Visakha devi dasi Remembers Srila Prabhupada
Prabhupada Memories
Interview 01
Visakha: My first meeting with Srila Prabhupada was in March of 1971. I had a friend, John, who is now Yadubara das, who had majored in photography at the same college that I attended. I was an undergraduate and he was a graduate student. John had decided to do his Masters thesis on the Hare Krishna people and had gone to India in the winter of 1970. After he had been there for a few months, he wrote and asked me to join him there. That’s why I arrived in Bombay in March 1971. In college I had a done a term project on close-up photography. I had taken that term project to a publisher in New York, and it gradually evolved into a small specialty book about close-up photography. When I went to India, I took that book with me, and about a day after I had arrived in Bombay, John said, “We should go and meet Prabhupada.” So we went to the temple, which was on the seventh floor of an apartment building called Akash Ganga, right by the ocean. Prabhupada’s room was simple, spacious, and airy because the windows were open and the sea breeze was blowing through it. It had a lot of natural light. Prabhupada, very relaxed, sat on a white cushion behind a low table as he traditionally did. John introduced me and then took my book, which I had under my arm, and gave it to Prabhupada saying, “She has done this.” Prabhupada graciously and gentlemanly took the book and thumbed through the pages for a minute. Then he handed it back and said, “We do not know much about these things.” When I brought the book to the temple I had thought, “Here is a saintly person. Why should I show such a person a book about close-up photography?” It didn’t seem appropriate. So, when Prabhupada said what he did, I felt that he confirmed my thought. I left with the impression of a very peaceful, I wouldn’t say transcendental, because I wasn’t thinking in that way, but a peaceful person and one who was pleasant to be around.
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To view the entire unedited video go to Memories 19 - Upendra, Visakha dasi, Bhargava, Sura
The full Prabhupada Memories Series can be viewed here and also at www.prabhupadamemories.com
Following Srila Prabhupada
Interview DVD 03
Visakha: After the incredibly successful pandal in Delhi where tens of thousands of people were coming every night to hear Srila Prabhupada, Srila Prabhupada took just a few of us, 20 or 30, to Vrindavan. So after all the fanfare in Delhi, the lights and distributing prasadam to all those people and the dignitaries that came, here we were in this simple village with Srila Prabhupada. I think all of us, certainly myself, felt how much Prabhupada cared for us that after this big, big preaching program, he would take the time and the trouble to bring us to Vrindavan. We stayed in a small place, Saraf Bhavan, which is about a mile from Loi Bazaar, and every day we would go by bus to different holy places. We went to Govardhan, Radha Kund, Barsana.
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Interview DVD 04
Visakha: We lived in Kesi Ghat by the banks of the Yamuna, and every morning we would attend mangal arati in Kesi Ghat. And after that, Achyutananda Swami would take a sankirtan party and we’d go all the way to Raman Reti, where the Krishna-Balarama Temple was under construction. And then we’d walk back along the parikrama path that followed the Jamuna River and go to the Radha Damodar Temple in time to meet Srila Prabhupada there. Prabhupada would lead us in the Jaya Radha-Madhava prayers, and then he would speak on Srimad-Bhagavatam, First Canto, Chapter 2, “Divinity and Divine Service.” And although we had heard what he was saying before, it was the basic Krishna conscious philosophy, in that atmosphere it had tremendous impact. I can’t imagine how fortunate we were, that small group of us, to be in the most auspicious place, Vrindavan, and then within Vrindavan in such an auspicious place where the Goswamis used to sit together. And to be there at such an auspicious time, Karttika, with Krishna’s pure representative, Srila Prabhupada. It was simply Srila Prabhupada’s kindness upon us that he made this arrangement to impress upon us this incredible philosophy of Krishna consciousness – so powerful, so important, so profound. So it was an incredible month, and a month that I will remember my entire life. Certainly, it moved me very deeply.
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Interview DVD 05
Visakha: When Srila Prabhupada offered the first arati to Sri Sri Radha Gokulananda, I was photographing him. I stood behind the arati tray and simply focused the entire time on Srila Prabhupada. As I was doing that, I was struck by how gracefully he offered the different items – the beautiful circles he made with the ghee lamp and the little circles within the circles. Also, I was even more struck by how focused he was on Sri Sri Radha Gokulananda. I was certainly focused on him and all the other devotees pretty much were focused on Prabhupada, but Prabhupada was focused on the Lord and on pleasing Them. This whole event was not about him, but it was about the pleasure of Sri Sri Radha Gokulananda and the pleasure of his spiritual master. Looking at him as I was, I could feel that. Then when he finished the arati and he started circumambulating the Deities, again his movements were very graceful, very rhythmic, and it was for the pleasure of the Lord. We were so engrossed in what Prabhupada was doing that when he gave just a little movement of his hands indicating that we also should participate in dancing for the pleasure of Sri Sri Radha Gokulananda, immediately all the devotees were involved in dancing for the Lord and it was an ecstatic moment. We were so delighted to be part of this historic event, that now Srila Prabhupada had a firm base, a beautiful base, Bhaktivedanta Manor, where Krishna consciousness could be expressed by his followers, and from that base they could start to spread Krishna consciousness throughout the country. |
Interview DVD 06
Visakha: Prabhupada pointed out in his talks that even well-to-do people would come to get this prasadam. They didn’t need it, they weren’t in need of food, but they valued it as something spiritual, something that could help them in their spiritual life. And this Prabhupada said was the purpose of prasadam. It’s not just an altruistic activity that we give prasadam to poor people or destitute people. We can do that, but prasadam is for everyone because spiritually we are all poor, we are all destitute. We need this mercy from Krishna, and Prabhupada was very generous about it. The children would sometimes come twice or even three times, and Prabhupada would smile and wag his finger at them; but he would give them again and again. |
Interview DVD 07
Visakha: When Prabhupada went on the stage at the end of the procession, I also tried to go on the stage. But some person who I didn’t know stopped me and said that no women were allowed on the stage. So I tried to reason with him, saying that I was authorized by the BBT trustees and they had paid for my fare and my film, but this person was adamant. So I left the stage and I went to the middle of the field behind the huge assembly of devotees and guests, and I sat down in an empty chair there. A short time later I looked and, to my surprise, Srila Prabhupada had gotten up off the vyasasana and was raising his arms in the air and beginning to dance. So I immediately climbed on the chair and began to take photographs, and it turned out that I could not have found a better position to be in than that very one where I was. So I’m grateful to this person, who apparently was an obstacle but in fact was a great help in my service.
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Interview DVD 08
Visakha: There was just one person between me and a clear view of Srila Prabhupada, and that was Tripurari Swami. So I was standing behind him, and I did everything I could think of. I held my camera in front of him, I tapped him on the shoulder, but he was just fixated on Prabhupada offering the aratik.
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Interview DVD 09
Visakha: I had written an article for Back to Godhead magazine about how we are not the body, very basic philosophy. And the editors thought that the written part of the article was fine, they didn’t have a problem with that, but they questioned my illustration for it because I more or less dissected the human body into different parts – the head, the chest, the legs, the arms – and tried to point out how we’re not these different parts. The editors felt it was too anatomical, and they didn’t really want to use it. But they thought that since Srila Prabhupada was there at the time in Los Angeles, I should ask him his opinion. So I went up to Prabhupada’s room with a mock-up of the article showing the illustrations, and I explained to him the concept. I didn’t get the answer that I was looking for, either yea or nay. But I got something far more valuable because I saw that although Prabhupada had thousands of disciples and dozens and dozens of temples all over the world, so many responsibilities, he gave his full undivided attention to this one teeny tiny little disciple and teeny tiny little article, three- or four-page article. It was like nothing else existed for those few minutes. He was fully present to this question that I was asking, and he was unhurried. He was not going to make a quick decision, but he really looked at the illustrations and thought about it. And on top of that, he was very thorough. He felt he couldn’t make a decision about the graphics without also reading the text that went with the graphics. So it was a great lesson for me in terms of making decisions in Krishna consciousness. It’s not a snap decision, but it is a meditation to see Prabhupada’s mindfulness and his presence and his focus and his thoroughness and his thoughtfulness even for a small question that’s put before him. Later on this article was published in the September 1975 issue of Back to Godhead magazine. The illustration with all the different bodily parts wasn’t used, but instead a painting by one of the devotees.
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Interview DVD 10
Visakha: I was on the flight between Philadelphia and Berkeley with Srila Prabhupada when the captain of the jet came out of the cockpit. He sat down next to Prabhupada, and the two of them had a very animated, joyful discussion. I could see Prabhupada was relishing the conversation. So I was filming this, and I was curious what they were discussing. But, of course, I couldn’t hear it, and I was too shy to ask Prabhupada what did he talk about after it was over. So I resigned myself that I guess I wouldn’t know. But it turned out that when Prabhupada arrived in Berkeley, during his arrival address he mentioned the conversation and he said the captain was very intelligent and he asked several questions. One of the questions was, “If God is all good, then why is there evil in the world?” Prabhupada said, “For God there is no evil, there is only good.” And he gave the analogy, “Just as my back is as important to me as my chest, if there is pain in my back I take care of that, I don’t ignore it thinking that the chest is more important. So evil is like the back of God and it’s not different from His front, which is compared to goodness.” Then the captain asked, “If everything is good from God’s point of view, how can there be evil?” and Prabhupada gave another example. He said, “It’s like the sun. On the body of the sun there is no shadow. We create shadow by turning our back to the sun. So similarly, evil means when we turn away from God.” So then the captain asked a third question. He said, “How is it possible to attain peace?” And Prabhupada said, “To attain peace, we have to understand that God is the supreme proprietor, the supreme enjoyer and the supreme friend.” |
Interview DVD 11
Visakha: At some point, Yadubara asked if we could film him while he translated, and finally we got permission. We set up some lights so that they were not too bright – the bright lights bothered Prabhupada’s eyes – and we filmed him as he translated from the 10th Canto, Chapter 13, Text 53 of Srimad-Bhagavatam. Our microphone was right next to his mouth, and I had the headphones on so I heard him speaking. And he said right into my ears, “Everything is acting, moving by the supreme desire of Krishna. This consciousness is Krishna consciousness.” So although I heard that from him directly, I could in no way relate it to that situation, that Prabhupada was about to leave this planet, was speaking one of his last purports. That this was the supreme desire of Krishna was beyond my comprehension. What we wanted at that point was Prabhupada’s vibrant preaching, his good health, traveling around the world, guiding us and correcting us, enthusing us, showing us what it’s like to be a Krishna conscious devotee. And to think that now it was Krishna’s desire that he leave was unacceptable. And also in that purport, reading it today there is no way of guessing the dire circumstances that Prabhupada spoke it in. Right there in that one purport was Prabhupada’s determination and his cent percent dedication to the mission of his spiritual master, completely resolute in his purpose.
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