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There are interesting parallels between the initiating events for the missions of both Srila Prabhupada and Lord
There are interesting parallels between the initiating events for the missions of both Srila Prabhupada and Lord
Brahma. This article explores some of those parallels.
Brahma. This article explores some of those parallels.
[[File:Brahma_deity_praying.jpg|400px|Brahma]]
[[File:Prabhupada_praying.jpg|475px|Prabhupada]]
<div style="clear: both;"></div>


=== Parallels in their missions ===
=== Parallels in their missions ===


Lord Brahma is the first jiva or living entity in the universe, born from the lotus flower sprouting from the navel of Garbodakasayi Visnu. Along with Lord Visnu as the maintainer and Lord Siva as the destroyer, he is the principal creator or engineer of universal affairs, on behalf of the Lord. He takes charge of matters such as fashioning the planets, situating them in their orbits, as well as creating and assigning bodies for the different species of life. He is also a pure devotee of the Lord, and one of the twelve mahājanas or great authorities on the science of Krsna, who pass down this knowledge in paramparā from Him <ref>[https://vanisource.org/w/index.php?title=730103_-_Lecture_BS_-_Bombay? Vanisource: Lecture on Brahma Samhita – January 03, 1973, Bombay, India]</ref>.  
Lord Brahma is the first jiva or living entity in the universe, born from the lotus flower sprouting from the navel of Garbodakasayi Visnu. Along with Lord Visnu as the maintainer and Lord Siva as the destroyer, he is the principal creator or engineer of universal affairs, on behalf of the Lord. He takes charge of matters such as fashioning the planets, situating them in their orbits, as well as creating and assigning bodies for the different species of life. He is also a pure devotee of the Lord, and one of the twelve mahājanas or great authorities on the science of Krsna, who pass down this knowledge in paramparā from Him <ref>[https://vanisource.org/w/index.php?title=730103_-_Lecture_BS_-_Bombay Vanisource: Lecture on Brahma Samhita – January 03, 1973, Bombay, India]</ref>.  
We hear in Chapter eight of the third canto of Srimad Bhagavatam that, after manifesting on the whorl of the lotus flower originating from the Lord’s navel, Lord Brahma first inquired from the Lord within His heart about his origin and constitutional position. After seeking out and connecting with the Lord, he realizes he is part and parcel of the Lord, subordinate to Him, and becomes inclined to serve Him through creative activities. In Chapter nine of Canto three, through beautifully composed prayers, Lord Brahma requests from the Lord creative potencies to serve Him by constructing the features of this universe. Brahma was very much eager and ready to serve the Lord at any moment, that was his sincere desire  
We hear in Chapter eight of the third canto of Srimad Bhagavatam that, after manifesting on the whorl of the lotus flower originating from the Lord’s navel, Lord Brahma first inquired from the Lord within His heart about his origin and constitutional position. After seeking out and connecting with the Lord, he realizes he is part and parcel of the Lord, subordinate to Him, and becomes inclined to serve Him through creative activities. In Chapter nine of Canto three, through beautifully composed prayers, Lord Brahma requests from the Lord creative potencies to serve Him by constructing the features of this universe. Brahma was very much eager and ready to serve the Lord at any moment, that was his sincere desire.
 
<blockquote>...I pray only to engage in His service in the creation of the material world.<ref>[https://vanisource.org/wiki/SB_3.9.23 Vanisource: SB 3.9.23]</ref></blockquote>
 
However, even such an exalted soul as he was very anxious and overwhelmed at the magnitude of the task before him. Srila Prabhupada relates to us Brahma’s mental state and predicament.
 
<blockquote>...The devastating water was so fearful that even Brahmā was perturbed at its appearance...The task was meant only for Brahmā, and no one in the universe can even understand how difficult it was.<ref>[https://vanisource.org/wiki/SB_3.9.27-28 Vanisource: SB 3.9.27-28, Purport]</ref></blockquote>
 
The image of Brahma sitting atop the original lotus contemplating his situation, amidst a vast churning ocean of devastation, certainly evokes awe and empathy for the challenge that lay ahead for him, and his feeling of being overwhelmed. As one of my spiritual teachers His Grace Syamananda dasa of [https://radhadesh.com/ Radhadesh] in Belgium clarified, Lord Brahma’s grief is distinctly different to that experienced by Arjuna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra. Whereas Arjuna was filled with doubts as to what his true duty was, Lord Brahma was not in doubt as to what to do, but he was overwhelmed with its complexity and he was in anxiety about how to go about it.
 
 
<div style="display: flex; align-items: left; margin-left: 0; padding-left: 0;">
 
  <div style="text-align: left; margin: 0; padding: 0;">
    [[File:Brahma_lotus_pray.png|300px]]
    <div style="margin-top: 10px;">Left – Brahma receives encouragement, knowledge and guidance from the Lord within his heart;</div>
  </div>
 
  <div style="text-align: left; margin: 0; padding: 0;">
    [[File:Brahma_and_Visnu.png|350px]]
    <div style="margin-top: 10px;">Right – Lord Brahma atop the lotus emanating from the navel of Garbodakasayi Visnu who lies submerged in the great ocean of devastation in this universe.</div>
  </div>
 
</div>
 
<div style="clear: both;"></div>
 
 
From the tumultuous waves shifting Lord Brahma side-to-side on the original lotus, we turn our gaze to another oceanic scene here on Earth. On the undulating waters of the Bay of Bengal, Laccadive<ref>Sea connecting waters off the southernmost coast of India with the Arabian sea; anglicized form of original sanskrit Lakṣadvīpa, meaning “hundred thousand islands”</ref> and Arabian seas, in the period of mid to late August of 1965, our Srila Prabhupada lay aboard the MS Jaladuta steamship<ref>[https://vaniquotes.org/wiki/Category:Jaladuta_-_ship Category: Jaladuta - ship]</ref> on its passage from Calcutta to New York. In his Jaladuta diary<ref>[https://vanisource.org/wiki/Category:1965_-_The_Jaladuta_Diary_-_Journey_to_the_USA Category: 1965 - The Jaladuta Diary - Journey to the USA]</ref>, Prabhupada related how he suffered several bouts of sea sickness due to the lurching of the ship caused by rolling swells and tides.
 
<blockquote>There was vomiting tendency and dizziness and I felt uncomfortable the whole day and night.<ref>[[https://vanisource.org/wiki/Category:1965_-_The_Jaladuta_Diary_-_Journey_to_the_USA Category: The Jaladuta Diary, August entries]</ref></blockquote>
 
He also suffered a serious heart attack while passing through the Arabian Sea.
 
<blockquote>Passed over a great crisis on the struggle for life and death.<ref>[[https://vanisource.org/wiki/Category:1965_-_The_Jaladuta_Diary_-_Journey_to_the_USA Category: The Jaladuta Diary, August 31 entry]</ref></blockquote>
 
So, just as Lord Brahma was tossed about in an ocean on the original lotus, our Srila Prabhupada was also tossed about in an ocean at certain points on the Jaladuta. And, just as Lord Brahma was anxious about his mission, Prabhupada was in some anxiety about his.
Brahma had a grand mission to create and arrange the different features of the universe. Srila Prabhupada also had a grand mission but his was to establish and spread Lord Caitanya’s saṅkīrtan movement in the western world. Amidst his anxieties on board the Jaladuta, Prabhupada remained always connected with the Lord and his spiritual master through prayer and constant meditation.
 
<blockquote>There is slight lurching(?) of the ship and I am feeling slight headache also. But I am struggling and the nectarine of life is Sri Chaitanya Charitamrita the source of my all vitality.<ref>[[https://vanisource.org/wiki/Category:1965_-_The_Jaladuta_Diary_-_Journey_to_the_USA Category: The Jaladuta Diary, September 9 entry]</ref></blockquote>
 
Just as we hear Brahma did in Chapter nine of Canto three in the Bhagavatam. One of my favourite entries in Prabhupada’s diary was on 13 September 1965 when he wrote:
 
<blockquote>Today I have disclosed my mind to my companion Lord Sri Krishna. There is a Bengali poem made by me today in this connection.<ref>[[https://vanisource.org/wiki/Category:1965_-_The_Jaladuta_Diary_-_Journey_to_the_USA Category: The Jaladuta Diary, September 13 entry]</ref></blockquote>
 
Revealing a mood of constant and intimate companionship with the Lord in his heart. He never considered himself alone at any stage.
 
 
[[File:Jaladuta.png|700px|Jaladuta]]
<div style="margin-top: 10px;">The Jaladuta ship in which Srila Prabhupada travelled from Calcutta to New York in 1965.</div>


<blockquote>...I pray only to engage in His service in the creation of the material world.<ref>[https://vanisource.org/wiki/SB_3.9.23. Vanisource: SB 3.9.23]</ref></blockquote>


However, even such an exalted soul as he was very anxious and overwhelmed at the magnitude of the task before him. Srila Prabhupada relates to us Brahma’s mental state and predicament
He composed a famous prayer called the Mārkine Bhāgavata-dharma upon his arrival in America at Boston Harbor on 18 September 1965. In it, he relates, among other transcendental sentiments, his feeling of being overwhelmed at the monumental task that lay ahead, just as Brahma did for his own mission. Just like Brahma, Prabhupada understood what the goal of his mission was, but he was understandably concerned about how to go about it. He feelingly relates this to the Lord in his poetry in various ways, including “...I do not know how they will be able to understand it.” [Mārkine Bhāgavata-dharma, Stanza 3] and “How will I make them understand this message of Kṛṣṇa consciousness?” [§].
Brahma emanated forth into the universe from the umbilical stem connected to his Lord and master Garbodakasayi Visnu. And Srila Prabhupada emanated forth into the Western world from his dwelling with their lordships Sri Radha Damodar in Vṛndāvan, via an umbilical attachment of love for Them. Prabhupada exhibited much attachment to deities from the Goswami temples in Vṛndāvan, including Sri Radha Damodar. He speaks of his feeling of separation from them while on the Jaladuta “...I am feeling separation from Sri Vrindaban and my Lords Sri Govinda, Gopinath, Radha Damodar” [The Jaladuta diary, 10 September entry].


<blockquote>...The devastating water was so fearful that even Brahmā was perturbed at its appearance...The task was meant only for Brahmā, and no one in the universe can even understand how difficult it was.<ref>[https://vanisource.org/wiki/SB_3.9.27-28. Vanisource: SB 3.9.27-28, Purport]</ref></blockquote>.


The image of Brahma sitting atop the original lotus contemplating his situation, amidst a vast churning ocean of devastation, certainly evokes awe and empathy for the challenge that lay ahead for him—and his feeling of being overwhelmed. As one of my spiritual teachers His Grace Syamananda dasa of Radhadesh in Belgium clarified, Lord Brahma’s grief is distinctly different to the grief experienced by Arjuna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra. Whereas Arjuna was filled with doubts as to what his true duty was, Lord Brahma was not in doubt as to what to do, but he was overwhelmed with its complexity and he was in anxiety about how to go about it.
[[File:Radha_Damodar.png|700px|Radha Damodara]]
<div style="margin-top: 10px;">Their lordships Sri Radha Damodara continue to be worshipped today  at Seva Kunj
near Loi Bazar in Vṛndāvan, Mathura, India.</div>

Latest revision as of 17:53, 8 July 2025

There are interesting parallels between the initiating events for the missions of both Srila Prabhupada and Lord Brahma. This article explores some of those parallels.


Brahma Prabhupada

Parallels in their missions

Lord Brahma is the first jiva or living entity in the universe, born from the lotus flower sprouting from the navel of Garbodakasayi Visnu. Along with Lord Visnu as the maintainer and Lord Siva as the destroyer, he is the principal creator or engineer of universal affairs, on behalf of the Lord. He takes charge of matters such as fashioning the planets, situating them in their orbits, as well as creating and assigning bodies for the different species of life. He is also a pure devotee of the Lord, and one of the twelve mahājanas or great authorities on the science of Krsna, who pass down this knowledge in paramparā from Him [1]. We hear in Chapter eight of the third canto of Srimad Bhagavatam that, after manifesting on the whorl of the lotus flower originating from the Lord’s navel, Lord Brahma first inquired from the Lord within His heart about his origin and constitutional position. After seeking out and connecting with the Lord, he realizes he is part and parcel of the Lord, subordinate to Him, and becomes inclined to serve Him through creative activities. In Chapter nine of Canto three, through beautifully composed prayers, Lord Brahma requests from the Lord creative potencies to serve Him by constructing the features of this universe. Brahma was very much eager and ready to serve the Lord at any moment, that was his sincere desire.

...I pray only to engage in His service in the creation of the material world.[2]

However, even such an exalted soul as he was very anxious and overwhelmed at the magnitude of the task before him. Srila Prabhupada relates to us Brahma’s mental state and predicament.

...The devastating water was so fearful that even Brahmā was perturbed at its appearance...The task was meant only for Brahmā, and no one in the universe can even understand how difficult it was.[3]

The image of Brahma sitting atop the original lotus contemplating his situation, amidst a vast churning ocean of devastation, certainly evokes awe and empathy for the challenge that lay ahead for him, and his feeling of being overwhelmed. As one of my spiritual teachers His Grace Syamananda dasa of Radhadesh in Belgium clarified, Lord Brahma’s grief is distinctly different to that experienced by Arjuna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra. Whereas Arjuna was filled with doubts as to what his true duty was, Lord Brahma was not in doubt as to what to do, but he was overwhelmed with its complexity and he was in anxiety about how to go about it.


   
Left – Brahma receives encouragement, knowledge and guidance from the Lord within his heart;
   
Right – Lord Brahma atop the lotus emanating from the navel of Garbodakasayi Visnu who lies submerged in the great ocean of devastation in this universe.


From the tumultuous waves shifting Lord Brahma side-to-side on the original lotus, we turn our gaze to another oceanic scene here on Earth. On the undulating waters of the Bay of Bengal, Laccadive[4] and Arabian seas, in the period of mid to late August of 1965, our Srila Prabhupada lay aboard the MS Jaladuta steamship[5] on its passage from Calcutta to New York. In his Jaladuta diary[6], Prabhupada related how he suffered several bouts of sea sickness due to the lurching of the ship caused by rolling swells and tides.

There was vomiting tendency and dizziness and I felt uncomfortable the whole day and night.[7]

He also suffered a serious heart attack while passing through the Arabian Sea.

Passed over a great crisis on the struggle for life and death.[8]

So, just as Lord Brahma was tossed about in an ocean on the original lotus, our Srila Prabhupada was also tossed about in an ocean at certain points on the Jaladuta. And, just as Lord Brahma was anxious about his mission, Prabhupada was in some anxiety about his. Brahma had a grand mission to create and arrange the different features of the universe. Srila Prabhupada also had a grand mission but his was to establish and spread Lord Caitanya’s saṅkīrtan movement in the western world. Amidst his anxieties on board the Jaladuta, Prabhupada remained always connected with the Lord and his spiritual master through prayer and constant meditation.

There is slight lurching(?) of the ship and I am feeling slight headache also. But I am struggling and the nectarine of life is Sri Chaitanya Charitamrita the source of my all vitality.[9]

Just as we hear Brahma did in Chapter nine of Canto three in the Bhagavatam. One of my favourite entries in Prabhupada’s diary was on 13 September 1965 when he wrote:

Today I have disclosed my mind to my companion Lord Sri Krishna. There is a Bengali poem made by me today in this connection.[10]

Revealing a mood of constant and intimate companionship with the Lord in his heart. He never considered himself alone at any stage.


Jaladuta

The Jaladuta ship in which Srila Prabhupada travelled from Calcutta to New York in 1965.


He composed a famous prayer called the Mārkine Bhāgavata-dharma upon his arrival in America at Boston Harbor on 18 September 1965. In it, he relates, among other transcendental sentiments, his feeling of being overwhelmed at the monumental task that lay ahead, just as Brahma did for his own mission. Just like Brahma, Prabhupada understood what the goal of his mission was, but he was understandably concerned about how to go about it. He feelingly relates this to the Lord in his poetry in various ways, including “...I do not know how they will be able to understand it.” [Mārkine Bhāgavata-dharma, Stanza 3] and “How will I make them understand this message of Kṛṣṇa consciousness?” [§]. Brahma emanated forth into the universe from the umbilical stem connected to his Lord and master Garbodakasayi Visnu. And Srila Prabhupada emanated forth into the Western world from his dwelling with their lordships Sri Radha Damodar in Vṛndāvan, via an umbilical attachment of love for Them. Prabhupada exhibited much attachment to deities from the Goswami temples in Vṛndāvan, including Sri Radha Damodar. He speaks of his feeling of separation from them while on the Jaladuta “...I am feeling separation from Sri Vrindaban and my Lords Sri Govinda, Gopinath, Radha Damodar” [The Jaladuta diary, 10 September entry].


Radha Damodara

Their lordships Sri Radha Damodara continue to be worshipped today at Seva Kunj near Loi Bazar in Vṛndāvan, Mathura, India.