” George was an honored guest, but he wasn’t expected to say anything. But before he spoke, Olivia stood up and said, “I am deeply touched by what I’ve heard and seen tonight, and I feel impelled to say that George has got true friends here, and I feel happy for him. And I feel happy that I didn’t miss the opportunity to witness this amazing gathering.” This was the only time that Olivia had come to the Manor. Before, when I called George and she answered the phone, she would be rude. I used to pray that she didn’t answer the phone. She would try to stop me from intruding into their privacy by visiting her husband. Olivia didn’t like us until that evening. After she sat down, Shyamasundar and Mukunda presented George with a little Prabhupada murti with a Prabhupada hat and glasses and a bead bag and a little book rest and a miniature size Bhagavad-gita, a little vyasasana and a sannyasi danda, and a little pair of kartals and a little pair of glasses. It was cute. George cradled Prabhupada and said, “I’m going to take Prabhupada home with me tonight.” It really touched him. He said, “I didn’t want to say anything, but I feel I’ve got to. First of all, I feel ashamed that I never participated in this campaign.” George hadn’t given any support, either verbally or in the press or in any other way. He said, “But I was following it on television or in the papers. I knew what was going on. In the back of my mind I thought if it didn’t work out, if you had to close the Manor, you could move over to my place in Henley and take over Friar Park—that could be your new temple.” He was so moved by what he had heard that evening that he was talking from his heart. Everybody started clapping like anything.

To view the entire unedited video go to Memories 39 - Dhananjaya

The full Prabhupada Memories Series can be viewed here and also at www.prabhupadamemories.com


Following Srila Prabhupada

Interview DVD 01


Dhananjaya: So this initiation took place on the property of John Lennon, which is known as Tittenhurst Park, about 25 miles outside of London. There were supposed to be four of us taking initiation that particular time. And to my right there was this English fellow called Jimmy Doody. He was a businessman. He was quite wealthy and he had this really pretty girlfriend, and he hadn’t actually shaved up. When Prabhupada was just about to start putting the colors for the fire yajna, Jimmy Doody’s girlfriend appeared at a window just to the right of Prabhupada. She didn’t want to participate, but she wanted to catch Jimmy Doody’s attention. Finally he looks up and sees her. So he stands up, goes over to Prabhupada and whispers in Prabhupada’s ear and he says, “Excuse me, Prabhupada, I just have to step outside a moment. Is that all right?” Prabhupada just casually nodded his head and didn’t say anything, and that was the last we saw of Jimmy Doody. So when I got the name Dhananjaya, Prabhupada explained…this means, obviously, ‘the winner of wealth.’…he said that “Money is flying in all directions,” and he started making some gestures with his hands. And he told me, “In this life, you will have no difficulty with money.”


Interview DVD 03


Dhananjaya: In 1972 I was the temple president in London, and Srila Prabhupada noticed that there were so many boys and girls staying in the temple. In fact, in the morning sometimes you’d have to step over sleeping bodies to get down the stairs.


Here we’re looking at one particular property called Runnymede Park, which is very close to the River Thames. So when George saw the place, and it hadn’t been occupied for some years and it was quite overgrown, he said, “This should be called Runnydown Park because it hasn’t been maintained for so long.”


Interview DVD 05


Dhananjaya: A lot of devotees don’t know this, but actually Prabhupada did name the land New Gokula and that’s why he named the Deities Radha Gokulananda. And he wanted the main activity there to be goraksha, cow protection. He wanted 150 cows kept on the property and I said, “But that’s not very practical because of the 17 acres of land, there’s only 6 acres which is pasture land.” I said, “You need at least one acre per cow,” and he said, “So you buy another 150 acres of land. What is the difficulty? This is the most important duty, to look after the cows and explain the importance of cow protection.” He said also we should purchase a double-decker bus and drive the bus into central London and fill the bus up with Western tourists, Western people, and bring them out to the Manor so they can be educated in simple living and high thinking. He said besides showing them how the cow is protected, we should also be producing milk for sale and butter and yogurt and also ghee. He said, “If we make our own ghee, so many people will want to purchase the ghee because there’s nothing like homemade ghee.” And he said that the other activities the devotees should be doing there is spinning and weaving and different handicrafts. This is what he wanted to happen there. Then I asked him about the Indian community. I said, “Should we cultivate the Indian community?” and he said, “They are already Krishna conscious.” He said we should concentrate on the British community. He said, “They know nothing about Krishna.”


Interview DVD 06


Dhananjaya: This particular footage was taken in May of 1974. It was the very first big public festival program that Prabhupada was present at. It was held in Hotel Parco dei Principi, which is a five-star hotel in a beautiful park called Villa Borghese right in the heart of Rome. The auditorium had seating for 500. So I was thinking in the back of my mind that day, “What if only 25 or 30 people show up? It’s going to be a terrible impression.” It just so happened that I was with Prabhupada the whole day, and we got there quite late. Actually when we got to the hall, the lights were down and we were showing “The World of Hare Krishna.” So then after about 5 or 10 minutes we were called that the film had just finished, so could we please immediately come onto the stage. And when we got onto the stage and the lights went up, I noticed that every single seat had been taken. It was absolutely amazing. Then I noticed that there were people standing at the back of the hall, there were people down the two sides of the hall, and there was even people sitting in the aisle in the middle. So I reckon there must have been at least 800 came to that program. Prabhupada turned to me and he said, “Oh, these Italians, they are very interested in Krishna consciousness. They want to hear.” So after the kirtan, Prabhupada started to speak and the translator was this very nice Italian devotee called Alikrsna. So Prabhupada spoke for 45 minutes. Then he asked for questions, and there was a forest of arms shot up. It was just amazing. There were hundreds of people wanted to ask a particular question. Prabhupada turned to me again and he said, “Oh, just see, they really want to understand. I am very happy that they have this enthusiasm for learning Krishna consciousness.” So Prabhupada spent about an hour answering questions. Then we had another kirtan, we distributed prasadam, and then we went back to the temple on Via Mistretta.


We went for different morning walks in different historical parts of Rome, the Colosseum. He turned to me and he said, “What is this?” I said, “Well, this is an old Roman ruin where they used to hold games, entertainment. It’s like a big entertainment theater.” Prabhupada said, “What is the purpose of it now?” I said, “It’s considered an historical monument.” Then Prabhupada asked me, “Are there any toilets inside?” I said, “No, there’s no toilets.” He said, “What is the point of maintaining such a huge building and you can’t even go to the toilet?” He was just joking obviously. Then we took him to this place called EUR, which is a new development that came up during the time of Mussolini, and it’s a type of architecture called fascist architecture. There were very tall buildings there, and Prabhupada commented. He said, “Just see, they have not learned from their mistakes. They have this big historical building which is useless called the Colosseum, and still they’re making big skyscrapers. And what is the use of these skyscrapers? They are simply increasing their eating, sleeping, mating and defending. This is useless civilization. They are not learning anything. This is just simply chewing the chewed.” We had this house that Prabhupada stayed in. He stayed with us for nine days. It was a detached house with its own garden, and Prabhupada very much liked the weather there. All the neighbors on that small street where the temple was on Via Mistretta would come every morning, knowing exactly what time Prabhupada was going to go for his morning walk, and they would be standing in line ready to offer Prabhupada a freshly picked flower from their gardens. Some were also offering fruits to him too. They were so respectful. Prabhupada had a very nice impression. Actually he said the Italians, they are religious by nature. They desire the blessings of God, and it’s up to us as devotees to teach them how to become qualified to get those blessings.


Interview DVD 08


Dhananjaya: Here Prabhupada is giving Bhagavad-gita class. He actually wanted Bhagavad-gita class to be held in the courtyard. There was one Indian who joined. His name was Prem Yogi, and he told him that he should give class in Hindi every evening. Then there was also an Indian couple, Pranav and his wife, Vanamali, and he told him that he should also give Hindi class and his wife should sing bhajans. Then Pranav said, “Actually my wife is more intelligent than me. Better that she gives the class. She speaks from Bhagavad-gita.” Prabhupada said, “That’s all right. If she can do that, she can give the class.” These people here, these are students from Nepal, and Prabhupada wanted them to chant the Purusha Sukta every day. This is the Hindi teacher. Prabhupada wanted us to learn Hindi. One morning I tried to demonstrate my Hindi. So I said, “Prabhupada, I am learning from this teacher,” and he said, “So what have you learned?” I said, “Ek balak chata he,” which means “one boy is walking.” Then Prabhupada said, “Do you know how to say in Hindi two boys are walking?” I said, “No,” and then he laughed. He said, “You will never learn Hindi.” So I took that as an instruction.