Video by Utpal Marshall
On March 3rd 1979, Sri Chinmoy completed his first marathon in Chico California in a time of 4:31:34. Each year since then, his students in New York and around the world have honoured him by running the 26-mile distance.

Video by Utpal Marshall
On March 3rd 1979, Sri Chinmoy completed his first marathon in Chico California in a time of 4:31:34. Each year since then, his students in New York and around the world have honoured him by running the 26-mile distance.

Sri Chinmoy held his first 7-hour public meditation, All Angels’ Church, Manhattan
Sri Chinmoy spends a day out in Flushing Meadows Park, Queens, NY, USA, where runners from America’s ‘Liberty Torch’ and Canada’s ‘Oneness-Heart’ compete in a 13-mile race.
An exhibition of Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala artworks opens at the Town Hall, New York, NY, USA.
A two-month exhibition of Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala artworks, sponsored by the U.S. Department of the Interior in conjunction with the National Park Service, is attended by the Department of the Interior Under-Secretary James A. Joseph and members of the U.S. Congress, including the Honorable Geraldine Ferraro, at the National Visitors Center in Washington, DC, USA.
An exhibition of Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala artworks opens at the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, in Washington, DC, USA.
Sri Chinmoy offers a meditation at the Rayburn Office Building, U.S. House of Representatives, and meets with Zbigniew Brzezinski, National Security Advisor, in Washington, DC, USA.
Sri Chinmoy lifts 300 lbs. using a seated calf-raise machine, in Jamaica, NY, USA.
Sri Chinmoy offers a Peace Concert (341), the third of 39 Peace Concerts dedicated to Swami Vivekananda’s 39 years on earth, in the David A. Stein Junior High School, Bronx, NY, USA.
Sri Chinmoy begins writing daily rhyming poems — meditations for each day of the year — subsequently published in My Silence Heart-Blossoms, part 1, in Jamaica, NY, USA.
Sri Chinmoy offers a Peace Concert (406), performing on 50 instruments from various nations around the world — the 6th of 50 concerts held in honour of the 50th anniversary of the United Nations — at the UN General Assembly Lobby in New York.
The University of Cincinnati becomes the world’s first Sri Chinmoy Peace University. The same day, Mayor Roxanne Qualls dedicates the city of Cincinnati, OH, USA, as a Sri Chinmoy Peace City.
Sri Chinmoy lifts Monsignor Thomas Hartman, Rabbi Marc Gellman and Tibetan monks, as part of his ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ programme, at Aspiration-Ground in Jamaica, NY, USA.
Sri Chinmoy lifts 41 white horses at the Tiara Resort in the Terelj National Park, Mongolia.
Sri Chinmoy spends a day out in Flushing Meadows Park, Queens, NY, USA, where runners from America’s ‘Liberty Torch’ and Canada’s ‘Oneness-Heart’ compete in a 13-mile race.
An exhibition of Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala artworks opens at the Town Hall, New York, NY, USA.
A two-month exhibition of Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala artworks, sponsored by the U.S. Department of the Interior in conjunction with the National Park Service, is attended by the Department of the Interior Under-Secretary James A. Joseph and members of the U.S. Congress, including the Honorable Geraldine Ferraro, at the National Visitors Center in Washington, DC, USA.
An exhibition of Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala artworks opens at the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, in Washington, DC, USA.
Sri Chinmoy offers a meditation at the Rayburn Office Building, U.S. House of Representatives, and meets with Zbigniew Brzezinski, National Security Advisor, in Washington, DC, USA.
Sri Chinmoy lifts 300 lbs. using a seated calf-raise machine, in Jamaica, NY, USA.
Sri Chinmoy offers a Peace Concert (341), the third of 39 Peace Concerts dedicated to Swami Vivekananda’s 39 years on earth, in the David A. Stein Junior High School, Bronx, NY, USA.
Sri Chinmoy begins writing daily rhyming poems — meditations for each day of the year — subsequently published in My Silence Heart-Blossoms, part 1, in Jamaica, NY, USA.
Sri Chinmoy offers a Peace Concert (406), performing on 50 instruments from various nations around the world — the 6th of 50 concerts held in honour of the 50th anniversary of the United Nations — at the UN General Assembly Lobby in New York.
The University of Cincinnati becomes the world’s first Sri Chinmoy Peace University. The same day, Mayor Roxanne Qualls dedicates the city of Cincinnati, OH, USA, as a Sri Chinmoy Peace City.
Sri Chinmoy lifts Monsignor Thomas Hartman, Rabbi Marc Gellman and Tibetan monks, as part of his ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ programme, at Aspiration-Ground in Jamaica, NY, USA.
Sri Chinmoy lifts 41 white horses at the Tiara Resort in the Terelj National Park, Mongolia.
A two-month exhibition of Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala artworks, sponsored by the US Department of the Interior in conjunction with the National Parks Service, is attended by the Department of the Interior Under-Secretary James A. Joseph and members of the U.S. Congress, including the Honorable Geraldine Ferraro, at the National Visitors Center in Washington, DC.

25 June 1986. Sri Chinmoy, Body, heart and soul one-arm lift anniversary, 25-26 June 1986, Agni Press, 1986.
Programme highlights at Sri Chinmoy Library
Photos by Bhashwar.
NEW YORK — He started August on the fast track, sprinting his way through those hot summer days in races held in the metropolitan area.
The runner was Sri Chinmoy, who wanted to finish his 48th year with a burst of speed. (He was to turn 49 on Aug. 27.)
He completed an 800-metre New York Road Runners’ Summer Track event on Randall’s Island Aug. 5 in 2:59:9. Six days later he won the Master’s Division in a two-mile race in Prospect Park, Brooklyn, with a time of 13:53 — a 6:56 pace.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 6, Nos. 8-12, Volume 7, No. 1, August 1980-January 1981
The bridge connecting the towns of Cumberland and Central Falls in Rhode Island has been renamed the ‘Sri Chinmoy Peace Bridge’.
Mayor Francis Stetkiewicz of Cumberland and Mayor Carlos Silva of Central Falls each walked one mile for peace and then met at the bridge for the dedication ceremonies on April 24.
Commenting on the symbolism of the peace bridge, the Master told the two mayors: “With your hearts of magnanimity, you are proving to the world-at-large that oneness-peace is ... a self-evident reality.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 18, April-July 1989
The U.N. Society of Writers invited Guru to read and speak about his poetry March 30 and its president, Hans Janitschek, gave Guru a literary award. Previous recipients included Mikhail Gorbachev, Arthur Miller and Vanessa Redgrave.
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 22, DECEMBER 1992-MARCH 1993
Following is an excerpt from a letter written March 21 by Paul O’Dwyer, President of the City Council of New York, reflecting back on his first meeting with Sri Chinmoy:
“I shall not easily forget the time Sri Chinmoy paid a call to my office. New York was in crisis at the time and [I] ... could think of nothing more irrelevant than a visit to a distraught City Hall of an Oriental man: a practitioner of meditation, a teacher, poet, writer, prophet and philosopher ...
“Yet, when he came into our emotional lives with his young disciples, the Office of the President of the City Council became transfixed. My incredulous staff, who had come out of sheer curiosity, stood enthralled when the young people sang with quiet spiritual commitment. For a brief moment, the atmosphere they had created and the simple reverence of Sri Chinmoy brought a peace and tranquillity to a place of turmoil. Many visitors have come and gone, but none made such a lasting impression.”
Published in Anahata Nada, May 1, 1977, Vol. 4 No. 4
questions in New York
Question: Recently you said we should strengthen our friendships.
Sri Chinmoy: God is our only Friend — that is absolutely true. Again, we believe in God’s existence inside everybody. Naturally we will feel our affinity, our oneness with some people more than with the rest of the world. Inside a scorpion, there is God. But I am not asking you to make friends with a scorpion. The scorpion will bite you again and again. But I am begging the disciples to establish friendships on a human level.
Sometimes I tell you to establish your friendship with someone because you have a special connection with that person from a previous incarnation and I want you to maintain that friendship. Then no matter how much you suffer in the hands of that person, please try to keep the friendship alive.
In some cases, people do not want to show their oneness. They feel that they are infinitely superior and their friend is inferior. In other cases, both sides are eager to serve the Supreme in me. Your friendship with one girl is extraordinary. It is more than friendship. It is like twin sisters. Your connection with her is unique. I see that inside her heart, she is for you and inside your heart, you are for her. This is how friendship can develop into complete oneness — oneness of the heart, oneness of the soul, oneness of the life. When two of my disciples are friends, it helps me. It is like a tree. If I shake the tree, all the branches move together.
On the earthly level, we need friends. Sometimes you are depressed or frustrated. That is the time for your friend to lift you up. Again, your friend can be down and you can be the one to lift her up. At that time, she will count on you so much and you will count on her. When you need a friend, you are not going to find a new person to confide in. You may feel that friendship is based upon sacrifice. But I wish to say that there is no such thing as sacrifice where there is love. Again, when you do not feel love, at least through sacrifice you can establish love.
On the human level, friendship is absolutely necessary. At the same time, you have to know that inside the heart of your friend is the real Friend, the only Friend — the Supreme. The Supreme is omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent. But on the human level, if He tells us that He will be able to help us via somebody, or He will be able to help somebody else via us, then we have to take Him seriously.
True friendship is very rare, but it does exist. I cherish those people who are true friends. When I deal with them, it is like dealing with one person instead of two. Each of my disciples should take a few people to be their human friends. I am not asking you to have the whole world as your friend — far from it. Only two or three real friends are needed. Even if you have only one friend, it helps considerably.
Friendship is based on forgiveness. Today if your friend has done something wrong, you have to forgive her immediately by thinking that you could have made the same mistake. If she has been nasty to you today, you have to forgive her immediately. Tomorrow you may be in the same position — you could be nasty to her. So if you forgive her when she is nasty, then if a day comes when you are equally nasty, she will forgive you. Good qualities eventually come forward. Good qualities will not remain dormant forever and forever. Unfortunately, good qualities take more time to come to the fore than bad qualities. Hostile forces come forward to attack us more quickly than the divine forces. The divine forces will eventually be victorious, but in the meantime, the undivine forces make us feel that they have conquered us.
I always feel the supreme need for friendship. The Absolute Supreme is our only Friend, but He tells us on the earthly level, for earthly purposes, we need one or two individuals with whom we can share our sufferings and our joys. As soon as we share our suffering, it is gone. As soon as we share our joy, it doubles. Our sadness is a heavy load. If somebody comes to share it with us, it reduces the burden. If you are carrying twenty pounds on your shoulder and if your friend comes and takes ten pounds from you, then together you can walk along easily. But if you do not tell the person about your suffering, then you are carrying the whole twenty pounds by yourself.
Again, when you have some good news, immediately it becomes like a Russian doll. Inside one piece, you see two, three, four, five, six more. When there is happy news, it is multiplied. When there is sadness, it is shared. So in every way friendship has a very special role to play on earth.
Question: Besides your name, is there a sound or a word that we can use when invoking you that brings us quickly to you?
Sri Chinmoy: Nothing can be sweeter than the word ‘Guru’. It is not a mere word or name. It is a mantra. It has become part and parcel of the life-breath of any disciple who has accepted me sincerely and seriously, just as I have become inseparably one with my true disciples.
Again, there are many, many disciples who get more joy by invoking the Supreme directly. He is my Source. The Supreme is my Guru, your Guru, everybody’s Guru. But sometimes before God-realisation, the term ‘Supreme’ can be vague. The Supreme is both personal and impersonal. Until we see Him and talk to Him face to face, He can remain impersonal. When Naren came to Sri Ramakrishna, he asked him, “Have you seen God?” Sri Ramakrishna said, “Have I seen God? I can talk to Him more clearly, more intimately than I can talk to you. I can see Him more clearly than I can see you in front of me.” I can also say the same. Not only do I see Him, but I can talk to Him. Why would it be impossible for me to talk to my Highest? It is like a little child who wants to speak to his father. No matter what the father is doing, he will spend a few moments with his child. Look at my dog Chela. No matter how serious I am or what I am doing, does Chela care? He just comes and says whatever he has to say in his own barking language. Chela knows his oneness with me. In exactly the same way, God is our Absolute Lord Supreme, but even in my human consciousness I can approach Him.
To come back to your question, you have to use whatever word gives you utmost joy. The Supreme has become inseparably, breathlessly one with your life-breath, and your Guru also has become inseparably one with your life-breath. Unfortunately, there are some disciples who, although they have been with me for many years, have not kept me inside their life-breath. Again, there are some new disciples, especially those who live in other countries, who will never have the opportunity to say a word to me in this incarnation, and I will also not have the opportunity to talk to them. In spite of this, they have established such closeness and such oneness with my divinity’s life-breath, my Eternity’s breath. The oneness that they have established with me is so solid, so concrete.
In other cases, for months disciples do not get any joy either by using ‘Supreme’ or ‘Guru’. That is called a dry period. Even spiritual Masters of the highest order have had to pass through dry periods. Sometimes for months Vivekananda used to go through dry periods. Believe it or not, your Guru never went through a dry period. From the age of six, when I started my prayer and meditation, I have not had that experience. It makes me sad that my disciples sometimes go through dry periods for years. It has happened in some cases that for five long years, not even one single day do they have a good meditation. For up to one year it is common to have a dry period, but five years is too much.
Why do people go through dry periods? Because they lose their devotion. Devotion is like a magnet. If the devotion-magnet is not working, then the spiritual life is all dryness. But if one maintains devotion to the Supreme or to his Guru, then one will never, never go through a dry period. It is devotion that connects both love and surrender. Devotion is the golden link. If one has devotion, constant devotion, sleepless and breathless devotion, then one will never lose the sweetness in life.
Question: What does it actually mean to see the divine in someone or something?
Sri Chinmoy: There are several ways to see the divine in someone or something. To try to see God consciously is one approach. Another approach is to see Him spontaneously. Suppose you enter into a garden. You are not consciously trying to see the beauty or smell the fragrance of the flowers. Spontaneously their beauty pulls you. It is like a magnet. If your eyes are not attracted by the beauty of the flowers and if you have to consciously go very near a particular flower and put it in front of your nose, then it is not spontaneous. The beauty is there, but only when beauty acts like a spontaneous magnet will the immediate manifestation of beauty enter into your eyes and heart as it has already entered into your soul. The beauty you feel inside your mind and inside your heart is real beauty.
I will give you another example. Yesterday morning I went to Goose Pond Park. It was drizzling and I was running slowly. Five times I passed by a man sitting on a bench who was heavily drunk. Each time I came by him, he smiled at me. I could not understand what he was saying, but each time I passed by him, he said something encouraging to me. Now if I had had to consciously try to see the divine in him — if I had said, “He is also God’s creation. Although he is drinking heavily, let me see the divine in him” — I would have been wasting my time. But each time I came by, spontaneously I got such joy. If I had identified myself with his outer life, I would have been disgusted. I do not care for drinking at all. For me, it is something abominable. But while I was passing him, I was seeing the divine in him. His inner divinity immediately attracted me. His heart entered into me and my heart entered into him. Therefore I sincerely got joy.
If the joy or the sweetness that the soul is giving us comes immediately and spontaneously, then we can easily see the divinity in something or someone. But if we have to think of the soul or concentrate on the soul of a chair or some other object, then we are wasting our time. When it comes to the human level, everyone is trying to be conscious of God and we are also consciously trying to acquire some good qualities. Seekers may try to see the divine in others, but they may have no way to enter into the soul or the heart of another individual.
If you can get a spontaneous feeling, that is absolutely the most important. Then if you see that somebody is a good seeker, that he is praying and meditating or that he has other good qualities, then you can appreciate the divine in him. You will not allow your insecurity, jealousy, impurity or dividing mind to interfere. There must be no competition between you and that person.
Sometimes it happens that the heart is appreciating, but the vital is jealous or the mind is mean. The mind does not allow you to get joy. If you see a beautiful flower, the mind may say, “I am not as beautiful as this flower, so who cares for it?” Again, when you see a beautiful flower, you can say, “How I wish I could be as beautiful as this flower, as fragrant as this flower.” This wishing is not creating any jealousy, any insecurity, any separativity.
But just mere wishing is not enough. If you see that someone else is meditating or praying soulfully, you have to pray to God, “Please help me to become as soulful and as prayerful as this person.” Then God will see that you are not competing with that person. You are only seeing something beautiful — like a beautiful flower — inside him. God sees that you want to identify with the divine aspect of His that has already been manifested inside that person. Then God will say, “One of My children has achieved something and now another child of Mine has come to appreciate it, instead of becoming jealous. This child is praying to Me to have the same good qualities. I am more than ready to give them to him.”
Many times it happens that if we do not have certain good qualities, we will try to degrade them in others. We will try to see no value in them. But again, there are some good souls who want to become better and best. Today they are good. Tomorrow they want to become better and best. How do we become best — by separating ourselves or uniting ourselves? By separating ourselves, either through meanness, jealousy or insecurity, we can never, never become better. Only by using the positive way, by having peace, poise and love for the Divine that is manifested, can we become better. We will not love the flower or the seeker as such, but the divinity that made the flower beautiful, the divinity that has made the seeker soulful. You have to have love for the divinity that is being manifested in each thing.
If you get the feeling of divinity spontaneously, that is always best. Otherwise, if you see something beautiful or divine, you can consciously try to become that by praying to God. Then the development of your body, vital, mind, heart and soul will increase and spread wide, wider, widest. Your own divinity will blossom much quicker if you can appreciate the beauty or divinity of something else or somebody else. If you are sincere, God will never think that you have become jealous. No, you are not competing or fighting. You are only appreciating, admiring and adoring something which God Himself has manifested in somebody else.
There is also another way to see the divinity in others. This way is the highest way. When a mother sees that her child is very beautiful or skilful, when she sees the capacities of the child, she does not pray to God, “O God, please give me the same capacity! My son is so tall and strong! He is running so fast! He is so intelligent!” The mother immediately feels that her son’s qualities are all hers. This is not because he is her product, but because she has established her inseparable oneness with her son to such an extent that she feels that what he has is all hers and what she has is all his.
If your consciousness is very high — higher than the highest — you can establish exactly that same kind of oneness with others. When Sudhahota does something, I have such oneness with him. I do not say, “Supreme, can You give me the speed that he has?” No. I have such oneness with him that I feel I have done it. The mind will say you are fooling yourself. But if the heart gets the same joy as he is getting on the strength of its oneness, then it is absolutely real. Sometimes the person who has achieved the thing may not be as happy as somebody else. I have seen that Sudhahota’s mother gets more joy in Sudhahota’s success than Sudhahota himself.
Similarly, my brother Mantu used to get infinitely more joy from my athletics than I used to get. His whole heart used to be thrilled if I was first. On the day of my competition, his whole day was spent only worrying and worrying about me. His oneness was such that it was as if his whole world would collapse if I did not do well in 100 metres or long jump. Definitely I got joy from my sports. But if you measure the joy, his joy was more than the joy that I experienced. Oneness can be on the same level, or somebody else can get more joy than the person who has actually achieved the thing.
First try to see the divinity in others spontaneously. If it comes immediately, that is excellent. If it does not come immediately, then on the human level, try to see it consciously. If you see somebody has already achieved more divinity than you have or that God has manifested one aspect of His Divinity inside someone else more than in you, then you can try to emulate that person or you can pray to God to give you the same qualities. There is nothing wrong in imitating something good. When a child tries to imitate his father, he is not a copy cat. He sincerely appreciates, admires, adores and loves the way his father walks, the way his father talks. Whatever his father says, he imitates. When the child imitates the good qualities of his father, he does not become a carbon copy. He is seeing the good qualities, the divine qualities of his father, so he wants to have the same good qualities. Readiness, willingness and eagerness are coming to the fore at every moment to inspire him and energise him to become as great and as good as his father.
In your case, your divinity will not decrease if you pray to God to make you as sincere or as aspiring or as self-giving as somebody else. It will only increase. Already you have some good qualities, but by appreciating, admiring, adoring and loving the development of the soul in somebody else, you can increase your own good qualities. Here jealousy is not coming, competition is not coming, only appreciation is coming to the fore. Appreciation you have to such an extent that you want to establish oneness.
If I had used the mind for these three questions, I could not have spoken for more than three minutes for each question. After three minutes, my mind would have become bankrupt. But if I use my heart and soul, I can go on and on because it is spontaneous. If I had used the mind, you would not have gotten any joy. Even if the mind had had something more to say, the mind would not have given any joy. The mind does not want to share joy. The mind only wants to hold it. When the mind knows something, it keeps it a top secret. The mind feels that if it gives what it has to somebody else, it will not be the owner any more. The mind feels that if it says something, its secret will be gone. But the heart is a spontaneous flow, only blossoming and blossoming. You have asked me such nice questions, and your questions deserved nice answers. The heart is always ready to appreciate the divinity in others.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 24
Sri Chinmoy raised two 500-lb. dumbbells off a metal support suspended above his shoulders on Feb. 16. Just three days later, he succeeded in lifting two 650-pound dumbbells. “I never, never, never, never imagined I would be able to lift 1,300 pounds,” he declared, saying it was all due to the infinite Grace of the Supreme.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 29, Mid-November 1999 – Mid-March 2000
WASHINGTON — Sri Chinmoy will be delivering a series of seven lectures at George Washington University here on four consecutive weeks, beginning Jan. 21.
The talks will be held at Marvin Center, Room 426, on Jan. 21, Jan. 28, Feb. 4 and Feb. 11. Afternoon lectures will be given at 3:30 p.m. on the last three dates. Evening lectures will be held at 7:30 p.m. on each of the four days.
The Master’s Wednesday evening public meditations at All Angels’ Church in Manhattan will be held on Friday evenings during the months of January and February.
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 2, No. 12, Jan. 1, 1976
WASHINGTON — Sri Chinmoy concluded his Wednesday lecture series in the nation's capital last month.
The Master delivered two talks Feb. 4 and three on Feb. 11 to conclude the seven-talk sequence at George Washington University.
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 3. No. 2, March 1, 1976
UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations community paid its final respects February 2 to the man whose inspiration and practical power played a crucial role in the establishment of the U.N. complex in New York.
Nelson Rockefeller “was a monumental man with a great influence on his time,” New York Senator Jacob Javits told the diplomats and U.N. staff members assembled in the Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium here. “He well deserves your tribute as representative of the diverse peoples of the world.”
Another speaker, former New York Mayor John Lindsay, spoke of how Rockefeller was “prepared and willing to follow the dream that came out of (his) ... enormously incisive vision” which saw “as far to the horizon as any other human being in modern society....”
He said the U.N. service was most fitting since the world body’s headquarters now stands on land donated by the Rockefeller family.
The programme, sponsored by Sri Chinmoy Meditation at the United Nations, opened with a short meditation by Sri Chinmoy, followed by a performance by the Meditation Group choir of a song the Master had written about Rockefeller.
Two of New York’s great political leaders, former Mayor John Lindsay [left] and Senator Jacob Javits [right] pay their respects to Sri Chinmoy at the memorial tribute for the late Nelson Rockefeller held at the U.N.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 5, Number 2, February 1979
New York Governor Mario Cuomo chats with Sri Chinmoy Jan. 29 at an interfaith programme held at the United Nations to celebrate the Columbus quincentenary. Cuomo had invited the Master, who had opened the programme with a meditation, to sit next to him on the dais.
Published in VOLUME 21, MID-DECEMBER 1991–MARCH 1992
Sri Chinmoy gave a series of four concerts and meditations the weekend of Jan. 28 in North Carolina, Virginia and Washington, D.C.
The Master, accompanied by a dozen carloads of disciples, began his 1,200-mile weekend trek in Chapel Hill, where he told a University of North Carolina audience: “Aspiration is our achievement in our inner world. Dedication is our achievement in our outer world. Surrender is our achievement in our higher world.
“In Heaven we achieve a fruitful smile. On earth we achieve a soulful cry. In ourselves we achieve a prayerful life.”
Later that day Sri Chinmoy played on the flute and esraj and disciple music groups performed to an overflow audience at Guilford College in Greensboro, N.C.
As seekers, “our inner choice is Infinity’s perfection-poise,” the Master said in a brief talk.
“Sri Krishna’s choice was a sea of harmony. The Buddha’s choice was a sky of illumination. The Christ’s choice was a flood of compassion. And our choice is a heart of poise that can easily brave all the buffets of life: poise within, poise without.”
Published in Anahata Nada, February 1, 1978, Volume 5, Number 1
APIA, Western Samoa — The Faleolo International Airport was dedicated to the cause of world peace Jan. 22 in honour of visiting good will ambassador Sri Chinmoy.
“The Ambassador of Peace brings to Samoa a project and a peace message which is already enshrined in our culture,” said Airport Manager Etuale Sefo, representing the Western Samoa Airport Authority. “The most fitting reminder of this message is our dedication today as a Sri Chinmoy Peace Airport.”
Sri Chinmoy, who was passing through Apia enroute to New York, said: “We are not strangers. You have accepted us as your true brothers and sisters. That is why you are so affectionate, compassionate and loving to us in every way.
“We now find ourselves in a boat, which is known as the Peace-Boat, and we see around us thousands and thousands of peace-dreamers and peace-lovers. We are sailing together toward the destined Goal that is inundated with peace.”
Western Samoa’s airport joins nearly a thousand other sites around the world that have been dedicated to peace in Sri Chinmoy’s name.
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 23, MID-DECEMBER 1993-MARCH 1994
CEBU CITY, the Philippines — The University of Southern Philippines awarded an honorary degree Jan. 18 to global peace ambassador Sri Chinmoy.
Sri Chinmoy is the fifth person ever to receive this university’s highest honour. He joins an elite circle that includes General Douglas MacArthur, a former Philippines President, a top United Nations official and a university president.
In bestowing a Doctorate of Humanities on the 61-year-old poet, author, artist, composer and spiritual teacher, University president Ronald Duterte said Sri Chinmoy “has devoted his life to helping others look into their inner selves that they may find their moral compass.”
Wearing a gold cap and blue-gold hood, Sri Chinmoy told a crowd of university officials. professors and other distinguished guests that there are two types of world peace makers. “The human peace maker happily feels and proudly declares how much he has already done for the world. The divine peace maker sincerely and soulfully feels how much he has yet to do for the world....”
Meetings and compromises of the mind, he continued may never lead, to world peace. “It is the heart-summit-oneness meetings that will ... fulfil the all-illumining Heaven-sent message for peace throughout the length and breadth of the world.”
Another speaker, Dr. Ruperta Martinez, the university’s Vice President for Academic Affairs, praised the spiritual teacher as “truly a harbinger of peace.”
In conveying “the message of the growth of the individual and global harmony in a beleaguered world,” she continued, Sri Chinmoy not only is the medium of the message. “He is the message.”
Sri Chinmoy, wearing his honorary degree robes, addresses dignitaries at the university of Southern Philippines.
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 22, DECEMBER 1992 – MARCH 1993
by Sri Chinmoy
at the South Beach Holiday Inn in Durban, South Africa
Question: Could you please tell us a little about your philosophy and your way of life?
Sri Chinmoy: Everybody is a seeker of truth and a lover of God — either consciously or unconsciously. In our case, we belong to the first category. Consciously, sleeplessly and breathlessly we are trying to be God-seekers and God-lovers.
There are many good things and many undivine, unaspiring things in our nature. We try to increase and multiply our good qualities and, at the same time, on the strength of our prayers and meditations, we try to decrease and eventually eliminate our undivine qualities. We are not trying to destroy our bad qualities; only we want to transform and illumine them. Darkness has to be transformed into light. The ignorance that we have been cherishing from time immemorial must be illumined.
According to our traditional Indian philosophy, God is the Creator, God is the Preserver and God is the Destroyer. But we feel that God, being the Author of all Good and the Source of Compassion infinite, cannot and will not actually destroy His creation. We feel that, at His choice Hour, He transforms anything within us that is not aspiring and makes it divine, illumining and fulfilling. So there is no such thing as destruction, but only illumination and transformation, which take place at God’s choice Hour.
On our path we give due importance to the physical life. Inside the physical is the soul, which is the direct representative of God. The body is the temple, and inside the temple is the soul, the shrine. Both the shrine and the temple must be kept in proper order. We feel that our inner life of aspiration and our outer life of dedication must go side by side. Like the flower and its fragrance, they cannot be separated; they have to be taken as two complementary realities. My students practise meditation and follow the spiritual life, and at the same time, they have their respective jobs. We live in the world and we live for the world.
Question: Most people in this area of South Africa suffer a lot because of daily violence. I am interested to hear your views on the causes of violence and any message that you might have as to what we can do about it.
Sri Chinmoy: The causes of violence are the divisions created by the mind. The mind always separates; it gets tremendous satisfaction in dividing reality. Because it sees itself as separate from others, the mind always wants to exercise supremacy over others. Inside the mind is restlessness, which eventually becomes destruction. Long before violence is manifested on the outer plane, it takes place in the form of thoughts inside the mind.
If we listen to our mind when it tells us to strike someone, at that time the mind becomes our lord. But there is always something within us that reminds us that we have another boss: the heart. Unlike the mind, the heart only wants to establish intimacy and oneness with others; it gets satisfaction not in division but in unification. The heart tells us, “By destroying someone you will never get even an iota of joy, but by loving that person you will get abiding joy.” So we have to pray and meditate to silence our restless mind and to illumine our unaspiring mind. If we can transform the mind and live in the heart, then there can be no violence.
Question: Are your Peace Concerts political in any way?
Sri Chinmoy: There are many ways to bring about world peace. My way is to pray and meditate and offer meditative Peace Concerts. I am a total stranger to politics and I do not enter into the political arena. I have love for all human beings, so I love politicians, too. But I do not dare to say anything about their political views.
I have been practising spirituality since my childhood. I am a man of prayer. I am a student of peace. I devote myself to the art of self-discovery and I ask my students to do the same. People come to me when they are hungry for inner peace, inner light and inner bliss. Many, many times politicians — along with others from various walks of life — have come to pray and meditate with me or have remained in a meditative consciousness while I have played instruments and sung.
Question: As a Hindu, I believe that the ultimate Truth is God-realisation. How do we reach our goal?
Sri Chinmoy: God-realisation is a most difficult subject. We can say that it is like climbing up not one but countless Himalayas. Millions and billions of people are living on this planet, but how many have dared to climb up the Himalayan mountains? Most of us do not dare to even try; we feel that it is impossible for us. Fortunately, we do not have to justify our existence on earth by physically climbing up the Himalayas, but the inner mountains we all have to climb. God will not allow any human being to remain unrealised.
In the outer life there are many obstacles that we have to surmount. Every day, in the hustle and bustle of life, we face many challenges. If we do not accept all the challenges, no harm. If we do not like athletics, for example, it is not necessary to play soccer or to try and become the world’s fastest runner. We do not have to participate in the outer race for our evolution or for our individual growth. But even if we do not consciously participate in the outer race, we have to know that our mind is always racing and racing aimlessly — like a mad elephant. It goes this way and that way and, at the same time, it builds solid walls that divide us from others.
There is also an inner race — to our inner goal. Christians call that goal salvation. Buddhists call it illumination. Hindus call it God-realisation. We believe that each individual shall realise God at his own special time. When my hour strikes, God will definitely bless me with God-realisation; when your hour strikes, God will bless you with God-realisation.
If God-realisation is our goal, then the first and foremost necessity on our part is to pray and meditate regularly. Again, we have to know what we are praying for. Are we praying to God for money to buy one house, two houses, three houses? If we have a car, are we praying for a second car or a third car? If we are praying to God to bless us with more material possessions, then we are still in the desire-life and God-realisation remains a far cry.
There is another way, which we call the life of aspiration. In the aspiration-life, we pray to God to give us only what we truly need, not what we want. The highest form of prayer in the aspiration-life is to say: “God, You know what I actually need. If it is Your Will to bless me with the things that I truly need, then at Your choice Hour do bless me with those things. If You do not want to give me anything, that also is up to You. I want only to please You in Your own Way.”
When we are in the aspiration-world, we pray to God to give us the capacity to please Him in His own Way. When we do this, we are walking along the right road. God-realisation comes at the right moment, provided we walk along the right path. So if we can pray and meditate to please God in God’s own Way, definitely God-realisation will dawn on us.
Question: Do you work also in a political way to bring about peace?
Sri Chinmoy: I do not want to deal with politics, which is the world of the mind. I want only to live in the heart and discover a sea of peace in each and every country. A few countries are fighting wars today; tomorrow some other countries may engage in war. People proclaim, “We shall never again enter into war.” But as long as we live in the mind that is not properly illumined, there will always be conflicts and wars. The mind may remain silent for a few days, a few months or even a few years, but the very nature of the mind is to try to exercise its supremacy.
I will not dare to try to solve the problems in Bosnia and other places by exercising political means. I have my own way, which is to pray and meditate to bring about peace. In no way will I condemn those who follow other ways. Politicians are all my brothers and sisters, and we are aiming at the same goal. If they can arrive at the goal before us, I will be the happiest person. Or, after reaching the goal, if they ask us to walk along with them, definitely we shall abide by their request. But, right now, we feel that they have their way and we have our way. God alone knows which way is best! But we feel, in the inmost recesses of our heart, that the way of prayer and meditation is best for us.
Question: Do you feel that people in the world are moving further away from leading a spiritual life, or do you feel that there is a gradual awakening towards spirituality?
Sri Chinmoy: It is my own personal conviction that people are more awakened and that they are turning more towards light than before. There was a time twenty or thirty years ago when peace was only a dictionary word. People used the word, but they did not mean it; they did not even care to know what it meant. But now there are many people on earth who most sincerely believe in peace and want to lead a life of peace. We are still not fully awakened, but now at least we sincerely feel the supreme necessity of world peace.
So the world is progressing in the way it is accepting peace and light. Some individuals are consciously accepting this message, while others are unconsciously accepting it. Still others are not aware of it and do not care for it. But if we are talking of the majority, then I have to say in all sincerity that more people are turning towards light than before.
Question: What inspired you to follow this path of peace?
Sri Chinmoy: When we pray and meditate, there comes a time when we get an inner message. We can say that something within us prompts us to do something. I have been praying and meditating for many years. From deep within an inner Voice, which we call the Voice of the Inner Pilot or God, commanded me to be of service to Him by offering my prayers and meditations to the world at large and sharing with others the message of peace.
Here we are all students of peace. Peace is a common subject that we are all studying in the same school — the school of our heart. Whatever I have learned with regard to peace, I have come here to share with you. At the same time, I have come to learn from you. I am not only a teacher but also a student. I am still learning and learning, for peace is a subject that is vaster than the vastest.
Question: You mentioned the struggle between the heart and the mind. In an area such as KwaZulu Natal, where so many people have been killed and where people's hearts have actually been hardened or broken, is it much more difficult for them to follow the right path than for others who are leading a more peaceful or ordinary life?
Sri Chinmoy: It entirely depends on the individual. Those who are denied peace by outer circumstances or by undivine human beings often have a greater inner hunger for peace than those who have found an iota of peace or abundant peace. People who suffer unnecessarily are more likely to pray to God and receive His Light than those who already have some peace of mind. So while the more fortunate ones may be wallowing in the pleasures of the limited peace that they already have found, individuals whose suffering has led them to develop an intense inner cry for world peace and harmony may be blessed with abundant peace sooner by God. When innocent victims cry from the inmost recesses of their heart, their cry is bound to melt the Heart of God.
But the question arises whether someone is really hungry for peace or whether he has simply surrendered to his fate. Some individuals lose faith in God or in their inner existence when their relatives are killed by undivine human beings. They say, “My dear ones did nothing wrong. If God has infinite Compassion, why did He allow them to be killed?” These individuals may inwardly revolt and say God is not active or dynamic, that God is perhaps sleeping. Again, they may become furious that their dear ones have been attacked and go to the length of saying: “There is no God!”
Unfortunately, these people do not look for light. They do not pray for the light to illumine those undivine human beings who have attacked their dear ones. If they did, then God would definitely change the mental attitude of those undivine human beings. The victims’ sincere cry for the illumination of the wrong-doers would reach God’s Heart. So if we pray to God in the right way, then those who have done wrong things and also those who may do wrong things in the near future will be illumined.
Question: I have found that music can change people, although I am not speaking about political change. I would like to hear your views on music.
Sri Chinmoy: We have to know whether we are talking about the music that tends to destroy our nerves and subtle bodies, or prayerful music that gives us pure joy and inspires us to become good citizens of the world. Prayerful and soulful music is definitely going to help us bring about world peace and establish oneness in the world community, for that music has a special appeal to the heart. It awakens and deepens our longing for a better life. When we play or listen to divine music, or when we sing divine songs, it becomes easier for us to see the light within us. It also helps us increase that light and bring it to the fore so we can transform the darkness that the mind has and is.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 10
APIA, Western Samoa — Sri Chinmoy paid a courtesy call on the Prime Minister of Western Samoa, Tofilau Eti Alesana, on Dec. 29.
“You have given your life to peace,” the Prime Minister told Sri Chinmoy.
The Master replied, “The good will that you are sending is covering the entire length and breadth of the world.”
Afterwards, the Prime Minister sent Sri Chinmoy a message stating: “Your visit to us was one of the most significant events in the life of our young nation. To us, you embody serenity, peace, sincerity and trust, sublime qualities of which our world is sorely in need.”
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 23, MID-DECEMBER 1993-MARCH 1994
YANGON — Myanmar’s top Buddhist leader met with Sri Chinmoy and his students on Dec. 29 at the monk's Kaba Aye Pagoda compound.
The Ven. Sayadaw Baddanta Thawbita, Chairman of the Central Executive Committee of the State Sangha Mahanayaka Committee of Myanmar, told the visiting peace group: “Buddhists believe in previous lives. In a previous life all of you and I were relatives. Now we meet each other again. All my relatives, be healthy, be happy!”
The Chairman Monk, as he is called, also exchanged gifts with Sri Chinmoy.
During the meeting, Sri Chinmoy sang a song he had composed about the Buddha, and his students sang two other Buddha songs he had written.
When questioned by a news reporter a few days later, Sri Chinmoy said the Chairman Monk “is a very ancient soul in terms of inner awakening and inner illumination.”
Myanmar’s Chairman Monk receives the Peace Torch from Sri Chinmoy.
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 24, DECEMBER 1994-MARCH 1995
NEW YORK — Sri Chinmoy offered his message for the New Year at a public meditation here Dec. 19, and then handed out prasad, or “blessing-food,” to each of the seekers and disciples present.
Sri Chinmoy’s New Year’s Message for 1976:
“The new year will be the year of destruction, frustration and satisfaction.
“The animal in us will unimaginably be destroyed. The human in us will unreservedly be frustrated. The divine in us will supremely be satisfied.
“The animal in us is self-doubt. The human in us is self-indulgence. The divine in us is self-offering.”
Caption:
Sri Chinmoy conducts a public meditation in New York (photo by Sarama)
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 2, No. 12, Jan. 1, 1976
By the staff of the international monthly newspaper Hinduism Today, Sri Chinmoy visits and blesses their premises on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami and his disciples lovingly welcome Sri Chinmoy and some of his students to their ashram for a traditional puja and a tour of the beautiful grounds, followed by a special luncheon. Afterwards, Sri Chinmoy is interviewed by the Editor of Hinduism Today, the Reverend Sivasiva Palaniswami; the Managing Editor, the Reverend Arumugaswami; and other senior editors. These are excerpts from Sri Chinmoy's answers to their soulful questions.
Sri Chinmoy: You sow the seed of light everywhere. Your own dedication is touching the very heart of humanity’s aspiration.
Editor: We only live and exist because of people like you, believe me.
Rev. Palaniswami speaks briefly about the publication and then Sri Chinmoy’s students perform the song that Sri Chinmoy composed for Hinduism Today.
Editor: How precious that is! This definitely is a first in our editorial offices. I wonder, in the spirit of that glorious benediction, if you might say a few words that could help guide our efforts. Every order of Hindu monks has something — perhaps an eye clinic or a school for children or orphans — to balance their contemplative enterprises. You are the great example of “giving back.” Hinduism Today is our contribution, and we need to know from you how to do it better — what you would like to see. What does the Hindu heart and soul need from all of us?
Sri Chinmoy: No hyperbole, your Hinduism Today not only embodies the supreme wisdom-light of the hoary past, but also reveals and manifests the infinite Compassion, the infinite Concern and the infinite Blessings of the Indian Trinity, Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva: Brahma the Creator, Vishnu the Preserver and Shiva the Transformer. According to Indian theory, Lord Shiva plays the role of the destroyer. But according to my aspiring heart, he never destroys anything; he only transforms. He transforms our ignorance-night into wisdom-light. Not only the Blessings, Compassion and Concern of the Trinity, but also the Blessings of the Indian cosmic gods and goddesses I see and feel when I read your Hinduism Today.
Over the years I have studied many, many books on Hinduism written by scholars, professors, truth-seekers and God-lovers, and before I pass behind the curtain of Eternity, I shall read and study many more. Also, I personally have offered my tiniest drop of aspiration to the infinite ocean of Hinduism. But among all these books, your magazine stands unparalleled. I use the term ‘magazine’, but it is not merely a magazine. It is not just a few pages of paper with ink. It is not something that is read just to stimulate our vital or feed our curiosity — far from it! Your Hinduism Today is a divine and sumptuous feast that is nourishing the God-hungry heart of the entire aspiring mankind.
When I read Hinduism Today, I definitely see the divine dances of the Indian cosmic gods and goddesses and hear their celestial music. The loftiest vision of the Indian gods and goddesses you are so devotedly, lovingly and self-givingly offering to the world at large with utmost humility, which is absolutely the best quality that we human beings can ever dare to aspire for. Your Hinduism Today is flooded with supernal humility.
We are living in the scientific age of computers. The poor Vedic seers did not have computers; they did not even dream of them. Another reason I appreciate and admire your Hinduism Today is that it offers the ancient lore of the Vedic seers but distributes it in the ultra-modern way. The twentieth century demands a different type of treatment, and you are combining the inner world of silence and the outer world of sound most perfectly. Both worlds you are bringing to the fore and keeping together.
I am so happy to learn that this magazine will touch many parts of the world, and especially India, where Hinduism had its origin. In Hinduism, the truth-seeker and God-lover claims each creation of God as his own, very own. By virtue of his prayers and meditations, he offers to the world at large the Message-Light and the Nectar-Delight of the ever-transcending Beyond.
Hinduism Today, to your all-illumining soul I bow and I bow. Hinduism Today, to your all-loving heart I bow and I bow. Hinduism Today, to your all-serving life I bow and I bow.
Editor: Thank you, Guru. The staff has assembled a number of queries. I think each one of them has some questions.
Sri Chinmoy: I would be most happy to be of service to you. Nothing would give me a greater sense of satisfaction than to be of service to other aspiring human beings, because in our hearts we are all the time growing together and in our souls we are all the time glowing together.
Question: Our paper is called Hinduism Today, which you so beautifully rendered into song. There is one question we ask everybody when we start. We ask, "Are you a Hindu?"
Sri Chinmoy: If I use my mind, then I will say I am a Hindu. But the real in me is my aspiration, my love of Truth, my love of God. Therefore I am neither Hindu nor Christian; I do not belong to any religion. When I am wholeheartedly aspiring, I am not a member of any religion; at that time I am cosmopolitan. I am a seeker of Truth and a lover of God, and all the religions I claim as my own.
Each religion is like a home. You live in Hawaii, someone else lives in California and I live in New York. Your home is perfectly right for you and my home is perfectly right for me. But when we pray and meditate, we leave our respective homes and study in the same inner school. At this inner school we come together to pray in the small hours of the morning. We raise our aspiration and see our heart’s inner cry climbing up high, higher, highest. Our Teacher is none other than the Absolute Lord Supreme.
I am a Hindu in the sense that I was born into the Ghose family. But when I am dealing with the world of aspiration, at that time I do not need my surname; I am just Chinmoy. Similarly, once we enter into the spiritual life proper, we do not need Hinduism or Christianity or any other ‘ism’. All the time we are only expanding our oneness. Every day, on the strength of our heart’s cry and soul’s smile, we are trying to serve God the Creator and God the creation.
Again, we have to know that Hinduism is not a man-made religion that binds and blinds humanity, claiming supremacy and sovereignty; it is the code of life. To me, Hinduism is Divinity’s Oneness-Heart-Home. In this Home, Infinity’s beauty at every moment blossoms and Immortality’s fragrance blesses us most powerfully and significantly. To me, a true Hindu is he who can prayerfully claim that he came, he lived, he loved and he became. He came into the world to realise the Absolute Truth of the Absolute Lord Supreme in the Supreme’s own Way. He lived only to please and fulfil God in God’s own Way. He loved God the Creator and served God the creation in God’s own Way. And he became a perfectly surrendered instrument of our Beloved Lord Supreme. To please God in His own Way at every moment, a Hindu life is born.
Question: One of the things that you talk about a lot in your writings is self-transcendence. We were talking to Ashrita about his breaking the brick-carrying world record, which was certainly an example of self-transcendence. He said that after he had walked around the track with a nine-pound brick for forty miles, he was on the verge of collapsing. Then you came and your presence and a few things you said put him into a state of self-transcendence. What do you do? How can you catalyse a person, or how can a person catalyse himself to transcend what he believes are his normal limitations?
Sri Chinmoy: Self-transcendence is not only possible, but practical and practicable, provided we sincerely feel in the very depths of our heart that we are not the doer but Somebody else is the Doer. Who is that Somebody else? It is our highest part, our Absolute Lord Supreme.
In our Bhagavad Gita, the Song Celestial, Lord Sri Krishna taught us, nimitta matram bhava savyasachin — “Become a mere instrument.” In my case, I tell my students never, never to think that they are the doers, because only God is the Doer. They should only offer their gratitude to Him at every moment because He is acting in and through them to do something special for Him.
There are many feats that Ashrita has performed over the years that are far beyond my own imagination-flight. He has succeeded because he has implicit faith in me and I have implicit faith in the Supreme, who is my students’ Guru, my Guru, everybody’s Guru. I always tell my students, “I am not your Guru. There is only one Guru on earth and in Heaven, and that is the Absolute Lord Supreme. He is our Eternity’s All.”
I tell all my students that I am like the elder brother in our spiritual family. As the elder brother, I know where our Father is. My job is to bring my younger brothers and sisters to the Father. Then my role is over and the younger ones can deal with the Father directly. On the strength of my inner awakening and realisation, I can say that I have been praying for quite a few years, even centuries. So I know an iota more about aspiration and realisation than Ashrita does, and I try to create faith inside him so he will come and follow me to the Father. I try to increase his own faith in himself so that he will see and feel that he is a supremely chosen instrument of God.
I am praying to God to bring to the fore only one quality in each individual: the faith that he is a special member of God’s family with a special purpose in life. Through each individual God is trying to manifest something unique. God does not want each and every human being in this world to perform the same task. No, He wants multiplicity in unity. A tree has one trunk but so many branches, flowers and fruits.
Our philosophy, as you so kindly mentioned, is self-transcendence. I happen to be an athlete. Let us say I have reached a certain standard and I am very proud of myself. But the moment I look around, I will see that somebody else can defeat me easily. So if we enter into the world of competition and try to defeat the whole world, we will be doomed to disappointment. Perhaps this moment we will stand first, but the next moment there will be somebody else to defeat us. So in the world of competition there is no peace; always there is somebody who is better. But if we try to compete only with ourselves and continually improve our own standard, then we are always happy.
In the spiritual life also, we are always trying to transcend and go beyond. If today I do twenty things wrong, then tomorrow I will try to do only nineteen things wrong. I will constantly try to improve myself, and in this way I will get a tremendous sense of satisfaction. I am not competing with anybody other than myself. This is how I can feel that I am arriving at perfection. Again, today’s perfection is only the starting point for tomorrow’s higher perfection.
Question: I understand you spent time at Sri Aurobindo's Ashram. I was very impressed that all the members of the Ashram are celibate at all ages. Even married, they practise brahmacharya, or continence. I've noticed that many of your devotees don't have children. I'm wondering how you instruct them or inspire them or talk about this area of brahmacharya in marriage.
Sri Chinmoy: It is all based on my personal experience in the inner world, which grew out of my prayer and meditation. Each spiritual Master entirely depends on the adesh, or divine command. At the age of 32 I was commanded by my Lord Supreme to come to America to be of service to seekers here. Most of my students are unmarried. I ask them what they actually want from life: joy or pleasure. There is a great difference between the two. Pleasure-life is always followed by frustration, and frustration is followed by destruction. Once we are really frustrated, our destruction is imminent. But if we get even an iota of bliss from our prayer and meditation, immediately our inner being is swimming in the sea of light and delight. During our meditation, if for five seconds we get a glimpse of divine light, the whole day we are flying in the sky of Infinity and swimming in the sea of delight.
I tell my disciples, “I did not touch your feet and beg you to join our path. No, you saw and felt something in me and I also saw and felt something in you. It was not one-sided — no, no, no! I felt in you a real inner hunger and you felt in me a real elder brother who would show you utmost love and compassion. Once upon a time you were wallowing in the pleasures of ignorance, but now you are aspiring and consciously crying for light. So the only thing that will really satisfy and fulfil you is the inner joy that you will get from your prayer and meditation.”
Fifteen or twenty years ago, before they came to our path, some of my students were taking drugs. Once they saw me, when I was giving talks or answering questions or meditating with them, they gave up their drug-life because they realised that this food would not nourish them anymore. They wanted something else. A child of one or two will take mud and clay as his food. Whatever he sees around him, he will eat. His mother will scold him and teach him to eat proper food. Then, when the child grows up, he will want to eat only proper food. In exactly the same way, once we enter into the spiritual life we stop eating the mud and clay of pleasure-life and drink only the inner nectar of divine joy.
Every second we can go higher or go lower, depending upon what we see, do and enter into. I go to many Indian restaurants and eat spicy food; the human in me may like this. But today’s food has pleased the divine in me immensely because it was so sattvic. From today’s food I got real, divine nourishment, not only because the food was so pure, but also because I am here with Gurudeva and his dearest devotees. In other Indian restaurants I do not hear the Vedic chants; instead I get rock and roll or other undivine music. I am trying to eat, but the lower vital forces and bad vibrations there are trying to pull me down, so I am all the time on tenterhooks. But here I do not have to worry, for who is going to bring whom down? On the contrary, here we are only lifting each other up.
Editor: Are you saying in a subtle way that you feel brahmacharya is important to spirituality?
Sri Chinmoy: Absolutely, but for some I cannot expect it to happen immediately. If somebody is studying at the high school level, I cannot expect him to suddenly take a Masters degree. Also, this is the twentieth century, and I try to be practical with my students. To people who are married, I say, “Do not try to become celibate overnight. Slowly and steadily reduce your physical, earthly hunger.”
Again, there are some who are ready to run very fast in their spiritual life. Perhaps they were born into a spiritual family, and their parents and older brothers and sisters are already practising spirituality, so they have that background. People who are already awakened are more than ready to follow the strict discipline of a celibate life. I tell them, “It is up to you how fast you want to run along Eternity’s Road. If you are eager to go the fastest, if you are thirsting for light, then you have to do the things that are absolutely necessary to increase your speed.”
Editor: What are those things?
Sri Chinmoy: Our philosophy is:
Asato ma sad gamaya
tamaso ma jyotir gamaya
mrityor ma amritam gamayaLead me from the unreal to the Real.
Lead me from darkness to Light.
Lead me from death to Immortality.As an individual I know what is binding me, you know what is binding you, he knows what is binding him. We can call it temptation or ignorance or something else, but it reveals itself in various ways. What is preventing one person from making progress is different from what is preventing somebody else from making progress. Somebody is suffering from jealousy; somebody else is suffering from insecurity or impurity. But whatever our problem, we can always find the solution by surrendering the problem to God, our Inner Pilot.
Let us say that somebody is suffering from impurity. I tell that person, “Think of yourself as a child of six or seven. You went out and played in the mud, and now your whole body is smeared with dirt and clay. But you know that there is somebody who can immediately make you clean again, and that is your mother. So you run to your mother and she cleans you.” When a child runs to his mother, he is not ashamed or embarrassed. He just goes to her and is immediately purified.
Similarly, no matter how many impure or undivine things we have done, there is always a Person we can come to for purification, and that is God, our Beloved Supreme. He is ever ready to help us, for this is His bounden Duty. God can never be satisfied if His child, His chosen child, is dirty and filthy. So if I have done something wrong, then I will go to the right Person to be saved, and God will immediately purify me. If a mother sees that her son has done something wrong, she immediately and secretly rectifies it because she wants the neighbours to say, “Oh, he is a very nice boy!”
We try to hide from God, but how can we hide from someone who is omnipresent? God is so affectionate and compassionate, but He tries to hide it. This is how He plays His Cosmic Game. But we have to know that at every moment God is trying to make us perfect. This is the task that He has taken upon Himself. We can never, never become worthy of God’s Compassion, but He has accepted the challenge. We have not challenged God; God has challenged Himself. Our task is only to have implicit faith in Him, plus gratitude and surrender.
We all pray — you and I and everyone. Can there be a better, higher, more illumining or more fulfilling prayer than “Let Thy Will be done”? That prayer touches the supreme heights. Peace begins when expectation ends. If I do a favour for you, immediately I expect a favour in return. And if you do not reciprocate, I start finding fault with you. But when we are praying to God, our prayer has to be unconditional. That unconditional feeling is what will save us. I tell my students that it is their bounden duty early in the morning to pray and meditate, but then they have to leave it up to God to do what He feels is best, for He knows what we need in order to make the fastest progress.
Let us say a child finds a dime on the road and comes running to his father to give it to him. His only possession is that one dime, but happily he gives it to his father. So what will the father do? The father knows that with this dime his child could have bought something, or he could have hidden it like a miser. But happily and cheerfully he gave it to his father because he has such love for his father and such faith in his father. The father is so pleased with his child that he will give the child ten dollars. Because the child came to the right person, he received much more than he would otherwise have gotten.
When we offer our prayer soulfully, lovingly and unconditionally, then we get infinitely more than we can ever imagine. But our prayer has to be unconditional. We will do the right thing, but without any expectation. I tell my students, “Why do you have to expect? Are you a beggar? If you know your Father is all for you and if you claim your Father as your own, very own, then how can you not have faith that He will give you whatever you need?” A small child knows only how to cry. If he is hungry, he cries, and his mother comes running to him no matter where she is. The child does not use the term ‘milk’; he does not ask for anything in particular. His job is only to cry. Then his mother comes running with milk because she knows what he needs.
Similarly, we have to cry only for God to make us a good instrument of His. In our prayer we will say, “I am at Your Feet. Just make me a good instrument.” In order to make me a good instrument, God will definitely make me simple, sincere, pure and self-giving. How can I be a good instrument of His if I do not have those qualities? But those good qualities I do not have to specifically mention — far from it! Only I will cry to become a good instrument of His, and the things that are needed to make me a good instrument, God will definitely give me.
Again, we have to know that there is such a thing as God’s choice Hour. We sow the seed and immediately we expect the tree, but it takes time. We have to let the seed germinate. It must first grow into a tiny plant before it becomes a huge banyan tree. Spiritual seekers often make the mistake of looking for an immediate result. But we have to know that everything takes time. It is like turning on the flame of a stove. You can keep on turning the handle, but until it reaches a certain point, there is no flame. So I tell my students that they have to wait for God’s choice Hour. That Hour comes only when God gives us the capacity. I will pray, but He will fulfil Himself in and through me only at His choice Hour.
All of us need and want freedom. This is not the freedom of a Caesar or a Napoleon, who wanted to conquer the world, but the freedom of Jesus Christ or Lord Krishna or Lord Buddha, who wanted only to love and serve the world. It is oneness-freedom that we are trying to have. We have to feel that the whole world belongs to us, that we are part and parcel of the world and destined to serve the world. If this is our feeling, and if we pray soulfully and unconditionally to God, then definitely we shall grow into good and perfect instruments of His.
Editor: We'd like to ask you to offer your advice to the average person or to someone who is just beginning to acquaint himself with meditation as to how he can make it a more integral part of his life.
Sri Chinmoy: Prayer is one road and meditation is another road. In the East, in India, meditation is part and parcel of people’s living existence, whereas prayer is part and parcel of people’s living existence in the West. When we pray, we talk to God; and when we meditate, we listen to God. In the West people find it easy to talk to God, but meditation they find more difficult. In meditation God is entering into us and inundating us with His Peace, with His Light, with His Bliss. But if it is difficult for us to feel the Presence of God, then we should start with prayer. If we find it difficult to listen to God, we should start by talking to God. Once we have established communication, we can have a two-way conversation.
If we go up and knock at God’s Door with our prayers, then He will definitely come down with His Blessings, with His Love, with His Compassion. Once we start to feel His Blessings, His Love, His Compassion in our lives, we will be able to immediately enter into meditation without first going through prayer. Again, some people find even prayer difficult. These people should start with japa. If they like Shiva, they will chant, “Shiva, Shiva, Shiva.” Or they can chant “Supreme.” After doing it a few hundred times, they will see how much benefit they get.
If japa is too difficult, seekers should spend time mixing with people who can do japa, who can pray, who can meditate. If they cannot do it themselves, then let them come to this place, for example, and just sit at the feet of Gurudeva. People can start anywhere they want, according to their own standard. If they are meant for japa, then Gurudeva will advise them to do japa. If they are ready for prayer, then he will teach them how to pray. He can teach kindergarten as well as the university course.
If someone wants to go directly to meditation without first starting with japa or prayer, then he has to know that there are three rungs to the ladder: concentration, meditation and contemplation. If it is very difficult for someone to meditate [Sri Chinmoy demonstrates meditation], then let him start with concentration [Sri Chinmoy demonstrates concentration]. Most people cannot meditate well because uncomely and uninspiring thoughts are entering into their minds. We are thinking of what we ate yesterday for breakfast, or what we are going to eat tomorrow. Concentration is like a naked sword that will not let us be distracted. So let us pave the way with concentration. In concentration, we do not allow an iota of thought, whether good or bad, to enter into our mind. Somebody is knocking at our mind’s door, but we do not know if it is a good thought or a bad thought, if it is a friend or an enemy. So the best thing is to keep the door bolted.
When we see that there is not even an iota of thought trying to enter, when we have passed our own examination on the strength of our sincerity, at that time we are ready to meditate. Finally, if we are advanced, after some time we will enter into contemplation. In contemplation, the divine lover and the Supreme Beloved are one. We are observing our Highest, and at the same time, we are our own Highest observing ourselves. At this moment I am the God-lover and my Beloved is right before me. The next moment we change roles, and He is the lover whereas I am the Beloved [Sri Chinmoy demonstrates contemplation].
Question: We're interested in hearing a little more about what made you decide to come to the West.
Sri Chinmoy: For me, there is no India, no America, no Europe; there is only God’s House, God’s Mansion, God’s Palace. At one moment God asks me to stay and work in a particular room of His House, which is called America. The next moment He can easily tell me to go and work in another room, which is called India. The following moment he can order me to go and work in England or Germany or some other place. My task is to accept His Command cheerfully, readily and willingly at every moment. My task is only to be at His Feet and surrender my very existence to Him unconditionally.
I do not obey God because I am afraid that He will punish me if I disobey Him. No, I listen to God’s Commands because I love God. His Love-aspect is drawing me towards Him like a magnet. If God asks me to go somewhere to work for Him, out of love I will go. For me, God is God because He is all Love, not because He is all Power. The Power-aspect of God does not enchant me. What can be more powerful than Love itself? Human beings are all the time giving importance to power. But when we accept the spiritual life, we come to realise that it is the power of love that we need.
So for me, there is no India and no America. For me there is only one thing: God’s Command. When I pray and meditate, I receive this Command or Message in the inmost recesses of my heart. Then I try to be of service to my Lord Supreme happily, cheerfully, willingly and, most importantly, unconditionally. Only if we serve God unconditionally can we be really fulfilled. No matter what we have, no matter what we grow into, no matter what we become, we can never be satisfied unless and until we are able to love God and serve God unconditionally.
You are physically in Hawaii, but God is asking you to serve the whole world from here. In my case also, physically I am based in New York; but spiritually, by virtue of my aspiration, I am not limited to New York. My aspiration takes me everywhere. When we live in the world of aspiration, we are everywhere. But when we live in the world of desire, we are nowhere, because desire is all the time binding and limiting us.
When I was born, my whole world was my father and mother. Then, when I grew a little older, my tiny village was my whole world. Then my town, my city, my province and my country became my whole world. Each time I became more awakened or developed, my consciousness expanded. Now if you ask me, “Where do you live?” the human in me will say, “I live in New York.” But the divine in me will say, “No, I live inside the heart of aspiring humanity. My real home is inside the heart of my spiritual brothers and sisters, just as they also live inside my heart.”
Question: You have gathered around you in Jamaica, Queens a very special group of souls. One thing always impresses us: every one of your students that we meet is completely committed to the spiritual life. It's a wonderful change from some of the semi-seriousness that we see in other groups. How do you see that little enclave of aspiring seekers gathered near you? They're out on their own, but also nearby, although not in your ashram or home. I don't think there's another group like it.
Sri Chinmoy: It is most kind of you. If we want to become better citizens of the world, we feel that we have to grow together. My disciples have accepted me as their spiritual father and I have accepted them as my spiritual children, so we belong together. I have implicit faith that my students are willing and eager to walk, march and run with me along Eternity’s Road. Again, they have faith that I will be able to help them, guide them and lead them to the destined Shore. So everything is based on mutual faith.
I give them what I am and what I have. They also give me what they are and what they have. This is how I am with them individually and collectively — not only in Jamaica, but in various parts of the world. I tell them one thing: see always the good things in others and try to increase those things. If I give importance to the dawn that breaks early in the morning, then my whole consciousness will be flooded with light. Again, if I want to think of the darkness that precedes the dawn, then my mind will be enveloped by darkness.
I always tell my students to see the positive aspect of life, not the negative aspect. I tell them to love others and try to bring forward not only their own good qualities, but also others’ good qualities. I say, “If you see that someone has two good qualities and one bad quality, appreciate and admire him for his good qualities. Then he himself will be embarrassed to have that bad quality and he will try to get rid of it. But if you go and tell him, ‘Oh, you have that bad quality’, then he is not going to change. You are only making yourself into his enemy.”
Question: Do your students have the opportunity to come to you privately at home?
Sri Chinmoy: They can come to me privately for short interviews, either in my home or at our tennis court, where I have a private room. I am an avid tennis player and I allow my students to play tennis there, because the message of tennis is “love and serve.” Tennis starts with love and then goes to service. If you serve well, then you get a point. Similarly, if you love the Supreme and serve the Supreme in mankind, you are doing absolutely the right thing.
Many times my disciples have asked for interviews, and I have granted them. But very often on the day that their interview is scheduled, early in the morning they find that their problem is solved, so the interview is no longer necessary. It has happened many times that I did not have to give an interview at the appointed hour because the disciple’s problems had already been inwardly solved.
Just two weeks ago the parents of five of my disciples died, and the disciples came to me for consolation. Individually they came and sat in front of me to pray and meditate. Most lovingly and most compassionately I told them, “Life and death are two rooms, side by side. This room, where we are physically and mentally active, we call life. This is where we stay during the day. Then, in the evening, we go to the other room to take rest. If you pray and meditate, you will see the door connecting the two rooms.
“Right now you are not able to go inside the other room, but there is Somebody who can go there, and that is God. Please pray to Him to most blessingfully do the needful for your mother and father. God will definitely listen to your prayers. God is the One who created your mother and father, and He is fully responsible for them. It is His Duty to take care of them; your only task is to pray to Him for His inner Guidance.
“So let us pray together and offer our gratitude to our Lord Supreme that for sixty or seventy years He kept your father and mother in the living room. Now the same Beloved Supreme has asked your father and mother to do something for Him in the other room. Right now you have no access to that room, but your prayer will go to God and He will most blessingfully do whatever is needed for your father and mother.” This is how I consoled them.
Question: Why is it that you so seldom give talks these days?
Sri Chinmoy: Over the years I have talked so much; I have spoken sixteen to the dozen! Over 900 books I have written, and many are based on my talks. But now I feel that silent meditation is the best approach, for the result of my silent meditation is extremely fruitful. Again, people cannot meditate for two hours at a stretch, so I also play soulful and prayerful music. When I meditate in silence and play a few instruments, I feel that the faces of the people in the audience are literally shining.
Editor: At the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago, your silence spoke louder than all the other speakers.
Sri Chinmoy: Believe me, at least seven or eight times the authorities there begged me to say a few words, but I did not want to. In India I wrote considerably about Swami Vivekananda, and easily I could have spoken about him. But instead I gave thirty-nine peace concerts in honour of the thirty-nine years he was physically on earth. Silence is infinitely more productive than the outer speech.
Editor: Why is it that the people in Hawaii could force you to speak, but the people in Chicago couldn’t? After your recent concert at the University of Hawaii’s Manoa Campus, you gave a lecture before the Matsunaga institute for Peace presented you with a peace award.
Sri Chinmoy: Sometimes it happens that I am at the mercy of my disciples because of promises they make to the authorities. Otherwise, I could have taken the award in silence, and in silence I could have offered my gratitude. But when my students promise that I am going to speak, or when people approach me in a particular way and I am caught off guard, at that time I open my big mouth and say, “Yes, I will speak.” Then afterwards I get no joy because I know that the people in the audience would have derived much more benefit from my silence.
When someone talks, he feels that he is a better person than his listeners. He feels, “I have all the wisdom and you have come here to receive an iota. If you do not listen to me, you will remain in ignorance-night.” When someone gives a lecture, he feels superior. He never thinks that the audience is doing him a big favour by bringing to the fore his good qualities. In theory a teacher will say that he also learns when he teaches. But in the back of his mind, the teacher thinks that he is only sharing his superior knowledge with his students. He believes that his listeners are beggars and he is giving them everything.
Again, when a teacher meditates with his students, neither he nor his students feel that the students are beggars. The teacher is lifting up his students and his students are also lifting him up. In silent meditation, who will say who is superior and who is inferior? It is a oneness-family. When a father is walking down the street and his little child is following him, the father is not thinking, “Oh, you are a little boy. What are you doing here? Do not come with me.” No, the father is so happy and proud that his little child is following him. And the child is not afraid of his father’s height or strength, for he knows that one day he will grow up to be as tall and strong as his father.
If your aspiration is stronger than mine, so what? If I have one drop of aspiration, I shall offer it to the ocean. If you have ten, twenty or a hundred drops, you will also pour them into the ocean. When a drop enters into the ocean, it loses its identity and becomes one with the infinite ocean. In our case also, when you offer your drops and I offer mine, we both become part and parcel of the ocean of aspiration.
Question: Do you think that the kind of extended family that is found in India, in which fathers, mothers, aunts and uncles all live together, could create a more stable society in the West?
Sri Chinmoy: It entirely depends on the consciousness of the individual members. Again, something can be applicable to a particular part of the world while it is not applicable at all somewhere else. Because of the way Western society came into existence, I feel in America the extended family is not needed. America has to grow in its own way by cultivating more love. In Indian society, the family members live together and grow together; there is a togetherness. But in America the sense of freedom is always taking the family members away. At first there will be four members of a family living together, and then it becomes three members and two members as the children move away. Sometimes the two remaining members very nicely get divorced. They are not satisfied with what they have and what they are. They try to get joy from separation, but there is joy only in oneness. One by one, about each family member they say, “He is not dear to me; she is not dear to me.” Finally they come to the point where there is nobody in their life.
I am not saying that Indians are satisfied with the extended family — far from it. But the qualities of the heart generally are more predominant in India than in the West. Indians make many blunders, but at the same time they try to make themselves feel that they belong to one family. In America, when the father becomes eighty or ninety years old, the son has nothing to do with him. The son is supposed to visit his father once a week, let us say, but on that day he will go to a movie or go on a picnic. In India, no matter how bad the father is, the son feels that it is his bounden duty to take care of him. Even if the children are poorer than the poorest, they will always take care of their parents according to their capacity.
For so many years the parents give the children everything that they have. They shower their children with affection and help them go to college. If their children have become great today, it is because the parents have helped them to become great. But in return the children often give their parents their indifference. The parents are sent to a nursing home and the children lead their own lives.
We have the body, vital, mind, heart and soul. If today I renounce my body, if tomorrow I renounce my vital and if the day after tomorrow I renounce my mind, then what will I have left? If I have a pain in my arm, shall I amputate my arm? Then afterwards I will have nothing! This is what the Western world does — cut off, cut off, cut off! But the positive approach is to say that if something is defective, then I will try to cure it and make it perfect. If my mind and vital are bad, then I will transform and illumine them.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 2
XlAMEN, China — Sri Chinmoy performed on the esraj and flute before an audience of schoolchildren on Dec. 20 at Xiamen Middle School No. 5.
A thousand of the children sang Sri Chinmoy’s new song, I am a Great Chinese Boy, I am a Good Chinese Girl in both English and Chinese, and Xiamen’s Minister of Education gave a brief talk.
Afterwards, the torch from the newly established World Harmony Run was passed from hand to hand among several hundred students.
This was the first event held in connection with the global Run, which is scheduled to be launched in April.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 37, December 2004 – March 2005
OVER 400 SONGS COMPOSED IN CHINA
During his three-month visit to China, Sri Chinmoy composed 419 Bengali and English songs.
Among those were a song to Hu Jintao, China’s President, as well as his immortal I am a Great Chinese Boy, I am a Good Chinese Girl song composed Dec. 17 for the children of China.
He also set to music a poem dedicated to the tsunami victims, written by Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing.
In addition, he composed and performed 27 quotes from Sri Aurobindo’s epic poem Savitri.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 37, December 2004 – March 2005
NEW YORK — At his annual New Year’s meditation held this year on Dec. 16, Sri Chinmoy offered the following message for the New Year:
“For the soulfully sincere seekers of the Absolute Supreme, the year 1980 is the year of amazing harmony, astounding peace and abiding oneness.”
Sri Chinmoy also set the message to music, and the song was performed at the New Year’s meditation.
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 5, No. 12, Vol. 6, No. 1, Dec. 1979 and Jan. 1980
by Nick Bailey, a reporter from ‘Hong Kong Today’
Question: May we have a tune from your flute before I talk to you?
[Sri Chinmoy plays the flute]
Question: Is that something you made up yourself on the spur of the moment?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes.
Question: Please tell us about yourself. You flew into Hong Kong yesterday and this is part of a tour of Southeast Asia. And you are promoting a programme that is known as "Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart." Can you explain all that?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a Truth-seeker and a God-lover. I feel that it is my bounden duty to be of service to mankind. "Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart" is our theme. I feel that if we have peace of mind, we will be able to raise the consciousness of mankind. This world belongs to God the Creator and, at the same time, God the Creator has become God the creation. Therefore, I go from one place to another and try to offer my soulful services to the citizens of each particular country.
Question: This is a message that you are getting from within?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, from my Inner Pilot. Each person is led by something. Most often it is our mind that asks us to do something and we abide by the dictates of the mind. Again, if we pray and meditate regularly, soulfully and devotedly, we can listen to the voice of our heart. So, in my case, I try to listen to the voice of my heart and I try to establish my inseparable oneness with the world.
Question: People listening to this programme might find that a little difficult to understand or they might wonder what your motives are.
Sri Chinmoy: This world is full of misunderstanding. Misunderstanding reigns supreme in this world. God alone is to judge whether my motives are sincere and genuine. Here I have not come to propagate my views. Here I have come to be of dedicated service to mankind. I have been to many, many parts of the world to offer the same dedicated and devoted service.
This "Lifting Up the World" programme is quite recent. I have not even been doing it a full year. For the last three years I have been lifting up weights just for physical fitness. Previously I was a runner, but I had to stop running because of a severe knee injury. Then I took up weightlifting. By God's Grace, I got amazing results. And then, for the last six months, I have been lifting up human beings.
I believe that each individual has a body, vital, mind, heart and soul. So, while lifting up the person, I feel I am offering my dedicated service to that person and, with my dedicated service, I feel I am able to bring to the fore their own divine qualities which are of paramount importance so that we can lift up the world together.
Question: What sort of people have you lifted?
Sri Chinmoy: I have lifted people from all walks of life: diplomats from the United Nations, professors, boxers, singers, athletes, weightlifters, priests, nuns, doctors, lawyers and so forth.
Question: How much do you weigh?
Sri Chinmoy: Usually I weigh between 151 and 157 pounds.
Question: Who is the heaviest person you have lifted?
Sri Chinmoy: In California, I lifted a great saxaphone player named Clarence Clemons. He is known as the 'Big Man'. He was 283 pounds.
Question: Almost double your own weight!
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. And yesterday, here in Hong Kong, I lifted two photographers at the same time. Their combined weight was 265 pounds.
Question: We have to mention at this stage that you lift people with one arm. Which arm is it?
Sri Chinmoy: I lift with both my left and my right arms. They are almost equally strong.
Question: How do you manage to lift up double your bodyweight with one arm?
Sri Chinmoy: God's infinite Grace acts in and through me. I was never a weightlifter. In my youth, I was a sprinter, a decathlete. I was a runner all my life. But for the last three years, I have been lifting up weights. Here I have entered into a new field. I do not compete with others, but I enjoy competing with myself. I started with 40 pounds. Three years ago, it was almost impossible for me to lift up 40 pounds. Then gradually, slowly, steadily and unerringly, I have made progress and now I have come up to this.
Question: Do the people whom you lift get an uplifting experience? Excuse the pun! Do they feel much better for it?
Sri Chinmoy: Some of them say that it is not only on the physical plane that they are lifted, but also in the inner plane. About six months ago, a nun came from Philadelphia to participate. When she was lifted, she said she had the experience that both her body and spirit were lifted together. And, interestingly enough, on that particular day her horoscope read that somebody was going to lift her, physically as well as spiritually. So she came all the way from Philadelphia to New York. After I lifted her up, she narrated her experience.
Interviewer: I am glad it worked for her. Let us hope it works for those people who are going to be lifted here in Hong Kong later today. Sri Chinmoy, thank you very much and I wish you good luck in your quest for "Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart."
Published in Conversations with Sri Chinmoy
NEW YORK — At the close of his annual New Year’s public meditation, held this past Dec. 15 at Columbia University, Sri Chinmoy delivered the following New Year's Message:
“The New Year is the year of man and earth’s self-giving choice, and also is the victory-year of God’s Soundless Voice.”
Published in Anahata Nada, December 1978, Volume 5, Number 11-12
YANGON — The Union of Myanmar was officially dedicated as a Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossoms-Nation Dec. 15 by the Minister of Hotels and Tourism, Maj. Gen. Saw Lw-in.
Sri Chinmoy was guest of honor.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 30, Mid-November 2000 – Late March 2001
KATHMANDU — Visiting peace ambassador Sri Chinmoy paid a courtesy call on Prime Minister Manmohan Adhikari of Nepal Dec. 13 at the government office building, Singha Darbar.
The Indian-born ambassador of peace, who had met with former Prime Minister Krishna Prasad Bhattarai the previous day, was visiting Nepal as part of a good will tour of Southeast Asia.
“We want to make our land a land of peace where every group practices its religion in harmony with other religions and appreciates other religions,” Prime Minister Adhikari told Sri Chinmoy.
Said Sri Chinmoy: “We play different roles, but we know in the depths of our hearts that we are all members of the same world family and that there is only one truth and reality.”
During the meeting, Sri Chinmoy’s students sang a song their teacher had written about the Prime Minister, describing him as “Nepal’s sleepless progress-perfection-voice.”
Sri Chinmoy’s meeting with Krishna Prasad Bhattarai on the previous day also included a song performed by the Sri Chinmoy choir. In this song, Sri Chinmoy hailed the former Prime Minister, who is now President of the opposition Congress Party, as a “renunciation-hero” who is “inviting all to come and visit your compassion-flooded heart-garden.”
The former Prime Minister and the Master met again for a private dinner at Sri Chinmoy’s hotel on Dec. 16.
Left: Nepal Prime Minister Manmohan Adhikari receives Peace Torch from Sri Chinmoy. Above: Former Nepali Prime Minister Krishna Prasad Bhattarai with Sri Chinmoy.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 24, December 1994–Mach 1995
UNITED NATIONS — Ambassadors, religious leaders and U.N. officials joined Sri Chinmoy here December 14 in a programme celebrating the holiday spirit of human oneness.
Televised excerpts from the programme, called “Oneness-Earth,” were broadcast nationwide by CBS on Christmas Day. Sri Chinmoy concluded the event with these words:
“The desire-man demands division-earth. The aspiration-man yearns for oneness-earth. Oneness-earth means God-Satisfaction in its universal dream-reality. Dream is the oneness of the earth-family; reality is the perfection ever-transcending of the earth-family.”
Other speakers included the Ambassador of Panama, a representative of the African National Congress, the Director of the International Year of the Child Secretariat, the U.N. Observer for Pope Paul and officials from the U.S. Mission and the United Nations.
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 4, No. 12, January 4, 1978
NEW CANAAN, Conn. — Nearly 300 runners from the New York metropolitan area participated in the Sri Chinmoy Ten Mile Run Dec. 11 in honour of UNICEF’s 31st anniversary.
Winner of the race, Dr. Norb Sanders, said: “In over 20 years of running, I think this has been one of the most inspiring running experiences that I've ever had.”
Sri Chinmoy, who awarded him the UNICEF cup, also gave the doctor an extra prize — a watch — because of the cheerful and devoted consciousness he had while running.
This watch, the Master said, “symbolically tells that your time has pleased us, perhaps far beyond your own imagination.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 4, No. 12 January 4, 1978
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. — The National Fine Arts Committee of the 13th Winter Olympic Games presented Sri Chinmoy with an award Dec. 3 for his “contribution to our efforts to recognize the whole man during the XIII Olympic Winter Games.”
The award, presented by National Fine Arts Committee Chairman Carolyn Hopkins, cited the Master as one who “himself embodies the whole man through his outstanding work as a painter, writer, composer, musician and athlete.”
At the same ceremony, Brian Gormley of the Lake Placid School of Art awarded the Master a certificate “in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the arts.”
It was Gormley who had invited the Master to Lake Placid to deliver a lecture on the concept of the whole man, the theme being emphasized by the Fine Arts Committee for the 1980 Olympics.
The talk and awards presentations were held in the Lake Placid School of Art, where a two-week exhibit of Sri Chinmoy’s paintings was being held.
Published in Anahata Nada, December 1978, Volume 5, Number 11-12
During his two-month visit to South America, Sri Chinmoy offered seven Peace Concerts. Six were in Brazil: in Sao Paulo Dec. 5, Rio de Janeiro Dec. 16 and 21, Curitiba Jan. 3, Iguassu Falls Jan. 9 and Brasilia Jan. 29. In Paraguay, a concert was held in Asunción Jan. 19.
Published in Volume 29, Mid-November 1999 – Mid-March 2000
Former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations C. V. Narasimhan had high words of praise for Sri Chinmoy when he spoke at the Master’s U.N. peace concert Dec. 6.
Sri Chinmoy had asked Narasimhan to come up and say a few words about U Thant, under whom he had served as Chef de Cabinet. Instead, the former U.N. leader spoke about Sri Chinmoy, who has been offering twice-weekly meditations at the U.N. since 1970.
Narasimhan said Sri Chinmoy “is one of the most remarkable human beings I have ever met, and I have met many remarkable human beings.”
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 23, MID-DECEMBER 1993–MARCH 1994
At his annual New Year’s concert on Dec. 9 at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, Sri Chinmoy offered this message for 1993:
God is dreaming,
Newness singing,
Oneness blossoming,
Fulness dancing.Hope no more gropes.
Life without slopes.
Splendid depths and heights
Transform bondage-nights.
Later in the month, he elaborated on the message, saying “God has taken many, many years to create...this particular year.”
For centuries, he said, the mind-power has dominated, “but now the mind-power is surrendering to the heart-power” and “brightness and luminosity have already started blossoming.”
From now on, he continued, “we will only see the song and dance of the divine forces. The undivine forces are exhausted. They have already started surrendering to the divine forces and they are ready to abide by the will of the divine forces.”
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 22, DECEMBER 1992 – MARCH 1993
NEW YORK — At his Dec. 7 Peace Concert at Hunter College, Sri Chinmoy offered his annual New Year’s Message, calling 1997 an inner turning point in humanity’s progress toward world peace.
“The slow and long years of humanity’s hope-heart shall begin to transform into humanity’s fulfilment-life,” he said.
“The beauty of world peace was a sweet dream. The fragrance of world peace shall begin to become a fruitful reality.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 26, November 1996–March, 1997
NEW YORK — Demonstrating that age is no barrier to fitness, Sri Chinmoy gave a public demonstration of his weightlifting prowess on Nov. 27 — hoisting a total of nearly 100,000 pounds in 33 separate feats of strength.
The 67-year-old fitness guru, who resumed his weightlifting career after a nine-year gap, said he wanted to prove that heart-power can challenge old age.
“I wanted to show the world that if we can go beyond the mind, then the physical body obeys us.”
Over the course of about three hours, he pushed a 300-pound stack of weights up a metal track 50 times with each arm, hoisted 200 pounds overhead with his right and left arm and did a series of standing and seated lifts using a calf-raise machine. To top everything off, he ended the evening by lifting his own body weight into the air with both arms at the same time.
Master of ceremonies Bill Pearl, five-time Mr. Universe, said, “He wasn’t lifting with his body but with his heart.”
Another member of the audience, former Mr. Olympia Frank Zane, called the evening “totally mind-blowing.”
Sri Chinmoy says he draws his strength from an inner source and hopes his weightlifting will “inspire many people to enter into the spiritual life.”
At the same time, he says he hopes it will also inspire spiritual people to enter into the fitness world.
After the weightlifting demonstration, the spiritual athlete put on another hat, becoming a spiritual musician, and offered a Peace Concert.
Both events were held at York College in Queens.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 27, August 1998-April 1999
UNITED NATIONS — For the first time ever, an “International Day of Thanksgiving” celebration was held here Nov. 25.
The unusual event, which included multi-lingual performances by representatives of several different nations, was opened with a short meditation by Sri Chinmoy, Director of the United Nations Meditation Group.
The concept of Thanksgiving is observed in several countries, and last month’s event sought to unify these different approaches under the aegis of the United Nations.
An international vegetarian Thanksgiving dinner made up of dishes from around the world was held that evening.
Published in Anahata Nada, Dec. 1, 1975 Vol. II, No. 10
by Sri Chinmoy
Just an hour ago I spoke to my sister in India. Two days ago in an Indian newspaper in Calcutta there was an article about my lifting the big elephant. The paper said I was a “miracle man,” and claimed me as a Bengali. — 25 November 1986
Published in My Weightlifting Tears and Smiles, part 2
Sri Chinmoy offered on Nov. 23 the first of a series of 50 peace concerts he plans to give in honor of the upcoming 50th anniversary of India’s Independence next year.
The concert was held at the Manhattan headquarters of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan (USA).
A second concert was held two days later in the Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium of the United Nations.
Both concerts included performances of significant Indian national songs by the Sri Chinmoy Singers, as well as readings of statements about India offered over the years by various spiritual and political leaders.
Sri Chinmoy’s project to commemorate the Golden Jubilee of India’s nationhood won warm praise from luminaries the world over.
“We in the Bhavan salute Poojya Sri Chinmoy ... who has consecrated himself heart and soul to the mission of transforming human hearts and fostering human harmony through divine music,” declared S. Ramakrishnan, Executive Secretary of the worldwide Bhavan.
Bhavan President C. Subramaniam said: “I am glad that Sri Chinmoy has come forward to participate in this great movement of bringing back spirituality to practicing politics.”
India's Prime Minister, H.D. Deve Gowda, said: “Such concerts, which transcend all kinds of barriers, promote peace and understanding, wherein lies true independence.”
Ramaswami Venkataraman, former President of India, said: “Sri Chinmoy is one of our outstanding servants for peace.... I am sure that his program, will further spread the message of harmony amongst nations.”
Patricia Mountbatten of Burma, daughter of the last British Viceroy of India, who oversaw the transition to Independence, said she was “delighted” by the Master’s project. “I know what a deep affection both my parents felt for India and her people....” she added.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25, August-November 1996
OTTAWA — Canada’s Minister of External Affairs, Lloyd Axworthy, and his wife, as well as Member of Parliament Mac Harb, attended the Peace Concert Sri Chinmoy offered Nov. 20 at Ottawa's Corel Centre.
Afterwards, Professor Laurence Ewasksho of the University of Ottawa presented the spiritual leader with the ‘Voice of Universal Music’ award on behalf of the University’s Music Department.
Sri Chinmoy also completed several hundred bird drawings in his hotel room that weekend, commemorating the 25th anniversary of his life as an artist. He drew his first Jharna-Kala rose in an Ottawa hotel on Nov. 19, 1974. ‘Jharna-Kala’, the Bengali for Fountain-Art, is the term he uses to describe his paintings.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 29, Mid-November 1999–Mid-March 2000
JAMAICA — In one of the most unusual and remarkable publishing ventures ever attempted, Sri Chinmoy directed the preparation and publication of 51 of his books within a 15-day period last month.
When the Master first called about 40 disciples over to his house the morning of Nov. 1, the material for the books lay piled up in huge cartons. The cartons contained transcriptions from shorthand notes and tape recordings of the Master’s various talks and answers to questions during the past several years.
These thousands of pages of material had to be sorted and compiled into separate, self-contained books.
This required hundreds of hours of analysing, typing, proofing and organising. Where points were unclear, Sri Chinmoy would elaborate. Where ideas were repetitious, deletions would be made.
The disciples occupied virtually every room of the Master's house, from basement to attic, each with his own particular job. Amid the commotion and bustle, Sri Chinmoy calmly directed the whole operation and, as time permitted, dictated a number of additional books.
Many of the disciples took a week’s leave of absence from work. Others continued their regular jobs and came to the Master’s house straight from the office.
To carry out the task — which in the normal course might have required years to complete — the disciples worked virtually around the clock, usually getting home around 1 a.m. for a couple of hours sleep before returning at 4 a.m.
Twice daily, once before the work began and then just before everybody went home, Sri Chinmoy conducted a short meditation. “If you receive my light,” he told the disciples, “you will not need sleep.”
The Master himself normally sleeps only two hours a night, and often goes days at a time without any sleep at all. He says that through meditation one can conquer sleep, and his disciples that week proved the truth of his philosophy.
As each book was completed, a messenger brought it over to a group of photo.typesetters in Jamaica and nearby Manhattan, also disciples, who prepared the manuscripts for final printing.
After the various proofreading stages, the book then went to one of the three disciple-owned or run printing presses in the area.
The 51 books of poetry, short stories, lectures, essays and questions and answers bring the total number of books Sri Chinmoy has written since coming to the West to more than 200.
The current group of 51 books includes four books of poetry, which complete the 20-volume Golden Boat series: four books of short stories, several books of lectures and essays, and quite a few books of questions and answers.
Eight books consist of answers on meditation. Other subjects include the nature of God, the cosmic silence and sound, the cosmic gods, aspiration, surrender, prayer and mantra, negative qualities and hostile forces, purity, the soul, music and human time and eternal time.
Published in Anahata Nada, December 1, 1974, Vol. I, No. 12
CHICAGO — The Jesse Owens Foundation presented Sri Chinmoy with the Jesse Owens Humanitarian Award at a black-tie dinner Nov.15.
Deeply thanking the Owens family and Foundation, Sri Chinmoy said the immortal athlete “was, is and forever shall remain my life’s champion supreme and my heart’s hero supreme for his deathless jumps, his breathless speed and his ceaseless self-offering.”
Generation after generation, he continued, “his Olympian voice will reverberate in the hearts of aspiring athletes....”
Published in Anahata-Nada, Volume 33, August–Mid-November 2002
JAMAICA — Gov. Rafael Hernandez- Colon of Puerto Rico was guest of honour Nov. 12 at a special celebration hosted by Indian spiritual Master Sri Chinmoy.
It was one of Sri Chinmoy’s ways of thanking the Governor for his many invitations to the gubernatorial palace and home in the past year, where he has held private meditations for the Governor and his family.
“Two loving hearts: the Puerto Rican heart and the Indian heart,” Sri Chinmoy said. “This evening the Indian heart is extremely happy and proud that it has been given by God ... the golden opportunity to offer its concern, love, appreciation, admiration and joy in abundant measure to the Puerto Rican heart.”
The Governor was greeted by a special colour guard, and then treated to an hour-and-a-half programme of spiritual songs, meditation and Spanish music, including the Puerto Rican Anthem and “O My Puerto Rico,” a song written by Sri Chinmoy in his honour.
Afterwards, the Indian Master presented the Puerto Rican leader with a straw hat — symbol of the Governor’s political party, a garland, and several other gifts.
Said the Governor: “You are very fortunate that you have a spiritual Master like Sri Chinmoy here close to you, that you have his guidance and are able to develop spiritually beside him .... He lives in this world as you and I do, and yet the sanctity in him and the deep spirituality which he embodies is present wherever he is.”
He appreciated “the great mission of spirituality, of beauty, of joy, which Sri Chinmoy, your spiritual Master, has brought to all. .. of those whom he has touched.”
The Governor concluded by saying: “I leave with you my conviction that these (Sri Chinmoy) Centres will continue to grow as the spiritual power of Sri Chinmoy grows and spreads throughout the world.”
Sri Chinmoy chats informally with Gov. Hernandez-Colon of Puerto Rico at a special function the Master held in his honour. Sri Chinmoy presented the Governor several gifts, including the straw hat he is wearing (photo by Lelihan).
Published in ANAHATA NADA, Dec. 1, 1975, Vol. II, No. 10
JAMAICA, NY — Sri Chinmoy hosted an Ambassadors' Dinner Nov. 10 in honor of the 25th anniversary of his peace meditations at the United Nations.
About two dozen ambassadors, ministers and other government officials from 11 African, Asian and European countries — many joined by their spouses came to Annam Brahma restaurant for this gala event.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25, August–Mid-December 1995
Bengal, the region where Sri Chinmoy was born, has gotten its first Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossom.
Mayor Amiya Das declared the Bengali city of Chandannagore a Sri Chinmoy Peace-City on Nov. 10, calling Sri Chinmoy “a guiding star not only for your Indian brothers and sisters, but indeed for the entire peace-loving humanity.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 29, August–Mid-November 1999
In a remarkable weightlifting demonstration, Sri Chinmoy on Nov. 9 hoisted a total of 126,902 pounds — or more than 63 tons.
It began that morning at Aspiration-Ground, where he lifted a four-ton elephant ridden by Mahasamrat Bill Pearl, using a modified calf-raise machine. He also lifted two horses, a sailboat and a small house with his calf muscles.
At an indoor function that evening, some of his more spectacular lifts included simultaneously raising 300 pounds with each arm from a supine position and 270 pounds with each arm from a seated position, and lifting a record-breaking 1,900 pounds on the standing calf-raise machine.
The program, called “The Body’s Fitness-Gong and the Soul’s Fulness-Song,” included 96 different lifts. It was dedicated to his brother Mantu, whose 75th birthday is Nov. 17.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 33, August–Mid-November 2002
REYKJAVIK, ICELAND — Iceland was formally dedicated as a Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossoms-Nation Oct. 30 at Hofdi House, where Presidents Gorbachev and Reagan held their 1986 summit meeting.
Speakers included the President of the Icelandic Parliament, Halldor Blondal, Reykjavik’s Mayor Ingibjorg Gisladottir and former Prime Minister Steingrimur Hermannsson.
At the end, Sri Chinmoy meditated and spoke.
Calling Iceland “the land of peace,” he said, “Iceland is my heart”s home.”
After the ceremony, Sri Chinmoy meditated at the table where the Soviet and American Presidents had conferred.
REYKJAVIK — Sri Chinmoy gave his 600th Peace Concert the evening of Oct. 30 in Reykjavik’s University Theater.
Since he held his first Peace Concert in Cologne, Germany, in 1984, the spiritual leader has travelled the length and breadth of the world offering his philosophy of peace through music.
Sri Chinmoy poses by the Iceland Peace-Nation plaque with former Prime Minister Hermannsson (left) and Mayor Gisladottir
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 30, Mid-July 2000–Mid-November 2000
Sri Chinmoy meditates at the opening of a Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan symposium Oct. 29 at New York’s St. Peters Church. The symposium was part of a three-day Gandhi program that included the opening at Bhavan headquarters on Oct. 30 of an exhibit of drawings from the Master’s third million bird series.
Sitting to Sri Chinmoy’s right is Dr. L.M. Singhvi, India’s High Commissioner to Great Britain. The previous day Dr. Singhvi had visited Sri Chinmoy at Annam Brahma, where he was lifted into the air as part of the Master’s “Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart.” program.
Published in Anahaha Nada, Volume 24, August–Mid-November 1994
SKOPJE, MACEDONIA — Sri Chinmoy’s students organized an 18-kilometer race through the center of Skopje Oct. 16 to commemorate the 18 years Mother Teresa lived there. Several hundred runners from many countries participated.
The race began and finished in Macedonia Square, where Mother Teresa’s house used to be.
At the start of the race, the President of the Macedonian Olympic Committee, Vasil Tupurkovski, presented the spiritual leader with “The Spirit of the Ancient Olympic Games Award.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 34, August–Mid-November 2003
LONDON — As part of his European peace tour, Sri Chinmoy met with the Speaker of the British House of Commons, Bernard Weatherill, on Oct. 12.
After speaking and meditating with the Master, the Speaker took him on a personal tour of the British Parliament. Afterwards, he wrote Sri Chinmoy a letter saying “how much I appreciated the time we spent together and what you said to me.”
In 1986 the Speaker had invited Sri Chinmoy to the Palace of Westminster to inaugurate a program of meditation for Members of Parliament.
Sri Chinmoy is greeted by Bernard Weatherill, Speaker of the British House of Commons.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 16, August–mid-December 1987
LONDON — London’s elegant Royal Albert Hall, known for its classical music, rang to a different tune October 9 when Indian Master Sri Chinmoy gave his British peace concert there.
Some 5,000 Londoners filled the hall to near capacity to listen to his music of peace and meditate for a better world.
One member of the audience, Lord Hylton, was so deeply moved that he wrote Sri Chinmoy afterwards asking him if he could give a series of peace concerts in Northern Ireland. He said the Master’s music “evoked the widespread sufferings of people around the world” and “made one think of striving together for peace, harmony and development.”
Comparing the response to the London and Paris peace concerts, Sri Chinmoy said: “England saw the king unknown in me. England gave me England’s dignity-height: admiration. France saw the child unknowable in me. France gave me France’s equality-depth: love.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 17, August-November 1984
AMERICUS, Georgia — Mrs. Lillian Carter met Sri Chinmoy and a group of his disciples Oct. 7, charming them with tales of her experiences in India and vignettes about what it’s like to be the President’s mother.
The Master, in turn, meditated with the 79-year-old “first Grand-mama” and sang her a song he had composed in her honour, which brought tears to her eyes.
Miss Lillian felt very much at home among the sari-clad women and white-trousered men. When Sri Chinmoy asked if they could meditate together, she quipped to the group. “He wants me to be quiet.”
Later she declared, “Mr. Chinmoy, you’ve never met anyone like me, have you?”
Toward the end of the interview, she said, “This is one of the greatest honours I’ve had.”
Later that evening, Miss Lillian attended a concert the Master and his disciples put on in a motel here.
Sri Chinmoy played the esraj and his disciples sang several Bengali and American Songs, including India’s National Anthem, "America the Beautiful,” and songs dedicated to Miss Lillian and to her son, President Carter.
During picture taking at the end, she walked up to the Master and took his arm, saying, “I want my picture taken with you.”
As she departed, southern hospitality mingled with Indian spirituality as she said, “Namaste, y’all.”
Sri Chinmoy meditates with Miss Lillian.
Published in Anahata Nada, November 1, 1977, Vol. 4, No. 10
VIENNA — Six Members of the Austrian Parliament presented Sri Chinmoy with the “Austria — Heart of Europe Award” on Oct. 4 at a ceremony at the banquet hall of the Vienna Borse.
“Because of your initiatives there is less suffering and more peace in our world,” said Mrs. Herta Wimmer, MP when presenting the Award.
After the presentation, a group of children gave Sri Chinmoy a huge cake resembling a topographical map of Austria, and the spiritual teacher made the first ceremonial cut.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 36, August 2004-Mid-November 2004
Sri Chinmoy's four-day trip to Europe began Oct. 3 with a visit to the Impossibility-Challenger Games in Zurich, where the Master lifted a number of world-class athletes.
The following day he gave an organ concert and appeared on German National Television in Munich, lifting TV host Guenter Jauch. He lifted additional dignitaries the next day.
The tour ended with a peace concert in the Alambra Theatre in Athens on Oct. 6.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 17, August-November 1988
The renowned Bengali novelist and journalist Mani Sankar Mukherji spent several days in New York in late September and early October meeting and talking with Sri Chinmoy.
During his final visit to Aspiration-Ground on Oct. 2, the author called his visit a pilgrimage, saying “I never realized that in this city of New York there is so much love, so much affection, so much bhakti.”
He called Sri Chinmoy a spiritual treasure that he and the Master’s students share, saying he was taking half the treasure home with him and leaving the other half in New York.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 33, August – Mid-November 2002
NOBEL PEACE LAUREATE GETS AN INNER LIFT
JAMAICA, NY — The 1976 Nobel Peace Laureate, Mairead Corrigan Maguire, founder of the Northern Ireland Peace Movement, was lifted by Sri Chinmoy Sept. 27 at Aspiration-Ground.
“I feel very humble to be here ... with Sri Chinmoy, who has given his whole life to loving and serving humanity,” she said.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 39, August – Early November 2005
JAMAICA, NY — The President and Vice-Chancellor of Stamford University Bangladesh came to Aspiration-Ground Sept. 27 to confer an honorary degree upon Sri Chinmoy.
Dr. Hannan Feroz, speaking on behalf of his University, called Sri Chinmoy “a dedicated soul for peace and world harmony” and said he would keep all of his writings in the university library.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 42, Mid-August – Early November 2006
High-ranking officials from the Czech Republic and Sri Lanka got a boost recently when Sri Chinmoy lifted them into the air as part of his “Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart” program.
The Speaker of the Sri Lankan Parliament, W. J. M. Lokubandara, was lifted Sept. 21 at Aspiration-Ground, and the Czech Foreign Minister, Alexandr Vondra, was lifted the following day in Manhattan.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 42, Mid-August – Early November 2006
in Apia, Western Samoa
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy, what message are you trying to spread around the world?
Sri Chinmoy: I am trying to offer a simple and prayerful message to the world at large, and this message is the message of peace. Unless and until we have achieved peace, we shall not be happy. We can have material things in boundless measure, we can be the richest human beings on earth, we can wallow in the pleasures of life, but we cannot be happy unless we have peace. We have to work together and pray together so that God will bless us with peace.
Interviewer: When you talk about peace, are you talking about having no wars, or individual peace?
Sri Chinmoy: Individual peace must come first. If I have peace of mind and you have peace of mind, then there cannot be war. But if I do not have peace of mind, then I am constantly insecure, jealous and afraid of you. I think that you are going to attack me at any moment, so I want to attack you first. Or I feel superior to you and want to show my supremacy; I want to prove that I am greater and stronger than you, so I declare war.
All this is coming from the mind. Indeed, war always begins in the mind. But if I live in the heart and feel my oneness with you, then I am not plagued by insecurity and jealousy. Then there is only oneness-peace. So I tell the world, “Let us live in the heart, not in the mind. War is in the mind, but love and peace are in the heart.”
Unfortunately, the world is still living in the mind. Each country either is trying to show its supremacy or is afraid of other countries, and therefore the world is sorely lacking in peace. How can the world get peace? From prayer and meditation. If I get peace from my prayer and meditation, then I will not attack you or anybody else. And my peace of mind will inspire you also to pray and meditate and acquire peace of mind. So from individual peace we can have collective peace.
My prayerful message to the world is this: let us first have individual peace, and from there we will go to collective peace. If there is one beautiful plant in a garden, then gradually other plants will grow from it. But all of a sudden I cannot get hundreds and thousands of beautiful plants from one plant; it is impossible. If one person has peace of mind, then he will inspire somebody else to have peace of mind. If one country in this world has peace, then that country will inspire another country to have peace.
Interviewer: When meeting with world leaders, what do you speak about?
Sri Chinmoy: Today I met with your Head of State. He was extremely, extremely kind, compassionate and loving to me. We are all praying to God to bring about world peace, so when I meet with world leaders we only talk about how we can have a peaceful world. Many world leaders are politicians, but I do not know anything about politics. I meet with them as a student of peace and a lover of peace. They know that I am ignorant about politics, but still they are kind enough to meet with me because they sincerely want to establish peace on earth. So we talk about our prayerful service to mankind and about peace and oneness.
Interviewer: Where does meditation come into this?
Sri Chinmoy: Meditation is of paramount importance. If we do not meditate, we cannot have even an iota of peace. Meditation makes the mind calm and tranquil [Sri Chinmoy demonstrates meditation]. With this meditation, I am bringing down peace from Above. If you can meditate for fifteen minutes, a half-hour or an hour daily, the mind will become calm, quiet, tranquil and peaceful.
Interviewer: Do you think of anything in particular while meditating?
Sri Chinmoy: While meditating we should not think of anything; only we should keep the mind calm and quiet. The mind is by nature restless, like the surface of the sea. But if we can go deep within, if we can dive to the bottom of the sea, we will find that it is all peace. We can find this peace either through prayer or meditation.
Interviewer: What about thinking peaceful thoughts?
Sri Chinmoy: After we make the mind calm, good thoughts, inspiring thoughts and pure thoughts will come. But if we start by trying to think good thoughts, they will not come.
Interviewer: What about sports? What does it have to do with your mission?
Sri Chinmoy: Physical fitness is of paramount importance. We are not practising sports to be the world’s greatest runner or athlete. We are praying to God to keep our body physically fit so that early in the morning we can pray and meditate and begin our day’s journey with a prayerful heart. If we do not do sports and take exercise to keep the body fit, then we may become weak and sickly and suffer from all kinds of pains and ailments. Then we will not be inspired to get up early in the morning to pray and meditate. So when we think of sports, we think of physical fitness, not physical supremacy. The most important thing in our life is prayer and meditation, and that we cannot do if we are not physically fit.
Interviewer: What about the competitive element in sports? Isn't that another form of showing supremacy?
Sri Chinmoy: If we are not yet ready to accept the highest philosophy, we say to ourselves, “If I do not keep my body fit, then I will not be able to defeat anybody.” With that thought in mind, at least we will try to keep our body fit. But from the highest point of view, the goal is not to defeat anybody but only to compete with ourselves. When we compete with others, we are never happy. Today I may defeat someone in running, but tomorrow I will look around and see that there is somebody who is far better than I. No matter what we do, there is always somebody else who can do it better. This moment I may be the best, but the next moment someone else will come and smash my pride, and I will feel miserable.
When I compete only with myself, I always get tremendous joy. Yesterday I had one standard, but today my standard has gone higher. Yesterday I had a certain number of weaknesses or defects in my nature, but today I will try my best to have a few less. In this way I am always making progress and I am always happy. Here there is no third person who is judging the two competitors. I myself am the judge. I know how many lies I told yesterday, so today I shall decrease the number. Again, yesterday if I prayed for five minutes, then today I will try to pray for ten minutes. Good things I will try to increase and bad things I will try to decrease. In this way I am competing only with myself. In sports also, our goal is to do our very best and try all the time to compete only with ourselves. But whatever the result, we have to accept it cheerfully. We will do our best and then, whatever result God wants us to have, we will accept.
Interviewer: What do you think of the Olympic Games?
Sri Chinmoy: I appreciate and admire the Olympic Games because they are raising the world standard. Right now the athletes are trying to defeat each other. For the time being this is good. If they did not have a competitive spirit, then they would be at home sleeping. It is better to be active and dynamic than lazy and useless. It is better to be moving forward than standing still. While moving forward, if they want to try to go ahead of those who are moving with them, no harm. Although this is not the highest way, it is far better than remaining inactive and lethargic.
After some time they will see that there is a higher way of looking at sports. If victory is the only goal, then the athletes can never find happiness, for even if they win today, tomorrow somebody else will come along and take away their glory. Real happiness can never be found in separating ourselves from others. Real happiness comes only in feeling our oneness with others, even if they defeat us.
We are all members of a family. If your brother defeats you in running, you are not miserable, because he is your brother. Again, if you defeat him in swimming because you have more capacity in that sport, your brother is not going to feel miserable. He will say, “It is my brother who has done it, so it is all right.” Like that, if all the athletes can feel that they belong to one family, then they will be happy no matter who wins.
Regardless of who wins on the sports ground, each one should try to excel in his own life by competing with himself and going forward according to his own capacity to his destined goal. In this way each individual will all the time make progress and achieve greater and greater perfection. True happiness comes only from our increasing sense of perfection which we can achieve only through self-transcendence. But right now the world has not come up to that standard.
Interviewer: What roles do your students play in your mission?
Sri Chinmoy: My students do everything. They participate in sports and they have completely thrown themselves into the peace movement. Every second year we have a Peace Run. In the last run, seventy-six countries participated, and millions of people who are true lovers of peace — from children right up to octogenarians — held our Peace Torch. My students are trying to be of service to mankind, to people who sincerely want peace and who are looking for something that will give them abiding satisfaction.
Interviewer: Thank you very much.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 2
By Ashok Parulekar
They are two great musicians who gave India’s divine gift of soulful music to the whole world. Ravi Shankar was the greatest Sitar player in the world who passed away recently. Spiritual master Sri Chinmoy composed 21000 soulful songs and performed in 700 Peace Concerts around the world based on his own meditative compositions and using a number of musical instruments. Sri Chinmoy left his body in October, 2007. Both will be eternally alive through their music and inspire humanity through generations.
Sri Chinmoy met Ravi Shankar in 1973. They met again in 2002 in San Diego, California. Sri Chinmoy honored Ravi Shankar in his unique way by lifting him up on a specially prepared platform and giving him ‘U Thant Award’. Afterwards they visited Yogananda Centre. Sri Chinmoy composed a beautiful song for Paramhansa Yogananda at the same spot where Yoganada wrote the famous book, ‘Autobiagraphy of a Yogi’. Sri Chinmoy’s disciples sang the song. Olympian Sudhahota Carl Lewis also joined. (Sudhahota is his spiritual name given by his Guru Sri Chinmoy) In October, 2002 Ravi Shankar traveled to New York to perform a private concert for Sri Chinmoy and his disciples. Sri Chinmoy composed a song for Ravi Shankar in his native Bengali. They were always in contact by phone till Sri Chinmoy left his body in 2007.
Sri Chinmoy giving U Thant Award to Ravi Shankar. Seen in the picture from L to R Ravi Shankar’s daughter Anoushka, his wife Sukanya, Ravi Shankar, Sri Chinmoy
This article in the December 21-27, 2012, edition of The Indian Panorama pays tribute to “two great musicians who gave India’s divine gift of soulful music to the whole world.”
Actress Judith Light, who had played the role of Angela in the long-running television series “Who’s the Boss,” visited Aspiration-Ground Sept. 17 to participate in Sri Chinmoy’s “Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart” program.
“My dear sister Angela, you have inspired millions and millions of people by offering them innocent joy and innocent delight,” the spiritual teacher said. He called her “self-giving heart and life” a tremendous help to all aspiring human beings.
He also sang a song he had composed in her honor, entitled, “Who is the Boss.”
Commenting on his lifting program, Sri Chinmoy said, “This is a group effort — you help me; I help you. But to tell the truth, only God can help us .... We cannot help anybody, but we can pray to God to act in and through us so that our dedicated service can blossom every day, every hour, every minute, every second.”
The actress replied: “I want to thank you from my heart .... I’m grateful to you for everything that you’re doing for the world — the demonstration that you are, the inspiration that you are, the model that you are.”
She also told him that when he was lifting her, “I could feel you underneath me before you lifted me up. I could feel your energy. It was a very powerful experience for me."
During the program, Sri Chinmoy also lifted her husband, soap opera star Robert Desiderio, and her two managers.
Actress. Judith Light visits Sri Chinmoy at Aspiration-Ground.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 33, August–Mid-Novemver 2002
Reported by Utpal Marshall
from New York
Video by Vasudeva Server
Sri Chinmoy beigins a 3-day Weightlifting Demonstration. Here are just some of the highlights:
Day one: September 15, Sri Chinmoy lifts a suspended car plus 2 people – total weight of 2,558 lbs. in Jamaica, New York.
Day two: September 16, Sri Chinmoy lifts bodybuilding legend Bill Pearl; Canadian strongman Hugo Girard; two stone lion statues and Hugo Girard, a total of 2,828 lbs., using a seated calf raise; 1,550 of his published works, a total of 1,179 lbs., using a seated calf raise; and a giant pumpkin, a total of 1,123 lbs., using a standing calf raise at Aspiration-Ground in Jamaica, New York.
Day three: September 17, Sri Chinmoy lifts three planes at Princeton Airport, New Jersey.
by Robert Swan for Simply Living magazine, in Canberra, Australia.
Question: You have said that your philosophy is a merging of the inner and the outer. Most people would interpret meditation as being an inner process and I wonder if you could explain for us how you feel marathon running has a place in spiritual development.
Sri Chinmoy: The inner running and the outer running complement each other. For outer running, we need discipline. Without a life of discipline, we cannot succeed in any walk of life. So when we do outer running, it reminds us of the inner running. The inner running, we know, is the longest distance, eternal distance. We do not know when it started and we have no idea when we are going to end it. Whereas, if it is a marathon, we know that after covering 26 miles and 385 yards, we come to an end.
For outer running, we need a life of discipline, endurance and patience — so many things which are good! In the spiritual life also we need many things — we have to conquer our fear, doubt, jealousy, insecurity and so on. So we feel that one is helping the other.
Early in the morning, if I have freshness in my mind and if I have sound health, then I will be inspired to pray and meditate. If I do not have good health, then I am not going to get up and pray and meditate. So it is my good health that is helping me to become a good seeker.
Again, if I am a true seeker, then I will try to do something for mankind on the physical plane. If I love God the Creator, I must also love God the Creation, otherwise what kind of love is it? If I love God, who has created this world, I must also love the Creation itself. So while we run outwardly, it is the Creation that we see and when we pray and meditate, we are trying to have a conscious awareness of the Creator.
Question: Does that mean that people who are not physically healthy cannot reach enlightenment?
Sri Chinmoy: Oh no, most definitely they can. The only thing is that we do not have to be the strongest man, we do not have to be a boxer or wrestler, no. I am saying that early in the morning if I do not have stomach upset or headache or fever, if I am running or doing some other physical activity, then it helps me a lot. Otherwise, if I enter into the Himalayan caves and start praying and meditating and neglecting the body, then how many days can I go on, how many weeks, how many months?
There are some people who tend to neglect the body, the needs of the body. We are not saying that we have to become the world’s greatest boxers or wrestlers, no. Only we should try to maintain a basic fitness. If I am physically fit, then I will be able to get up early in the morning. Then I can pray and meditate. If I am physically unfit, will I have the capacity to pray and meditate?
Question: I have heard from some teachers in the Shankaracharya tradition that yoga asanas are good because they lower the metabolism of the body and help lay the foundation for meditation. But running, or Western sport, would seem to be in the other direction. You do not see it in this way?
Sri Chinmoy: No, no, no, because I have practised these things. It is only that hatha yoga is an Indian way of thinking and there was a time when whatever the Westerners did was very bad and whatever we Indians did was always good. For some time it was difficult for Indians to see anything good in the West. So the Indian theory was that our asanas are by far the best and the Western way of approaching the reality was wrong.
Now I wish to say that there should be a combination of the Indian spirit, which is calm, quiet and tranquil, and the Western spirit, which is dynamic. We have to take them as one. The Indians think that the West is all restlessness, which is not true. And again, the West thinks that India is all poverty-stricken and Indians are lethargic, which is also not true. Both sides exaggerate the facts.
When we think of the West, we have to think of the good quality of the West, which is dynamism. And when we think of the East, let us say India, we have to think of calmness. It is like the ocean. On the surface there are waves and surges, it is all dynamic movement, and down at the bottom it is peaceful. We cannot separate the waves from the tranquillity which is at the bottom. They have to go together. Dynamism and peace must go together. If some people feel that by doing Indian asanas they will get a peaceful feeling, they are correct. But again, by running and jumping and taking physical activities we can acquire dynamism, otherwise it will be all one-sided. So dynamism and tranquillity must go together, like the obverse and reverse of the same coin.
Question: So in this philosophy are you creating something new, something different from what has been created generally in the East and in the West?
Sri Chinmoy: I do not want to say that I am creating something new. Only I am saying what the East and the West need to become complete and perfect. It is not my creation, only I am saying that I am aware of something and, if you see eye to eye with me, you will agree and, if you find it difficult to accept my theory, you are perfectly entitled to do so. I wish to say that the West has something to offer and the East has something to offer and their contributions are equally valuable.
Question: I do not think that Western sports people in the past have considered that their sport would lead them to enlightenment!
Sri Chinmoy: No, I am not saying that. Sports only will help. We have to know how much importance we are giving to sports. Our goal is not to be the world’s greatest athlete. Our goal is to have physical fitness and for that only the amount of sports — of running, jumping, throwing or tennis — that is necessary we shall do. Not to neglect the body as such is our aim.
If we pray and meditate soulfully, how can we neglect the body? It is one of the five members of our family — body, vital, mind, heart and soul. We shall pray with our heart, we shall meditate, and then, when activity is demanded of the body, we shall not neglect it. We have to give due importance to each member of our family. If we pay attention only to one member, then will not the others feel sad? If a father has five children, he has to pay attention to all the five.
Question: How do you see the new movement in the West towards the merging of scientific principles, like the quantum theory, with the ancient Vedic traditions or understanding of enlightenment?
Sri Chinmoy: Unfortunately, science is not my forté. I am totally ignorant of scientific developments. Since I know nothing about science, it would be the height of folly on my part to say anything about it. Only I know a little about the inner life, being a God-lover and Truth-seeker.
Question: If we look at your meditation technique itself, can you explain a bit about it?
Sri Chinmoy: We do not have any set technique or method. Everybody knows that in the beginning, when you start meditating, you should make the mind calm, quiet and tranquil so that you can have a very peaceful meditation. Then I tell my students: try to meditate the way you feel is best. If you like a flower, the fragrance of the flower, the beauty of the flower, then try to imagine the flower inside you. Petal by petal your life is blossoming, the way petal by petal a flower blossoms. Your whole life is blossoming like a flower.
Or, if you are inspired by a flame, try to imagine a burning flame inside you, rising up and illumining the inner darkness. If you feel the necessity of climbing up the Everest, that is, the highest in the spiritual life, then envision the flame within you climbing up high, higher, highest.
Then again, I tell my students, it is a matter of joy. If you get joy from the flower, then do it; if you get joy from the flame, then meditate on the flame; if you get joy looking at my picture, then do it. Anything that gives you joy while praying and meditating you should do. If you want to look into the vast sky or at the sea, or if you want to be at the foot of a tree and derive peace from the tree itself, then meditate at the foot of a tree. If you want to meditate on the power aspect of life, then look at the sun and meditate. And if you want to have mildness, softness, tenderness in your life, then you can meditate on the moon. I tell the individual, while meditating keep in mind the thing you like best in your life.
Question: You said in particular that meditating on the moon is for tenderness. Can you tell us some more of these particular relationships? Meditating on the sun?
Sri Chinmoy: The sun represents power, not the power that destroys, but the power that creates, originates. If you want to have power, then look at the sun and meditate.
Question: How do you know which one is right for you?
Sri Chinmoy: That is the thing! You have to choose the one that gives you the most joy. If you get power, are you getting more satisfaction? Or when you develop some sweetness, tenderness, fondness is there more joy in your being? You have to decide. Then, as I said before, if the flower gives you more joy than the flame, then meditate on the flower inside your heart. If the flame gives you more joy, then meditate on the flame. And I tell my students, if my picture gives you more joy, then meditate on that.
Question: What will that effect be?
Sri Chinmoy: I am saying that from the joy you are growing.
Question: Just from the joy?
Sri Chinmoy: Joy expands. You look at the flower and then the beauty and purity of the flower enter into you. Then, if you feel purity, on that day you will not indulge in impure thoughts because already you have received purity from the flower.
Question: So it is really the joy that creates the enlightenment?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. God created this world out of joy. We use the spiritual word ‘delight’. In the Vedas it says, “From delight we came. In delight we grow and, at the end of our journey, we enter into delight.” This means that we go back to our Source.
If you have joy, then you create, like a child. A child has joy all the time. That is why he is able to do things here and there. If I am an octogenarian with no interest in life, am I going to create something? When we are happy, we want to do something for the rest of the world. When we are miserable, we do not do anything, either for ourselves or for anybody else.
Question: Can you tell us a little about the state of enlightenment?
Sri Chinmoy: The state of enlightenment is not something that we discuss; it is something that we grow into. You may like the taste of mango. If you are eating mango, you will say it is most delicious, but if a second person is not eating it, if he does not have the opportunity to eat a mango, then how is he going to understand it? He sees how happy you are, but he is not eating it. Since he is not fortunate enough to have a mango, it will be sheer imagination for him to say it is like this, it is like this. It will be all mental.
Question: So there is no point in talking about it before?
Sri Chinmoy: It is a matter of belief. If I say that the mango is most delicious, then you will try to procure a mango and see for yourself. But if you do not believe me when I say that the mango is most delicious, if you say, “Oh no, he is telling a lie,” then you will not try to obtain one. So first we have to believe.
It is like a teacher and his students. If the teacher says he has seen the truth, then the students believe him. These people are my students. When I say that I have attained enlightenment, they believe me. By staying with me, they will be able to see whether I have attained enlightenment or not. If they see that I am a fake, then they will go away. So it is because of their belief in me that they have remained my students — and because of my belief in them, as well, that they are sincere and genuine seekers. They believe in my realisation and I believe in their aspiration, so it is our mutual belief that keeps us together.
Question: Many teachers that have come out of the East don't particularly like talking about their past.
Sri Chinmoy: In my case also, I always say that the past is dust. We are running towards the golden future. Today’s goal will be only tomorrow’s starting point, so why do I have to waste my time knowing who I was? The most important thing is what I am going to become. If I think of my past, why limit it to 40 or 50 years ago? Why not a few centuries before? At that time I was in the animal kingdom. Perhaps I was a lion or some other animal. Then if you go back even further, I was in the mineral and plant consciousness. So now, will I get joy if somebody tells me, “You were that particular tree” or “You were that tiger or panther?” Or, if somebody says, “No, you were a thief, you were a very undivine person in your past incarnation.” Does it give me any joy?
Interviewer: No.
Sri Chinmoy: Even if someone says, “You were a good person, a simple, honest person in your past incarnation,” does it help me much? Goodness is one thing, but perfection is totally different. We have to have all-embracing good qualities, then alone can we become perfect. So unless and until I have become perfect, I am not satisfied. I do not want to be satisfied with an iota of peace and bliss. I want to have an ocean of peace and bliss.
Sri Chinmoy: I was brought up in South India in a spiritual community. Then around the age of eleven or twelve, I got my inner illumination. At that time I developed free access to my Inner Pilot.
Question: You had a teacher?
Sri Chinmoy: I had a teacher in those days. Sri Aurobindo was my teacher. I was at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram for twenty years. But then, when I became fully aware of my inner realities and existence, the Supreme became my Guru. At first, Sri Aurobindo was in the physical body, then he left the body in 1950. But once I got my inner illumination, then I found that the Absolute Supreme is the only Guru — your Guru, my Guru, everybody’s Guru. Only the Lord Supreme is the Guru of the entire world.
Question: Can we look at the world situation? What do you think of it?
Sri Chinmoy: It is my inner feeling that the world is progressing. I do not encourage pessimistic ideas, thoughts and so forth. God Himself is inspiring the world, it is His Creation. He is not doomed to disappointment, far from it. He looks at His Creation and He sees that it needs encouragement, inspiration and guidance. When we create something, we try to make it better and more illumining and fulfilling. Even so, God has created His Creation and now He is trying to make it more beautiful, more fruitful. So the world is progressing. We are all trying to become better instruments of God.
Question: There are a lot of people who would suggest that the world situation is fairly tense right now.
Sri Chinmoy: That story we have heard right from the beginningless past! Four hundred years ago, if you read any history book, you will see that they said the world was going to end and people were not nice. You can start even from the Vedic era. Everybody, from the beginning of Creation, will say this world is not divine.
All right, it is not divine. Now also it is not divine, but the fact is that we are using the terms ‘divine’ and ‘perfect’. That means we have an inner urge to become perfect. When the very idea of goodness enters into our mind, that means we want to become good.
Our philosophy is to move forward. Once a sprinter leaves the starting blocks, he does not come back. He has to go forward until he reaches the goal.
Question: But in the scheme of things, according to Vedic thought, we are in the kali yuga now. Is that not correct?
Sri Chinmoy: If we say that in the Vedic era people were more spiritual or more illumined, it will be a deplorable mistake. It is only that we get tremendous joy by saying that our forefathers were most spiritual. We extol the past to the skies. But we have to see everything as a spiritual growth. The seed that was planted in Vedic times had tremendous potentiality. Gradually, gradually it became a tree and now it is flowering with spirituality. Nothing is touching the abysmal abyss. Everything is going up high, higher, highest. If we see the bright side, the Vedic Seers prayed and meditated. They gave us inspiration. Now in so many places people are praying and meditating.
Question: What does kali yuga mean then?
Sri Chinmoy: It is all mental theory. When people are not aspiring, when the consciousness has descended, it is called the kali yuga. But I want to say, was there a time when the consciousness did not descend? In the Mahabharata time, five thousand years ago, why did Sri Krishna have to fight against the Kauravas? He Himself asked the Pandavas to fight against the wrong forces. So you see, even five thousand years ago, there were undivine elements in the world. And if you can be aware of the satya yuga, the Golden Age, you will see that there were countless undivine people on earth at that time.
Our goal is not to look behind, not to enter into the past. Our goal is in the future, in the Eternal Now. Yesterday I was crawling, then I started walking. A few times I fell down. Then I began running. Now, will it help me to remember that I crawled? No. The only thing that will help me is to think, “I am a runner. I want to be a better runner, I want to be an excellent runner.”
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 34
Sri Chinmoy embarked on a whirlwind concert tour through Germany, performing in a different city every day for eight straight days.
The tour began in Freiburg on Sept. 14, then moved to Mannheim, Nurnberg Munich, Dresden, Berlin, Dortmund and Hamburg.
To handle the overflow crowds, both an afternoon and evening concert were given in Munich.
Nearly 30,000 people attended the nine concerts.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 39, August-Early November 2005
Heads of state from around the world sent letters and telegrams congratulating Sri Chinmoy on his 60th birthday on Aug. 27.
Letters came in from the Presidents of Austria and Sri Lanka and the Prime Ministers of Canada, Japan, Italy, New Zealand and Iceland.
Congratulations also were sent by South African leader Nelson Mandela and America's Elliott Richardson. Another well-wisher, U.S. Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, wrote: “The number of individuals who have been affected by your commitment to promoting world peace is truly awe-inspiring.”
The tributes were read out at the Master's Sept. 11 commemorative birthday dinner. The spiritual teacher opened the dinner with a silent meditation and an extemporaneous piano performance.
Speakers included U.N. General Assembly President Guido de Marco, who described the spiritual leader as a man who “has become a symbol of the oneness of humanity.”
Six-time Olympic gold medalist Carl Lewis said Sri Chinmoy stands for “all the things that we believe in.”
Other speakers included the Soviet Union’s Deputy U.N. Ambassador, Aleksandr Razvin, as well as several other U.N. Ambassadors, and prominent members of the Indian comm unity -including Pravin Panday, President of the Federation of Indian Associations, and Shankar Shetti, President of the Indian Congress of America.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 20, August – Early December 1991
New York Governor David Paterson recites a poem on hope by Sri Chinmoy, at the 9/11 memorial ceremony held at Ground Zero in New York City.
Hope
Knows no fear.Hope dares to blossom
Even inside the abysmal abyss.Hope secretly feeds
And strengthens
Promise.
Published in My Christmas-New Year-Vacation Aspiration-Prayers, part 26, nos. 29, 30, and 32.
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Sri Chinmoy started the San Juan International Masters' Games Sept. 9 with a short message to the athletes and a brief meditation. He also ran the 100 metres, completing the distance in 15.57 — his best time of the year.
The following month, on Oct. 29, he threw the javelin, discus and shot in the Sri Chinmoy Masters’ Games in Long Beach, California.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25, August–Mid-December 1995
by journalist Ms. Merle English*
at Annam Brahma Restaurant Jamaica, New York
Newsday: I want to do a diary in the paper starting this Sunday about Mother Teresa.
Sri Chinmoy: I am still mourning my supreme loss. I have such affection, admiration and adoration for Mother Teresa, and I have received from her boundless affection and compassion. This is not the time for me to speak about myself; this is the time only to offer my deepest gratitude to her because she was so kind and compassionate to me.
She was born on the 26th of August, and she was baptised on the following day, the 27th, which is also my birthday. I spoke with her on the telephone for 15 minutes on the 26th. In India this was actually the 27th because they are one day ahead. She knew that I was going to call, so she answered the phone herself. I asked her, "Mother, how do you feel?" She said, "I am fine. I am much better." She was blessing me on the phone for my birthday, and asking me about my activities. Then she passed away on the 5th of September.
Newsday: Where did you first meet her?
Sri Chinmoy: At the United Nations. On 24 October 1975 the Temple of Understanding invited religious leaders to an interfaith meeting, a spiritual summit conference, held in the Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium of the United Nations. I offered the opening meditation and then gave roses to all the participants, including Mother Teresa. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim was also there.
Newsday: After that first meeting with Mother Teresa, did you establish some kind of connection with her?
Sri Chinmoy: It took quite a few years to build up a connection. In 1989 a student of mine spoke with her on the telephone. At that time I was completing my 25th year of service in the West. So Mother Teresa gave this message, "God bless your efforts." Since then, we have been in regular contact. In 1994 I had the great good fortune to meet with her again in Rome.
Newsday: On what occasion?
Sri Chinmoy: She had kindly agreed to hold our Peace Torch. As you know, our Peace Run relay goes all over the world. Every two years the runners in our Peace Run carry the Torch through more than 70 countries.
During this meeting with Mother in 1994, I had a 15-minute private interview with her. Then she met with the fifty students of mine who were accompanying me. We sang songs for her.
This experience with Mother Teresa will always remain written on the tablet of my aspiration-heart. The very first thing she did showed her real humility. I was waiting for her in a very small room — smaller than the smallest. The room was very simple, with a small table and two chairs, and it had a very sacred vibration. According to Indian tradition, out of respect I left my sandals outside the door and went inside barefoot. When she saw me with only my socks, she said, "What are you doing? It is cold in here. Either you wear your shoes, or I am going to take off my sandals also and put them outside." What was more unbelievable, she was about to pick up my sandals and bring them inside to me. So I had to walk very fast, taking long strides, towards my sandals. I grabbed them and immediately put them on so that she would not have to carry them. Then she said, "Now it is all right."
I sat in front of her bowing my head, and we did not speak for two or three minutes. We were sitting face to face. Then she took my left hand and started massaging and caressing it. After that she started caressing my right hand. When the conversation started, the first thing she told me was how she has saved about two dozen women. She told me that she had gone to a jail in Calcutta to see some women of ill fame. They had been engaging in illegal activities, and the police had arrested them. They were all crying, saying, "Mother, Mother, we did not want to lead this kind of undivine life, but we were forced to do so because of poverty."
So Mother said to them, "I am taking you back. I will give you very good training." Then Mother told the jail authorities that she would take responsibility for these women.
Newsday: They let the women go out with her?
Sri Chinmoy: They said, "Mother, if you take responsibility for them, we will let them go." These women all became nuns, Sisters in her Missionaries of Charity. She said to me, "This is what love can do. The world needs only love, love, love." She herself went to the jail and freed those two dozen women. Afterwards, she gave them lots of affection, and they all joined her Order. She has done this many times. When she would hear that some women did not want to lead that kind of undivine life, she would go to the jail and bring them back and transform them. She was telling me that love can transform everybody's nature, which is so true. This was her inmost conviction. This is what she started with, and to the end of her life she kept this conviction.
But in one of her writings she admitted that even love cannot change some human beings. One sad experience occurred in her life. Even with her self-giving love, she could not change the nature of one particular individual who was preventing her from entering Albania to see her dearest mother. She said, "I thought that love can do everything, but love did not succeed." Her soul's conviction that love can do everything still remained, but every rule admits of exception. So here, in this one case, in spite of trying her utmost, she was very disappointed and disheartened. She could not see her mother before her mother passed away.
Newsday: After you saw Mother Teresa in Rome, you next met with her here?
Sri Chinmoy: Last year I met with her in the Bronx, and in June of this year I met with her two more times in the Bronx. On June 3rd I had a private meeting with her, and then two weeks later on June 17th, I met with her again. I was accompanied by forty of my students. They sang devotional songs for her in Bengali. She understood all the songs because she speaks Bengali. Then she invited them to come to India to sing at her Mission in Calcutta.
Newsday: Did you speak to each other in Bengali?
Sri Chinmoy: We spoke in English. I would have spoken in Bengali, but she prefers English. After that meeting, I wanted to speak to her again before she left for Calcutta. One of the Sisters in charge of the Bronx House, Sister Sabita, said she would make the arrangements for Mother to call me. Before this meeting I had spoken to Mother Teresa several times on the phone.
On the day of her departure from New York, I got a phone call from her. She phoned me from the Bronx around 11:30 in the morning and spoke to me for about ten minutes or so. But, that was not the end. Later that same day she wrote a most compassionate letter to me. Can you imagine? Around three or four o'clock, one of the Sisters from the Mission phoned us to get our proper address, saying, "Mother has written a letter to you prior to her departure." That was her last letter, her last written blessing to me. The very last time I spoke to her was on the 26th of August, when I called to wish her a happy birthday, and she gave me birthday blessings as well. She blessed me profusely. This is what she always did.
Three or four days later, when Princess Diana passed away, I wanted to have a special statement from Mother Teresa for a book I was doing about Princess Diana's spiritual dimension. I asked one of my students to phone her. She had already issued two statements, one for the royal family and one for the public. But she immediately gave another one at my request. That was my last contact with her. I did not speak to her directly, but I asked her for a comment and she gave one. At that time she mentioned again that she wanted me to go with her to China because China needs light. So many times she told me that I must come with her to China. She wanted us to go together to offer light. In that last contact, when she gave us a message about Princess Diana, she also said, "Tell him that we have to go to China." I will never forget this.
Newsday: You were in Poland when Mother Teresa died?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. I was watching the news about Princess Diana on television. All of a sudden, they announced that they had another piece of sad news: Mother Teresa had died. I was so shocked, because she had spoken to me only a few days earlier, telling me, "I am much better, I am much better." These were her words. O God, I was watching television with my head in my hands; I was stunned.
Newsday: What do you think about the fact that these two great figures died within days of one another? One was young and one old, but they seem to have had similar hearts because Diana was trying to do some good works, and Mother Teresa always did good works.
Sri Chinmoy: Two great losses to the world, that much I can say! One Senator just yesterday said something very, very nice about Mother Teresa. He said, "We have become poorer, but Heaven has become richer."
Newsday: But do you think there is any kind of message for the world in the fact that these two women died so close to one another?
Sri Chinmoy: The message is that we have to think more about the world than about ourselves. These two women have given us one message: we have to think of the rest of the world instead of just thinking about ourselves. Both of them considered the suffering, bleeding humanity as their very own. They both wanted to be of service to the poor and the suffering.
One was 36 years old, the other 87; but they died within days of one another. What can we learn from their passing? We have no idea when our time will come. So if we want to do something good for humanity, we must not waste time, but do it now. Every moment we are on earth, we can do good things for the world. Mother Teresa got an inner call, and from Albania she went all the way to India. In Calcutta she found her true home. She was living proof that the world is one home.
Newsday: Did she ever talk to you about why she felt drawn to Calcutta more than to any place else in India?
Sri Chinmoy: Her Saviour Jesus Christ inspired her from within to go to Calcutta and serve Him there. She is the ocean of compassion and I am only a tiny drop, but let me give you an example of what I am saying by telling you something about my own life. I was born in India, and I spent many years praying and meditating there. I could have stayed in India, but my Inner Pilot — you say 'God' but I use the term 'Inner Pilot' — wanted me to come to America to be of service to Him here.
Similarly, she could have remained a nun in Albania, but she was prompted from deep within by Somebody to come to India. In her case, Somebody means the Saviour Jesus Christ. In my case I use the term 'Inner Pilot'. He commanded me to come to America the Beautiful to be of service to humanity. The entire world is His House. Each country is like a room. For several years I happened to live in one particular room. Then He said, "Now you must go and live in another room." So I came to this other room, but it is in the same mansion.
Newsday: That is sweet — the idea that service can be offered wherever you're called, because it is all one world.
Sri Chinmoy: It is one world. If my Inner Pilot says, "You come and serve Me here," how can I say no? If I have love for my Inner Pilot — which I do — if I want to give my life entirely to please Him in His own Way, how can I have a different idea?
Newsday: What memory of Mother Teresa stands out most in your mind?
Sri Chinmoy: What stood out for me from the first time I met with her privately was her compassion, affection and concern. First she wanted to bring me my sandals. Then, as soon as I sat down, she started caressing my left hand and right hand. The very first thing she shared with me was the story about the women she had saved. Her message is love and compassion. Her life-boat plied constantly between two shores, two destinations: love and compassion.
It is very easy to criticise human beings; everybody can do that. But let us see how many people can go out and work with lepers and people with AIDS. We can talk in a general way about helping the world, but if we have to face one dying person, we will not go. We do not even want to go near a hospital unless our dearest ones, the members of our immediate family, are very sick. Otherwise, even when our friends are in the hospital, we just send flowers. In Mother Teresa's case, the whole world became part of her immediate family. But Mother Teresa took people from the street, from the very gutter! Was that not her infinite love and compassion? She is at once humanity's flower-heart and Divinity's fragrance-soul. From my personal experience I can say that this moment she was like my sister and the next moment she was like my mother. When I bowed to her, she would put both her hands on my head, like a mother blessing her son. She had every right to place her palm on my head and bless me because at that time she was playing the role of the mother. Then, the next moment, she would play the role of the sister and demand that I come to China with her to help her, or she would look at me with utmost affection. At that time she was like an older sister looking with such love and appreciation at her little brother.
Newsday: She looks like a person who was very jovial.
Sri Chinmoy: Absolutely! Her divine humour was always aimed not at hurting people but at alleviating their suffering. When somebody is suffering, you can cut a joke to hurt him. Again, you can cut a joke only to relieve him of his pain. When a dear one is in the hospital, first the relatives pray and meditate for God to cure him. Then they speak to the sick person about light things, absolutely unimportant, mundane things so that they can relieve his tension. Otherwise, if they start talking about deeper philosophy, the patient's illness may only get worse!
Newsday: Exactly! It will make that person feel a little bit easier. Mother Teresa must have been fond of you.
Sri Chinmoy: She was very fond of me! We have so many pictures of her pouring her affection into me. From each of our meetings we have many pictures showing how she was blessing me, showering me with her affection and appreciating my activities. Always she told me that she was praying for me every day, and she told me to also pray for her. Even on my birthday she said, "I am praying for you, and my Sisters will pray for you. You also must pray for me." Every time she spoke to me she told me to pray for her.
Newsday: That is what Jesus said, too.
Sri Chinmoy: It is an emotional demand. As I said, we were like mother and son, brother and sister. So she would tell me: "You should do this, you must do this. You must come with me to China."
Newsday: Was she aware of the difficulties for you to go there?
Sri Chinmoy: No, I did not tell her that. I only said, "Mother, when the time comes I shall definitely accompany you."
Newsday: You met her successor, too?
Sri Chinmoy: Her successor, Sister Nirmala, is so nice to me, so kind and affectionate. When I went to see Mother Teresa in the Bronx, she came up to me and introduced herself: "I am Sister Nirmala." I had known about her, so I had brought a gift for her. She was with Mother Teresa when I gave Mother this book that I had written about her (showing book). So I shall keep a connection with Sister Nirmala. I have already sent a message to her.
Newsday: You gave this book to Mother Teresa?
Sri Chinmoy: It was my birthday present to her. I dedicated the book to her and gave it to her personally when I saw her in June. Then she gave her blessings for the book. On the first page she wrote, "God bless you," and put her signature there. I took that page and gave it to the printer, and it was inserted into a later edition of the book. For about fifteen minutes Mother Teresa browsed through the book in front of me. A few days later when I spoke to her, she said she had liked it very much.
Newsday: You gave her this book not knowing that in a short while she would not even be around anymore!
Sri Chinmoy: If we do not pray and meditate, then we have to do everything ourselves. But if we pray and meditate, then God does everything for us. I knew nothing, but God knew what was going to happen. Why did I write the book and offer it to her as a birthday present in June? Her birthday is in August, so I should have given her the book in August. But something within me was telling me, "The sooner the better!"
When I called her on my birthday, I got her last blessing. This will remain in my memory. I will treasure this last blessing that I got on my birthday. Then, three or four days later when I wanted a statement from her about Princess Diana, she gave me one. It appeared in my book about Princess Diana.
Newsday: When did you publish this book about Princess Diana?
Sri Chinmoy: A few days ago. I had an interview with her on the 21st of May — just three months before she died. Then she wrote me two letters in June, three letters in the month of July and her last letter on the 7th of August — not even a month before she left the body.
Newsday: This is amazing!
Sri Chinmoy: Her last letter mentions Newsday. Your newspaper said she was the Queen of American hearts, so I sent her a copy of the Newsday clipping. Also, I was grateful to be an instrument in arranging her last interview with Mother Teresa. She first met with Mother in 1992 in Rome. This year she wanted to meet her again, but she was unable to track her down. So I said that I would be responsible for making arrangements because I was going to have an interview with Mother. When I told Mother Teresa on the phone that Princess Diana wanted to see her, Mother said, "Tell her to come to New York." But Princess Diana wanted to see Mother in Europe. Then Mother Teresa was joking with me, saying, "If she does not want to come to New York to see me, then tell her to come and see me in Calcutta." So I wrote to the Princess and gave her Mother Teresa's phone number and address in the Bronx. Then she phoned up Mother and finally saw her.
Newsday: That is amazing, amazing! God seems to have put you in the position to touch these two people's lives.
Sri Chinmoy: It is not that I touched their lives but that I was given a golden opportunity to be of service to them. God wanted Princess Diana to bring her spiritual dimension to the fore. In my case, at the age of four I started praying and meditating. And at the United Nations I have been offering my prayers to the entire world-community for the last 27 years. Princess Diana had so many good qualities, but her prayer-life had not come to the fore. She did so much work for charity, for the poor, for the sick; but she also had another aspect, a spiritual aspect. That is why she wanted to see Mother Teresa and why she invited me to come and see her at Kensington Palace. Otherwise, she could have said, "Oh, I do not care for spiritual people." But her heart cried for God's Love and Light, the Light that Mother Teresa saw and served in Jesus Christ.
This same higher power made it possible for Princess Diana and I to meet just before her passing. For years I had wanted to meet her, without success. How did I succeed at the eleventh hour? It is because of the intercession of a higher power. And with Mother Teresa also I developed such a close connection in the last few years of her life. I first met her in 1975, but many years passed before I saw her again. It is because at that time it was not necessary. But when God's choice Hour struck, we became closer than the closest.
And with Princess Diana, if I had not had that first and last interview, we never would have gotten to know one another. Plus these letters! How could one imagine that she would write on the 7th of August and three weeks later leave the earth-planet? After the 7th of August I doubt that many people received letters from her. And perhaps very few people had private interviews with her after the time I met her in May.
Newsday: That's right, exactly! But apparently she was reaching out, too, in wanting to meet with you, and with Mother Teresa so soon afterwards.
Sri Chinmoy: Right! She was the one who asked me to make arrangements. She said, "I cannot track Mother Teresa down." I said, "I will do it." So I did it. I was the instrument, but her heart wanted to have the meeting. Otherwise, when I said to her that Mother Teresa is so kind and affectionate to me, she could have said, "Yes, yes, I am also an admirer of hers." But why did she say, "I want to meet with her. Can you tell me how I can meet with her?" She could have stopped at saying, "Yes, yes, I have deep admiration for her," but she was so eager to meet with her. Something inside Princess Diana was prompting her.
Newsday: What a wonderful thing! Just in time!
Sri Chinmoy: She met with her in the middle of June. Then, within a few months both were gone. So it was all God-ordained. When we pray and meditate, God does everything for us.
Newsday: That's just simply amazing. You are so right. When you tune into a higher power, things happen.
Sri Chinmoy: The higher powers do it for us because we are their children. Children know nothing. Parents know what will give the children joy, so the parents do it. Children only know how to cry. The rest is done by the parents.
Newsday: This has been really wonderful! Just absolutely wonderful! Will you be here for the rest of this week, or will you be travelling again soon?
Sri Chinmoy: I have just returned from Oslo and Warsaw. I was giving Peace Concerts there. I dedicated the Oslo concert to Princess Diana and the Warsaw concert to Mother Teresa. On the stage at Warsaw we had huge pictures of Mother Teresa.
Newsday: Mother Teresa brings together both the spiritual life and the life of service.
Sri Chinmoy: She was a woman of prayer plus service. Mother Teresa always said, "Pray for me, pray for me, pray for me." In her, God wanted to unite service and prayer. In Diana's case, she was a woman of service — service to mankind. In my case, I pray and meditate first, and I also serve. I have been to so many countries offering Peace Concerts. Mother Teresa also did both. Every day she prayed and, at the same time, she served.
Princess Diana was young; she did not get the time or opportunity to enter into the prayer-life. That is why she did not take the prayer-life so seriously. But the service-life she did take seriously. At every moment she went here and there — to Angola, to Yugoslavia, to Pakistan and other places. She took the service-life more seriously, whereas Mother Teresa took both prayer and service seriously.
Newsday: I am really happy that I made an effort to come, because this is far more than I expected. I think that we have touched on an aspect that nobody else has really dealt with — the connection between the three of you. It's amazing.
Sri Chinmoy: God brought us together. Mother Teresa was at the end of her life and Diana was at the prime of her life. We three were like a triangle. I came in between, like a devoted bridge between the two.
Newsday: You brought them together. That is more fascinating than the mind can even encompass.
Sri Chinmoy: The mind can never comprehend the inner realities. The mind is very limited; it is only a collector of information. With our mind we have read many books and talked to so many people on earth; but we have only collected information. Real knowledge and wisdom come from prayer and meditation — not from books. Otherwise, the professors and teachers would have been ruling the world. But they would have only misguided us. The more we remain in the mind, the more we are misguided. But if we can live in the heart, we are lifted up.
When we are in the mind, it is like being encaged; all the windows and doors are closed and we cannot go beyond it. It is like a prison cell, and we want to come out of it. But when we are in the heart, it is like being outside in a beautiful garden. So it is up to us. We can live in our own mind-prison, which we have created; and again, we can live in our own heart-garden, which is also our creation. If we are in the mind, the prison cell welcomes us; if we are in the heart, the garden welcomes us.
Newsday: That's right. Exactly! Sri Chinmoy, I cannot tell you how happy I am now that we had this conversation.
Sri Chinmoy: We are sailing in the same boat. So many reporters have come, but they have not opened their hearts so beautifully and spiritually the way you have done. With one hand we cannot clap. Two hands are needed.
Let me autograph this book for you. (Sri Chinmoy signs his book about Princess Diana and draws seven birds.) Seven is for the seven higher worlds. There are seven higher worlds. When I die, when you die, we shall have to go to the seven higher worlds.
Newsday: And I was born in the seventh month, too. This is wonderful. Thank you. Thanks are not enough. You know how I feel. I appreciate this.
Sri Chinmoy: Everything happens at God's choice Hour. These things could not have taken place if God's Hour had not struck. One was in Calcutta, one was in England and one was here in New York. See how God united us because of our love for Him. If we love God, then God brings everything together.
Newsday: I believe that, I really do. This is why I am here.
* Her full-page article appears in the 'Queens Life' section of the Sunday edition on September 28th.
Published in Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soul, part 3
PHNOM PENH — The President of Cambodia’s International University, Professor Uon Sabo, presented Sri Chinmoy with an Honorary Doctorate of Humanities in Peace Studies at a ceremony on Sept. 7.
This was the first time the University had conferred the degree upon a foreigner.
One of the speakers, Cambodia’s Secretary of State of the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport, Pit Chamnan, told the gathering of professors, government officials and students that Dr. Chinmoy’s “humanitarian activities and work for peace really impress the people and the government of Cambodia.”
The spiritual leader, he continued, “has touched the lives of millions of people and has brought them a message of hope and love.”
Sri Chinmoy called the award “not an honor but a supreme blessing.” As part of the awards ceremony, he performed on the esraj and gave a talk.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 39, August – Early November 2005
PHNOM PENH — Prime Minister Hun Sen of Cambodia received the U Thant Peace Award Sept. 6 at a ceremony in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
At a meeting beforehand, Sri Chinmoy told the Prime Minister that he is the “heart and the breath of Cambodia” and praised him for “the hope you have instilled in the heart of every Cambodian and the promise you have made to the life of every Cambodian.“
The Prime Minister replied, “I am very grateful to my elder brother for your kind words, which are ... not only an encouragement to myself but also to all the people of Cambodia.”
Later, at a ceremony attended by some 300 Ministers and other government officials, Sri Chinmoy presented Hun Sen with the U Thant Peace Award on behalf of Sri Chinmoy: The Peace Meditation at the United Nations.
He told the gathering that Hun Sen’s “heart dreams in and through each citizen of Cambodia. He is your hope and you are his hope.”
The Prime Minister called the honor one of “the most meaningful events in my career and the development of my country.”
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen of Cambodia receives a medal from Sri Chinmoy.
Published in Anahata Nada, August – Early November 2005
SKOPJE, MACEDONIA — Sri Chinmoy has been named the recipient of the prestigious Mother Teresa Award.
The Award, presented by the Humanitarian Organization Mother Teresa, a private foundation in Macedonia, is regarded as the country's highest national honor.
Presented annually on Sept. 5, the anniversary of Mother Teresa’s death, the Award was first given out last year to Pope John Paul II.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 32, August 2001 – mid-November 2001
Sri Chinmoy, who was in frequent contact with both Mother Teresa and Princess Diana in the weeks before their passing — and was instrumental in their meeting — recently held special memorial services for his two dear friends.
In a private service for Princess Diana Sept. 2 at Aspiration-Ground, he declared: “Human frailties we all have but divine achievements founded on self-giving can be found in the likes of very few on earth. Indeed, Princess Diana is one of those very, very rare souls.”
At his Sept. 4 Oslo Peace Concert dedicated to her memory, the Master eulogized her as “the Queen of the aspiring and self-giving humanity.” He also held a memorial for her at the United Nations on Oct. 3. And in the last poem of his new book about her, he said:
Diana, the Princess of Wales,
Dies
For Diana, the Empress of the World,
To live eternally in the heart-garden of humanity.
OSLO — The City of Oslo was dedicated as a Sri Chinmoy Peace Capital in a day-long series of events held Sept. 4.
As an official guest of the City, the Master was welcomed by Deputy Mayor Svenn Kristiansen at City Hall, site of the yearly Nobel Peace Prize ceremony.
Next came a visit to the Oslo Harbor, which had been named a Sri Chinmoy International Peace Harbor in 1993. There the peace advocate was received by Port Director Per Mavritz Hanssen.
The Oslo dedication ceremony — attended by the Deputy Mayor, representatives of the City Council, an official from Bergen (another Sri Chinmoy Peace City) and other dignitaries — took place at the Holmenkollen Ski Jump, where the Peace Capital plaque was permanently mounted.
Oslo was declared a Sri Chinmoy Peace Capital a few weeks earlier by unanimous vote of the City Council.
Sri Chinmoy ended the day by offering a peace concert in Oslo’s Gamle Logen Concert Hall.
Sri Chinmoy and Princess Diana pose for an historical photo at Kensington Palace. (PHOTO: BHAVANI)
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 26, Mid-August–November 1997
at Aspiration-Ground
with Mr. Radhakrishna Pathak, Associate Editor of a newspaper in Delhi, India
Sri Chinmoy: Your wife is a great devotee of Mother Kali. Does she know that I am also a devotee of Mother Kali? I am still alive because of Mother Kali. When I was a young boy, in my teens, I was a great athlete. I was brought up in the Sri Aurobindo Ashram. There I was decathlon champion for two consecutive years. I stood first overall in ten items. I am bragging! I was also the fastest sprinter for sixteen consecutive years. According to Indian standards I was quite good.
Now I am coming back to Mother Kali. One day we had a 400-metre race. I ran the fastest for the first 300 metres. Then I became tired and exhausted. For the last 100 metres I was about to collapse. Finally, when I completed the 400 metres, I did collapse. My soul left my body while I was lying down at the finish line. Then, while my soul was going up, whom did I see? My Mother Kali! She very forcefully grabbed my soul and put it back inside my body. That is why I am still alive. Otherwise, my soul would have left for good.
Of all the Cosmic Goddesses, Mother Kali is my dearest Mother. She is the Mother of fastest speed, and again she is the Mother of Compassion. All the divine Mothers, the divine Cosmic Goddesses, have Compassion, but Mother Kali is the fastest in everything. We can make mistakes hundreds of times. We can wallow in the pleasures of ignorance for a long, long time. But if her Grace descends, in the twinkling of an eye, all our weaknesses, shortcomings and so-called sins can be nullified, illumined or purified. This is Mother Kali. I am so happy to learn that your wife is a great devotee of Mother Kali, since I also happen to be the same.
Mr. Pathak: I do not know how I am here. It is only through your grace. It really amazes me that I am here.
Sri Chinmoy: You have a very beautiful soul. Your parents have given you a most beautiful, soulful name, Radhakrishna. You embody both Radha and Krishna. Radha was all love, all devotion for Sri Krishna. Her love for Sri Krishna was unparalleled. Again, look at Sri Krishna's love for Radha. The mother aspect in Radha is the compassion aspect. It is like a magnet. It is infinitely easier to go to Lord Krishna through Radha than otherwise. In human life also, it is easier to go to the father via the mother. If you have to go to the father directly, it is difficult. But the mother knows when the father is taking rest or when he is in a humorous mood. She knows when the father is accessible and available. The mother is the bridge between the children and the father, because the children have a more intimate connection with their mother than with their father. The mother represents Mother Earth. The father represents Father Heaven. It is difficult to go straight to Heaven. We need the bridge: the mother.
The mother may be on the fourth floor and the child on the first floor. But as soon as the mother hears the child cry, the mother comes down to see if the child needs milk or something else. If the father hears the child cry, he says, "I am coming," but he takes a little time. The father feels that the child is not going to die in a minute. But the mother's affection is such that she feels something has happened. Nothing has happened; only the child is crying for the mother's milk or something else. But the mother cannot wait for a fleeting second.
The mother's wisdom is in affection. The father's wisdom is in light. The father will tell us about higher philosophy, about God's universality, about God's self-transcendence — everything that we want to know. When we have to deal with something vast, vaster, vastest, the father comes into the picture. But when we have to deal with something intimate, more intimate, most intimate, immediately the mother comes into the picture. When we have any little pain, at that time we shall call the mother, and the mother will come.
The father represents vastness and light. The mother represents intimacy and affection. Both are needed. The Vedas say that inside the finite is the Infinite. Inside the heart is the soul, and the soul represents God. Inside a tiny atom is the cosmos. In the same way, the mother and father are like a beautiful flower and its fragrance. They cannot be separated.
I am so glad that your parents have given you the name Radhakrishna. Radha is the mother, and Sri Krishna is the father. The higher we go, the clearer it becomes to us that Radha and Sri Krishna are inseparably one. It may appear that Radha is only a devotee touching Lord Krishna's feet. Yes, that is true; but Lord Krishna raised her high, higher, highest. So when we see Radha and Sri Krishna together, at that time it is the highest transcendental aspect of God: God the Creator and God the creation together; God in His masculine Form and God in His feminine Form. This is Radhakrishna.
Again, Sri Krishna and Mother Kali are one. I have written many songs and stories saying that Lord Krishna and Mother Kali are one. They are inseparable, although they have different names. If you sincerely worship Lord Krishna, you are bound to get blessings from Mother Kali. Similarly, if you pray to Mother Kali, Lord Krishna will definitely bless you. They are absolutely one.
You are a father; again, you are a great newspaper editor. While you are working in the office, they call you Mr. Pathak. Your children call you "Father" or "Baba" in our Bengali, or something like that. In French it will again be totally different. You are the same person, but each individual is calling you by a different name. Your divine reality is the same whether you are in the office or at home eating with your children. But your divine reality is expressing itself in different ways at different places. Your son will never be happy by calling you Mr. Pathak. He will feel miserable. But your colleagues and acquaintances will get joy in calling you by that name. When you are in a gathering with your friends, again you show another aspect. I get joy by calling you by your first name. Somebody else will get joy by calling you by your surname. Again, your children and your wife will call you in different ways. Everybody knows that you are the same person, but everybody gets joy by calling you a different name. To give each individual joy in a specific way we came into the world. We are all God's creations. I may get more joy by calling to Lord Krishna, whereas you may get more joy by calling to Mother Kali.
I was born in Chittagong. At the age of eleven and a half I went to the Sri Aurobindo Ashram. I stayed there until the age of 32. Then I came here to be of service to God. My philosophy is to love and serve. If we love someone, then we have to serve that person. The mother loves the child; that is why she serves the child. The child loves the mother; that is why the child serves the mother. If we truly love God, then we will have no hesitation to serve Him. In the same way, if we serve someone, definitely we love him. We serve our parents on the strength of our love. This moment we love someone. The next moment we serve the same person.
Do you have any specific question you wish to ask?
Mr. Pathak: Questions always come and go. Please bless me so that I can spread your message.
Sri Chinmoy: Your soul contacted me at least two years ago. Physically you have come to see your Guru now, but spiritually at least two years ago your soul made its connection with me. Now you have come here for the outer recognition, but the inner recognition was made long ago.
Mr. Pathak: For years I didn't believe in a Guru.
Sri Chinmoy: Why do you have to believe in a Guru, as long as you believe in yourself? If you have faith in yourself, that means you have faith in something high, divine, pure and immortal. You do not have to believe in a Guru as long as you believe in yourself.
Mr. Pathak: But one cannot know oneself without a Guru.
Sri Chinmoy: What does the Guru do? The function of a Guru is very simple. He tells you, "Look, you do not know what you have inside you. Inside you is a safe. Inside the safe you have the most beautiful, most expensive diamond, but you have misplaced the key. My job is to help you search for the key. I will search for the key and find it. Then I shall give you the key and you will open the safe. As soon as it is open, you will see the diamond inside you. This is your divinity."
The Guru's role is to show you the way. You have lost your own divinity, but the Guru comes to bring you back to your own divinity. The divinity is already there. The Guru does not give you the divinity; God has given you the divinity. But the Guru is the messenger boy. The Guru shows you your divinity.
The Guru is the bridge between man and God. You need a bridge to go from one place to another. When Sri Rama had to go to Lanka to fight against Ravana, he needed a bridge to his destination. In our case we need a bridge to go to the Golden Shore. The Guru tells us that the Highest is the only Guru. The real Guru is God. The real Guru is your Father and my Father. But since you are younger than I in the spiritual life, I tell you, "Come with me. I will show you where our Father is." The eldest son of the family knows more about the father than the youngest son.
You are my spiritual brother, just as others are my spiritual brothers and sisters. The real Guru is the Absolute Lord Supreme. I have already realised Him. You also have to realise Him. Now the time has come for me to help mankind to go to the highest Absolute Lord Supreme, because I know I have already realised Him. Not only in this incarnation, but in previous incarnations also I have realised Him. In this incarnation, God out of His infinite Bounty wants me to manifest Him. In my previous incarnations, I spent time in the Himalayan caves, near the Nepalese border. How many austerities I practised inside the Himalayan caves! In this incarnation God wants me to be in the ultramodern country, America.
Everything is God's creation. If He wants me to be in a cave, I will be in a cave. If He wants me to be in a palace, I will be in a palace. That is called surrender. Again, if He wants me to be in India, I will be in India. It was He who brought me to America because He wanted me to serve mankind here in America. Otherwise, how many countries and how many people there are that could have taken my service! Had I remained in India, in a village or somewhere else, God would not have given me that opportunity to be of service. Now people from so many countries, even the former Soviet Union, are all coming here. Here in America God wanted me to act like a tree. A tree has so many branches, so many flowers, so many fruits and countless leaves. He chose America for me so that I could be of greatest service to humanity.
Again, if God asks me to go back to India, I will go happily. At the Sri Aurobindo Ashram I was the secretary of Nolini Kanta Gupta. He was Sri Aurobindo's main secretary. I was quite happy there. I was an athlete, and I wrote considerably. In those days they did not give degrees in the Sri Aurobindo Ashram, but I studied a lot. I could have remained in India; again, I can return to India. Whatever God wants me to do, I shall do it happily. If He asks me to sit down, I shall sit down. If He wants me to run, I shall run. He asked me to come and be in America in the hustle and bustle of life. When I came to America, America was like a lion roaring! Pondicherry was such a mild village. It was simplicity incarnate. From simplicity I had to come into diversity, because God wanted me here, and He is expressing Himself in and through me here. In exactly the same way He wants to express Himself in and through you and through everybody.
There are various ways to work to spread God's Light, and you are already doing it. So often you are publishing spiritual things, and many, many people have come to learn about me from your newspaper. I understand it is your strongest desire to have a few fellow disciples or seekers in India. If you can inspire a few seekers in Delhi to follow our philosophy, that will again be of tremendous service. From one we become many. You see that so many people have come to our path from Germany. From one it became many. One seeker inspired some people, and they in turn inspired others. When one seed germinates, it becomes a plant, and then it becomes a huge banyan tree with thousands of leaves.
Swami Vivekananda's philosophy was accepted in the very beginning by one disciple, a school teacher from South India. He was the one who started spreading Swami Vivekananda's light. Always the seed is one. Then eventually it becomes a tree and it produces countless seeds. One seed enters the ground, and when it grows into a tree, it produces so many seeds, so many flowers. Then many travellers and pilgrims come and enjoy the beauty and fragrance of the flowers. So if you are inspired, you can also inspire others.
When a child smiles at his father and mother the parents feel that they have got the whole world. The child does not have money. The child does not have wisdom. The child has only a smile. One smile from a child conquers our heart. Others can give us wisdom and so many other things, but we are not satisfied. But just a little smile from a child gives us such joy and such satisfaction.
In exactly the same way, when Lord Krishna smiles at us or Radha smiles at us, we get the whole world. Lord Krishna does not have to give a seeker ten houses or ten cars. When Lord Krishna smiles at a seeker, the seeker gets the whole world. What is God-realisation? Only a smile and satisfaction. If we see that God is satisfied with us, God is smiling at us, that means we have got the whole world. But to get that Smile from God, we have to prepare ourselves. We have to pray; we have to meditate; we have to give Him everything that we have and everything that we are.
Our difficulty is that when we go to God, we feel that we have to be pure, we have to be sincere. God says, "All right, become pure, become sincere. But if you are still impure, where will you go? If you are still insincere, where will you go? You have to come to Me with your purity and with your impurity, with your sincerity and your insincerity."
A child goes out of the house and he plays on the ground, in sand, mud and clay. Then he goes to the right person: his mother. What does his mother do? His mother cleans him. Before the child comes to his mother, does he first enter into a pond or a swimming pool to clean himself? No, he comes to his mother full of mud, clay and sand. He knows that his mother will say, "He is my child," and that she will wash him and show him all her affection.
In exactly the same way, we have to go to God with all our imperfections. If we say, "No, first I have to conquer my impurity, I have to conquer my jealousy and insecurity," then we shall have to wait for millions of years more. We say, "God, you know my heart. I am insincere, I am impure, I am jealous. You can just kick me away." But, God will say, "You come to Me. The Hour has struck. It is time for you to run towards me."
When Lord Krishna used to play on the flute at odd hours, did Radha care for anything else? She had her own husband, but she ran to Lord Krishna because the call had come. When Lord Krishna played on the flute at any hour, Radha and the gopis all used to run, because the Hour had struck. They gave up everything. At that time they were not thinking, "O my God, we are not pure." They used to run to get Lord Krishna's affection, love and blessings.
In our case, the Hour has struck. When the Hour strikes, at that time we shall not look around or see if we are properly dressed. God is not asking us for our appearance. God is asking us for our heart. The child's love for his mother and father compels him to run towards his parents. In exactly the same way we have to run towards God, no matter what we are, no matter where we are. We have to run towards God because the Hour has struck. God says, "You come with your wife, with your children and with your larger family. Your larger family is your friends, your dear ones and acquaintances."
Once upon a time I did not know my spiritual children. Now they have become part and parcel of my life. Like a human father, how many times I scold them and insult them! But their love is so strong that they know how much I love them. In exactly the same way, parents scold their children, but the children do know how much love the parents have for them. Here it is one family, one family — a oneness-home.
When you go back to Delhi, you can spread your Guru's light by talking to people. More than that, they will see something totally different in you. As soon as your friends and colleagues look at you, they will see something different in your eyes, in your face. It is something better, something higher, something purer, something more divine. Now you have come to your Master's place, and from here you will carry the inner beauty, inner fragrance, inner light and inner delight. After being here for two weeks you will go back. Your wife has known you for so many years. Now she is bound to see and feel in you something spiritual, divine and most illumining. She will say, "My God, what has happened to my husband?" How much progress she is bound to see in your human eyes, because she herself loves Mother Kali.
Your very presence will be able to inspire your friends, colleagues and dear ones. The things that you are now receiving from your Guru or from your own aspiration will come to the fore, and you will be able to manifest them. As you sow, so you reap. Here you have sown divinity; there your divinity will come to the fore.
Mr. Pathak: Fear sometimes does not allow me to let myself go. It holds me back.
Sri Chinmoy: Fear of what? When your children were two years old, you were so tall and stout. Were they afraid of you? No, because they knew that you were their father. Your children were very small, but they knew you in your affection aspect, and they were not afraid of you. It is like the ocean. The drop is not afraid of the ocean because it knows its oneness with the ocean. A little child is not afraid of his father because he knows that person is his own father. Why should he be afraid of his own father's love?
So, what are you afraid of? What makes you fearful? Jumping into the unknown?
Mr. Pathak: Uncertainty.
Sri Chinmoy: At night you go to sleep, and then you get up early in the morning at five o'clock or six o'clock. If you think of the night as such, if you look into the night sky, it is something unknown. Again, if you look at the sky with your heart, you are not afraid of it because you have become the sky itself. The drop of water has established its identity with the vast ocean, so the drop is not afraid of the ocean. A child has established his oneness with his father. The father is so tall and stout, and he is an important person, an editor. But the child does not care what the father's title is. He knows that his father is all love. Your child does not care what you are in the outer world. He cares only for your affection, for your compassion, for your love.
We are afraid precisely because we do not establish our oneness with the vastness. The unknown does not remain unknown; the uncertain does not remain uncertain. Before the dawn breaks, before the sunrise, night is unknown. But when we see the sunrise, the unknown becomes known. The spiritual life is also like that. We aspire for the Highest, but then there is uncertainty. Not only in the spiritual life, but in ordinary life at every moment, before we arrive at our goal, it is all uncertain. I have a goal, but I do not know what will happen even if I arrive at the goal. Will I see a most beautiful garden, or something totally different?
We have to know what will happen from within, or we have to believe in somebody who also experienced the same problem at the beginning of his spiritual journey. People who have realised God, like Lord Krishna, Lord Buddha, Sri Ramakrishna, Sri Aurobindo and others, also had the same problem. Then they saw that the unknown, the unknowable, can be knowable. The unknown can easily be known. In the alphabet, after A comes B, and then C and D. You teach your child A, and at that time B is unknown to him. You know that B is right after A. Once I was talking to an American child only two years old. I was telling him that after A comes B and then C. He thought I was a magician! Where did B and C come from? For him, they were coming from Heaven or somewhere else. So, for adults A, B, C and D are known, but for a little child they are unknown.
In the same way, when you have fear of the unknown, you have to feel that it does exist, and many people have seen it. The place that you are unaware of today has been visited by many people. It is not something dangerous; it is not something destructive. No, no, no! We can conquer uncertainty or fear of the unknown by having faith in someone else who has gone there.
In a big palace there are many, many rooms. When you approach the palace you see that it is all darkness, because you do not know there is a light switch inside. But an electrician will come and tell you, "Here is the switch — just turn it on." Then everything is all right. Before you turn on the light, you are so afraid because the palace is all darkness. In the same way, the Master comes and turns on the switch. Then you see the unknown is all illumined. But if you go there alone and you do not know where the light is, then naturally you will be afraid.
For everything in life, we need someone to turn on the switch. As I told you half an hour ago, inside you is the treasure, but somebody has to come and show it to you. If you take an inner guide to illumine you, he will do the needful. Then there cannot be an iota of uncertainty in your life. Everything becomes absolutely positive. We get confidence when we see that somebody else has already gone through what we are experiencing. Whoever is my teacher also had that same problem in the beginning, when he was still a student. Now he has become my teacher. His job is to teach me; it is up to me to have faith in him or not.
My Guru is now the Absolute Supreme, but previously I had a human Guru. He realised God, but before that he also had uncertainty and so many other difficulties. Similarly, Swami Vivekananda had so much uncertainty. He did not know what was going to happen in his life. Before he came to America, he was so afraid. He wondered what would happen! But he came here and conquered the heart of America only by saying, "Brothers and Sisters, Sisters and Brothers." Then he was able to spread Sri Ramakrishna's light. Everybody is uncertain in the beginning.
Again, whoever has faith in God goes through a dark tunnel at some point. When you go to Manhattan from Queens, you pass through a tunnel. When you enter the tunnel for the first time, you may say, "O my God, where are we going? It is all darkness. The cars will collide!" Then in a few minutes you come out of the tunnel and enter into Manhattan, as many people have already done. So, when you go through the tunnel you are afraid and uncertain, but you have to go through it. In the spiritual life also, we have to have faith, in the inmost recesses of our heart, that at the end of the tunnel there is light.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 11
The first Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence Marathon, held Aug. 30 in Rockland Lake State Park in upstate New York, drew more than 800 runners from around the world.
Dhima Bogush, 31, from Moldova, sprinted to the finish in a neck-to-neck race with second-place finisher Gyula Szabo, 32, of Hungary, for a winning time of 2:43.
The top woman runner was New Zealander Anna Webster, 25, whose time was 3:08.
Publsihed in Anahata Nada, Volume 33, August–Mid-November, 2002
CHICAGO — Nothing better symbolized the ecumenical spirit of the Parliament of the World’s Religions than the silent meditation that spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy offered at the opening of the main plenary session Aug. 28.
His message of prayerful silence transcended religious dogma and became a unifying element for the nine-day conference that brought together leaders of every major religion in the world. The conference, held at Chicago’s Palmer House. was the first such interfaith gathering in 100 years.
The Indian spiritual leader came to Chicago in the spirit of his predecessor, Swami Vivekananda, who had also carried the message of universal oneness and brotherhood to the Chicago religious parliament in 1893.
On the first day of the Parliament, Sri Chinmoy led a five-minute silent meditation before several thousand Christians, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, Muslims and others.
The following morning, Aug. 29, he offered a sunrise peace concert at the main meeting hall.
Afterwards, Ananda Guruge, Ambassador of Sri Lanka to the U.S. and President for Sri Lanka of the World Fellowship of Buddhists, came to the podium and presented Sri Chinmoy with a book.
He then read out his dedication to the Master: “You are one of the rarest gifts that humankind of the 21st century has. May I wish that your services could continue forever.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 23, August–Mid-Deecember 1993
Heads of state from around the world sent letters and telegrams congratulating Sri Chinmoy on his 60th birthday on Aug. 27.
Letters came in from the Presidents of Austria and Sri Lanka and the Prime Ministers of Canada, Japan, Italy, New Zealand and Iceland.
Congratulations also were sent by South African leader Nelson Mandela and America’s Elliott Richardson. Another well-wisher, U.S. Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, wrote: “The number of individuals who have been affected by your commitment to promoting world peace is truly awe-inspiring.”
The tributes were read out at the Master’s Sept. 11 commemorative birthday dinner.
The spiritual teacher opened the dinner with a silent meditation and an extemporaneous piano performance.
Speakers included U.N. General Assembly President Guido de Marco, who described the spiritual leader as a man who “has become a symbol of the oneness of humanity.”
Six-time Olympic gold medalist Carl Lewis said Sri Chinmoy stands for “all the things that we believe in.”
Other speakers included the Soviet Union’s Deputy U.N. Ambassador, Aleksandr Razvin, as well as several other U.N. Ambassadors, and prominent members of the Indian community — including Pravin Panday, President of the Federation of Indian Associations, and Shankar Shetti, President of the Indian Congress of America.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 20, August–Early December1991
NEW YORK — Sri Chinmoy opened the World Music Festival, a concert dedicated to global harmony, with a short meditation and musical performance.
The Aug. 25 concert, held at Madison Square Garden’s Paramount Theater, brought together some of the greatest musicians of East and West — including American vocalist Patti Austin, Latin American ballad singer Danny Rivera and Indian violinist L. Subramaniam.
The festival was sponsored by the Indian cultural association Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan (USA).
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25, August-Mid-December 1995
NEW YORK — About 500 disciples from around the world are expected to converge in New York this month for a ten-day festival celebrating Sri Chinmoy's 43rd birthday.
Spiritual plays, concerts, picnics, athletic functions, and a circus will be combined with meditation as the festival seeks to interweave outer as well as inner experiences.
The general public will be invited to participate at an open meditation to be held at 7:30 p.m. August 23rd at New York's Hunter College. The out-of-town disciples who have been followers of Sri Chinmoy for at least a year will be guests at the homes of New York area disciples.
This is expected to take up all available space, and dormitory rooms at a local college has been booked for the newer disciples. The “Sports Day” will be patterned after the track and field events that Sri Chinmoy used to participate in during his 20-year stay in a south Indian ashram.
A decathlon champion in his youth. Sri Chinmoy still practices athletics and each morning, for the past few months, has been joining his disciples on a local track field to prepare for the event.
The festival will culminate with an all-day birthday meditation August 27th.
Published in Anahata Nada, JULY 27, 1974 VOL. I, NO. 8
NEW YORK — Sri Chinmoy has begun a series of Wednesday night meditations at All Angel’s Church, 81st St. and West End Avenue.
The meditations begin at 7:30 p.m. and are open to the public. Admission is free. Meetings scheduled for the last two weeks of August will not be held as they coincide with the annual ten-day festival honouring Sri Chinmoy’s birthday.
A large public meditation will be held at All Angel’s Church on Friday, Aug. 22, at 7:30 p.m. At this time, seekers in the New York metropolitan area will have an opportunity to join Sri Chinmoy’s disciples in receiving the Master's silent birthday offering.
Published in Anahata Nada, August 1, 1975, Vol. II, No. 7
NEW PALTZ, N.Y. — Sri Chinmoy stood in the centre of the field, clad in gold shorts and a gold sleeveless shirt, as his athlete-disciples, wearing the colours of their own particular Centres, circled around him on the quarter-mile track.
Trumpets and drums set the tempo, blaring out a Bengali marching song, as the 1974 Olympic-style “Sports Day” officially opened on ;August 21st in New Paltz, N.Y.
Sports Day is the annual track and field competition in which disciples from around the world compete against one another. Sri Chinmoy, who had been a decathlon champion 15 years ago in the Indian ashram where he grew up, always joins in the competition.
“Our aim is not to become the world’s best athlete,” Sri Chinmoy says. “Our aim is to keep the body fit, to develop dynamism and to give the vital innocent joy.”
The value of competitive sports, he continues, is that it helps one bring forward his own best capacity. “If we can learn to participate in competitive sports devotedly,” he adds, “then we will get real joy and make real spiritual progress. But if we compete egoistically, then we are bound to suffer both inwardly and outwardly.”
The Sports Day events are open only to the best athletes in the Sri Chinmoy Centres. But a few days later, a “Games Day” was held in Greenwich, Conn. for all disciples wanting to participate. Sports included soccer, baseball, tennis, archery and croquet.
Sri Chinmoy during “Sports Day”
Anahata Nada, August 1974, VOL. 1, NO. 9
JAMAICA, N.Y. — An Indian poet and spiritual teacher set what is probably a world record August 13 when he completed 630 rhymed poems — in English — in 24 hours.
Sri Chinmoy, a native Bengali, worked around the clock from midnight to midnight to complete the feat, using yogic powers of concentration.
During the 13 years he has lived in America, he has written several thousand English language poems, but never before in rhyme.
The 630 poems have been published under the title A Soulful Cry Versus a Fruitful Smile. All told, during the month of August Sri Chinmoy wrote over 1,000 rhymed English poems.
Published in Anahata Nada, September 1, 1977, Vol. 4, No. 8
JAMAICA, NY — Nobel-prize winner Bruce Merrifield, a chemist, became the 1,300th person lifted in Sri Chinmoy’s “Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart” series.
The Aug. 13th lift was part of a day-long celebration during which hundreds of disciples lined up in the Master’s meditation park and chanted “Supreme” 1,300 times, as Sri Chinmoy walked slowly past, meditating on them one by one. It all took place in the pouring rain.
Also lifted during the event was V Ramalingaswami, one of India’s top health officials, who called Sri Chinmoy’s work “a great force for the fulfilment of this dream (of world peace) of mankind.”
Other guests lifted included TV personality Bill McCreary and his wife, saxophonist Mokshagun Clarence Clemons and singer Addwitiya Roberta Flack.
Publsiehed in Anahata Nada, Volume 18, August–November 1989
Sri Chinmoy’s recent progress in the one-arm lift goes beyond anything previously achieved in weightlifting.
The astonishing sequence began Aug. 11 when the 160-pound Master lifted a 303¼-pound weight from a power rack above his head and supported it for several seconds. He had been struggling with this poundage for several weeks and succeeded only on his 214th attempt.
On Sept. 21 he lifted 400½ pounds, and eight days later, went up to 503 pounds.
On Oct. 27 he broke 600 pounds and on Nov. 1 lifted 705¾ pounds.
Then, on Nov. 7 he moved up to 806¼ pounds ... on Nov. 10, to 1,007¾ pounds (a more than 200-pound jump) ... and on Nov. 17, to 1,317¾ pounds (a 310-pound jump).
Then, on Nov. 24 Sri Chinmoy lifted 1,515¼ pounds and on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 27, he hoisted 2,039 pounds — over a ton — with one arm.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 14, August–November 1986
To celebrate his 60th birthday, Sri Chinmoy did a number of athletic, musical and spiritual events 60 times between Aug. 7 and 17.
Some of his items: lifting 60 people into the air ... lifting a 60-pound dumbbell 60 times (with each hand) ... performing on 60 different instruments ... spontaneously composing 60 songs ... answering spiritual questions from his Russian disciples for 60 minutes ... doing 60 walking meditations along the tennis court.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 20 August-Early December 1991
Twenty-seven free concerts — plus one for good measure — were given by Sri Chinmoy and his students last month in the New York metropolitan area and Washington, D.C.
The concerts went beyond the normal fare to include dramatic performances, short talks and demonstrations of marching, as well as instrumental and vocal renditions of Sri Chinmoy’s music and solos by the Master on the esraj, flute, violin and cello.
They were performed in churches, schools, universities and outdoor parks in various locales ranging from Harlem to Westchester, from the resort town of Asbury Park, N.J. to the exclusive Connecticut suburb of Westport.
“This accomplishment is something most significant,” Sri Chinmoy declared at the end of the final concert the night of July 31, at New York University. “And at the same time, it is only the beginning, the very beginning. Far we shall go, farther than the farthest. High we shall fly, higher than the highest. Deep we shall dive, deeper than the deepest.
“The physical consciousness of America may not know what we have done but the soul of America knows and the soul of America is blessing us with its pride divine, gratitude divine.
Then the Master gave out as prasad bags of 27 food items and giant cookies. There were also two six-foot-long hero sandwiches resembling esrajs, and other delicacies.
Published in Anahata Nada, August 1, 1977, Vol. 4, No. 7
In Brief
Spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy traveled from his world headquarters in Queens, New York to Spain to open the Parliament of World Religions in Barcelona on July 13 at the Grand Hall. A crowd of 3,200 participants of all faiths traveled from North and South America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand, to what was of one of the largest events taking place during the five-month Universal Forum of Cultures in the city. The current parliament is the fourth since the event was launched in 1993 to mark the centennial celebrations of the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago, where Swami Vivekananda delivered his immortal talk. An opening prayer for oneness was followed by a peaceful performance by Sri Chinmoy on an esraj, an Eastern stringed instrument. Winner of the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize, Iran’s Shirin Ebadio delivered the keynote address at the ceremony
Published in News India Times, July 30, 2004
Video from Sanjay Rawal
Sri Chinmoy lifts Joe Franklin, TV talk show host of the ‘Joe Franklin Show’, and tapes an interview with him in Secaucus, New Jersey.
NEW YORK — Madhupran Schwerk, a 47-year-old instrument maker from Solingen, Germany, set a new world record when he completed the Sri Chinmoy 3,100-Mile Self-Transcendence Race on July 28. It was also his 47th birthday.
Averaging over 72 miles a day, Madhupran smashed Istvan Sipos’ 1998 record by over four days, completing the distance in 42 days 13 hours 24 minutes.
Calling the half-mile loop that marked the race course “a holy ground,” Madhupran said that when you go deep within and open your heart, “you get energy enough for everything.”
At a brief victory celebration, Sri Chinmoy told Madhupran that his performance was “an unprecedented achievement not only for you but for the whole world.” Running legend Ted Corbitt also showed up to congratulate him.
Afterwards, Madhupran returned to the course to complete another 13 laps to break the record for 5,000 kilometres. All told, he set 74 various distance-records since beginning his run on June 16.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 33, March-July 2002
By Lyndee Yamshon
One could hear a pin drop as Sri Chinmoy, artist of 70,000 Peace-Bird drawings, voiced several prayers to visitors of the exhibit of thousands of colourful birds unveiled at the United Nations building on 42nd Street and First Avenue last week.
He told the gathering how his idea to draw the birds came from deep prayer and meditation and how he believed that the birds were given to him as a gift from God.
“These birds are a collective repetition of prayers for peace,” he said.
“They are a reminder of harmony, the highest stage of being. I thank God that I can be here today, sharing these birds with you.”
The Indian-born artist who moved to New York in 1964, passed out peace bird cookies to guests, who included Kate Zuma, wife of the Deputy President of South Africa, Conrad Zuma, who spent many years in prison with Nelson Mandela.
A lecturer at several Ivy League schools including Harvard, Princeton, Yale and Columbia, Chinmoy meditated, eyes closed, smiling as he met with people from different nations, religions and cultural backgrounds who attended his opening at the magnificent headquarters. As they gathered around him, he recited a series of prayers and said:
“You may ask why I draw birds in countless numbers. In my case, I can not separate quality and quantity. These birds represent unity and multiplicity — if we have both these components in this world of ours we’ll have peace and bliss in boundless measures.
“The birds represent freedom. This freedom travels far beyond the horizons carrying the message of eternal peace. Freedom, as it is divine, it is boundless and it is bound to carry.
“The birds fly in boundless forms singing a victory of God the creator and God the creation at the same time. Each bird is a prayer from my heart, from my spiritual inner life. Each bird embodies a new hope.
“Peace is the golden bridge of earth tears and heaven smiles.
“Peace is the eagerness of the heart to discover God....
“Peace is the perfect voice of the inner world.”
As well as being an accomplished artist, Chinmoy also performs on several musical instruments, including the esraj, flute, violin and cello.
During his travels, he often offers free music concerts for peace, hoping to awaken the world’s consciousness towards the necessity of a higher existence. His exhibition at the UN building runs until Friday, August 4.
MAN OF PEACE — the exhibition by Indian-born artist Sri Chinmoy runs at the UN building until August 4.
TOWN & VILLAGE, VOL. 53, NO. 31, NEW YORK, NEW YORK, JULY 27, 2000
In a staggering achievement, Sri Chinmoy completed the words and music to 13,000 spiritual songs on July 26.
His 13,000th song, in Bengali, entitled “Victory’s Heart-Song,” marked the completion of an odyssey that spanned more than three decades.
“Each of these songs is a gratitude-flower from my heart to my Beloved Lord Supreme,” he declared. Of all his creative achievements, he added, this was the most difficult because of the necessity of following strict Bengali meter and rhyme.
About 5,000 of the songs are in English and 8,000 are in Bengali.
Among these are his longest song, a 194-line poem which he wrote as a youth in India on August 24, 1945, which he set music to on July 8.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25 April-July 1995
Leaders Mark National Day of Prayer at the U.N.
B GEORGE DUGAN
Leaders of six of the world’s major religious bodies marked this country’s National Day of Prayer yesterday at a ceremony attended by 100 people in the chapel of the Church Center for the United Nations, at First Avenue and 44th Street.
The Rev. Dr. Dan M. Potter, executive director of the Council of Churches of the City of New York, called it the “most representative gathering of religious leaders ever held in the city.”
Sri Chinmoy, a Hindu and director of the United Nations Meditation Group, presided at the hour-long ceremony. He opened the meeting with silent prayer, standing behind a plain white marble altar.
Then, in brief comments, the leaders representing Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist, Baha’i and Muslim groups – called upon Americans to renew their “dedication to the eternal” in prayer and asked God to lead all the nations in “paths of righteousness.”
The speakers, in addition to Dr. Potter, included the following: Rabbi Samuel Geffen of the New York Board of Rabbis, Lozang Jamspal of the Buddhist Monastery of America, The Rev. Robert Kennedy of the Brooklyn Diocese of the Roman Catholic Church, The Rev. Stephen Kyriacou of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of North and South America, Catherine Mboye of the Baha’i International Community, Muddassir Ali Shamsee of the Muslim Prayer Group, Sheik Shahabu-d-din of the Sufi Order. The Rev. Grant Anderson of the Queens Federation of Churches, The Rev. Kenneth Folkes, president of the Council of Churches of the City of New York.
Dr. Potter said there was much for which we can thank God, but, we see so many shortcomings, so many failures, so many examples of injustice, inequality, discrimination, brutality, pain, suffering and interminable degrading violence to human dignity."
“We cannot celebrate this Bicentennial,” he added, “without feeling the compelling need to sit in sackcloth and ashes, in penance for our failure to God as well as our disappointment to fellow citizens.”
Following the commentaries, excerpts were read from President Ford’s statement proclaiming yesterday as a National Day of Prayer, the late President John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address and the writings of the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
The Sacred Fire, a 30-member choral group, sang “The Battle Hymn of the Republic” and “America the Beautiful.”
Representatives of Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist, Baha'i and Muslim groups at prayer ceremony at the Church Center of the U.N
Published in THE NEW YORK TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1975
Not just dialogue
That spirit of fellowship was the ultimate goal of the 2004 Parliament of the World’s Religions, which took place earlier this month. Nearly 550 events drew more than 8,000 people from nearly 80 countries.
While the gathering was steeped in the grander notion of achieving world peace, the immediate task was to bring together people of different faiths to discuss what they have in common and how they are different. It was also designed to let people strengthen partnerships and build friendships so they could work on critical world issues, such as conflict resolution, the environment and poverty.
“It’s important for the public to understand that interfaith work is not just dialogue,” said Kusumita P. Pedersen, chair of the Department of Religious Studies at St. Francis College in Brooklyn and a parliament trustee.
The council brings together people who are working on interfaith programs at local levels who want to share their experience and network. “People find it helpful to know what others are doing in other communities,” Pedersen said.
When he returned, Hirschfield said, he realized “the issue is not how we’re all alike. It’s how, with all our differences, we are going to treat each other as human beings. The temptation in all these conferences is to homogenize. The truth is, that isn’t good for anything but milk. The real issue is how to evolve an ethic of diversity.”
First held in Chicago in 1893, the gathering has taken place only four times since. In 1983, a group of Christian leaders convened the second parliament in Chicago. They created the council to ensure that similar interfaith gatherings would take place every five years or so. Before Barcelona, the last parliament was held in Cape Town, South Africa, in 1999.
Today, the Parliament of World’s Religions is the largest and most inclusive interfaith gathering in the world, Pedersen said. “It’s open to anyone who wants to come. There are thousands of groups and, programs all over the world that are trying to bring religious communities closer together in better relations.”
In Barcelona, people arrived not because they represented their institutions in an official capacity but because they had made a personal commitment to change. They came “to exchange knowledge ... and form coalitions to work on the goals they are committed to,” Pedersen said.
Agraha Levine, a follower of Sri Chinmoy, a spiritual leader based in Jamaica, said seeing many faiths represented was inspiring. “You had Buddhist leaders in their saffron robes, people in turbans. There were Catholic monks, reverends. You knew all the faiths were there. Everyone came because we all knew at this moment in history, conflict between religions is causing a lot of strife in this world. It is of great importance to strive for interfaith harmony.”
In his sky blue Indian garment, Sri Chinmoy officially opened the parliament with a silent meditation. “He prayed in silence for the oneness of all religions,” said Levine, a researcher who splits his time between Seattle and New York. “Suddenly, there was a tremendous sense of something very important.”
The parliament leaders hoped to motivate individuals to commit simple acts that would benefit their local communities in four areas: overcoming religiously motivated violence, supporting refugees worldwide, increasing access to clean water and eliminating international debt for developing countries.
“We’re not a UN agency that can create programs throughout the world,” Pedersen said. “Rather, we wanted to have deep discussion and inspire people to commitment and to form partnerships and friendships with one another.” Said Bishop Epting: “There was a challenge personally to be engaged in more interreligious understanding.”
• Debbe Geiger is a regular contributor to Newsday.
Sri Chinmoy, a spiritual leader from Queens, opened the meeting with meditation “for the oneness of all religions,” an attendee said.;
Published in New York City NEWSDAY, Saturday, July 24, 2004, page 63
India Post News Service
BARCELONA, Spain: The Parliament of World’s Religion, only the 4th in the world, was held in Barcelona, Spain from July 7-13.
During Sri Chinmoy’s Opening Meditation, the entire audience joined with him in pin-drop silence, each praying in their own way.
These moments symbolize the very heart of the Parliament: people from all faiths joining together in oneness for the betterment of the world. This is an urgently important message at this very moment.
The Parliament of the World’s Religions, which began in Chicago in 1893, was the first and is the largest global interfaith gathering in the world.
Sri Chinmoy, who is nearly 73 years old and resides in New York City, has led the silent interfaith Meditation at the United Nations for diplomats and staff twice weekly since 1970. He has initiated many interfaith programs through culture, sports and dialogue.
The Council of the Parliament invited Sri Chinmoy to offer the Opening Meditation by stating “We think such a starkly singular and wordless presence will be the perfect entry for participants into the Parliament experience. And we can think of no one better to do it than you.”
Published in India Post, VOL 10. No. 520, July 23, 2004
SAN JUAN — The first Sri Chinmoy Centre, opened here in 1966, celebrated its 15th anniversary on 22 July.
Sri Chinmoy came to Puerto Rico that week to commemorate the event with a series of public concerts and meditations. There was also a 13-mile Sri Chinmoy race on 20 July.
San Juan officials, in turn, honoured the Master with a Mayoral proclamation saluting the Centre’s 15 years of service to the city.
Two of the concerts were held in San Juan — one on 20 July in El Capitolio, the capital building, and one on 22 July in the Bellas Artes Center. A third was held at the other end of the island, in Ponce, on 23 July in the Museo de Arte.
Published Anahata Nada, Volume 7, Nos. 6-7, June-July 1981
By Dave Rosner
On this hot Sunday morning, Sri Chinmoy is well back in the pack. As he bobs along at slower than 7 MPH, it quickly becomes evident that Sri Chinmoy will not be the star of the Sri Chinmoy Five-Mile Run. For the duration of the race, in fact, the noted Indian spiritual leader has few followers. In the literal sense, that is.
Then again, distance running, to Sri Chinmoy and his disciples, has never been a literal game of follow the leader. On this hot Sunday morning in Flushing Meadow Park, Sri Chinmoy, as always, is content to lead by example alone. “It shows my spiritual children that I am not a so-called Indian philosopher who lives in the moon land and has nothing to do with reality,” is how he explains a marathon schedule that rivals Bill Rodgers’ for quantity. “It reminds them that I not only preach and teach, but also act ... I not only encourage my students to do things that will benefit them inwardly and outwardly, but I also do these things in order to offer them inspiration.”
It has not always been that way, though. In 1964, when he emigrated to New York, Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose was too busy to exercise much. He had been an athlete in his ashram in Pondicherry, India, winning the spiritual community’s 100-meter dash title 16 straight years and the decathlon twice. But suddenly there was no time for that, so busy was he piecing together the spiritual organization he now directs from his Jamaica home.
There were the more than 60 Sri Chinmoy Centers to open throughout the world. There were the meditations he holds twice a week at the United Nations for delegates and staff. There were the lectures at universities, and the concerts at such places as Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. There were the 400 books to author, the 140,000 paintings to create, the 3,000 songs to compose. There was, in short, little time for running. Problem was, as his popularity expanded, so did his waistline. “Even God was ashamed,” he jokes of the days when he was 20 pounds over his current weight of 130.
Sri Chinmoy, in that sense, is just another product of the running boom, a nouveau jogger who trains between 50 and 80 miles a week. But, of course, it is more than that. In the three years since he took up distance running, the sport has become ingrained in Sri Chinmoy’s spiritual teachings. He uses running as a spiritual metaphor, frequently referring to meditation as “inner running.” Or, put another way: “Try to be a runner, and try all the time to surpass all that is bothering you and standing in your way. Be a real runner so that ignorance, limitations and imperfections will all drop far behind you in the race.”
The meditative benefit of running is not a new concept, really. Perhaps Runner’s World magazine publisher Bob Anderson epitomized the sport’s cult following when he said he answers inquiries into what religion he is by saying, “Runner” (to which, Joe Henderson, then the magazine’s editor, quipped, “If running’s going to become a religion, then I’m going to become an atheist.”). Rather, what is unique about Sri Chinmoy’s “Run and Become” philosophy is that he probably is the first spiritual leader to espouse running as an aid to spiritual development. “At every moment we are running inwardly, and this outer run is undoubtedly a true expansion of the inner run,” he tells disciples on the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team.
The team, comprising about 125 students from the metropolitan area and 700 worldwide, is an extension of his philosophy. “Guru teaches us that the body is the temple of the soul,” said Lorne Cherns, a 24-year-old ultramarathoner from Jamaica. “How can you pray and meditate if you don’t have a strong, healthy body? We’re not running for the sake of running. It’s a way to better ourselves inwardly.”
Like most of his teammates, Cherns took up running after he joined Sri Chinmoy six years ago. Cherns already was an established runner when Chinmoy began jogging in 1978. He has seen the former sprinter make the difficult transition into distance runner, then run his first marathon in four hours and 32 minutes the following spring, then run his personal record of 3:55:07 a month later in Toledo, Ohio. “He wants to live his philosophy, to show that things can be done, to transcend himself,” Cherns said. “Everything is transcendence.”
In honor of “Sri Chinmoy’s 17 years in the West,” Cherns, ran from Toronto to New York last spring, covering 32 miles a day for three weeks. In honor of Chinmoy’s 50th birthday, Cherns recently ran 50 times up and down a quarter-mile hill on 150th Street in Jamaica; even Guru, who detests hills, joined for 20 circuits. But the real party will not occur until his birthday, Aug. 27, when Chinmoy will join many of his disciples in a 50-mile run around the Jamaica High School track. Since his 47th birthday, the annual ultramarathon, drawing as many as 135 students, has covered 47 miles. This year, however, is special. Witness the 50 Sri Chinmoy Invitational Two-Mile Runs that will be held Monday at sites throughout the world, from Flushing Meadow Park to London, from San Francisco to Paris, from Valley Stream State Park to Tokyo, from East Meadow to Zurich, from Montreal to Stockholm, from Stony Brook to Bonn.
The marathon team is accustomed to organizing races, more than 200 a year, each drawing from 300 to 1,000 runners. Even when Chinmoy is not present, the races bare his mark: The flat courses, a sure mark of a converted sprinter; the aid stations at every mile; the recordings of his songs played along the route; the time splits at every mile. Splits are so important to Chinmoy that when he trains with his students, someone will carry a stopwatch to give him the mile times. “He is aware of pace,” Cherns said, “so he can improve.”
That is the only competition Sri Chinmoy recognizes in running. On that hot morning of July 12, he not only ran the five-mile race (43:33) but also the two-mile fun run (15:51) immediately preceding. He saw little difference. “We compete with others not for the sake of defeating them, but to bring forward our own best capacities and also theirs,” he writes. “In ordinary human life, we try to win by conquering others. In the spiritual life, we try to win by conquering the unaspiring and undivine in ourselves ... In the ordinary life, we compete with others to gain supremacy. But in the spiritual life, we are not in competition with others. We are always trying to transcend our own capacity; but while we are transcending our capacity, others may feel that we are competing.”
Although he is involved in cycling (he is a member of the Sri Chinmoy Cycling Team) and tennis (he once played 453 straight games), Chinmoy considers running “undoubtedly” the best form of exercise because “when we run, especially when we run long distances, we are more aware of this inner goal than we are while doing other forms of strenuous exercise.”
Still, Guru cautions against meditating during races, fearing that dissociation hides the warning signals from the runner. “It is always advisable to concentrate while running a marathon,” he said. “If you meditate, then you will feel that you are either on the top of a snow-capped mountain or at the bottom of the sea. That is the very highest type of meditation, but that will not help your running. But if you concentrate on the running, then at every moment you will be able to regulate your steps and your forward movement ... Before running a marathon, meditation is of paramount importance. But while running, concentration is of paramount importance.”
A veteran of 11 marathons, Sri Chinmoy talks from experience. In none is the recognition factor greater than the New York City Marathon, where the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team regularly has the largest contingent. It is not surprising to hear spectators yelling, “Go, Guru,” at the sight of his familiar headband. Nor is it surprising that he has been able to fill a book with amusing stories of his experiences — such as the time he was running in Japan and felt compelled to answer each traditional bow with a bow of his own, until he became too tired and had to settle for a salute.
But it is in Jamaica that Sri Chinmoy, runner, is known almost as well as Sri Chinmoy, spiritual leader. Indeed, in her book, “The Road Runner’s Guide to New York City,” Patti Hagan writes: “Jog Douglaston Manor for the Gatsby look and Jamaica for a dynamic meditative running consciousness, a Sri Chinmoy high.”
Sri Chinmoy competes in Sri Chinmoy 5-Mile Run (Newsday Photo by Alan Raia)
Published in NEWSDAY, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1981
with Senor Hector Campos Parsi, on the Government Station, WIPR. (Channel 6) in San Juan, Puerto Rico
Interviewer: Master Chinmoy, I have just introduced you in Spanish and explained some of your works that I have read in Spanish.
What is your mission now in Puerto Rico and how long will you stay here?
Sri Chinmoy: My mission here in Puerto Rico is to help the sincere seekers in their inner life and help them realise their spiritual perfection. I shall be staying here until 6 August and then I shall leave for New York where I have another Centre. We have two Centres, one here in Puerto Rico, the other in New York.
Interviewer: Master Chinmoy, is this the first time that you have been in Puerto Rico?
Sri Chinmoy: This is my fourth visit. I was here exactly a year ago, last year in July. That was my first visit. Then I came here twice after that. So this is my fourth visit.
Interviewer: How many people do you have working at the Aum Centre in Puerto Rico?
Sri Chinmoy: We have here now fifty members, fifty sincere seekers, I must say. And there are many who are connected with the Centre but are unable to come to the meetings owing to family problems and so on.
Interviewer: Are they all well acquainted with philosophy? Are they students of different stages or are they all of the same level?
Sri Chinmoy: They attend the classes, they come to me to receive help and guidance in their self-realisation, but they are not of the same standard. Some of them are very well versed in both eastern and western philosophy, while others are not. All of them come to me and meditate with me and ask me spiritual questions to solve their inner and outer problems. The students range from absolute beginners to the most advanced aspirants.
Interviewer: Well, it is a very broad problem in order to attain to Realisation, is it not?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, it is a lifelong problem. To be accurate, a lifelong process. It depends on the individual. It may even take a few incarnations to achieve Realisation.
Interviewer: Master, I understand that in order reach the height you have now attained, it took you a very long time. I would like you very much to tell me how you felt the inner call, how you started preparing yourself for the spiritual life.
Sri Chinmoy: When I was very young, about a year and a half old, my parents took me to a spiritual place in Pondicherry, South India … in Madras State. I was taken to that spiritual Ashram three times more in my early childhood. And when I was twelve years old, I became a permanent member, a spiritual seeker in that Ashram. I stayed there for twenty years, from the age of twelve to the age of thirty-two, practising the spiritual discipline and living the inner life.
Then the Divine within me, the Supreme, commanded me to come to the West. He said, "I want you to be my instrument. I want you to help my sincere, spiritual children in the West. This is your Mission. Go to the West. My spiritual children there are thirsting for the spiritual life. I am in you, with you and for you."
Interviewer: Master Chinmoy, but ... do you not think that the East is more prepared, more inclined to understand the spiritual life and practise it than the West?
Sri Chinmoy: According to my own understanding of the Truth, the West has also abundant possibility to realise God. As the East has ample opportunity, so also has the West. True, formerly the East was more inclined to the inner life and the spiritual life. But now those days are gone. Even in the West there are many sincere seekers who can stand on the same level as the most advanced aspirants in the East. God-Realisation is not the sole monopoly of the East. God is Omnipresent. The West also has infinite divine qualities. For example, the West has dynamism and the West is extremely fortunate in giving importance to time. Time is a great factor in the spiritual life. The West knows the value of time, whereas in the East, in the name of Eternal Time, we have become very lazy. We wallow in the pleasure of idleness.
Interviewer: I just wondered, Master Chinmoy, if by creating the high materialistic form of life we have now, whether we have put too many barriers between ourselves and the Divine.
Sri Chinmoy: This is, to some extent, true, but at the same time, in the West, you have been aspiring for material perfection, which will help you hold the Divine most solidly. The Western soil is spiritually fertile. The West can easily and effectively express the Divine through the most advanced material development in the physical world. The East does not have that material development. The sense of material development is absolutely necessary for the East.
Here in the West, your material development need not stand as a barrier. On the contrary, it can be of great advantage. You have both dynamism and material development. Like the East, if the West is ready to accept and feel the Truth that the Divine is not only in Heaven but here on earth, and if the West cultivates, develops and adds eastern Silence to its matchless Dynamism and material development, then God's all-transforming smile will dawn on the West.
Interviewer: Master Chinmoy, in Puerto Rico do you find great spiritual possibility?
Sri Chinmoy: I must say in all sincerity that there is a great possibility for the spiritual life here in Puerto Rico and many people are practising it. Unfortunately some of them are doing this unconsciously. They are eating something but they do not know what they are actually eating. The Puerto Rican soil is spiritually fertile. The seeker in Puerto Rico is extremely genuine. Hence the spiritual fulfilment in Puerto Rico is inevitable.
Interviewer: And will it be your task and the task of the Aum Centre to make them realise their spiritual Goal?
Sri Chinmoy: That is my sole aim. They are ready, they are fit and they are able to enter into the inner life. Some of them are actually moving fast across the path of the spiritual life. To my sorrow, there are some who are not aware of their inner aspiration. So I wish to make them conscious of what they are truly doing.
Interviewer: Master Chinmoy, I am curious about the meaning of these three letters which you pronounce "AUM."
Sri Chinmoy: AUM is a Sanskrit syllable, or you can say, a complete word. We have, in India, the Trinity: Brahma, Vishnu and Siva — the Creator, Preserver and Transformer. A represents Brahma the Creator, U represents Vishnu the Preserver and M represents Siva the Transformer. And this AUM is the breath of the Supreme. The Indian sages, seers and yogins of yore chanted this AUM and they got their souls' illumination and liberation. Even now, most of the seekers in India chant AUM most devotedly. They will have their Realisation by chanting AUM, the Power Infinite.
Interviewer: In case our televiewers would like to communicate with you, where will you be staying?
Sri Chinmoy: Right now, I am staying at our Aum Centre. It is located at 659 Miramar Avenue. We are holding classes and meditations every night. The President of the Centre is Miss Carmen Suro. Our telephone number is 724-7286.
Interviewer: Thank you very much. Master Chinmoy, for your kindness to us and we hope that you will be visiting Puerto Rico very often. You are helping so many people. Thank you very much.
Published in AUM – Vol. 3, No. 3,4, Oct. – 27 Nov. 1967
Sri Chinmoy speaks with Jed Horne
at the Old Mill Farm in Harrison, New York
Question: Could you tell me about your childhood?
Sri Chinmoy: I grew up in an ashram. At the age of twelve I was about to be totally conscious of what I was in a previous incarnation; and when I was thirteen years old I became fully conscious of my first achievement, what we call self-discovery.
Question: When was that incarnation?
Sri Chinmoy: It was my immediate previous incarnation. I don’t wish to tell who I was, because it only creates problems, but I was a spiritual Master, a yogi. Some of my disciples have seen some of my previous incarnations during their meditation with me.
In this incarnation at the age of thirteen I became fully aware of who I was. It was like revising an old book. But it took me twenty years to totally revise the book. I studied that book; I did well. But when it is a matter of manifestation, it took me twenty years to bring to the fore everything that I had realised and achieved by the infinite Grace of the Supreme. Then I got a command from within. The Supreme, my Inner Pilot, wanted me to come to the West and be of service to Him in the aspiring West. It was His express command that I come. If He asks me tomorrow to go to India or some other country, I will gladly do it.
Question: Do you miss India?
Sri Chinmoy: I don’t miss it in a human way, because inside me is the universal Reality, as inside you is the universal Reality. When one has a free access to the universal Reality, one does not miss anybody or anything.
Question: Do you expect to go back someday?
Sri Chinmoy: It may happen. I have no expectation, no anticipation. I only live in the Eternal Now. Just at this moment if I get a command from Him, then I will be more than happy to go to the foot of the Himalayas or live inside a Himalayan cave, which I did in some of my previous incarnations.
My life is now a life of service. If the Supreme asks me to be of service here or in any other part of the world, then I shall gladly do it. I do whatever He wants from my life. I have no personal choice. It is He who is manifesting in and through us in His own way. When one becomes a seeker, he realises that he is a mere instrument and the Supreme Musician is playing on that instrument. But if he becomes a conscious instrument, then the Supreme Musician can utilise him fully in the best possible way.
Question: What do you remember as being a difficult problem you had to overcome on the road to God-realisation?
Sri Chinmoy: To be absolutely frank with you, in my case I didn’t have the kind of difficulty which other Masters have had. In some cases for six months they had a dry period and they could not meditate. Sometimes the lower vital forces attacked them. Sometimes the cosmic forces, even the so-called divine forces, the gods and goddesses, tried to prevent the Masters from surpassing them. But I followed the path of the heart, which I am now advocating. I always acted like a sweet child both inwardly and outwardly, and if one is a child, a real child, then he is liked, appreciated and encouraged by all. From a child we don’t expect anything.
The Supreme in me wants to remain always a child, to be always in a childlike consciousness. This is what I always say to my students, too. If one remains childlike, not childish, he makes progress. At twenty or twenty-four years of age the human mind becomes fossilized. It doesn’t want to receive anything new or know anything more. But a child feels he knows nothing. At every moment he can learn something new. At every moment he learns from you, from others. Newness is his life.
Question: What do you think will happen when you have left the body?
Sri Chinmoy: It depends on how much my disciples receive while I am in the physical and whether they can keep a very good inner connection with me. Out of 700 disciples, a few have a very close connection with me. Only those who have a good connection with me will be able to spread the Light that the Supreme in me has been manifesting.
Question: Would one of them become the Guru and lead the services?
Sri Chinmoy: No, unfortunately or fortunately, no. Unfortunately I say, because some of them may want to become Gurus. But their desire will not be fulfilled. Fortunately I say, because to become a Guru is to suffer constantly. I do not want my disciples to suffer the way I and every other true Master suffers.
Each of my Centres has a president or a leader. I have taught them how to conduct the meetings in my absence. But when it is a matter of real inner guidance, unfortunately they have not been able to attain the spiritual stature for that. While I am alive if one of my disciples attains God-realisation, then naturally I will say that he or she will succeed me. But right now I see that this is not likely to happen, and in that case there will be a good leader conducting everything, but he will not be my spiritual successor.
I take the role of a conscious messenger who carries the aspiration of the seekers to the Supreme. Others are not able to do this in the same way. Again, it all depends on how much progress the disciples make. Unfortunately, still we have not got any God-realised souls. But I am proud of them. They are really progressing.
Question: How many first-class disciples do you have?
Sri Chinmoy: Very few. They can be counted on the fingertips. They are very few, very, very limited. I can expect only those disciples to maintain their inner connection with me. But there is no certainty. Second-class disciples can become first-class. Provided he really wants to be a good student and sincerely tries hard, one who is not good now may become good. Again, some first-class disciples have gone down from first to second, third, fourth. I have written a book called The Ascent and Descent of the Disciples, all about this kind of movement. Some started from fifth class and slowly and steadily they have gone up. Some have maintained their standard. They are like good students who always do well in their studies. Some students have maintained their high standard right along.
Question: Have you ever lost any students altogether?
Sri Chinmoy: Some people have left our Centre. But people who have accepted me wholeheartedly once will never be and can never be rejected by me. They are like my children. A child may become naughty, delinquent, but the parents have to claim him as their own. Children may disown their parents and have nothing to do with them, but good parents can’t and won’t do that. They will claim their children no matter how bad the children are. These are my spiritual children. Outwardly they may go, but inwardly, in my spiritual heart, they have to remain because the Supreme in me has commanded me to take care of their lives, and inwardly I am asked by the Inner Pilot to remain responsible for them.
Question: How do you explain the popularity of Eastern religions in this country?
Sri Chinmoy: Something is unfortunately lacking or missing in the Western world and that thing one can call love, psychic love, heart’s love. At this point the parents must forgive me when I say that in general they do not show enough love to their children. In India the way we get love — sometimes it is too much; we are spoiled. But in the West, children don’t get enough love. Eastern religion, Western religion, all religions are founded upon love, compassion, concern. But when it is a matter of expressing or communicating love, in the West it is not shown as it should be. The Eastern spiritual Masters offer boundless love to their spiritual children.
Here in the West when children grow up, immediately they see that their parents have a different life. They don’t have their vision inside their children anymore. When they are absolutely little children, the parents think they will grow up and bring name and fame to the family. But when they are six or seven, the parents just give the children to the babysitter and go to clubs, movies, or other entertainment. They lead their own lives, and the babysitter becomes the parent. But why should she take responsibility for other people’s children? She thinks all the time of her own life. Then the children will also have their own life — a frustrated and undisciplined life — because nobody gives them the love and concern that they need.
Then, in the church, most of the priests are preaching spiritual truths, but they do not practise what they preach. Sometimes they do not really understand it. They tell what the truth is, but they do not or cannot live it; therefore, they are unable to inspire their students deeply.
About six years ago I gave a talk at Yale. During the question and answer period a professor of psychology stood up and said to me, “Whatever you are saying is not new to me or to my students. Everything you have said today during your talk and during the questions and answers, I have been telling my students. But look how they are listening to you, with such rapt attention!” Then a student beside him stood up and said, “There is a little difference between him and you.” The students saw something in me and gave real importance to what I was telling them, because my words and my actions, to the students, were one. But in the professor’s case, words and actions were two totally different things, unfortunately.
Question: Did you ever think of getting married and having children?
Sri Chinmoy: No, I have enough responsibility. Seven hundred children God has given me. India’s most famous scientist, P.C. Ray, was brought up in Scotland and he got his degree there. He was the father of Indian science. Once one of his students, who knew perfectly well that he was a bachelor, asked, “How many children do you have?” Immediately he said, “Wait a moment,” and he took out of his pocket a list of his favourite students. It was a big list. He said, “Here I have got seventy-three children,” and he read out their names. “These children are infinitely more important in my life than my own children could ever be.” Spiritual children are the real children, because they follow in the footsteps of the Master. They always try to follow him. The children of our first avatar, Sri Ramachandra, could have become more spiritual than they were. Our second avatar, Lord Krishna, had many physical children, but not even one accepted the spiritual life. His disciples, like Arjuna and others, were far dearer to him than his physical children. In the case of other Masters, not only their children but also their brothers and sisters were not spiritual. Undoubtedly Sri Ramakrishna had relatives, but Vivekananda, who was no relation of his, became his dearest spiritual son. I am lucky. My brothers and sisters all accepted spiritual life. Being the youngest, I followed them. My parents also were spiritual. All my brothers and sisters went to an ashram after our parents died.
Whoever adopts or follows my principles, my way of life, is my true child. He is not my blood relation, but he is my soul’s relation. If we can establish a spiritual relationship with someone, then he becomes a true member of our family. True, he is not a physical relative, but it is the soul’s relationship that will remain eternally.
Question: You were an athlete in your youth. Could you explain the relationship between athletics and the spiritual life?
Sri Chinmoy: We want to be integral; we want to be perfect in our body, vital, mind, heart and soul. If only one part of our being is perfect and the rest remains imperfect, then we will not be able to fulfil the Supreme the way the Supreme wants to be fulfilled here on earth.
Suppose early in the morning I want to meditate. It is time for me to meditate and I want to get up, but my body is weak. I have a stomach upset, a headache, a backache or some other pain, so how will I meditate? The best thing is to meditate for half an hour and then practise sports. The body is quite important. We can’t deny it; we can’t discard it. It is like a house or a temple. Inside the temple is the shrine. If there is no temple, then the soul will have no place to live.
As the soul aspires, the heart, mind, vital and body can also aspire. When the body aspires and reaches a certain height, when it achieves peace and light from above, immediately Mother Earth grabs or captures that light on the physical plane. When we practise athletics or sports, immediately our achievement becomes the possession, the treasure of Mother Earth. Here in the material world we claim the success of our own children. We are so happy, so proud of their achievements. Similarly, when the physical in us does something good, divine, immediately Mother Earth gets tremendous joy and pleasure in her children’s achievement.
Question: What forms of exercise and diet do you advise?
Sri Chinmoy: Sports, running, jumping, anything that keeps our body fit. Again, we don’t have to do anything too vigorous. We don’t want to strain or overtire ourselves. We do need the perfection of the body, but ours is not the aim to become Olympic champions. If an aspirant is good enough as an athlete to participate in the Olympics, well and good. But for most of us, our aim is not to go to the Olympics. Our aim is only to transcend our capacity, always to transcend our individual capacity. I will compete with you, not to beat you but to see my own capacity. My aim is to see how much I have achieved, and to transcend my own capacity. When we participate in sports, we try to keep before us the idea of our own self-transcendence. We wish to see how far we can go. We have a certain goal, but our goal is only for today. Tomorrow it will be our starting point. Today’s goal cannot remain the goal forever. A child’s goal is to go to kindergarten. Then he goes from kindergarten to primary school, and gradually to high school, college, university. Our goal also is constant self-transcendence.
Question: You don't do complicated yoga exercises?
Sri Chinmoy: We don’t give much importance to complicated breathing or postures, and difficult exercises like cleaning the internal organs, because we feel that our love of God will purify us. People take many exercises for purification. But we feel that our real love for God, who is all Purity, will purify us. We go to the Source. We pray and meditate; we pray to the Supreme to grant us purity, sincerity, humility and other divine qualities. In our sincere prayer and meditation easily we can get these divine qualities. Either we do it all ourselves with greatest difficulty through our personal efforts, or we rely on someone with the capacity to help us. He who has the capacity can easily give me these things provided I love Him. If I love Him, naturally He will give me what He has and what He is. But if I don’t love Him and want to get what He has, then I have to do everything myself.
Sri Chinmoy (to Jed Horne): You have a very fine soul. Most illumining questions you have asked me about my life from beginning to end. But there is no end. We are walking along the eternal path on the eternal journey. The Goal, too, is eternal, an eternally self-transcending Goal, and there is also an eternal traveller inside us.
Published in AUM – Vol. 2, No. 9, 27 September 1975
Sri Chinmoy completed another million soul-bird drawings on July 19, bringing his total to five million.
He began drawing these little birds four and a half years ago while on a trip to Malta. They represent images of the human soul in its various spiritual moods.
In the artist’s words: “These birds are a new creation, the creation that will sing the song of Immortality in the life of mortality. To me they represent new hope, new promise, new peace, new bliss and new perfection on earth.”
Upon hearing of the five million birds, Mother Teresa declared: “These five million birds are all God’s Work! God is doing all of this.”
Mikhail Gorbachev said, “With all my heart I congratulate you ... May your birds, into which you put your soul, make the world more ... beautiful.”
An exhibition of three million of these birds opened in a midtown Manhattan gallery in August.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25 April-July 1996
Questions by Marty Gallagher, editor and publisher of Strength Review Magazine, accompanied by Hugh Cassidy, former world powerlifting champion. The interview takes place at the Washington Monument, Washington, DC, before Sri Chinmoy’s Peace Concert.
Marty Gallagher: What essentially is your philosophy with regard to making progress?
Sri Chinmoy: Ours is a positive way of thinking. We feel that every day we have to go into our heart-garden and get inspiration. There we try to see a beautiful rose — not yesterday's rose, but today's rose. The petals on yesterday's rose are dry and withered. But today's blossoming rose will be fresh. Then tomorrow we will go again and try to see a new rose.
The past is gone. Yesterday it was fresh; today it is not fresh. Today we have to see something new and fresh. This is how we can get inspiration. We cannot go on with yesterday's inspiration. Yesterday's inspiration was needed for yesterday, but today's inspiration we need for today. We have to always look forward and enjoy the beauty, fragrance and purity of today's flower.
Often, when people first hear about my weightlifting achievements, they try to exercise their power of imagination. They say, "Perhaps he can do it." But then, when they allow the doubting mind to come forward, their imagination-bird's wings are clipped and its flight is over. Then they start doubting me and criticising me.
As an individual, I am nothing and I can do nothing. For everything that I have achieved, I give one hundred per cent credit to God's Grace. I do not have the physique of a bodybuilder. In my youth I was a sprinter and a jumper, but I never cared for weightlifting. Only three or four times a year I used to practise lifting twenty pounds. And here in America, when I started lifting dumbbells off the ground, I found it extremely difficult to lift over forty pounds because it was not at all in my line.
But I entered into this new field with tremendous determination and every week I was progressing — going up from 40 to 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100 pounds. After 100 pounds, I was unable to progress any further because it is difficult for me to bend. Then a student of mine from Australia made a support rack for me so that I could start with the weight at shoulder height. He said, "Since you cannot bend, perhaps you will be able to continue if you do it this way." So I tried and he was right. From 100 I went to 200,300,400, 700 — up to 7,000 pounds. We have photos; we have videos. And many people do believe it.
Hugh Cassidy: And yet none of them have tried it.
Marty Gallagher: That's incredible!
Sri Chinmoy: No, they do not try. With regard to my calf raise, one very prominent powerlifter had absolutely no doubts about my 2,000-pound calf raise. He said he believed it because so much of weightlifting depends not on physical power but on mental power. I call it Grace. I am saying again and again that it is not my physical power; it is my prayer-power that enables me to lift up such heavy weights. But you can call it mental power or anything you want to call it.
I have lifted an elephant, a truck, a helicopter, a plane, a sailboat and all kinds of things. People have seen with their own eyes that the weight has gone up. Some people are saying that because of the laws of physics, it is not the full weight that I am lifting. I am not claiming to lift the full weight. Let us say it is 75% or even 50% of the weight. A 3,000-pound elephant is standing in front of you. You try to lift it up. Even if the actual weight on my shoulders is 50%, that is 1,500 pounds. Let others try to lift up 1,500 pounds.
Many weightlifters and bodybuilders have seen my standing calf raise machine with 1,400 pounds on it. They could easily have asked to try it. I would have had no objection. If it is such an easy thing, then let them try. But nobody has asked me.
About a month ago I was in Germany. There I met Jusup Wilkosz who was recently Mr. Universe. He invited me to come to his gym. I have never seen such a beautiful and well-equipped gym. And it was so clean! He had a calf raise machine there. I asked him how many pounds he could lift on it. He said, "I can only do 500 or 600 maximum. My students cannot do even 400." Then he asked me to try it. I had just finished a full breakfast and I did not have any warm-up. But I had been practising with much heavier weights on my own machine, and I knew I would not injure myself. So I just stood in front of him and lifted 860 pounds, which was all the weight he had available for that machine. Then he said to me, "This is not physical power. This is your spirit. Your spirit is doing this." It is absolutely true. I call it God's Grace, but he calls it spirit.
He was very nice. He examined my spine and massaged my knee and gave me lots of advice on what to do for my knee pain. And he has no doubts about my weightlifting. He accepts my 7,000-pound one-arm lift and my 2,000-pound calf raise.
Marty Gallagher: Some weightlifters are critical because they are too ego-filled.
Sri Chinmoy: My whole purpose is to be of service to mankind and this I can do only through inspiration. I get inspiration from my prayer, and this inspiration I try to offer to my friends and dear ones. This is my whole purpose in life. I have written thousands of poems. In hundreds of places I have given musical performances. I have also composed thousands of songs. It is all for inspiration.
Some people may want to enter into competition and defeat others. But right from my childhood, I have been only competing with myself. If I can compete with myself and improve myself, I will become a better person. And if I become a good person, Mother Earth will be so happy, since she will be blessed with one less undivine person. I want to increase my capacities, I want to go beyond and beyond, so that others will be inspired to do the same. This is the message and the inspiration that I am trying to offer.
As soon as we compete with others, we forget our oneness. When we compete, we try to win by hook or by crook and our undivine qualities come forward — jealousy, pride and all kinds of negative things. Then we get unhappy experiences.
Hugh Cassidy: I think it would be great if some champions would lay their egos aside and take on this attitude — the feeling that they don't have to compete with others or challenge others, but just find out what they themselves can do.
Marty Gallagher: In the weight world, the problem today is the way young lifters make progress. When they can no longer go beyond the capacities of the body, they take drugs. And that is a dead end; it's an evil. We know that the way to overcome this drug problem is through the mind, through spirituality. But to get that message out to the young lifters is so difficult. That is why we were so pleased when word of your lifts first came out.
Sri Chinmoy: I am extremely grateful to you. This very thing I call inspiration. There is one gym in San Francisco where they keep two or three of my weightlifting pictures on the wall. Young weightlifters concentrate on my picture and make progress. For days or weeks perhaps they cannot lift something; but after looking at my picture they are able to lift it. Because they believe that I can do it, they feel that they also have the capacity to do it.
This is the kind of inspiration that I wanted to offer through my weightlifting. Competing with others does not serve any purpose. People who want to increase their capacity can seek inspiration from others.
Hugh Cassidy: When you do that, you have to believe in the other person.
Sri Chinmoy: Believers will always believe and disbelievers will never believe, no matter what you do. They will say it is magic or deception. How can you ever prove anything to them? There are many, many things you cannot prove. Right now I cannot prove God to you, but I do know that God exists. My faith in God is infinitely stronger and more fruitful than any proof I can offer you. For me, God is a living Reality. Although I cannot show God to you, that does not mean that the Reality of His Existence is less. I know He exists because I feel Him, I see Him, I talk to Him.
If I have eaten a most delicious mango this morning and I am unable to prove it to you, who cares? You may think I am fooling you, but I will simply say, "You remain satisfied by calling me a liar, and I will remain satisfied that I was lucky enough to eat the mango."
In this world we are all running after satisfaction. Some people get satisfaction by doubting me and speaking ill of me, and I get satisfaction because God's Grace was able to accomplish something in and through me. So each of us is satisfied. Why do we all have to have the same kind of satisfaction? I like water; you like milk. As long as you get milk and I get water, it is fine. But you cannot say that water is very bad and I have no right to tell you that milk is very bad. When I say that my drink is nectar and your drink is all poison, then the problem starts.
My whole approach is through love. Just before I lifted the elephant, I went to the elephant and said, "You are my friend, you are my heart's friend, you are my soul's friend, you are my life's friend." Somebody else might come and try to frighten the elephant, but that is not my way.
Before I lift very heavy weights in my house, I go and touch each plate before I lift it. I can show you on the video. I touch each plate and try to establish my friendship with it, for even an inanimate object has pride. If you are my friend, then you will have no objection if I lift you up. As your friend, I can beg you to do something and you will feel obliged to do it. But if I am your rival, you are under no obligation. If I act like a commander and say "Stand up!", why do you have to listen to me? You will say, "Who are you to tell me to do something?" Then it will be like fighting with an enemy — challenging the weight or being challenged by the weight. The weight will say, "You cannot lift me," and I will say, "I can lift you." At that time, the weight will be like a rival and, as soon as I hold it, there will be a competition between me and the weight. I will say, "I am going to lift you up," and the weight will say, "Who are you to lift me up?"
That is not my approach at all. Instead I become one with the weight itself. My whole approach is one of friendship and oneness. I am trying to be of service on the strength of oneness. So whether it is an inanimate object or an animal or a human being, my whole purpose is to establish oneness, oneness, oneness.
Oneness starts with the members of your family. Then gradually, gradually, you establish your oneness with your neighbours, associates, countrymen and, finally, with the whole world.
Marty Gallagher: You have offered us such good advice. We are going to apply it!
Sri Chinmoy: We take the body as a temple, and the soul inside the body as a shrine. Without the shrine, the temple has no value, Again, without the temple, where can we keep the shrine? If we leave it in the street, people will destroy it. So this body, which is supposed to be the temple, has to be kept clean and pure. But how can the body have purity when the mind is so impure? If my mind enters into rivalry, jealousy and competition, then it is only separating me from you. But if my mind tells me that you are my friend, then we will establish our oneness.
If the mind is a problem, some people say that we have to discard the mind completely. If the vital is a problem, if the vital is aggressive and destructive, they say we should cast aside the vital. If the body is a problem, if the body is lethargic, they say we should renounce the body. This is the way of separation.
But we can also take a positive approach. Instead of rejecting the mind, if we can make the mind clear and pure, and teach it to think positively, then our mind will be a great help to us. If we can ask our vital to become constructive and dynamic, then it can do many good things for us. And if we can ask our body to work for God, sleeplessly and breathlessly, then it will be a tremendous help to us.
This is our way of approaching the inner and the outer life. Others may offer a completely different approach. There are many different roads that lead to the Goal. We cannot say that others are wrong and they cannot say that we are wrong.
Marty Gallagher: Earlier you were saying how you went and touched the plates and became friendly, as it were, with the plates. What other things do you do before you lift? What do you think or not think?
Sri Chinmoy: Before I lift, I do not think at all because, in general, thinking weakens us. When we are lifting heavy weights, we need the power of concentration. It is like this: let us say I am inside my room and I hear people knocking at the door. I have no idea whether they are my friends or my enemies. So what do I do? I say to myself, "Whatever I have to do inside my room, let me do first. If these people are my real friends, they will wait for me. If they are my enemies, their pride will come forward and they will say, 'It is beneath our dignity to waste our precious time here'. Then they will go away. But my good friends will be sympathetic and say, 'Perhaps he is doing something very important and that is why he is not opening the door'. So they will wait for me indefinitely."
When I am lifting heavy weights, at that time I do not allow any thoughts, whether good or bad, to enter into me. I only pray for God's Grace and then surrender to His Will. I fold my hands and say, "I would like to become a faithful and devoted instrument of Yours." Human power is so limited; it cannot lift more than a few pounds by itself. It is the divine Power in me, which I have brought to the fore through my prayer-life, that has enabled me to go from 40 pounds to 7,000 pounds.
We have to believe in a higher Power. If we do not believe in a higher Power, then we cannot go beyond our capacity. It is like being in a tug-of-war. When one individual is fighting against another individual, it can be very difficult since each may have the same strength. But if more people come to their rescue and begin pulling with the other contestants, then each team will have greater capacity.
Similarly, when I pray and meditate, I feel that somebody else is helping me, whereas an ordinary man feels he can only rely on himself. When he is under the weight, he thinks that he is lifting it all by himself. He has practised for so many years and developed his strength and he feels that everything depends on this physical strength. But in my case, I feel that I am only an instrument. There is some other power that is coming to help me. That power I call God's Grace.
Marty Gallagher: We work a lot with young lifters. What advice would you give to them?
Sri Chinmoy: The young lifters and bodybuilders must find an invisible friend who will help them. They must feel that there is Somebody who is eager to help them. They cannot see Him with their eyes, but they can feel Him inside their heart. Many things we cannot see but we can feel.
Let us say that yesterday some young students lifted 200 pounds. They must feel that they have got this capacity from God. If they cannot give credit to God, they should at least give credit to an invisible friend. Or let them say there is a higher force.
They know their own body because they have worked with it for a long time to develop their muscles. But do they also know what their mind can do? When they have a negative thought, they become so weak! Again, when they have a positive thought, how strong they become! While they are lifting, if they think of their rivals, they are bound to fail. At that very moment, they should not think at all. But if they have to think, they should think of their coach who is helping and encouraging and inspiring them.
The best thing, however, is not to think of anybody, but to become one with the weight itself. If the weight and I have become friends, then we do not need anybody else. But if I cannot take the weight as my friend, at least let me think of my coach — that he is so kind to me and is always trying to help me. And if I cannot think of my coach, then at least let me think of the joy I get from lifting and not of somebody else who perhaps is stronger than I am.
There are so many ways we can improve if our mind is trained to think in a positive or divine way. We have so many friends within us and around us. We have to accept the world as our friend, and not as our enemy.
Marty Gallagher: How do you know the moment to actually grab the bar and lift?
Sri Chinmoy: There are various ways I can know. I do not lift the bar until I feel that my thought process has completely stopped and I have become another plate. When I am touching the plates one by one before I lift, I am establishing my friendship and oneness with them. I identify myself so completely with them that I feel I have become the weight itself. If I have become the weight — if I am the body and the weight is my hand — then I can easily raise it.
Marty Gallagher: So many of our lifters lift with aggression and that is why they need huge bodies to lift the weights; whereas, if they were harnessing their real capacities, think of the weights they could lift with these huge bodies!
Hugh Cassidy: Yes, isn't it ironic that most of the lifters in the world are the ones who challenge the weight? They're not the ones who become friends with the weight.
Sri Chinmoy: That is their mistake. A challenge is like a special kind of anger. If I am angry with you, my nerves are weakened. Each time we challenge someone, we inwardly weaken ourselves. But if we establish our oneness with someone, then we get that person's strength.
That is what we are doing with our prayer-life and meditation-life. When we pray and meditate, we are getting God's Strength. It is not that we are stealing it; only we are establishing a free access to it. If you and I have become friends, then immediately you will give me what you have and what you are and I will also give you what I have and what I am. So both our capacities are increased. If I challenge you, I will come with nine dollars and you will show that you have eleven dollars. But if we show our oneness rather than our rivalry, then my nine dollars and your eleven dollars become twenty dollars.
Marty Gallagher: How often do you recommend that a person meditate? Should he meditate before he lifts and for how long?
Sri Chinmoy: Absolute beginners should not meditate at all; they should concentrate. For an absolute beginner, meditation is a difficult process. There are three rungs in the spiritual ladder. The first rung is concentration, the second rung is meditation and the third rung is contemplation.
In my case, I can do all three because I have been practising for many years. But a beginner has to first learn concentration. When he concentrates, his concentration must be on the tiniest part of the weight that he is trying to lift. Suppose I am trying to lift 200 pounds. On one side of the bar is 100 pounds and on the other side is 100 pounds. When I am concentrating, I will focus my attention on my wrist or on my hand, and try to feel the whole weight there. I will not think of the plates on either side. Everything has to be felt at the spot where I am concentrating. While I am concentrating, I have to feel that the weight is smaller than the smallest — no matter how big it is.
But when I am meditating, at that time I will have to see the whole picture — the plates, the bar, everything. Then, when I am contemplating, I have to establish my total oneness with everything — with the plates, with the bar, with the entire apparatus.
Hugh Cassidy: What about breathing?
Sri Chinmoy: As you know, when you want to lift up a heavy weight, it is easier to do so when you are breathing in. It is always good to take deep breaths, not shallow breaths. When I lift very heavy weights, I take three very deep breaths before lifting. The best thing is to feel the breath or the life-energy in your spiritual heart and in your forehead. While you are concentrating, you can feel the same life-energy inside your wrist or inside your palm. It is life-energy that enables us to lift. So when I breathe in, I always feel that my life-energy is inside my forehead and, when I concentrate, I feel it is inside my wrist.
Marty Gallagher: Are you talking about the spiritual third eye?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, the third eye. Always feel that your power is coming from there. Our will-power is not in our arms or in our shoulders. The will-power that is governing the whole body originates in the third eye — between the eyebrows and a little above.
Weightlifting students who have not been practising meditation should learn how to concentrate. For them that will be easiest. Then they should learn to meditate. In the beginning, if they do not concentrate, they will not be able to bring to the fore their own inner strength. Strength is always there inside us, but the way to bring it to the fore is through concentration and meditation.
Marty Gallagher: How does meditation differ from concentration?
Sri Chinmoy: When we concentrate, we focus on something smaller than the smallest. When we meditate, we meditate on something larger than the largest.
We concentrate on a tiny drop, but we meditate on the vast ocean or the sky. Meditation is vastness, absolute vastness. And contemplation is something far beyond both of these. Contemplation is oneness.
I am extremely, extremely grateful to both of you. I feel that if we can work together positively, there will be countless people who will believe us and who will be able to derive inspiration and benefit. I know that there are some people in the weightlifting world who feel threatened by my approach to weightlifting.
Marty Gallagher: There are people who build careers on the negative and there are always other people who will get malicious pleasure from reading their comments.
Sri Chinmoy: Some people will say that the moon is so beautiful, it gives us light, inspiration and joy. Again, there will be others who will say that there are so many spots on the moon, or that it is not as bright as the sun. Still others will say that even the sun is losing its energy and after a few centuries there will be no sun. Some people will always look at the dark side, but we want to look at the bright side. If we take the positive side, then we make progress. We feel that people who constantly criticise the world and see the negative side of things are unconsciously destroying themselves.
We are trying to become better citizens of the world, and for that we have to go beyond our present capacities. Whatever capacities we have are not enough. We have to become better in every way. By criticising someone, in which way are we becoming better? My right hand can lift up a heavier weight than my left hand. But will I criticise my left hand? Will I say, "Look, why do I have to keep you? You cannot lift as much as my right hand, so the best thing is to chop you off!" Am I such a fool? Because I have established my oneness with both my right hand and my left hand, in no way will I feel that my left hand is inferior. The left hand and the right hand have to go together, like the older brother and the younger brother in a family. If the older brother can lift 200 pounds and the younger brother can lift 20 pounds, the older brother will not feel that the younger one is inferior. If he has sincere love for the younger one and sympathy with him, he is so happy at the younger brother's achievement. Also, he knows that his little brother will be able to make progress and one day he, too, will lift up 200 pounds. And the little brother on his part will feel so happy that his own brother is able to lift 200 pounds.
So this is how we establish our oneness. The older brother could have said, "It is beneath my dignity to identify myself with my younger brother and count his 20 pounds with my 200 pounds." But if he is a good person, he will not do that. He will say, "My little brother has done 20, so now we have 220 pounds in our joint account."
Marty Gallagher: Even a child can see farther if he is sitting on his father's shoulders.
Sri Chinmoy: You are absolutely right. In the long run, it is the haters of mankind who will be the losers, not the lovers of mankind. It is the lovers of humanity who will do something worthwhile for the world and for themselves. Only by positive thinking, by bringing the positive qualities of human beings to the fore, will this world be able to make progress.
Marty Gallagher: You have given us much to think on. Would you be so kind as to give me an autograph for my young children? They asked me for it. As I was walking out the door, my young son came up and said, "Could you please get Sri Chinmoy's autograph for me?"
Sri Chinmoy: I shall gladly do it. I am so grateful to you for coming to see me. You have been extremely, extremely kind to me, and my gratitude is the only thing I can offer to both of you.
Published in Aspiration-body, illumination-soul, part 3
Sri Chinmoy on Temas del momento, ‘Themes of the moment’, a TV programme directed by Mr Evelio Otero
God is seated in the hearts of all human beings, so when one practises Yoga, one is entering into God’s presence. Yoga is not a religion; it is something infinitely deeper than religion. The so-called religions are satisfied with moral canons, ethics, creeds, and so forth. But Yoga helps a human being to transcend these finite, human standards. That does not mean that one has to act like an animal or violate civilised morality. It means that one has to be constantly in touch or in contact with one’s Inner Being and listen to the dictates of his Inner Being. One has to go beyond the snares, the boundaries of morality. So we can say that religion is a human endeavour, while Yoga is a soul endeavour. The difference between Yoga and religion is the difference between the body and the soul. At the same time, there is no ultimate difference, because the body needs the soul and the soul needs the body. So religion needs Yoga and Yoga needs religion.
Interviewer: Sri Ghose, what is the advantage to the human body in being influenced by learning Yoga philosophy?
Sri Chinmoy: There is abundant advantage in accepting Yoga in our day-to-day life. First of all, everybody wants to simplify one’s outer life. One wants to free oneself from fear, doubt, bondage, limitation, imperfection and ignorance. Now, if one practises Yoga, one enters into the deeper reality of human existence. And when one has free access to the Inner Being, one is in a position to have a better life and have a more satisfactory human existence. Right now we see frustration all around us. Each human being has become consciously or unconsciously a victim of frustration, worry and anxieties. But Yoga assures us that we can easily free ourselves from this frustration if we follow the path of inner self-discipline.
Interviewer: Is it necessary for a person to abandon his religion, let us say Catholicism, in order to adopt the Yoga teachings?
Sri Chinmoy: One does not have to abandon one’s own religion or one’s own faith. If one abandons one’s own religion, then he will be committing a Himalayan error. One must live in one’s own religion, in one’s own faith. Religion is like a house. In your own home, you have complete security, you have a place to live and rest, you have a place to do your work, to be with your own family, you have a place of your own where you can be comfortable and at ease. Similarly religion has to be accepted. One should live in one’s own religion, though, at the same time, aspire to realise God. Nobody is required to relinquish or abandon his religion in order to practise Yoga. If one does so, he is making a mistake. But at the end of his journey’s Goal, when a person is liberated from suffering and feels that he is one with God’s consciousness, then he knows that he can transcend all this. But at the beginning, one need not leave one’s religion aside to attain liberation or to practise Yoga. No.
Question: What made you come to Puerto Rico?
Sri Chinmoy: First of all, I would like to tell you that I came to the West in 1964. I came here on the invitation of some of my friends, admirers and disciples from the West. They invited me to come in 1964.
Question: And this is your seventh visit to Puerto Rico?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, this is my seventh visit.
Question: What other Centres do you have?
Sri Chinmoy: We have four centres: one in Puerto Rico, one in New York, the third is in Jamaica, West Indies and the fourth is in Miami, Florida. There we do our spiritual and yogic activities. Puerto Rico happens to be the first Centre and the name of our Centre is Aum Centre.
Question: Does that have a meaning?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, AUM is a Sanskrit word and it means God in three aspects: God as the Creator, God as the Preserver, and God as the Destroyer or Transformer.
Question: Is the membership of the Centre here almost one hundred per cent Puerto Rican?
Sri Chinmoy: A little less than one hundred percent. We have one German disciple and three Americans who have lived in Puerto Rico for many years. The others are all native Puerto Ricans. All are most dedicated and most sincere in their spiritual approach.
Question: Do they follow your teachings with enthusiasm?
Sri Chinmoy: Mostly; and they have an earnest seeking for the Truth. They pursue their spiritual discipline most devotedly and satisfactorily during my absence.
Question: How many days do you spend in Puerto Rico when you come and engage in these teachings?
Sri Chinmoy: Each time I come here, I try to spend about a month or so, but this time, I shall be here for about six weeks.
Question: Then from here, where will you go?
Sri Chinmoy: I will go back to New York and there is every possibility of my going to Germany, Italy and a few other places in Europe.
Question: You don't have established headquarters in New York or in Puerto Rico aside from all these centres?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, we do. I have my permanent headquarters in New York, but these are all permanent Centres with a resident president in each place. They function here all the time without me, although I offer them spiritual guidance inwardly and by mail and telephone. I spend eight or nine months a year in New York and the rest of the time I spend in Puerto Rico, Miami, Jamaica, West Indies and other places. Then I go out on occasion when people invite me to speak on Yoga, philosophy, etc. I give a great many public talks in churches, synagogues, schools, Hatha Yoga groups, etc.
Question: I want to inform the television audience of the location and telephone number of your Centre.
Sri Chinmoy: Our Centre in San Juan is located in the San Marcos building in Santurce, at 659 Miramar Avenue. The telephone number is 7217286. Every week we hold special meditations and classes. On Sunday morning at 11:00 a.m. we have a special meditation and a discourse. On Wednesday evening, we start meditation at 8:00 p.m. and end at 9:30 p.m.
Interviewer: Thank you, Master Chinmoy Kumar Ghose, Master of Yoga philosophy for the privilege of having you here on “Temas del Momento”. Goodnight.
Question: Is the earth planet like a final stage for perfection? Do we have to go through the other planets first and then come here?
Sri Chinmoy: The earth is the only place to realise God. To other places, humans go as visitors, as you would visit your friends’ or relatives’ houses. According to what your own inner affinities are, you might like the place and stay, or else complete this incarnation and go back there. But there you do not make any progress. You do not meditate there or do anything to further your spiritual evolution.
This is the world where you have aspiration and where you practise meditation. No soul, no human being is able to realise God on other planes; only here on earth. That is why an Indian poet said, “Man above all.” No one is superior to man because man is tomorrow’s God and God is today’s man, concealed but not revealed. Man is tomorrow’s God revealed, whereas God is today’s man concealed.
When the soul aspires in other worlds, it gets experience. Aspiration is itself an experience. But manifesting the divine fruits of aspiration can only take place here on earth. Here alone is the field for manifestation and here alone realisation can be had. Realisation is the culmination of the soul’s evolution and it can only be had here on earth. The planet earth represents and embodies spiritual evolution. The soul incarnates in a human body in order to give liberation or realisation to human beings and at the same time the soul manifests the Infinite and the Highest.
Published in Earth’s Cry Meets Heaven’s Smile, part 3
Religious People Will Have to Take Responsibility for Human Rights in the World
On July 7th, 2004 the city of Barcelona, Spain hosted the week-long Parliament of the World's Religions for representatives of the main religions of the world.
From North and South America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand, 3,200 people of faith from 76 countries of the world, took part in this event.
In the style of the world Olympics, with great flair and festivity, hundreds of seminars and discussions were also held.
Universal religious leader, Sri Chinmoy, focusing on the common goals of all religions, opened the Parliament with a silent meditation. Following this, he played the ancient musical instrument, the esraj, creating a wave of peace in the assembly hall. Well known for his writings, sports, paintings and multi-faceted creativity that inspire many God-lovers, Sri Chinmoy attended this significant gathering with a number of his students.
The keynote speaker for this event was 2003 Nobel Peace Laureate, Ms. Shirin Ebadi of Iran. Prior to her speech, Ms. Ebadi and Sri Chinmoy met to discuss issues related to world peace and humanitarian works.
Ms. Shirin Ebadi in her keynote speech noted that for the establishment and protection of human rights in the world, religious leaders and governments will have to take responsibility. Her message in this present world of turmoil was received warmly by the peace-seeking delegates.
After the opening ceremony, more than 400 small seminars on different subjects were held.This great gathering of ochre-robed Buddhist monks, Jains from India, Vedic gurus, Hindu sannyasis, turbaned Sikhs, and Muslim and Christian priests from different religions and nationalities, lent an air of festivity to the city of Barcelona.
This event was the fourth Parliament of the World's Religions. The first one was held in 1893 in Chicago. A hundred years later, the second Parliament of the World's Religions was also held in Chicago, in 1993. The third Parliament was held in Cape Town, South Africa, in 1999.
The first Parliament was immortalised by the opening speech of the great Indian saint, Swami Vivekananda. Swami Vivekananda's message of the common essence of all religions has withstood the test of time and provides direction to people even today. In the opening ceremony of the fourth Parliament, the Indian rishi Sri Chinmoy, who serves as an inspiration for many God-lovers through his literature, music, paintings and sports, offered a message of peace, oneness and creativity through his silent meditation.
Published in THIKANA (The Most Widely Circulated Bangla Newspaper) page 71, Vol. 15, No. 22, Friday, 16 July 2004
On July 1, the Sri Chinmoy Centre of Wilton held a special service commemorating its first year. The service consisted of silent meditation and songs composed by the members using the words of Sri Chinmoy’s poetry.
The only meditation center in Connecticut, the Sri Chinmoy Centre of Wilton is one of a number of Sri Chinmoy Centres. The others are in the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Canada, and elsewhere in the United States. The Director of all the Centres is Sri Chinmoy, an Indian Spiritual Master who came to the West six years ago to spread the message he received during his life of meditation and spiritual discipline. Since his arrival in the West, thousands of spiritual seekers have come to him, attracted by his Love, Peace, and Light.
Sri Chinmoy has been invited to lecture at over 40 American universities, including all the Ivy League schools and the major universities in the mid-West and West coast. He has delivered a special lecture series on the Bhagavad Gita at New York University, and has been asked to give a similar series on the Vedas at Columbia.
Sri Chinmoy personally conducts meditations at the Sri Chinmoy Centre in Wilton every Monday night.
Published in The Norwalk Hour, VOL. 99 No. 163, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1970
Sri Chinmoy answers questions from Mr. John Cairns and Ms. Nix Picasso, two researchers who had collaborated with Mother Teresa on her book, ‘A Simple Path’, after Sri Chinmoy’s lunchtime meditation meeting at the United Nations
Sri Chinmoy: I am very, very, very fortunate that I was able to meet with Mother Teresa last year. From my personal feeling I can say that she is both the Mother of compassion and the Sister of affection. When I look at her heart, I see that it is all compassion. When I look at her eyes, I see that they are all affection. She herself is the embodiment of both affection and compassion; these divine qualities inundate her inner being. I have the highest admiration and deepest, deepest love for her. If we had more Mother Teresas on earth, this world of ours would definitely be a world of compassion and a world of oneness.
It is because of her compassion that she accepts donations from people. For her, the one who has money is a brother, and the one who needs money is also a brother. Between the two brothers she is trying to establish the message of oneness. She sees that someone is in need and that someone else has more than he needs. So she begs and pleads with the person who has more than he needs: “Please give to me, so that I can give to our common brother, who desperately needs something.” She is begging both sides. She is begging the person who has to give and also she is begging the person who does not have to take. Some people are ready to die in the street rather than take help from others. They have lost their wisdom or ordinary intelligence. So she has to beg them, “Please allow me to treat you. Please allow me to serve you.” To me, Mother Teresa is a living saint.
Question: You and Mother Teresa live lives of service. You are seen as exceptional people and sometimes put on a pedestal. What would you say to people who feel that they are inadequate in trying to follow in your footsteps?
Sri Chinmoy: First of all, I beg to be excused. I do not dare to be placed on the same footing as Mother Teresa. Her life of service is far, far beyond my imagination’s flight. But if I may answer your question in a general way, then I wish to say that there is no such thing as adequacy or inadequacy. In a family there are two sisters; one is younger and one is older. The older sister has learned a few more things from her parents than the younger one because she was born first. The little sister is studying the ABCs, let us say, whereas the older sister is studying for her Master’s degree. The little sister will speak in her own way and her English may be faulty, but the older sister does not mind. All her affection she will shower upon the little one because she feels her oneness with her. And because the little sister feels her oneness with the older sister, she identifies with her older sister’s wisdom and claims it as her very own.
Similarly, if someone such as Mother Teresa knows a little more about spirituality, self-giving and the inner realities, then it is her bounden duty to share her knowledge with others. She has to feel like the older sister sharing her wisdom with her younger sister. At that time, why should the younger one feel inadequate? Each individual in this sense is unique. Someone can brag that his own good qualities are more important than somebody else’s. But if we want to be spiritual and establish our oneness with others, we will just offer our own good qualities to them and claim their good qualities as our own. The little sister is offering the older sister her sweet smile, and the older sister is offering her wisdom. In giving each other what they have, they are establishing their oneness with one another. It is like a flower and its fragrance; they are inseparable. Because of their oneness, the little sister’s good qualities and the older sister’s good qualities will always go together, for they are part and parcel of the same human family.
Published in Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soul, part 3
Question: When problems seem so huge and individuals seem so small, when problems seem to be able to be solved only on a very large scale, by large-scale intervention by governments, what can individuals do to contribute to world peace?
Sri Chinmoy: Problems can be found everywhere — in each individual, in each government and in each organisation. When it comes to solving world problems, ordinary individuals like ourselves are helpless. But we are not hopeless. We can hope; in fact, we have every right to hope for the betterment of the world. Although ordinary individuals cannot change the world, there are some great individuals who belong to a different category. The Holy Father and Mother Teresa, for example, are a real source of inspiration to millions and millions of people. Mahatma Gandhi was in politics; then he went beyond politics and became the father of India. How significantly he advised and illumined Nehru, Patel and others! President Gorbachev also has shown us how one individual can change the face and fate of mankind. He is living proof that an individual can be stronger than a government. So we see what great individuals are able to do.
Again, although ordinary individuals are helpless, we have to know that we have access to a higher power that is infinitely stronger than any organisation or government. This power, which is within us, is the absolute highest Power. We call Him the Inner Pilot, the Absolute Lord Supreme. The power that operates through governments or large organisations can easily be conquered by this highest absolute Power, which is all-illumining and all-fulfilling.
There is God the Creator and God the creation. We are God the creation. But if we pray to God the Creator to change or illumine the minds of those who are running countries or large organisations, then easily He can do it. Right now the mind is ruling the world — the mind that wants to dominate others and lord it over others. But if we pray to God to bring forward the heart of mankind, we will see that heart-power is infinitely stronger than mind-power. Why? Because the heart immediately identifies with others and claims their strength as its own. If ten people are on one side, what can one strong individual do? Eventually he has to surrender, no matter how strong he is. This is true whether it is an individual, a government or an organisation because oneness-power will always eventually win in the battlefield of life.
Question: Charity is sometimes criticised for being impersonal and patronising and assuaging our guilt. How does the concept of service differ from charity?
Sri Chinmoy: Charity and service are spelled differently and their meanings also are totally different. Whenever we use the term ‘charity’, there is a feeling of superiority and inferiority. Let us say that I have millions and billions of dollars and you have nothing. I feel that you are an object of pity, so I give you ten dollars. At that time, I feel that you are a beggar and do not deserve even ten dollars. So this is charity, and it is the wrong approach for dealing with others.
If I say that I am helping you, I am also making a deplorable mistake. Who am I to help anyone? If I say that I help the world, then I am the worst possible fool. Only God can help. I can only serve, and I must serve out of a feeling of oneness. If a mother hears her child crying because he is hungry, immediately she comes to feed him. When the mother gives food to the child, she does not think that her child is inferior. No, she has already established her oneness with the child, and she feels the child’s hunger as her own.
When we establish our oneness with the rest of the world, we feel the entire world as our very own. When I offer something to you because you are in need, I feel that I am only giving to my larger self. In serving you, I feel that I am serving myself. This is the spiritual approach — not charity, with its feeling of superiority and inferiority, but service, which is based on oneness.
Question: Why do people in the West find the idea of simplicity so complicated?
Sri Chinmoy: Simplicity seems complicated because it is something new to us or something that we do not want to use. Everything is complex for us because we always use the mind. We do not want to walk along a straight line. Unless we zigzag and go in a serpentine way, we get no joy. Just because we value complexity, we do not take the sunlit path — the simple, straight path. If a path is simple and straight, we feel that it has no value. Right from the beginning of our lives, we become accustomed to doing things in a very complicated way, so simplicity is most difficult for us.
When a child takes birth, the mother spends all her money-power to buy the child most beautiful and expensive clothes. She wants to show that she is richer than her neighbours. The child would be equally happy with simple clothes, but right from the beginning the child is taught that simple things are not good. So naturally, when the child grows up, he does not care for simplicity.
A simple man will have only what he needs, and he will know the difference between what he needs and what he wants. But in the West, we feel that whatever we want, we desperately need. Like hungry wolves, we are trying to possess the world. But before we possess the world, to our wide surprise we see that the world has already possessed us. We want to possess the world in all its multiplicity. We want multiplicity without unity; we want the flowers, fruits and leaves of the tree without the trunk. But if we do not start with the trunk, with simplicity, then we can never go to multiplicity. Unity is the source, and multiplicity grows out of unity.
Question: When differences in religious creeds can create such intolerance in the world, what is the proper attitude towards other people's faiths?
Sri Chinmoy: No religion teaches us to hate mankind. It is we human beings who choose to hate one another. But the spiritual Masters of the highest order, who are the founding fathers of the various religions, teach us only to love. I am a Hindu. My ancestors, the Vedic seers, taught us to love everybody. The Saviour Christ also offered the message of love. If we go deep inside each religion, we will find there the message of love. That is why I feel all religions should be appreciated and admired.
Religion is like a house. What purpose does it serve for me to tell you that my house is more beautiful than your house? If you are happy with your house and I am happy with my house, then why should we quarrel? I quarrel with you only because I am not satisfied with what I have. If I am really satisfied, if there is happiness, peace and bliss inside me, will I go and knock at your door in the middle of the night to tell you to come out and be illumined? Let me be illumined first. Once I become the sun, then only will I offer my light and illumination to you and to others. At that time I will not quarrel with you; just by being near you, I will spread illumination and light, and your heart will spontaneously receive it. It is only when I have limited light, or when I am in darkness, that I am disturbed by the darkness in others. Once my inner being is flooded with light, I will not fight with anybody.
Question: As we approach the millennium, there is possibly a feeling of despair. Do you think this is a special time for the fate of humanity? Is there another way of looking at this?
Sri Chinmoy: This is a very serious question. I am not a prophet; I would only like to say that things cannot get darker. The future cannot be worse than the present or the past. We have touched rock bottom, the abysmal abyss; now things have to go up.
Again, we have to know that by seeing the dark side of an individual or the present-day world, we do not bring light to the fore. The world is full of despair, but God did not create this world for suffering. When we create something, we do not do it with the idea, “I am creating this to torture myself.” God created this world to give Himself joy. The suffering in the world is caused by us.
It is a vast game; we call it the Cosmic Game or Cosmic Lila. In a game, sometimes we do not know which side is going to win. It is so complicated. In this Game there is a fight going on between light and darkness. When darkness conquers light, it shows its supremacy. But when light conquers darkness, it shows its intimacy. When the dark part of our nature conquers something, it acts like Julius Caesar when he said, “I came, I saw, I conquered.” But when the good side of us conquers something, it says, “I came, I saw you, I loved you and I became one with you.”
What the world has been passing through for the last fifty or one hundred years is only a temporary reign of darkness. For a time, darkness has been showing its supremacy. But now light is coming to embrace and illumine this darkness. This will happen not today or tomorrow, but in the near future. People have been using the mind-power for a long time, and it has brought only misery and suffering. If I have two ways of approaching reality, and one is bringing me only unhappiness, will I not one day begin to use the other approach? The other approach is the way of the heart, and the day is fast approaching when heart-power will replace mind-power.
Question: Isn't this a time when people like you and Mother Teresa and some others are awakening this in a lot of people?
Sri Chinmoy: Not just us, but everybody who practises prayer and meditation! Heart-power means prayer and meditation; heart-power comes from spirituality. When I pray, I feel that Somebody is listening to me. When I meditate, I feel that Somebody is advising me or telling me to do the right thing and be the right person. Prayer and meditation must go together. When I pray, I am asking Someone: “Give me light, give me joy, give me peace and bliss.” When I meditate, Somebody is saying: “This is the way you can have peace. If you do this, you can have peace. If you do that, you can have light and bliss.” So prayer and meditation have to go together.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 20
Sri Chinmoy answers the following questions for the Italian magazine ‘Armonia’ in New York
Question: Which spiritual qualities has humanity developed at this point in its evolution?
Sri Chinmoy: To be very frank, because the world has not developed appreciable spiritual qualities, it is in such miserable condition. If I have to say what spiritual qualities the world has developed up until now, I will say: compromise, mutual agreement and a deep hunger for world peace.
Question: How can mankind make more inner progress?
Sri Chinmoy: To make more inner progress, mankind must resort to spirituality. Prayer and meditation in our everyday life are of paramount importance.
Question: What contribution can each of us make to Mother Earth?
Sri Chinmoy: Each one has to make his own contribution. There is no hard and fast rule that everybody has to make the same contribution. According to his inner capacity, each one has to contribute to Mother Earth for her happiness.
Question: Why are you so involved in so many worldly activities?
Sri Chinmoy: For me, the inner world and the outer world go together, like the fragrance and the beauty of a flower. Again, we can think of a seed and a tree. The seed is underground. There it germinates and eventually it becomes a tree. Then in the course of time, this tree produces new seeds. Like this, inner activities and outer activities must go side by side. Otherwise, there will be no balance between the two.
Question: Can music transform our consciousness?
Sri Chinmoy: Definitely music can transform our consciousness, provided it is soulful, devotional music and not the music that produces vital stimulation. That kind of music can never transform our consciousness. There is a type of music that is all inner illumination and outer progress. This music is spiritual, devotional and self-giving. It can awaken us from deep ignorance-sleep.
Question: Do you have a special wish for the New Millennium?
Sri Chinmoy: My only wish in this New Millennium is to see everybody happy — happy while looking at the world, happy while helping the world, happy in becoming a true citizen of the world for the tremendous evolution and progress of mankind.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 30
Sri Chinmoy completed his 13,000th Bengali song during his visit to Japan.
He wrote the words to the song on the train ride from Hiroshima to Kamakura on July 13 and composed the music during a function with his students at the Kamakura Park Hotel the following day.
“My 13,000 heart-flower-songs in Bengali, my Mother tongue, I am offering lo all the soulful singers of the world, born and yet unborn,'” he said.
“My gratitude-heart I am prayerfully offering to the Vision-Eye, Compassion-Heart and Protection- Feet of my Absolute Lord Beloved Supreme.”
It took him more than 42 years to complete this remarkable feat. In addition to his Bengali songs, the composer has also written over 7,000 spiritual songs in English.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volune 41, Mid-April–Mid-August 2006
TORONTO — Toronto Mayor Barbara Hall welcomed Sri Chinmoy at the start of his University of Toronto peace concert on July 12.
“You bring to our city great inspiration through your life and work in music, in meditation, in writing and in sport,” she said. The Toronto concert, geared for members of the Indian community, was part of the series honouring India.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 26, April-August 1997
SRI CHINMOY PEACE FOUNDATION OF CANADA
NEW YORK — Recently, Sri Chinmoy met with Mother Teresa at her Missionaries of Charity House in the Bronx, New York City, and presented her with a unique tribute entitled, “Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soul.”
The 86 year-old living saint was smiling broadly and was clearly thrilled as she received the award — a large glass sculpture carved with Sri Chinmoy’s peace-birds, offered on behalf of the Indian-born peace leader and the Peace Meditation at the United Nations, which he leads.
The meeting was one of Mother Teresa’s only meetings thus far since she arrived in New York just over a week ago for profession of vows by her sister. Spiritually indomitable but in delicate physical health, Mother Teresa shared with Sri Chinmoy her current world wide service to the poor and her future plans.
Sri Chinmoy told her “You are the choicest instrument of our Lord and He wants you to be here on earth for many, many more years. So you have to bless us. You have to take care of your children, that is to say, humanity.” Full of affection and joy, Mother Teresa replied, “Thank you so much and God bless you. Please continue to pray for me specially and for our whole congregation. You are in our prayers.” The 65 year-old peace leader replied, “Mother, every day I pray for your health and for the success of your Mission.”
Also present at the meeting was Sister Nirmala who was elected in March as Superior General of the Missionaries of Charity. She is accompanying Mother Teresa during her visits to Rome, New York and Washington. “We are now in 120 countries — can you imagine,” exclaimed the Nobel Peace Laureate. “We have 384 houses in India and all over the world.”
Sri Chinmoy and Mother Teresa have met on several occasions before, both in New York and Rome. They regularly correspond and speak by telephone. During the meeting Mother Teresa poignantly shared: “Fifty thousand people have died and gone to Heaven! They were all picked up from the streets and we took care of them and loved them, and they went straight up to Heaven to God.” Sri chinmoy lovingly replied, “Yes, but you were the one to take them to God. Their souls are all gratitude to you, Mother, because you have taken them directly to the Lord with your prayers and with your blessings.”
Published in THE GUYANESE & CARIBBEAN INTERNATIONAL VOICE — WEEKLY — JULY 11th, 1997
National
BARCELONA, JULY 10. International spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy opened a week-long Parliament of the World’s Religions in Barcelona with silent meditation and a performance of his peace-filled music before participants from all faiths. The meet brought together the world’s religious and spiritual leaders and included an address by Shirin Ebadi, the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize winner.
This was the fourth such Parliament. The first took place in the presence of Swami Vivekananda in Chicago in 1893.
Published in The Hindu, page 60
This article about Sri Chinmoy’s weightlifting is printed in the Sport around the World section of DELO, one of the main daily newspapers in Slovenia. (Number of printed copies: 87,700)
At the age 69 years he lifted 272 kg
New York — At the age 69, Sri Chinmoy set an astonishing record for his age: he bench pressed 272 kg by simultaneously pressed up two gigantic 136 kg weights.
Interestingly, Sri Chinmoy improved his achievement each day by lifting weights of at least 22.5 kg heavier than the previous day for three successive days.
But this record is not the only one he has set in the last months. Previously he set records including the standing double-arm dumbbell lift (590 kg), seated double-arm dumbbell lift (200 kg), standing calf raise (907 kg) and seated calf raise (544 kg).
Published in DELO, 10 July 2000
International spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy offered a silent meditation and performed his peace-filled music on esraj to open the week-long Parliament of the World’s Religions in Barcelona before thousands of participants from all faiths on Wednesday evening. Many other preeminent world figures — including the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize winner, Ms. Shirin Ebadi, the Archbishop of Barcelona and the Governor of Catalonia — spoke during the ceremony which officially begins more than 400 plenaries, seminars and special events.
At a time when inter-religious conflict is causing untold world suffering, the Parliament offers a means for people of all spiritual and cultural traditions to join together in helping better the world through joint prayers, as well as common social and ecological initiatives.
During the first Parliament, held in 1893 in Chicago, Swami Vivekananda captured the hearts and imaginations of all the participants with his powerful, all-embracing spirituality. This was the beginning of the interfaith movement worldwide. One hundred years later, Sri Chinmoy, who has led the Peace Meditations at the United Nations since 1970, also offered the opening meditation at the world’s second Parliament.
The current Parliament of World Religions is only the fourth in history and is one of the largest events taking place during the five-month Universal Forum of Cultures in Barcelona.
Published in The Indian Express,page 57, Friday, July 9, 2004
NEW YORK — What is probably the largest one-man art show in history opened July 7 at a block-long gallery in New York’s Soho art district.
On display were seven thousand paintings — some as large as 9x16 feet — by spiritual Master Sri Chinmoy.
They formed part of the 27,000 works the Yogi completed in an eight-month period.
The exhibit at The Jharna-Kala Gallery, 220 Mercer St. (near Broadway) is open seven days a week and will extend through August 29. On the evening of that day there will be a gala closing, to which art lovers and interested seekers are cordially invited.
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. II, No. 7, August 1, 1975
JAMAICA, NY — Former Indonesian Prescient B. J. Habibie, vacationing in New York with his family visited Sri Chinmoy at Aspiration-Ground on July 6, and was lifted into the air.
Sri Chinmoy had met the Indonesian leader in Jakarta in January 1999.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 38, April-Early August 2005
During an informal gathering in Sri Chinmoy’s back yard the evening of July 5, it began to rain.
Instead of inviting the disciples into his house, as he often does, or using his spiritual powers to stop the rain, as he has frequently done in similar situations in the past, the Master asked his disciples to meditate with him.
He requested those who had taken shelter in the garage or under umbrellas to either come out into the rain or go home.
The Master and the disciples remained meditating in the chill downpour for about an hour. Then the Master gave out prasad and hot food was served.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 6, Nos. 5-6-7 May-June-July (continued)
Indian spiritual master Sri Chinmoy and Pope John Paul II had a private meeting at the Vatican recently and the result was a very Joyous Guru.
“He showed me much affection and love,” reports Sri Chinmoy. The holy father noted the Indian meditation teacher’s hopes for peace through the United Nations, and then said: “Special blessings to you. Special greetings to your members. We shall continue together.”
The late Pope Paul also had deeply appreciated Sri Chinmoy’s efforts for world peace when the two met privately on three occasions.
Sri Chinmoy with The Pope: love and affection exchanged.
Published in News India, Page 4, July 4, 1980
Schweriner Volkszeitung
Daily newspaper
Monday, 3 July 2000 page 8
Circulation: 126,000
Former record mark just surpassed by 100 pounds
New York • The peace meditation leader and fitness pioneer Sri Chinmoy has transcended his own bench press record for his age and weight in New York by raising up a total of 400 pounds (181.4 kg) in the double-arm dumbbell bench press. The 69-year-old raised the two huge 200-pound (90.7 kg) dumbbells a full 7 inches (18 cm) high and held them aloft for six seconds. With 100 pounds (45 kg) more weight than he lifted just one week ago, Sri Chinmoy has far surpassed his own dumbbell world record as well as all other age records. The previous world record using a barbell was 340 pounds (154 kg). Jim Smith, Registrar of the British Amateur Weight Lifters Association, exclaimed, “Dumbbells are much more difficult to lift than a barbell.”
Sri Chinmoy during the record attempt.
Published in the German daily newspaper Schweriner Volkszeitung in the federal-state of Mecklenburg
GUATEMALA CITY — Sri Chinmoy was invited by the Guatemalan Government to participate in the Changing of the Rose ceremony commemorating the end of the country’s civil war.
He is only the third non-citizen to be afforded this honor.
The rose, resting in a statue of two linked hands in the courtyard of the National Palace, is changed daily, but the official Changing of the Rose ceremony takes place once a month.
The event with Sri Chinmoy took place on July 2.
In Guatemala City that evening, the spiritual teacher offered a World Harmony Concert. About 3,000 people attended the concert.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 38, April-Early August 2005
Peace advocate Sri Chinmoy, 55, who leads peace meditation programs for U.N. delegates and staff, lifted a gigantic 7,000-lb.-plus dumbbell with one arm in Jan. 1987. The feat was designed to show the powers of the human mind through concentration and meditation. The Maryland Sri Chinmoy Centre will be holding a self-awareness workshop on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, July 10 to 12, at Homewood Friends Meetinghouse, 3107 N. Charles St.
Published in The Baltimore Chronicle, Vol. 15, No. 5, July 1987
AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Mayor Les Mills opened Sri Chinmoy’s Auckland peace concert at Aotea Centre on June 30.
Speaking to a crowd of 2,500, he hailed the spiritual teacher as a man who has dedicated his life “to moving the people of the world from darkness into light.”
Sri Chinmoy, he said, “is here to help us understand our unique worth and to inspire us to respect and understand that worth in others.”
The Auckland concert, like most of Sri Chinmoy’s other peace concerts this year, was dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the United Nations.
While he was in town the following day, the Auckland Zoo was officially dedicated as a Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossom. The city of Auckland previously had been named a Sri Chinmoy Peace Capital.
New Zealand Prime Minister Jim Bolger meets with Sri Chinmoy on June 30 in Auckland.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25 April-July 1995
on Radio Clyde in Glasgow, Scotland
Interviewer: I would like to ask if you feel only spiritual joy is genuine in this life? Do you deny the existence of physical joy?
Sri Chinmoy: No, we do not deny the existence of physical joy. But we feel that if the physical joy becomes an expression of the spiritual joy, only then will it be lasting. Otherwise, it has no backbone, let us say. If there is no real source, if there is no reality behind the physical, then the physical joy cannot last. The Vedic Seers, Indian spiritual figures, came to realise that it is from Joy that we have come into existence; it is in Joy that we exist; and at the end of our journey's close it is to Joy that we return. But the source has to be spiritual joy, that is to say, God. If God expresses His Light in and through the body, then only will the joy be lasting. Otherwise, if we discard the inner Light, the God-Light, and only care for the physical joy, which is sense-pleasure, then there can never be abiding satisfaction. Right after we indulge in sense-pleasure, we get the experience of frustration; and frustration is followed by destruction. But if the physical becomes a conscious instrument of the spiritual, if the spiritual joy is being expressed through the physical, then the joy lasts.
Interviewer: Joy both physical and spiritual very often emanates from an appreciation of beauty. Now, how are we to recognise beauty and the validity of beauty? John Keats wrote that "Beauty is truth, truth beauty; — that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know."
Sri Chinmoy: Right. He also said that "A thing of beauty is a joy forever." We have to know that there is a vast difference between the physical beauty and the spiritual beauty. When we see physical beauty, earthly beauty, we immediately want to possess it, grab it. Even when we look at beauty with our naked human eyes, while we are appreciating it, we try to devour it. So appreciation is immediately followed by destruction. We see a flower which is so beautiful and we immediately want to touch it. But when we touch it, the life-force, the life-principle of the flower goes away. When we touch physical beauty, immediately we destroy the essence of the beauty there. But when we touch the inner beauty, the spiritual beauty, at that time we become part and parcel of the beauty itself. We grow into the beauty that we touch.
When we say that physical beauty is skin-deep, there is much truth in this. But inner beauty, the beauty of the soul, is infinite, because in the inner world we are always growing; we are always singing the song of self-transcendence. In the physical everything is limited. Somebody is beautiful, but he can be more beautiful. Somebody is tall, but he can be a little taller. The physical beauty that we notice in human beings or in nature is always limited. But inner beauty comes from the soul and the soul is the direct representative of God, who is all Beauty. Since the soul derives beauty from God directly, the soul's capacity to express beauty is limitless.
So beauty is truth when we speak of inner beauty. The outer beauty is also truth; but it is temporary and transitory because it fades away. A flower, after one day, fades away. Physical beauty is truth; undoubtedly it is a form of truth, but its capacity is very limited. But inner beauty, which is limitless, is eternal.
Interviewer: Can we turn now to the subject of music? Do you see music as something related to spirituality?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I do feel that music has a special role in the spiritual life. Next to spirituality is music. Again, if I have to be sincere, as spirituality encompasses music, so do the higher types of music, soulful music, encompass spirituality. It is through music that the universal feeling of oneness can be achieved in the twinkling of an eye. Thousands and thousands of people come to listen to one person who will play for an hour or so. Now, what is he doing? Through his music he is entering into the heart and soul of the audience. For an hour he is showing his capacity; that is to say, he is bringing down some Light from above. Music is not just playing on an instrument. No, music is receptivity to something higher, something from the higher world. First the musician receives it and then he offers it to the world at large. In an hour, thousands of people can feel it as their very own. So music has the opportunity, the capacity, to claim the universe as its very own.
Interviewer: Reading about your background, I see you entered a place called an ashram. Can you tell me something of your experience there?
Sri Chinmoy: It is a spiritual community. I stayed there twenty years and I prayed and meditated most sincerely. I also participated in sports, because I saw the necessity of having a fit body. The message of the spirit must be expressed in and through the body. Here we are on earth, in the physical body, and the Light we receive from our meditation must be expressed through the physical. The body-consciousness must not be neglected. The higher messages that we get from our meditation must have a channel for expression and the body is that channel.
Interviewer: In this sense, is some kind of punishment of the body necessary? You know, in the rigorous observance of a fitness regime?
Sri Chinmoy: It is not actually punishment. True, we feel it is better to wear out than to rust out. But actually, we do not wear out. The only thing is that if we don't utilise the body, we don't know how much capacity it has. The body needs exercise. If we do not take exercise, we do not know how much we are capable of achieving. If we do not eat, we do not know how much we can eat. The capacity of the body remains fast asleep. But when we take exercise, we allow the body or we encourage the body and inspire the body to play its role in the Cosmic Game.
Interviewer: What were your particular interests in the sporting life there?
Sri Chinmoy: At that time, I was very fond of athletics: running, jumping and throwing. Also, I was a good football player. But now I am so hesitant. Scotland is excellent, excellent in sports, especially in football. Scottish people play football extremely well.
Interviewer: Oh, that's very kind of you to say so. Now that you have mentioned Scotland, perhaps we shall come to a Scottish lady who is sitting beside us. [Speaking to her] In fact you run and organise the Centre in Glasgow?
Disciple: Yes. We call it the Sri Chinmoy Centre and we practise meditation under Sri Chinmoy's guidance. There are ten or twelve of us at the moment and we meet twice a week to meditate. We also make crafts and hope to have a store where we shall sell the things we make.
Interviewer: So there is some kind of practical outlet for this awareness and consciousness of what you are doing?
Disciple: Oh, yes. We are very close. We don't live together, but we do meet very often. We have a theatre group that puts on plays that Sri Chinmoy has written. We also have a choir.
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy, thank you very much for talking to Radio Clyde and I hope your stay in Scotland will be a happy one.
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you so much for your most interesting and significant questions. I am so grateful to you. This is the only way I and my students can be of service to mankind. If we had not accepted the world, we would not have met together today. I would have remained in the Himalayan caves and you would have remained in Scotland.
Interviewer: Thank you very much.
Published in Sri Chinmoy speaks, part 4
A 1,500-mile bicycle relay the length and breadth of New York State took off June 21 in honour of Sri Chinmoy’s 15 years in America.
The seven-day event, called the “Empire State Bicycle Relay,” was probably the largest statewide event of its kind.
Some 100 bikers, paired up in teams of two, rode three-hour shifts through more than 300 towns and cities across the state.
Police provided escorts most of the way, and several mayors and county executives met the caravan in their local areas with “Sri Chinmoy Day” proclamations.
Proclamations came from the mayors of Albany, Buffalo and Rochester, among others, and from the chief executives of Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester and other counties.
The New York State Assembly adopted a resolution honouring Sri Chinmoy, whom they called a “celebrated humanitarian.”
And the Mayor of Albany, Erastus Corning, proclaimed the Master’s Welcome song an official song of the city. It, and several cycling songs Sri Chinmoy wrote to inspire the bikers, were played on the carillon at City Hall during ceremonies greeting the bikers.
The marathon ended around 6:20 a.m. June 27, with the returning cyclists and about 125 cheering disciples pouring onto the Jamaica High School playing field.
Then, in the early morning silence, Sri Chinmoy got onto his own bike and very slowly began pedalling around the quarter-mile track that circled the field.
Fifteen times he made the wide loop — a solitary figure on a 10-speed bike — circling the small, intimate world of those most dear to him, as they clustered on a playing field in a tiny corner of Queens.
Then prasad was given out, and the Empire State Bicycle Relay officially concluded. Later that morning, cyclists who had taken off from work were treated to a six-course meal cooked by the Master.
N.Y. Assemblyman Arthur J. Cooperman presents Sri Chinmoy on June 28 with the Assembly resolution honouring him for his service to the State.
Published in Anahata Nada,Volume 5, No 6, June 1979
JAMAICA, NY — The top Environmental Ministers of Zimbabwe, Bangladesh and Ghana took a break from their Earth Summit + 5 meetings at the United Nations on June 26 to visit peace advocate Sri Chinmoy and accept awards on behalf of their countries.
Sri Chinmoy honored the Ministers at a special banquet and presented their countries with an environmental and peace award on behalf of ‘Sri Chinmoy: The Peace Meditation at the United Nations’, which he leads.
“I cannot find the right words to ... acknowledge the honor done to my country,” declared J. E. Afful, Ghana’s Minister of Environment, Science and Technology. “I am deeply touched by this wonderful gesture and I accept the award in all humility ...”
The Bangladesh Minister for Environment and Forests, Mrs. Sajeda Chowdhury, voiced a similar sentiment. Speaking through a translator, she said, “I find peace when I come here,” and said she hoped Sri Chinmoy and the Meditation Group “will continue with your message of peace and love for all the people of the world.”
Zimbabwe’s Minister of Environment and Tourism, Chen Chimutengwende, also was “very touched,” he said. The Minister had met Sri Chinmoy a year and a half ago in Harare, when the peace advocate had visited President Mugabe.
“We in Zimbabwe recognize the good work you are doing in the United Nations and internationally in promoting love and peace,” he declared.
Representatives from Sweden, the Bahamas and Moldova also attended the banquet and received awards from Sri Chinmoy.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 26, April-August 1997
JAMAICA, NY — Track and field star Carl Lewis (Sudhahota) was master of ceremonies.
Four-time Olympic gold medalist (discus) Al Oerter and bodybuilding champion Bill Pearl, five-time holder of the Mr. Universe title, were sitting in the front row, enthralled.
These were a few of the athletes attending an unusual celebration June 25-26 of the weightlifting achievements of spiritual Master Sri Chinmoy.
Applying the power of meditation to weightlifting, the 54-year-old spiritual teacher has astonished the sports world with his 240-pound one.arm lifts and 1,300-pound calf raises after only one year’s training. (By the end of July he was lifting 250 pounds with one arm and 1,500 pounds in the calf raise.) He weighs under 160 pounds.
During the two-day event, the visiting athletes took a tour of the Master’s art gallery ... played tennis with the spiritual teacher ... officiated at disciple weightlifting, pushup and headstand contests ... and listened to a medley of 50-odd songs Sri Chinmoy had composed to honour them. “In my whole career there are ... maybe three things that have stuck with me and moved me enough to remember over the years,” Pearl said afterwards.
“But here with Sri Chinmoy is by far the best ... This is a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”
Jim Smith, Registrar of Records for the British Amateur Weight Lifters’ Association and masters champion in the two-handed standing press, also called it “an experience I will never forget for the rest of my days.”
Others attending the celebration of the first anniversary of Sri Chinmoy’s weightlifting included: Cliff Sawyer, President of the Physique Committee of the American Athletic Union and chairman of the Mr. America Committee.
Sri Chinmoy with (top) Olympic gold medalists Al Oerter and Carl Lewis (Sudhahota) and (bottom) weightlifting champion Bill Pearl at celebration honouring the Master’s weightlifting anniversary.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 14, April-July 1986
TICONDEROGA, N.Y. — The mayor of this historic town just outside Fort Ticonderoga proclaimed June 24 “Canada’s Oneness-Heart Day” in honour of the Canadian running team. The Canadian runners passed through Ticonderoga during a 500-mile relay run from Parliament Hill in Ottawa to the Statue of Liberty.
Members of Canada’s Oneness-Heart carried out the run to salute the American Bicentennial and the Liberty Torch runners.
Besides bearing a flaming torch, the Canadian runners brought letters of friendship and Bicentennial good wishes from Prime Minister Trudeau and other Ottawa officials.
During their own 500-mile relay, the Canadian runners received proclamations, medallions and other awards from various towns and cities including Poughkeepsie, Newburgh and Saranac Lake, N.Y.
The Canadian run concluded June 26 at the Statue of Liberty, where the Canada’s Oneness-Heart and Liberty Torch runners had a special ceremony with Sri Chinmoy.
Sri Chinmoy told the Canadian runners, “History will bear witness to the supreme fact that Canada is not for Canada. Canada is for America as well; nay, Canada is for the length and breadth of the entire world.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 3, No. 5, July 1, 1976
Question: Do you have a philosophy on physical fitness?
Sri Chinmoy: As a truth-seeker and a God-lover, I feel the supreme necessity of physical fitness. To me, the body is the temple, and inside the temple is the shrine. If there is no temple, then there can be no shrine. The shrine is our soul, our inner life, our inner hunger for truth, for delight, for beauty, for perfection. The body and the soul must go together, like the inner life and the outer life. If I have a good thought inside my mind, then I can express it to the world at large. If I have a pure heart, then in my outer actions and dealings also, I will be pure. The inner and the outer must go together. This is my simple philosophy.
Question: Which comes first — the inner life or the outer life?
Sri Chinmoy: God always comes first. The creation did not create God. God is both God the Creator and God the creation. Then they become one, inseparably one. But we have to say the Vision of God came first, then the manifestation of God. The manifestation cannot come before the vision. You envision something and then you try to give shape and form to it. So the Vision of God came before the manifestation of God.
The physical strength or physical capacity that we have is the result of our inner aspiration. That is to say, how we behave inwardly is of supreme importance at the beginning, and then how we behave and react in our outer life. Our inner life of aspiration must come first; then comes our outer life of dedication. They go together, but the one will lead and guide the other. If we are not guided by our inner thoughts, inner goodwill, inner strength, then we will be nowhere in the outer life.
Question: How does exercise and competition help the inner life?
Sri Chinmoy: In my case, I use the term 'self-transcendence'. I do not compete with anybody. I compete with myself. It is like a seed that germinates and becomes a plant. Then it becomes a tree and, finally, it grows into a huge banyan tree. I always try to transcend myself. In the weightlifting world, I started lifting 40 pounds with one arm and then I went up and up.
There are many athletes who get inspiration and enthusiasm only when they compete with others. I cannot blame them. If someone is in a position to compete with somebody else, that means he is inspired, he is enthusiastic. If he is competing with someone, then he can bring to the fore his utmost capacity. Otherwise he may be lethargic. He may not practise daily. The physical discipline in his life may come into existence only when he knows that he has to compete with somebody else. Otherwise, he may not take these physical exercises seriously.
But with God's Grace, I practise daily for physical fitness and at the same time I try to better myself, I try to improve my capacity.
Question: Is improvement and building on previous records important, or is the main thing to exercise daily?
Sri Chinmoy: I feel improvement is necessary in order for us to make progress. In this world we are happy only when we make progress. When I studied English, in the beginning I had to learn the alphabet, the ABCs. Now at this age, if I had not studied hundreds and thousands of English books, I would have felt miserable because my teacher taught me the ABCs so many years ago. So that is called progress. This progress is giving me satisfaction. What we want is satisfaction. If we are satisfied with what we have right now, and we do not want to go forward, then we will not be happy.
Again, we have to know that there is a great difference between competition and progress. When we want to compete with others, sometimes we adopt foul means — by hook or by crook we try to win. Then we bring to the fore our feelings of rivalry and almost animal propensities, animal qualities. We are only thinking of how we can defeat others, how we can lord it over others. But when we are competing with ourselves, we know that we have to purify our inner existence in order to improve. So here is the difference. When it is a matter of self-transcendence, we have to depend on our inner purity, inner love, vastness and oneness with the rest of the world. We try to develop universal goodwill, whereas, while competing with others, we may not have those feelings. At that time, we may see others as rivals, we are on the border of enmity with them. It can be as if we are fighting with enemies when we are competing. But when we are trying to transcend ourselves, we cannot fight with ourselves. If we can go ten steps ahead today, tomorrow we will try to cover twenty steps, and the day after thirty steps.
Question: Spiritually, what can we get from games? Volleyball, for instance, is one of those sports that they will be doing in the Senior Olympics.
Sri Chinmoy: Very good. I happened to be a volleyball player in my teens. I was the captain, the main instructor, in the place where I was brought up in India for many, many years. I used to play volleyball quite well.
From the spiritual point of view, there are many things we can learn from games. One is fellow feeling. Then, in volleyball there is something called a serve. Let us take the term 'serve'. By playing, we are serving mankind. You will say, "How?" Let us say you are playing volleyball, and I am in the audience. You are giving me joy and inspiration. You are playing so well, you are smashing the ball and doing all kinds of things.
Why do we watch sports? The world needs inspiration and enthusiasm. You play volleyball extremely well, and I am inspired by it. Then I go and play tennis. You have given me the inspiration, and I go and play some other game. But you gave me the joy, you gave me the inspiration, you gave me the courage. Like that, each person can get inspiration from another person to do better in their own respective fields.
Question: Why is the development of the Senior Olympics important?
Sri Chinmoy: I am very happy because those who participate in the Senior Olympics are utilising time in a divine way. There are two kinds of time. One is fleeting time. Another is eternal Time. Here these people who are advanced in life are trying to defy the attacks of self-doubt, frustration, failure and so many negative things. As we advance in age, incapacity lords it over us. We can no longer do this, we can no longer do that. Ten years ago we did it, but now we cannot run fast, we are unable to do so many things. Then we become frustrated.
But the Senior Olympians are saying, "No! We are still walking along the same road. Sometimes we are sprinting, sometimes we are running, sometimes we are jogging, and sometimes we are crawling. But as long as we keep to the same road, we will reach the destination." We often see a marathon runner running very fast. Then, to wards the end of the race, how difficult it is for him to run. He is obliged to walk. But when he reaches his destination at the end of 26 miles, he gets tremendous joy. So here also the Senior Olympians, after the age of 55, may not run as fast as they did in their prime. But the fact that they are still willing to run and eager to run deserves tremendous appreciation and admiration from us.
Question: In your remarks tonight, what do you anticipate saying to the Senior Olympians?
Sri Chinmoy: I only wish to encourage them and inspire them. I will tell them that they have developed wisdom. I use the term 'wisdom-light'. These senior athletes do not belong to the fleeting time. They belong to Time eternal. They are running along Eternity's Road, challenging the giant pride of self-doubt. Self-doubt so proudly declares, "I cannot do this, I cannot do that." The giant pride of self-doubt stands against us in the battlefield of life. These Senior Olympians are challenging their own self-doubt. They are shaking hands smilingly and proudly with impossibility. People say, "It is impossible — a person of that age cannot do pole vault. They cannot do shot-put or hurdles." But these Senior Olympians are proving that there is no such thing as impossibility.
Question: Could you talk about the concert that you will be giving?
Sri Chinmoy: It is a Peace Concert. This world of ours has everything save and except one thing: peace. And this peace has to start from within. If I have peace of mind, then only can I be of help to you. If you have peace of mind, then only can you be of help to me. This peace of mind we can get from our peaceful meditation and our prayerful life, not from political talk. Not by talking, but by praying and becoming something good can we offer peace to others. So I play quite a few instruments and offer soulful music — not the music that stimulates our vital, but the music that increases our inner hunger, which is love of God.
Question: What is the relationship between meditation and sports? I know in martial arts, which is something I've done for many years, there is a direct relationship, but does it also exist with sports?
Sri Chinmoy: In sports we need energy, strength and dynamism. When we meditate, we make our mind calm and quiet. If inside us there is peace, then we will derive tremendous strength from our inner life. That is to say, if I have a peaceful moment, even for one second, that peace will come to me as solid strength in my sports, whether I am running or jumping or throwing. That strength is almost indomitable strength, whereas if we are restless, we do not have strength like that.
Look at an elephant. An elephant has tremendous strength. It is not restless like a monkey which is moving here and there. It is exactly the same for us. In our inner life if we have the strength of an elephant, then only in our outer life can we be peaceful. A lion is very peaceful. Then when something happens, he starts roaring. But its strength is the peace that it has. It has confidence. But a monkey and other animals that are very, very restless, what kind of strength do they have? Meditation gives us inner strength. Once we have inner strength, we are bound to be successful in our outer life.
Published in Run and smile, smile and run
on Radio Orwell, Ipswich, England
Listen to the interview with Sri Chinmoy
with ITV, Ipswich, England
Interviewer: Yoga is becoming highly respectable. One Guru at least has been welcomed in the corridors of power. He's Guru Sri Chinmoy, who's Guru to the United Nations Meditation Group in New York. Sri Chinmoy was taking a break from his U.N. work today and enjoying a visit to Ipswich. For six years now, Sri Chinmoy has been Guru at the United Nations in New York, ministering to the spiritual needs of a growing number of the U.N.'s official staff. The Indian-born teacher and philosopher sees meditation as essential to world unity and peace, a view shared by his U.N. disciples, who see meditation as "Our hope for mankind."
Today his English disciples meditated with their Master in a room that was heavy with the scent of flowers and incense. Afterwards, I talked with Sri Chinmoy about his role at the U.N.
Sri Chinmoy: At the United Nations they are giving me the opportunity to be of service to them. I am not a teacher; I am a server. There is a great difference between a teacher and a server. I serve the United Nations according to the capacity that the Supreme has granted me, and there are people who are kind enough to accept my service.
Interviewer: Why does there seem to be an increase in interest in what meditation can do for mankind? I notice that on the U. N. Meditation Group book here, they call meditation "Our hope for mankind."
Sri Chinmoy: United Nations members have already tried other ways and have not been successful. So now some of them are trying this way, the inner way. The outer way they have tried; through politics and various outer means they have tried to bring about peace. But, unfortunately, they have not succeeded. So now they are trying to cultivate the inner way.
Interviewer: When you talk about peace are you talking about individual peace of mind or world peace?
Sri Chinmoy: I am talking about both: individual peace of mind and also world peace. The world is composed of you and I, he and she. So if you have peace of mind, I have peace of mind and he has peace of mind, then automatically it becomes universal peace.
Interviewer: So you think that an increased awareness of meditation and interest in meditation in lots of nations throughout the world brings hope for world peace and unity?
Sri Chinmoy: That is the only way, I feel. When a nation cares for peace, then another nation joins it and also cares for peace. In this way all the nations eventually will care for peace. At that time there cannot be any war or any ill feeling among nations.
Interviewer: Thank you, Sri Chinmoy.
Published in My Rose Petals, part 7
with Sri Chinmoy
on Medway Radio, Chatham, Kent, England
Listen to the interview with Sri Chinmoy
Published in My Rose Petals, part 7
LIFE IN THE LENS
Peacemaker and fitness enthusiast, 69-year-old Indian Sri Chinmoy, who has repeatedly stunned the world with his power, set a new world record for his age and weight a few days ago in New York. When pushing off the bench, he lifted two 68-pound dumbbells at the same time. Sri Chinmoy thus raised his own body weight and added an additional 59 kilograms to a total weight of 136 kilograms to “inspire people, especially those over the age of 50 years, that age is not a barrier.”
The spiritual leader, who is also a writer, musician, painter, a worker for world peace and the initiator of sporting events in many countries, persevered to lift the weights 20 centimetres high in seven seconds.
Pushing from the bench with two dumbbells is considered much harder than pushing a single heavier weight, because lifting with two arms separately requires much more power, control and balance. Before the successful achievement, Sri Chinmoy said, “My physical strength comes from the unconditional blessing of God.”
Then he explained, “I am a man of prayer and a disciple of peace. I feel that physical and spiritual strength need to go together. I am 69 years old. I try to inspire people who have given up their hopes. My colleagues, over the age of 60, may not have new inspiration, new aspiration, new hope. They have a feeling that their lives are coming to an end. My prayer to God is to give every human being new inspiration to become a world-elevating citizen.”
The older he is, the stronger he is.
Published in Slovenske Novice (Slovenian News), page 8, Tuesday, 20 June 2000
Advanced in years, but still not old and weak: High-Performance Athletes and Beauty Kings
Youth has passed for these gentlemen, but they are still not ready for the scrap-heap for a long time. Sri Chinmoy (pictured on the left), an Indian living in the U.S., set a new dumbbell record for his age category. On the weekend in New York, the 69-year-old lifted two dumbbells with a total weight of 300 pounds simultaneously. Also on the weekend the 92-year-old Simon Kokoraschwili, Georgi Teimurazow (94) and ShalaTsarvadse (87) (pictured on the right, from left) could not be enthused by this kind of top performance. These gentlemen were 3 of a total of 14 seniors, who took up a beauty competition in the youth centre of the Georgian capital Tbilisi.
Published on page 8 of the daily Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung (New Osnabrück Newspaper), Monday, 19th June 2000, circulation: 334,000
Sri Chinmoy
An Indian Spiritual Master employing yogic concentration during a period of 24 hours wrote 360 poems which were subsequently published in a book.
Submitted by Carl Brown, Jamaica NY.
Above: This item appeared in the syndicated feature Ripley’s Believe It or Not! in many US newspapers on June 18, 1974.
June 5th (New York), Nobel Prize Laureate Mother Teresa met with international peace server Sri Chinmoy at the Missionaries of Charity House in the Bronx. The two shared privately about their projects and experiences in the service of humanity. Members of the Sri Chinmoy Center sang three songs written by their teacher to the words of the Christ and to Mother Teresa’s words:
“I am so happy to see you, Sri Chinmoy, after such a long time!” exclaimed an affectionate Mother Teresa on seeing Sri Chinmoy.
“Once more I have come to receive blessings from you,” replied Sri Chinmoy.
Mother Teresa recited her own words to the song sung in her honor: “The fruit of silence is prayer. The fruit of prayer is faith. The fruit of faith is love. The fruit of love is service. The fruit of service is peace.”
Mother Teresa described her work in taking young men and women in jail and helping to change their lives. “Your infinite compassion is conquering the whole world,” responded Sri Chinmoy deeply moved. Mother Teresa stated, “you do so much for us all.”
At a previous meeting in Rome in October 1994, Sri Chinmoy presented Mother Teresa with the U Thant Peace Award. Since that time, the two spiritual leaders have kept up an active exchange. Mother Teresa said “I am so pleased with all the good work you are doing for world peace and for the people in so many countries. May we continue to work together and to share together all for the Glory of God and for the good of man. Sri Chinmoy met Mother Teresa 20 years ago at an Interfaith Program held at the UN. Sri Chinmoy is an acclaimed author, poet, artist, composer, musician and athlete who is widely known for his service for peace.
Published in Asia Online, No. 127 Vol. II, June 17–June 23, 1996
INDWELLING POWERS
Sri Chinmoy beats 65
“Age is in the mind and not in the heart. With determination we can conquer the age barrier and go back to our childlike heart,” Sri Chinmoy declared as he approached 65. The master of understanding through undertaking set out to celebrate by completing 65 challenging events, his “rainbow dreams.” On June 16 he performed eight of them in a row.
He began with 7,000 “crunch” sit-ups — the most demanding kind — completed in 79 minutes without stopping, then proceeded to “abdomen lift” a 302-pound weight 130 times. Among other feats he walked 250 meters wearing a weighted 100-pound vest, lifted 1,500 pounds on a standing calf-raise machine, followed with leg extensions of 120 pounds. Professional muscleman and vegetarian Bill Pearl, five-time winner of the “Mr. Universe” body-building contest, was impressed: “I have been working out for many, many years, and I do leg extensions with 120 pounds with both legs. He is unbelievably strong to do repetitions of 120 pounds with one leg.” Equally-dazzled strongman Lee Haney said, “His feats of strength are a tremendous motivation to people.”
Sri Chinmoy lived much of his early life at Aurobindo Ashram in South India, where he was a star athlete. Soon he abandoned competitiveness for personal self-transcendence. He is known for prodigious achievements in music, writing and art, most recently completing a mind-numbing 5 million drawings of peace birds (if he drew ten a minute, this would take 1,041 eight-hour days). In Bengali-influenced linked words, Sri Chinmoy summarized the impulse behind his indomitable drive: “The old-age bondage-limitations will return to the childhood-freedom-dreams.”
Beyond limits: 130 abdominal lifts on stage
Hinduism Today, page 27, December 1996
Excerpts from the interview with Sri Chinmoy
the United Nations in New York
UPI: You said once that honesty and frankness are the birthright of the West, humility and devotion are the birthright of the East, and the combination of these four powers should be the ideal of a human being. What do you mean by this?
Sri Chinmoy: When these qualities, the good qualities of the East and the good qualities of the West, are all combined, a human being can be perfect. Right now the good qualities that the East has are not enough. Similarly, the good qualities that the West has are not enough. But when we can amalgamate, when we can have the qualities of both worlds, then an individual can become perfect. Right now the West wants to proceed with only honesty and frankness, but this is insufficient. Humility is also required. The East has humility, but honesty is also required if it wants to become perfect.
UPI: What is it that you do at your meditation sessions?
Sri Chinmoy: We pray and meditate, plus I give short talks and answer questions. The inner world embodies peace, light and bliss. The outer world, unfortunately, does not embody these qualities right now, whereas the inner world has them in boundless measure. So we try to establish a free access to the inner world by virtue of our inner cry and our soulful meditation. We call this our aspiration.
UPI: So you don't sit down and talk about the boundaries in the Middle East; you talk about other things?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. I am quite ignorant of politics as such. My forte is spirituality. There are two approaches to every problem. One is the inner approach; the other is the outer approach. Those who come to meditate want to try to walk along the inner road. But ultimately both the roads can lead to the same destination.
UPI: What is the inner road?
Sri Chinmoy: The inner road is the road of sincere dedication to the highest Cause. In the outer world one can aim at a particular goal without having sincere dedication to the goal. But the inner road represents the attitude of the seeker. The seeker tries in every way to lead a more illumining and more fulfilling life, to find and follow the way that is right from the highest point of view.
UPI: Do you envision the day when your goals will be achieved?
Sri Chinmoy: In the outer world it is a very, very slow process. In the process of time, definitely we will reach the destined Goal. No sincere cry will meet with frustration, disappointment or failure. If we have a sincere cry, the day is bound to dawn when our sincere cry will meet with satisfaction, supreme satisfaction, which is illumination within and without.
UPI: But you don't ever see the day when your work will be done, do you?
Sri Chinmoy: No, my work is not like that. It is a slow and steady process. We have to sow the seed, which has to germinate, then become a sapling and gradually become a huge banyan tree. We are now in the process of consciously becoming that which we always were in the inner world. But this process of growth is an ever-transcending process. We can grow eternally. We need never stop.
UPI: Where are you now? Have you dropped the seed? Do we have a seedling?
Sri Chinmoy: This is a most inspiring, encouraging question. I have been asked thousands and thousands of questions all over the world, but this last question of yours so far nobody has asked me, not even my disciples. We have sown the seed. Now we have a tiny plant. This tiny plant will grow and become a strong tree. If storms of doubt and hurricanes of jealousy and other undivine things enter, then naturally the progress can be very slow. But if there is implicit faith and devoted oneness, then naturally the plant will very soon grow into a tree. Now we are in the plant stage; we have sown the seed, and it is no longer a seedling. It has germinated properly. Previously it was only a seedling, but now it has become a tiny but healthy plant. So there is every hope that it will weather all the buffets and blows of human doubts and weaknesses and grow into a huge tree.
UPI: Thank you very much.
Published in The Inner Role of the United Nations
A 14-HOUR FATHER’S DAY MEDITATION
Jamaica, N.Y. – Sri Chinmoy and about a hundred of his disciples celebrated Father's Day last month with a 14-hour meditation.
For the final seven hours, the Master gave darshan, blessing each one of his disciples individually.
The disciples filed one by one into a small room where Sri Chinmoy waited, closing the door behind them.
Earlier, he had asked each of them to write on a piece of paper seven spiritual accomplishments or achievements. As each disciple entered the room, the Guru read the list in silence, and then blessed the seeker.
Some of the blessings lasted for a couple of minutes, and often the disciples would come out of the chamber deeply moved, sometimes in tears.
The meditation was originally meant to last only 13 hours, but the extra hour was needed to complete the darshan.
The day was broken up into two four-hour sessions, one three-hour session, and a final two-hour session which stretched into three hours. Between the sessions were rest breaks.
The disciples were asked to eat very little, or fast, in order to meditate better. But at two sessions the Master handed out prasad, or blessed food. Once it was an orange and a nectarine, and once it was an ice cream sandwich and an apple.
The evening ended with a 13-course meal.
Only those who had been disciples for at least four years were invited to participate in the meditation, and some came all the way from Canada and Florida for the single-day session.
The previous day Sri Chinmoy held a seven-hour meditation for his other disciples who had been with him for less than four years.
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. II, No. 6, July 1, 1975
Norwalk Meditation for Sri Chinmoy
A special Father’s Day Meditation was held Saturday, June 14 in the garden of the Norwalk Sri Chinmoy Centre, 80 Perry avenue. The program consisted of *seven hours of silent meditation led by Sri Chinmoy, director of the United Nations Meditation Group. Present were 200 people, mostly members of the Norwalk Sri Chinmoy Centre. Also attending were members of Sri Chinmoy Centres of Chicago, San Francisco, Miami and Canada who came specifically for this event.
The meditation began at 6 A.M. and ended at 5 P.M. with several intervening breaks. After the meditation a 13-course vegetarian meal topped the festivities.
Several members of the Norwalk group also attended a similar meditation at the Sri Chinmoy Centre in Queens, N.Y. held the next day, which lasted for 14 hours.
Sri Chinmoy conducts regular meditations at the Norwalk centre every Saturday at 1 P.M.
Editor's note:*14 hours in total
Originally published in The Norwalk Hour, Wednesday, 18 June 1975
Reprinted in AUM – Vol. 2, No. 6, 27 June 1975
JAMAICA, NY — Singer Arlo Guthrie came to Annam Brahma restaurant on June 14 to meet and meditate with Sri Chinmoy.
“I am a great, sincere, genuine admirer of your father,” the Master told him. “He was a supremely genuine seeker and also an unparalleled self-giver through his heart-illumining and life-fulfilling songs.”
During the course of the meeting, the disciple singers sang Woody Guthrie’s “This Land is Your Land” and Sri Chinmoy’s adaptation, “This Heart is Your Heart,” using words their teacher had put to Guthrie’s music.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 20, April–July 1991
OSLO — Sri Chinmoy offered a silent meditation in the Storting, or Norwegian Parliament, on June 13 at the invitation of Einar Steensnaes, Chairman of the Storting’s Foreign Affairs Committee and Deputy Leader of the Christian Party.
During the meditation, the peace advocate also performed on the esraj and sang a song he had written earlier that morning about the Parliament.
Afterwards, Steensnaes symbolically presented him with the “Heart of Norway,” a special recognition of his work for peace.
Meanwhile, a group of runners from the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run formed an honor guard outside the Storting, where they were greeted by the Speaker of the Parliament, Kirsti Kolle Grondahl.
Sri Chinmoy meditates in the Storting.
Anahata Nada, Volume 31, Late March 2001–July 2001
By Kristyn Giles
Recess Editor
Sri Chinmoy, known for his music and inspirations for peace, will hold a free concert Friday at 8 p.m. in St. Petersburg’s Bayfront Center Arena. Performing meditative music on more than a dozen instruments, Chinmoy is expected to entertain about 13,000 people.
“One of the key things Chinmoy does is inspire a feeling of oneness through humanity,” said Tilvila Hurwit, who became a student of Chinmoy’s 17 years ago. “Real peace in the world starts inside our hearts. To improve society starts with improvement in ourselves, bringing more joy to life.”
Hurwit said she learned about Chinmoy’s teachings because she wanted to increase her spiritual existence through prayer and meditation. Chinmoy does this through music, art and poetry.
“We all want happiness, success, desire for material things outside of ourselves, but a point comes when we discover these are never ending,” Hurwit said. “Chinmoy tries to inspire the longing to go from within.”
According to Hurwit, Chinmoy’s practice is not like preaching or academics. It is not religious, but spiritual, which Hurwit said is the common source of all religions.
“There is a oneness amongst all of us,” Hurwit said. “We are all brothers and sisters, and this concert gives people of all backgrounds, races and religion the chance to come together to share in aspirations of peace.”
Chinmoy’s music reflects his philosophy of inner peace because it is played in a meditative consciousness with sincerity and purity, according to Hurwit.
“When his music is played, it helps inspire peace, an inner peace, which everyone has experienced, even for a fleeting second in our lives,” she said. “Chinmoy feels he is not the player but the instrument.”
This is what, Hurwit said, separates Chinmoy from other popular musicians.
“He’s not trying to make an impression, but play from the heart,” she said.
“This is why Chinmoy’s music cannot be classified — it’s not jazz, hard rock or even new age.”
For first-time viewers, Hurwit said, the experience will be very simple, and some instruments will be unfamiliar. They may find some parts of the music soft and melodic, while others are dynamic or powerful, she said.
“This music isn’t meant to entertain,” she said. “It is meant to inspire peace within yourself, your family, your community and country.”
Sri Chinmoy will be holding a free concert Friday at 8 p.m. in St. Petersburg’s Bayfront Center Arena.
Published by The Oracle, University of South Florida, Vol. 34, No. 155, Thursday, June 12, 1997
Other events highlighting Sri Chinmoy’s week-long visit to Oslo included a lecture and short Peace Concert at the Blindern Campus of the University of Oslo on June 12 and a major public Peace Concert at the Oslo Spektrum two days later.
There was also a Sports Meet June 11 at Bislett Stadium, which attracted over 500 athletes, a three-day international music festival and a visit to Norway by the Sri Chinmoy European Peace Run as part of its 45-nation journey.
Sri Chinmoy had been invited to Oslo by the Deputy Mayor and was an official guest of the City.
Sri Chinmoy walks around the track at the world-famous Bislett Stadium, where more than 60 track and field world records have been set.
at Aspiration-Ground, Jamaica, New York
Sri Chinmoy first lifts the reporter overhead. Before the lift, the singers sing the song ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’.
Reporter [while standing on the lifting platform]: This is like going to paradise, with the angels singing.
Sri Chinmoy [after lifting the reporter once]: I would like to lift you once more. You are our sister-friend from the Soviet Union, whereas I am from India. India and the Soviet Union are extremely, extremely good friends. Therefore, I would like to lift you a second time. The first time I lifted you, I offered my love and gratitude to the Soviet Union. Now when I lift you, I shall be offering my love and gratitude to the soul of India. May the soul of the Soviet Union and the soul of India forever and forever enjoy their unique friendship and eternal oneness.
Reporter [after descending from the lifting platform]: Thank you! It was great!
Reporter: What is your message to the world and possibly to the young people of our country? What is the essence of your credo?
Sri Chinmoy: My message is very simple. We all must try to become better citizens of the world. Now let us say at the present time we are good — you are good, I am good, he is good, she is good. But even though we are good, we feel that we can become better and best. As we make progress in this way, we get more joy and more satisfaction in our lives.
Our goal is to have a peaceful feeling in ourselves. First we have to establish peace within ourselves, and only then can we try to offer peace to others. If I feel peaceful, then I shall not find fault with you or quarrel with you. If you feel peaceful, then you will not quarrel with me or with somebody else. So if I can find inner peace within myself and if you can find peace within yourself, then that peace will grow in the world like a flower, petal by petal. Each country in the world is a beautiful petal on the flower of oneness. The Soviet Union is a petal. India is a petal. America is a petal. Each petal has to contribute its beauty and fragrance to the flower as a whole. Only then can they form a most beautiful oneness-flower, which the whole world will be able to appreciate and admire.
So my message is that each country has to come to the fore with its inner message of love and feeling of oneness.
Reporter: Through what means can a person establish peace of mind and peace in the world? Is it through meditation or through doing good things or through a better way of living?
Sri Chinmoy: It depends on the individual. Some people may try to establish peace on the strength of their prayer and meditation, while others will try to establish peace on the strength of their dedicated selfless service, by working to make the world a better place. A third person may combine both — a life of prayer and a life of service.
* Dr. Felix Kuznetsov: We would like to offer you gratitude for your heart's welcome to us. Through us, you are welcoming our whole country — all the Soviet people. We feel that it is coming from your heart. Meeting with you has been one of the most important events in our visit to America.
Sri Chinmoy: We belong to one big family. When a family is big, a few members of the family go out of the house and live elsewhere. They live in different places, but they still have the same parents, the same brothers, the same sisters. Similarly, God's creation is one family. Some members are living in the Soviet Union, others are living in America and still others are living in India, Canada and different parts of the world. But we are all God's children, and we are all brothers and sisters. Our goal is the same; our destination is the same: universal oneness and peace.
When we pray and meditate, we live in the heart and we come to realise our oneness with one another. If we do not pray and meditate, we live in the mind, where everything is division. If we live in the mind, we find that even in our own being there is division. Our mind wants us to do one thing and our vital wants us to do something else. Therefore we can never have satisfaction. But if we live in the heart, all the parts of our being work together. Let us live always in the heart. The little brothers and big brothers have to go together. The rich countries and the poor countries have to go together, for we are all one.
Mrs. Kuznetsov: We are all one. We hope that our children will be friends with each other and that there will be no borders. We would like to come to visit our friends without any effort.
Dr. Kuznetsov: I would also like to say that you have most incredible eyes. Your eyes are like burning lava, like flowing volcanic lava. It is an incredible force, which is also very kind. You are sending a welcome to us with your eyes.
Sri Chinmoy: It is your oneness-heart that is speaking. You feel in me what you yourself are deep within. You have a most beautiful jewel inside you, locked deep within yourself. But you have misplaced the key, and now you are searching for it. My job is only to show you where you have kept the jewel and to help you find the key. Once you have found the key, the treasure inside will be all yours. It is your jewel, your soul.
* Dr. Felix Kuznetsov of the Gorky Institute, Moscow, and his wife are also present on that occasion.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 28
By David Burke
NEW YORK (AP) — Joining the work values of the Protestant ethic with the spiritual ideals of their Indian guru, a group of young people have established an unusual business community here.
At the request of their guru, or spiritual guide, they have given up their jobs in the white- and blue-collar worlds and used their savings to open a restaurant, book store, and a number of other small shops, which they call “divine enterprises.”
“The main purpose is not to make money, though of course we have to eat,” explains Jonathan Roberts, 22, a former truck driver and now proprietor of the Garland of Divinity’s Love flower shop.
“Our guru teaches us not to renounce the world but to work to transform it from within. He brings us peace and serenity, and we try to offer some of this to people coming to our stores.”
Roberts, like the other shopkeepers, is a disciple of the Indian spiritual master Sri Chinmoy, who guides them in meditation and spiritual practices several evenings a week. Their guru, who has published a number of books and holds weekly meditations at the United Nations, has about 20 spiritual centers around the world.
So far, there are eight different enterprises, all located within a block or two of one another near their guru’s home in the Queens borough of New York.
Virtually a self-contained business-spiritual community, they include a stationery store, health food shop, record store, restaurant, book store, flower shop, boutique and printing and publishing company. An ice cream parlor and craft shop are to open shortly.
The disciples work long hours, scraping to make ends meet, and sometimes earn less than they did at their former jobs.
“If I had been here for myself, I would have closed up in frustration a longtime ago,” says Roberts. “But I feel I’m working for a higher cause.”
Loren Hein, who owns the Divine Robe Supreme boutique with another disciple, says she prefers this work to her old secretarial job because “it allows me to harmonize my outer and inner life.”
Sri Chinmoy’s picture hangs in several places, and his writings are available alongside the clothing, jewelery and religious items. The owners meditate in the store before opening each morning.
“We try to make this place special,” explains 21-year-old Miss Hein. “We give it love and attention and try to bring it joy. Our guru tells us to treat it like a living entity, like a child, and not just a business.
In one case, a 24-year-old woman gave up the relatively easy life of a housewife when the guru asked her to open a vegetarian restaurant so people could have a spiritual environment in which to eat.
Now she works 12 hours a day, doing all the cooking, dishwashing, and serving, with an occasional assist from other disciples. “The first few weeks I wondered how I could go on,” says Eve McLaughlin. “But Sri Chinmoy never asks you to do something, without giving you the capacity.”
The restaurant, named Annam Brahma, meaning “Food is God,” has lost money during its first three months, she says. Her husband, jazz guitarist John Mc Laughlin, keeps it solvent with money from his concerts.
Why does she do it? “When you take a spiritual master, you must accept what he says.
“It’s just like when you learn about math at school, you accept what your math teacher says without question because he knows what is right.”
Published in The Washington Post, Saturday, Jun. 8, 1972
PEOPLE TODAY
New York — During her stay in one of her missions in the Bronx, Mother Teresa (second from the left) was visited by the Indian peace advocate Sri Chinmoy. Also in the photograph: two other Missionaries of Charity.
Published in Dolomiten, Daily Newspaper South Tyrolian, northern Italy, Sports Journal, Friday, 06-06-1997
The Sri Chinmoy 1,300-miler — the longest certified race in history — was held June 5-23 in Flushing Meadows Park, Queens.
“Your life-history does not include the word ‘impossibility’,” Sri Chinmoy told the runners at the start.
“This race is new, unique and unprecedented. Only your heroic hearts can accept the challenge and become victorious in every possible way, inwardly and outwardly.”
He called the participants “the pioneer hero-runners who will be running along Eternity’s road,” telling them that “humanity is loving your hearts and treasuring your lives with utmost joy and utmost pride.” Marty Sprengelmeyer, 40, of Davenport, Iowa, covered the most distance completing 1,250 miles before the 18-day cutoff. Pippa Davis, 40, of Westford, MA, was first among the women, with 832 miles. Both distances were the longest ever in a certified race.
Altogether, runners from the U.S., Canada, Britain, France and Japan established 22 world or national records during the event.
Marty Sprengelmeyer, winner of 18-Day Race.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 15, April-July 1987
MOTHER TERESA: NEW YORK, 4 JUN 97 — Mother Teresa, second from left, is visited by Indian-born peace advocate Sri Chinmoy (R) during Mother Teresa’s stay at the Missionaries of Charity House in the Bronx section of New York City June 3. Sri Chinmoy gave Mother Teresa a glass sculpture during the visit. Mother Teresa will visit Washington, D.C. June 5. Others in photo are sisters from the Missionaries of Charity House.
Photo by Dhanu Alaimo
From, NYK - 01 REUTERS
The first official Sri Chinmoy Marathon was held June 3 in Menlo Park and Atherton on California’s San Francisco peninsula.
Some 180 participants completed the 26.2-mile event, which sought to raise money for UNICEF. Winner was Steven Slawson, with a time of 2:25:03.
Indian Consul General L. L. Mehrotra, who gave Sri Chinmoy a post at the Indian consulate when the Master first arrived in America in 1964, handed out the awards. Several of Sri Chinmoy’s running songs were also performed at the awards ceremony.
A second Sri Chinmoy Marathon is planned for the New York area in November.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 5, Number 5, May 1979
Wilkes-Barre TV Channel 28 in Pennsylvania reports on Sri Chinmoy lifting Frank Zane, 3-time Mr. Universe, at Aspiration-Ground in Jamaica, New York.
Sri Chinmoy’s two-arm dumbbell lift of 400 lbs. (achieved in May 2000) is reported on News Channel 8 Sports in New Haven, Connecticut.
Fitness enthusiast and peace leader Sri Chinmoy, at age 64, performed an astonishing feat of physical strength on May 29 before a number of onlookers in Queens, N.Y.
Using his abdominal muscles he raised a weight of 203 lbs 103 times in 61.95 seconds. The concentrated weight, which was 1 and 1/3 times his body weight, was placed directly over his abdomen and he lifted the weight 2 to 3 inches each time.
Nishtha Baum of the Sri Chinmoy Centres International in Jamaica, N.Y. said Sri Chinmoy embarked on this new venture in late May with a 100-pound weight. In what he calls the “crunch abdomen-up” he then raised the 100-pound weight 100 times consecutively in 48.60 seconds. He then proceeded to perform 4,000 crunch sit-ups without stopping in 47 minutes, 28.53 seconds. A rate, she noted, of over 85 stomach crunches per minute.
Fitness expert and five-time “Mr. Universe,” Bill Pearl said “4,000 crunches is impressive but 100 crunches with 100 pounds is even more impressive. I am sure I can’t do that and I’ve been doing this for years and outweigh Sri Chinmoy by 80 or 90 pounds.
“Age is no barrier,” says Sri Chinmoy. “When the inflexibility of the mind surrenders to the enthusiasm of the heart, then we can accomplish many unimaginable things!” Dr. A. Rodriguez, medical director of the New York Road Runners Club said “Sri Chinmoy has an inner strength and an inner power. The astonishing feats of fitness which Sri Chinmoy displays have encouraged countless people to do what they never even dreamed they could do.”
Published in The Journal of Alternatives Therapies, Volume 2, Number 9, June 1996
broadcast on WPFA-FM in San Francisco
Listen to Sri Chinmoy’s interview
This recording is an 18-minute excerpt from the one-hour interview with Sri Chinmoy, in which he also answers listeners’ questions.
SACRAMENTO — Sri Chinmoy officially opened the 1996 California State Championships of the Senior Games with a moment of silent meditation on May 31.
A choral group of 40 of his students also performed a special song their teacher had written for these games.
Sri Chinmoy participated in five events over that weekend — basketball free throw, softball throw, ergometer, 50 meters and 100 meters.
During his visit to Sacramento, he was awarded a medal for his service to world peace by the organizer of the California Senior Games, Pam Rhodes.
Doing the softball throw at the Senior Games
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25, April-July 1996
RUNNERS line up to try the new Peace Mile in Cutteslowe Park in Oxford.
The one-mile marked course for runners, walkers and joggers was officially opened yesterday.
It was set up by the Sri Chinmoy Athletic Club in conjunction with Oxford City Council and is dedicated to peace.
Meditation teacher and peace worker, Sri Chinmoy, who is based in New York, attended the ceremony.
Also present were the Lord Mayor and Mayoress, Mr Bill Fagg and Mrs Ida Fagg, Mrs Barbara Gatehouse, chairman of the council’s recreation and amenities committee, and Mr John Linton from the U.N. Association.
A plaque explaining about the Sri Chinmoy Peace Mile has been set up.
Other Peace Miles have been established in Ipswich, London, Manchester, Glasgow as well as North America, Canada, Europe, Japan, Australia, South America and Scandinavia.
The cost of the sign and course was met by the athletics club.
Athletic beginning ... runners tackle the new course watched by Sri Chinmoy left, and Mayor Bill Fagg right.
Published in Oxford Mail, Saturday, May 30th 1987, page 3
By TAMER EL-GHOBASHY
He’s barely 145 pounds and stands about 5-feet-8, but Sri Chinmoy has mastered the art of mind over matter. That enables the 69-year-old Hindu-born spiritual leader to honor other religious leaders committed to peace — by literally lifting them up for praise. During a lighthearted ceremony in his Jamaica headquarters recently, Chinmoy praised five clergymen and a nun as models of the ideal that all religions are united by a spiritual path of love toward God and thanked them for promoting peace. Then he lifted them above him using a simple bench-press-like apparatus. Chinmoy said the Lifting Up the World with a Oneness Heart program, which he created more than a decade ago, aims to unite the world’s religions in one path of love. “I am trying to reach people in various walks of life who have inspired others in politics, in literature, in science and in sports,” Chinmoy said. “When somebody does something great, he is cheered by his colleagues. Here also I am trying to congratulate them with my inner oneness with them.
“Among the honorees last week were Msgr. Tom Hartman and Rabbi Mark Gellman, aka “The God Squad,” who are co-hosts of a show promoting interfaith understanding on Long Island’s Channel 25. Hartman also helped establish the Christa House Jerry Hartman Residence, a shelter for poor AIDS patients in West Babylon, L.I. Jerry Hartman, the priest’s brother, died of AIDS. Chinmoy, hardly straining and letting out only a slight groan, lifted Gellman with his left arm and Hartman with his right — a total of 521 pounds. He held them about 2 inches off a platform for five seconds. Also honored and lifted were a Tibetan lama, Kunsang Detchen Lingpa Rinpoche; Hindu Pandit Ram Lall; Muslim Imam Mohammed Shrazad, and a Catholic missionary, Sister Eileen Storey. Chinmoy, who has written thousands of poems and songs, is an internationally recognized spiritual leader. For 31 years, he has led peace meditations at the United Nations twice a week. But Chinmoy, who has more than 7,000 students worldwide, is also a world-renowned weightlifter. The spiritual leader has lifted more than 2,000 world figures, including former South African President Nelson Mandela, former U.S. track and field athlete Carl Lewis, Knicks point guard Mark Jackson, singer Roberta Flack and Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-Bayside). Chinmoy, who began weightlifting in 1985, relies more on meditation to lift weights of more than 2,000 pounds. “I am doing these lifts with the physical body, but the strength and power are coming from within,” Chinmoy said, “Prayer and meditation are my inner secrets and my outer secrets.”
Published in NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, MAY 29, 2001
THE MADAL CIRCUS — “Welcome to the world premiere of Madal Circus announced the bright programme of the May 28, 1972, performance of Sri Chinmoy’s “happiest show on earth.”
Held at Hillcrest High School gymnasium in Jamaica, the afternoon’s production was truly an unprecedented blend of the West’s outer dynamism and the East’s inner devotion and spirituality.
As part of the dynamic upswing battling the hostile forces of lethargy and depression in this turbulent year of destruction as well as perfection, members of Sri Chinmoy Centres from various parts of the world joined together for an inspiring and joyful weekend of sports, circus, a Columbia University public meditation, and family oneness.
Within a little more than a month’s time, the Madal Circus had grown from an informal evening’s discussion between Sri Chinmoy and disciples, through an intensive rehearsal schedule, into an impressive semi-professional troupe of spiritual brothers and sisters from Puerto Rico, Connecticut, and New Jersey, as well as New York.
Heralded by a drum roll and the energetic opening chords of the circus band, a ‘Grand Parade’ of all participants led the afternoon's performance.
Cyclists, clowns, magicians; a lion, a bear, a gorilla, an elephant (the costumed varieties); jugglers, ballerinas, acrobats, and many more, marched, twirled, and danced, and a unique “greatest show on earth” had begun.
Following the performance, Sri Chinmoy meditated with the participants and the audience expressed his gratitude, and spoke of the aims of the circus:
“AUM ...
“O sweet children of the Supreme, you have honoured my nickname ‘Madal’, and in return l wish to honour you. I offer to each of you my heart's deepest love and my soul’s highest blessing ...
“Undoubtedly, Madal Circus will not offer us our highest realisation. It is our aspiration, our heart's mounting cry, that will offer realisation, but physical fitness, cheerful consciousness, and a disciplined life can without fail add to our aspiration. My joy knows no bounds today, for you have displayed something most significant, both in the inner world and in the outer world.
“In the inner world, I have felt your total dedication; and in the outer world, the audience has seen and felt capacity, ability, coordination, and the astonishing result of a disciplined life.”
Adapted from the original report published in ‘Chinmoy Family’, Volume II, Number 2, Summer 1972
Brazil has become South America’s first Peace-Blossom-Nation.
The country’s Minister of Tourism and Sports, Rafael Greca de Maceda, declared Brazil a Peace-Blossom-Nation on May 28.
Other new Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossom-Nations include Slovenia, on May 6 ... Jamaica, West Indies, on May 20 ... and Kyrgyzstan, on July 29.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 28, May-July 1999
PARIS — A special ceremony in connection with the World Harmony Run was held at UNESCO headquarters here on May 27.
World Harmony Runners from several countries held the Harmony Torch, and Sri Chinmoy performed his spiritual music on several different instruments.
Vladimir Petrovsky, the former Director-General of the United Nations in Geneva, was one of the main speakers.
During the events Sri Chinmoy dedicated his 12,000th song to the soul of UNESCO.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 38, April-Early August 2005
Sri Chinmoy lifted a number of luminaries as part of his ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ program during his visit to Russia.
He lifted academicians, sports figures and others, including Russian cosmonaut L. D. Kizim, head of the Military Space Engineering Academy, on May 26 in St. Petersburg.
Sri Chinmoy lifted several cosmonauts, academicians and sports figures during his visit in Moscow.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 35 April-July 2004
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Sri Chinmoy offered a series of lectures and short musical performances at many of St. Petersburg’s major universities and medical centers during his three-day visit this spring. It coincided with a Humanitarian Action program the Sri Chinmoy Centre was sponsoring here and in Moscow called “Healthy Children — Healthy World.”
Sri Chinmoy gave talks arid musical performances at the Herzen State Pedagogical University of Russia and St. Petersburg Pavlov State Medical University on May 25, at the Smolny Institute of Liberal Arts and Sciences in St. Petersburg State University on May 26 and at the National Institute of Health on May 27.
He also offered evening concerts on May 25 and, after a lifting program, on May 26 in St. Petersburg.
Meditating at St. Petersburg concert
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 35 April-July 2004
Sri Chinmoy opened exhibits of his Jharna-Kala paintings on May 24 at St. Petersburg’s Dyagilev Center of Arts and on May 29 at Moscow’s Museum of Russian Contemporary History, where he presented one of his original paintings to the Museum.
He also attended the Jharna-Kala opening May 31 at the Indian Embassy in Moscow, which was hosted by the Indian Ambassador.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 35 April-July 2004
CINCINNATI — The University of Cincinnati became a Sri Chinmoy Peace University — the world’s first — on May 23.
The same day, Mayor Roxanne Qualls dedicated the city of Cincinnati as a Sri Chinmoy Peace City.
The university and city join more than 700 other landmarks and places around the world, which have been dedicated to the cause of world peace in the spiritual leader’s name. They are referred to as Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossoms.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25, April-July 1995
This interview is conducted for the first episode of a new programme called ‘No Beginning, No End’ at the Ulaanbaatar Hotel in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.
Interviewer: First of all, I would like to express my gratitude to you for coming here and encouraging Mongolia to join the movement for world peace. Can you please elaborate on the goal of your visit to Mongolia? I have heard that you have ancestors from Mongolia.
Sri Chinmoy: My ancestors from my father’s side came from Mongolia. The very name ‘Mongolia’ gives me boundless joy and boundless inner thrill.
I have come to Mongolia to love the country and to be of service to Mongolia. Our beloved President Enkhbayar has given me boundless inspiration and encouragement. For that I shall remain eternally grateful to him. He has a child-like heart, and he is a devout Buddhist, an adorer of Lord Buddha. I have the deepest adoration for the Lord Buddha, so we have quite a few things in common, the President and I.
Interviewer: Can you please tell me your feelings about music?
Sri Chinmoy: Music is a universal language. I do not know even a single word of the Mongolian language. Yet, when I hear the Mongolian music, I get tremendous joy. The real music comes from the heart, and then again it goes back to the heart. The heart does not need to learn all the languages of the world — no! The heart has developed an inner feeling for each and every human being on earth. When we play prayerful music, soulful music, then we can easily feel our oneness with each and every human being. In my case, I am so fortunate that some of the world’s greatest musicians and composers have not only inspired me, but also encouraged me to continue my music. It started with Pablo Casals, then Leonard Bernstein, Yehudi Menuhin, Ravi Shankar and others. They all have encouraged me enormously, and their kind appreciation has helped me enormously in composing hundreds and thousands of songs.
Interviewer: You have achieved astonishing results in many fields. What is the source of your strength?
Sri Chinmoy: I pray and meditate. I started praying at the age of four or five. And at the age of nine or ten, I started meditating. When you pray and meditate, you can enter into the inner world. The inner world is the source, not only of my creativity, but the creativity of all the artists. all the singers, all the musicians — all, all. So if we pray and meditate, we can develop those capacities. I did not pray to God to make me a great musician or a great singer — no! I prayed to God only for the fulfilment of His Will. When we pray to God for the fulfilment of His Will, God encourages us and inspires us, and actually in and through us, He creates things to inspire the rest of the world.
Again, I did not pray to God to become a great musician, a great singer or a great writer — no, no, no! I prayed to God only for the fulfilment of His Will. So this is how He is fulfilling His Will in and through me, my activities.
Interviewer: It is said that whoever wants to become illumined needs help from a Teacher. In your case, who was your spiritual Teacher?
Sri Chinmoy: In the beginning, when I was a young boy, I came to a spiritual institute, which we call an ashram. There I was extremely fortunate to have Sri Aurobindo and the Mother as my Teachers.
Then, gradually, gradually, when I came to America, I felt that there is only one Teacher: God, the Supreme. He is everybody’s Teacher. He is the Teacher of a little boy and He is the Teacher of spiritual people, and of spiritual Masters as well.So there is only one Teacher, and that Teacher we call our Inner Pilot. Now my Teacher is the Inner Pilot. He inspires me, He blesses me, He encourages me to do all the things that I do. Everybody’s Guru, everybody’s Teacher is God, God Himself.
Interviewer: Now I have a question about birds. Why do you draw so many birds?
Sri Chinmoy: I have drawn many, many birds — over fifteen million. While drawing these birds, I get tremendous joy. Birds fly in the sky. The sky is so vast; it is infinite. There the birds fly and enjoy freedom.
We, too, want freedom. But this is not the freedom to break something or to kill someone. No! This freedom is the freedom of oneness. The sky is so vast; it is infinite. There I wish to establish my oneness with Infinity-not to rule others, not to lord it over others, but to love others and embrace others. This oneness is the real freedom.
Interviewer: There are many religions in the world and apparently they all lead to the same goal, but when will it happen that all the religions will unite?
Sri Chinmoy: All the religions will lead us to the same goal; but I have no idea when. I cannot predict when they will unite. When, I cannot predict; but how, I can predict. I feel that it is by virtue of prayers and meditations that all the religions can be brought together. But when that will occur, I have no idea. The oneness of all religions, the synthesis of all religions, can take place only by virtue of prayers and meditations.
If we sincerely pray, if we sincerely meditate, then we shall not find fault with anybody. We shall only feel oneness, oneness, oneness. But if we do not pray, if we do not meditate, then we shall find so many mistakes inside others. Our own mistakes we do not take as mistakes, whereas when we see the same mistakes in others, we immediately feel that these are mistakes. We must stop seeing mistakes in others’ lives. We must only encourage and encourage one another. By virtue of encouragement, we shall fulfil one another, and we can establish a new world of harmony and peace.
Interviewer: What is happiness, and how can we achieve happiness?
Sri Chinmoy: We can achieve happiness by loving others and by praying to God to give us happiness — not only our personal happiness, but happiness for all human beings. If we pray to God only for our own happiness, God will make us happy; but if we pray to God to make everybody in the world happy, then God will be extremely, extremely pleased with us. God wants us to feel that this world of ours is a family, just one family. In a family, if only one or two members are happy and the others are miserable, that family vvill not make any progress. All the members of the family should be happy. Only this happiness will keep us peaceful. If we are happy, we do not go out and fight, we do not quarrel. If we are unhappy, then we quarrel, we fight, we try to kill one another. Happiness comes only from prayer. Happiness comes from the feeling that all of us belong to one family.
Interviewer: God grants life to everyone on earth, but some people cry, some people smile. Why is there such a big difference in our lives?
Sri Chinmoy: Some people have joy. That is why they smile. And some people do not have joy. That is why they cry. But the question here is, when people cry, what do they cry for? If they cry for name, fame, wealth and material possessions, then they will never be happy; they will never be able to smile. But if they pray to God to please God in His own Way, if they cry for God, then one day they will become happy.
If they cry for material possessions, for earthly belongings, they will never be happy. If they cry for God to make them happy, then God will definitely make them happy at His own Time. Happiness comes from the inner feeling of oneness, the feeling that God is within us and He wants us all to be happy, happy. He does not want us to cry. But if we do cry, then we shall cry only for peace, light and bliss, and not for material possessions. If God fulfils our desires, then we shall feel miserable. But aspiration is a different type of desire which is divine, which only wants God, God, God. When we aspire, we say, “Let the world make progress, let the whole world think of God and pray to God.” That kind of desire is very good.
For that kind of desire we use the term ‘aspiration’.
Interviewer: You have done many drawings while in Mongolia. What is your impression of Mongolia?
Sri Chinmoy: My impression of Mongolia is extremely good! Here I have been inspired, and I have had the opportunity to aspire as well. Because of the inspiration and encouragement that I have received in Mongolia, I have been able to do quite a few things. I was able to meditate with the President; two times he blessed me. And I was able to offer a Peace Concert, which unites everybody. I have also given talks on art and poetry. When we develop art in our inner life, we get tremendous joy and satisfaction. In every way, I am very, very sincerely and soulfully pleased with Mongolia, its inner life and outer life. Mongolia has inspired me and encouraged me in so many ways to bring forward my creativity. For that, I am very, very, very grateful to the soul, heart and life of Mongolia.
Interviewer: In conclusion, what would you like to say to the Mongolian viewers?
Sri Chinmoy: My brothers and sisters of Mongolia, I love you dearly. I am very, very pleased with you all. Here you have loved me and blessed me, and I wish you tremendous inner progress and tremendous outer success. Inner progress and outer success we all need.
Here I have noticed two most extraordinary things: you have inner speed and you also have outer strength. When the outer strength and the inner speed go together, we feel that we are absolutely certain to arrive at our destination, which is oneness, oneness, universal oneness.
Interviewer: Thank you.
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you, thank you.
Published in World-Oneness-Heart-Song in Mongolian Life
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed on ‘Q&A with Riz Khan’ and broadcast live around the world by CNN International. It is Sri Chinmoy’s first international live TV interview.
Environmentalist Maurice Strong has received the prestigious U Thant Award for his “lifelong commitment to the soaring ideals of the United Nations”, and his “reverence for our beautiful and bountiful Planet Earth.”
In receiving the award from Sri Chinmoy: The Peace Meditation at the United Nations, the Canadian leader joins a select group of luminaries that includes Mother Teresa, South Africa’s President Nelson Mandela, former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, freedom fighter Archbishop Desmond Tutu, former Indian Ambassador to the US. Siddhartha Shankar Ray, and India’s High Commissioner to Great Britain, L M Singhvi.
“I am overwhelmed to receive the honor that bears the name of U Thant and to receive it from the hands of Sri Chinmoy, who has been for so many years the custodian and guardian of the spiritual roots of the United Nations,” Strong declared.
''That combination makes this the greatest honor I could possibly imagine.”
Sri Chinmoy, the international peace advocate, presented Strong with the award May 2 at a ceremony held at the United Nations Church Centre, which was attended by about a hundred diplomats and staff members of the U.N. “You convincingly manifest the powerful truth that to unite humanity in the cause of preserving our Mother Earth is not only good, kind and necessary but also practical, profitable and fruitful, Sri Chinmoy told the Canadian leader, who was secretary general of the 1992 UN Conference on Environment and Development — known as The Earth Summit. Strong, who is currently advisor to the President to the World Bank, has, also been an Under Secretary General of the United Nations, first president of the Canadian International Development Agency, and Chairman and Chief Executive office of Ontario Hydro. The U Thant Peace Award, originated in 1982, goes to individuals whose life had furthered the cause of peace in the spirit of the late U Thant, who was the U.N.’s third secretary general. It is presented by Sri Chinmoy: The Peace Meditation at the United Nations, an association of U.N. delegates, staff, NGO representatives and accredited press correspondents holding twice weekly peace meditations and other programs at U.N. headquarters.
Published in Asia Online Number 123, Volume II, May 20–May26, 1996
SPORT & SOCIETY
Sri Chinmoy Awarded a Prize For His Campaign for World Peace
Sports, peace among people and the ‘psychophysical’ health of the individual can be joined together well. Sri Chinmoy, who has resided in New York for more than 30 years, is the witness. At the end of March, on the invitation of Francesco Rutelli (Mayor of Rome), Umberto Silvestri (President of the Rome Marathon), and Allan Steinfeld (Director of the New York City Marathon), he participated, on the occasion of the Rome Marathon, which traverses the historic centre of the ‘City of the Caesars’, in a ceremony dedicated precisely to peace.
Sri Chinmoy received the ‘Fred Lebow Award’ in recognition of his constant efforts for world peace and his constant activities for the benefit of the inner and outer health of millions of people. The award, bears the name of the founder of the New York City Marathon [Fred Lebow] and was given to him by Rutelli himself.
Last year, Pope John Paul II received, at the Vatican, Sri Chinmoy and thousands of people who were participating in the ‘Peace Run’. The Pope was given a torch, and the Holy Father, using the torch to make the sign of the Cross in the air, solemnly blessed the athletes, who were carrying "through the streets of the world" a message eminently Christian.
The ‘Sri Chinmoy Peace Run’, the longest relay run in history, was founded by Sri Chinmoy in 1987. Today the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team sponsors more than 500 athletic competitions annually in about 50 countries, all inspired by the ancient Roman principle of “a sound mind in a sound body.”
In the photo — Sri Chinmoy receives the ‘Fred Lebow Award’, on the occasion of the Rome Marathon. From left to right: Mico Licastro, NYC Marathon Director Allan Steinfeld, Sri Chinmoy, and Rome Marathon President Umberto Silvestri. Pulak Viscardi photo.
Published in the Italian-language daily newspaper America Oggi (AmericaToday) in Westwood, New Jersey on Sunday, May 19, 1996
ULAAN BAATAR — Sri Chinmoy delivered a poetry lecture at the Government Palace here on May 18, which was introduced by Mongolian MP Tugusjargal Gandhi.
Afterwards, Dr. G. Mend-Ooyo, President of the Mongolian Academy of Culture and Poetry, presented Sri Chinmoy with the Academy’s ‘Pegasus’ Award.
Dr. Mend-Ooyo later presented the spiritual leader with a copy of his newly published Nomadic Lyrics, which had been dedicated to him.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 44, Mid-April–July, 2007
A 48-year-old Indian Guru won the second-place medal for his age group in the Great North Fork Foot Race May 17 on Long Island.
Sri Chinmoy, who placed 29th overall in a field of some 180 runners, completed the course in 22:12 minutes — a 7:09 pace.
Sri Chinmoy displays 5-km medal.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 6, Nos. 5-6-7, May–June–July 1980 continued
ROME — The International Center for Peace Among Peoples of Assisi presented Sri Chinmoy with its 1998 Pilgrim of Peace Award on May 16 at the Palazzo Colonna, a royal palace dating back to the 14th century.
Previous recipients include Pope John Paul II, Mother Teresa, Mikhail Gorbachev, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, tenor Luciano Pavarotti and UN Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar.
Gianfranco Costa, President and founder of the Assisi-based civic organization, said:"We hope and pray that through the innumerable actions that Sri Chinmoy is doing for peace, the Millennium of Peace will take birth....
“With immense and deep love and gratitude, we offer the little pilgrim into the hands of this great man who has done so much, is doing so much and will do so much....”
The event ended with a Peace Concert by Sri Chinmoy.
Sri Chinmoy and Gianfranco Costa pose with the Pilgrim of Peace Award.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 27, April–early August 1998
Luminaries from around the world have been taking part in the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run this year.
A team of international runners was welcomed by Vladimir Petrovsky, Director-General of the UN in Geneva, when the European Peace Run arrived at the Palais des Nations on March 23.
“We are very thankful to Sri Chinmoy for this very important peace initiative that has become part and parcel of international peace activities in the new world today,” he said.
Elsewhere in Europe, the Vice-Mayor of Amsterdam dedicated his city as a Sri Chinmoy Peace Capital during a Peace Run ceremony on May 15.
In Ottawa, Prince Charles of England held the Peace Torch and met with runners from the Canadian Peace Run on April 25, an event televised nationally over CBC.
Jimmy Carter became the first U.S. President to hold the Peace Torch when he greeted the American Peace Run as it passed through his hometown of Plains, Georgia, on April 29.
Starting out April 14 from the United Nations, the American Peace Run is travelling through all 48 contiguous states with separate runs in Alaska and Hawaii.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 31, Late March 2001 — June 2001
If age is in the mind, Sri Chinmoy is proving it. This week the fitness enthusiast and peace leader succeeded in vertically jumping 31" from a standing position onto a platform — which is above the top of a kitchen table or a piano, and at the level of the hood of a Toyota car! Using the power of intense concentration and a childlike enthusiasm for this new and surprising field of endeavor, Sri Chinmoy reached the height of 31" on only his ninth training day.
“This is unbelievable! That is a great jump and from a coaching standpoint, this is a very, great athletic feat! Sri Chinmoy is like some of the basketball players in the NBA!” commented Jim Hurt, Track and Field Coach at St. John’s University in Queens, New York. Putting the jump into perspective for us he added. “This is an outstanding performance for any human being, but it is absolutely stupendous for a master athlete of his age.”
Not stopping here. Sri Chinmoy recently jumped over a 33 inch tape in the standing high jump which is only 1/2 inch less than half of his height of 5'7". This week his record standing vertical jump of 18 1/4" inspired former Olympic Track and Field Coach Paton Jordon, who himself holds many track and field records, to offer the following encouragement: “Outstanding! Sri Chinmoy’s 18 1/4" vertical jump is terrific and incredibly outstanding for his age.”
A study reported in the European Journal of Applied Physiology of Italian athletes in 1991, reported that the average vertical jump for power athletes (sprinters and jumpers) aged sixty to sixty-nine was 9 1/2" and the average vertical jump for endurance athletes in the same age group was 7 1/2".
A sprinting and decathlon champion and volleyball coach in his youth, Sri Chinmoy was valued on the volleyball team for being able to leap up and smash the ball over the net. Almost fifty years later he says “the old-age bondage limitations return to the childhood-freedom dreams, with determination we can conquer the age-barrier and go back to our childlike heart where hope is blossoming at every moment.”
Known as a musician, writer, artist, spiritual leader as well as an athlete, Sri Chinmoy explains why he devotes himself to such leaping pursuits; “Age is in the mind, age is no barrier,” he states, “When the inflexibility of the mind surrenders to the enthusiasm of the heart, then we can accomplish many, many unimaginable things! I wish to encourage old people not to surrender to old age,” says Sri Chinmoy, “but to grow into the heart of a seven year old child. Then there will be no end to our progress.”
Sri Chinmoy has always been a dedicated practitioner of sports.
From a standing position Sri Chinmoy vertically jumping 31 inches onto a platform.
Published in Caribbean Life, Brooklyn Edition, May 14-20, 1996.
LONDON — India’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, L. M. Singhvi, received the U Thant Peace Award on May 13.
The award is presented to individuals or organizations reflecting the late Secretary-General's lofty spiritual ideals. Other recipients have included Mikhail Gorbachev and Mother Teresa.
Sri Chinmoy presented the award to the High Commissioner on behalf of The Peace Meditation at the United Nations.
Before making the presentation, Sri Chinmoy participated in a ceremony at the High Commissioner’s residence, observing the anniversary of the Buddha’s enlightenment. The Master spoke briefly and his students sang a few songs he had written about the Buddha.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25, April-July 1995
* The meeting is held at the Waldorf Astoria, not the Hotel Pierre as printed.
Sri Chinmoy met privately with Mikhail Gorbachev, his wife and daughter at the Waldorf Astoria on May 12. Afterwards, the former Soviet President presented the Master with an autographed photo taken of him and his family. Left, the two leaders embrace. Above, Sri Chinmoy presents the Gorbachevs with a cake displaying pictures of their faces etched in icing.
NEW YORK – While visiting New York, Raisa Maximovna Gorbachev took a respite from her whirlwind schedule on May 12 to visit the art exhibit of her husband's good friend, Sri Chinmoy.
Accompanied by her daughter, Irina, Mrs. Gorbachev was personally escorted around the gallery by Sri Chinmoy. He later offered her the painting of her choice. She chose his 27,000th work.
For the Indian-born artist, it was one of his most spiritually significant paintings, since he was born on the 27th of August. There was a large celebration among his students, in fact, when that painting was completed in 1975.
“I see in this painting the colour of life and the colour of hope. The green stands for life and the blue stands for hope,” Raisa Maximovna said. “And that's what I treasure in life.”
As she was leaving the exhibit, Raisa Maximovna thanked Sri Chinmoy for the warm support and affection he had shown to her family, the Gorbachev cause and the Gorbachev Foundation.
“I was so happy to spend these few precious moments with you, Sri Chinmoy, to see everything with my own eyes,” she added.
The art exhibit, which the spiritual teacher had dedicated to Mrs. Gorbachev, ran for three weeks in a mid-Manhattan gallery located near Grand Central Station.
Memories of Raisa Maximovna's visit to Sri Chinmoy's Jharna-Kala Art Gallery. Above and top right, Mrs. Gorbachev admires some of the Master's paintings. Right, Mrs. Gorbachev and her daughter, Irina, listen to one of Sri Chinmoy's songs. They are seated in front of the painting that Sri Chinmoy presented to Mrs. Gorbachev.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 21, April-July 1992
JAMAICA, NY — Sri Chinmoy and Paul Horn offered concerts for one another on May 11 in a musical exchange from the heart.
Sri Chinmoy performed in the afternoon, and then lifted the flautist, who is known for his spiritual-musical odessys around the world.
Later, the musician said, “I have received a few honors and awards in my lifetime, but this is by far the most wonderful and most appreciated, coming from a man ... who is music itself and who wants a oneness-community in the world.”
That evening, the flautist gave a one-man concert of meditative music for Sri Chinmoy, his students and invited guests.
In introducing this concert, Sri Chinmoy said: “Your sublime flute music is born inside the silent depth of your meditation ... and transports your listeners far beyond this mortal world into the very heart of silence.”
Flautist Paul Horn and Sri Chinmoy enter Aspiration-Ground together on May 11.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 34, April-July 2003
Sri Chinmoy 24/12 hour run
VS. It stopped raining just a few minutes before the start at 12 noon. A dry stretch, as well as cool temperatures, ensured the best running conditions for the 83 runners from 14 countries at the ninth international Sri Chinmoy 24/12-hour run in Basel.
This is how Hans-Peter Brönnimann from Riehen, who started the run too quickly last year and had to give up early, succeeded this time in a super performance: With 257.3 kilometres, run with the consistency and precision of a Swiss clockwork, he set a new all-comers record (longstanding old record by Aribert Hannappel; 244 kilometres) and stayed just under 3 kilometres below the course record. He won with ease in front of the Berliner Thomas Kabuss, with 224 kilometres a total of 33 kilometres behind him! Third place went to Milan Furin from Slovakia with 220.2 kilometres. Jean-Claude Jamin from Tri Team Bern was the second Swiss to take sixth place in the main class (seventh place overall).
In the women’s category, Ursula Alder from Wald also set a new Swiss record with 190.3 (old record by Tarangini Westreicher: 186 kilometres), which, however, was only enough for third place in the main class after the two Germans Inge Ludwig with 203.2 kilometres and Heike Pawzik from Berlin with 201 kilometres.
The new Swiss Record holders in the 24-hour run: Ursula Alder from Wald and Hans-Peter Brönnimann from Riehen. Image Keystone
Published in Boltsſtimme, People's Voice — Newspaper for the Upper Basel Region, 9.5.96.
with Sri Chinmoy
First interviewer: I've heard about meditation, but I really don't know too much about it. This morning our guest is Sri Chinmoy, who is an expert in the area of meditation. He has lectured at many universities and written several books on the subject, and he also conducts twice-weekly meditations at the United Nations. It's nice to have you here this morning, Sri Chinmoy.
Sri Chinmoy: I am so happy to be here.
First interviewer: I think my first question is that I want to know more about meditation. Is it a mental exercise or is it like self-hypnosis? Is it an alternative to religion? Do people meditate instead of going to church?
Sri Chinmoy: Meditation is not a mental exercise, it is not self-hypnosis and it is not a form of religion. Meditation is an inner study for self-discovery. We meditate in order to empty our mind and in order to empty our heart. When we empty our mind we receive God the Peace. When we empty our heart we receive God the Love. Peace and Love are the two most important things in our life.
First interviewer: I think a lot of people are going to be wondering how you go about meditating. How do you do it? I think the results you are talking about sound good, but most of us don't really know how to meditate.
Sri Chinmoy: I wish to meditate for a few seconds. Then I shall explain how to meditate. [Sri Chinmoy meditates for a moment.] You just observed as I meditated for a couple of seconds. While I was meditating, I felt Peace and Delight all through my body. It was like a stream of Peace, Light and Delight flowing from the crown of my head to the soles of my feet.
Second interviewer: How would you describe what you saw in your mind's eye? Were you seeing some sort of a landscape scene?
Sri Chinmoy: Actually I was not seeing anything. I was growing into something, and that something was flowing Peace, Light and Bliss. I was becoming part and parcel of it.
First interviewer: Do you have to actually clear your mind of everything?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, you have to clear your mind and not allow any thought whatsoever to enter into the mind. If a thought does enter into the mind, then we cannot grow into the divine Reality.
First interviewer: But I think that's really hard for people, because particularly in everyday life, there are so many things that are acting upon you. How do you go about actually clearing the mind and not thinking about something you have to do that day or a problem you have?
Sri Chinmoy: Meditation should be a regular practice. We study regularly in order to pass our examination or achieve something. If we practise daily, it is quite possible to meditate well. But to start with, we should read a few spiritual books to inspire ourselves and go to a spiritual Master who can increase our aspiration. We should try to live a regular, self-disciplined life.
First interviewer: So one can actually go to a class to learn?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes.
Second interviewer: What are some of the exercises? What can you learn from reading a book about how to empty your mind and heart? How would the readings inspire you to be able to do this?
Sri Chinmoy: If you read a spiritual book, it will mention techniques for emptying your mind and illumining your mind. But as regards physical exercises, I feel they are not absolutely necessary. These preliminary exercises help us to a certain extent, but they are not indispensable. When we sit and make our mind calm, quiet and tranquil, we feel that we are in a position to have a free access to our inner reality. When we have a free access to our inner reality, we hear the Message of God. God is constantly speaking to us. He is trying to guide us all the time, but it is we who do not hear His Message.
Second interviewer: When we are getting ready to meditate, doesn't the environment have to be just right? Do you have to be in a quiet place alone or can you do it with a bunch of people around?
Sri Chinmoy: It depends on your capacity. In the beginning it is impossible to meditate when there are people around who are making noise or who are not aspiring. But there comes a time when you become an expert in meditation. Then, no matter what is happening around you, you will not be affected at all.
Second interviewer: We are talking with the distinguished authority on Yoga and meditation, Sri Chinmoy. Sir, what about the housewife who is at home with three screaming children in the morning or most of the day? Or the business executive who is just running from here to there for appointments all day long? How can they sit down and take a few moments to meditate? How can you get them to calm down from their daily activities?
Sri Chinmoy: Housewives and business executives can easily meditate, provided they know what is most important in life and provided they are willing to do the first thing first. Early in the morning before they enter into the hustle and bustle of life, if they offer a few seconds to God, then they can easily meditate. God is for everyone. He is not the sole monopoly of one individual who is ready to aspire all the time. Just because God is omnipresent, He is in everybody. God is not denied to a housewife or a business executive; only they have to feel a conscious necessity for God.
Second interviewer: In the midst of daily life, how is a housewife going to sit down and take time out? Is there some simple thing she can do to relieve the tension?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, while she is talking to her children, while she is trying to discipline their life, if she can feel the presence of the living God inside them, then there will be a spontaneous flow of divine love from her. And at that time her children will feel that their mother has something special to offer. So when she consciously observes God or feels the presence of God, she will be in a position to deal with her children in a divine way; and that is her meditation.
First interviewer: I've read about classes that you can go to and some seem very expensive, something like $300 for a class. Do you feel there is commercialism in meditation?
Sri Chinmoy: It depends on the individual teacher. I have no idea what others do. In my case, I always say that my fee is aspiration or an inner cry, plus regularity.
I have been teaching meditation for the last seven or eight years, and we have about forty-five meditation Centres all over the world. If one has an inner cry and at the same time is willing to come to the Centre regularly and devotedly, then he has paid his fees.
Second interviewer: You mentioned the presence of God a number of times, and that would lead to another question: Is this God compatible with every religion that anybody might belong to?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, every religion speaks about God. Yoga is another name for spirituality. Meditation also talks about God.
First interviewer: I remember reading in the paper one day about certain scientific studies in terms of the physical effects that meditation has on the body. What are some of these?
Sri Chinmoy: If we meditate well, then we feel peace inside ourselves. We feel that all the time there is illumining guidance within ourselves or a beckoning hand which is all the time leading us towards our destination, which is satisfaction-life.
First interviewer: So meditation can also decrease blood pressure and do other things?
Sri Chinmoy: These things can be done by the Will of God. When we meditate, we identify ourselves consciously with God's adamantine Will. So if we are in need of something, then naturally our God, who is all Love and all Compassion, will do the needful within us.
Second interviewer: Peace and love are wonderful things to have and we should all have them. But what do you do if you are trying to express a feeling of peace and love but people around you are running here and there, backstabbing and what-not in the everyday business world, let us say? How can this really help the situation?
Sri Chinmoy: In this world we feel that everything is contagious. If we can increase the number of people who are in the world of love and peace, then naturally we will be able to inspire and influence others. You are a good soul. If you work with a bad human being, then your inner good qualities will try to inspire that person. When we see a saint, immediately we feel the good qualities of the saint coming forward in ourselves and inspiring us. So if you have peace and love, then either today or tomorrow your peace and love will spread, because the very nature of peace is to spread and the very nature of love is to spread.
Second interviewer: I think, though, that a lot of people will look upon somebody who is meditating and so on as kind of weird, bizarre or mystical. How do you counter that feeling?
Sri Chinmoy: Right now let them cherish this false notion. But a day will come when we are in a position to offer or reveal our inner qualities and then they will be able to recognise their folly. So let them assess us in their own way. Let us offer to the world at large what we have to offer. A day will come when they will be able to recognise their mistake.
First interviewer: Thank you very much for coming today, Sri Chinmoy. I think people will now want to at least try meditation and see if it works for themselves.
Published in Aspiration and God's Hour
The President of the Republic of Macedonia, Boris Trajkovski, visited Sri Chinmoy and his students at Aspiration-Ground on May 8.
Sri Chinmoy welcomed the Macedonian leader with an esraj performance, and afterwards lifted him into the air as part of his ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ program.
The spiritual leader then presented President Trajkovski with the U Thant Peace Award for his “signal contributions to the entire peace-starving humanity.”
The Master hailed him as “a supremely choice son of your beloved Motherland,” as well as “the resplendent rising sun of Macedonia.”
The President called the U Thant Peace Award the highest honor he has received since becoming President of his nation.
“It comes, he said, “at a moment of destiny and great importance to my country,” as a gesture of the support of the entire “spiritual peace-loving world.”
He went on to pledge that “as long as I live, I will ... work for peace, happiness and love among people.”
Macedonian President Trajkovski visits Sri Chinmoy at Aspiration-Ground.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 33, March-July 2002
WINGS OF HOPE: More than 32,000 small birds have found a home at JFK Airport's International Arrivals Building. The exhibit of bird drawings by Jamaica resident Sri Chinmoy (right) seeks to promote “the cause of international friendship and harmony through art,” said a spokesman for the Port Authority, which is sponsoring the exhibit. The birds, symbolizing the human soul, carry the message of freedom and peace, declared the 61-year-old artist, poet, author, spiritual teacher and ambassador of peace.
Published in Queens Tribune – Vol. 23, No. 18 – May 6-12, 1993
NEW YORK — Two of India’s cultural giants, the President and the Executive Secretary of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, visited Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala Art Gallery on May 5.
After a special programme of spiritual songs and meditation, C. Subramaniam, President of the worldwide Indian cultural organisation and Governor of Maharashtra, declared:
“We have been transported from the world of chaos to the world of peace and bliss here.”
One day, he continued, the world will be a place of peace and joy, and that comes from “divine Grace, (which) ... functions through great souls like Sri Chinmoy.”
S. Ramakrishnan, Executive Secretary of the Bhavan, declared: “In divinity’s presence, the mind stands still ... For one hour, the mind stood still. That is proof positive that our revered Sri Chinmoy is a man of God.”
Sri Chinmoy greets C. Subramaniam, left, and S. Ramakrishnan, guiding lights of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 21, April-July 1992
Sri Chinmoy answers a series of written questions submitted by Joop Koopman, Editor-in-Chief and Associate Publisher of Catholic Digest (published in Holland). Sri Chinmoy meets with Mr. Koopman and offers him the ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ award the following day.
Joop Koopman: Sri Chinmoy, you had important friendships and spent significant moments with Pope John Paul II and Mother Teresa of Calcutta. You are effusive in your praise of them, depicting them as wonderful, powerful and colourful beings. In the East, the celebration and appreciation of holy men and women is the norm. The charisma of leaders is experienced as real and palpable. The mainstream of Judaism and Christianity is more cerebral. We think of our leaders as good people, but not necessarily as living saints whose very touch or glance can heal. Can you please describe John Paul II and Mother Teresa in this regard?
Sri Chinmoy: Let me start with the Holy Father, Pope John Paul II. The Holy Father was for all religions. He was not confined to Christianity. That is why it was possible for me to receive from him unbounded compassion, affection and encouragement. I had the golden opportunity in this lifetime to be blessed by him six times. Each time I was in his presence, I did feel many of his divine qualities, qualities which are very rarely found in other individuals.
The Holy Father was at once a friend to some, a father to some and a grandfather to still others. As a friend, he wanted people to understand the real meaning of life. The real meaning of life is compassion, concern and sympathy.
As a father, he was strict with those who are wanting in morality, those who are not abiding by the laws of truth, plus those who are hungry for power and supremacy. Pope John Paul II warned his spiritual children that if they do not have concern for mankind, there will be a very serious crisis. The standard of mankind, instead of going up, will descend and descend into an abysmal abyss.
As a grandfather, he was all affection and, to some extent, indulgence to human beings. He felt that human beings are by nature weak. If he became strict with them, it might do more harm than good. He felt the necessity of going very slowly with those human beings who are already very weak. His concern for them was unbounded, and he felt that a little bit of indulgence would eventually awaken them to the Light. Once they are in Light, they will not deliberately enter into the thick darkness of ignorance.
To the Holy Father, I offer my heart's infinite and infinite gratitude. Each time I met with him, a new experience I had. In the evening of his life, while he was quite frail and his hands were shaking, he most affectionately touched my arm and blessed me with utmost compassion.
Unlike other popes, he was both practical in the activities of the outer world and also a visionary of the most sublime height in the inner world. His inner vision and outer action most gloriously complemented each other.
Mother Teresa was not only for the poor and the needy; she was for the entire humanity. She was her bleeding heart for the helpless and the hopeless world. She was her sacrificing life to save others' lives. Her life-boat plied between the compassion-shore and the concern-shore. Fear was not born when she saw the light of day.
Faith in the Saviour Jesus Christ she had in infinite measure.
To me, she was this moment a real mother and the next moment a real sister. As a mother, she blessed me with her blessingful eyes. As a sister, she loved me with her compassionate heart.
Again, Mother Teresa was encouragement incarnate. Not once, not twice, but thrice she asked me to accompany her to China. It was her fervent wish to do something great and good for China and the Chinese people. But, alas, her desire was not granted. Heaven summoned her before her desire could be fulfilled.
Recently I spent practically three months in China, remembering many, many times her blessingful request to accompany her there.
Mother Teresa: a daring soul, an all-loving soul and an all-sacrificing soul. The world desperately needs many more God-chosen servants like Mother Teresa to change the face and fate of the world.
Joop Koopman: What do you make of the great interest in spirituality in the US, much of it in the form of the pursuit of, if not quasi-religions and movements, then a sometimes vague New Age-ism?
Sri Chinmoy: Spirituality in the United States is a very complicated matter. It is like the huge waves of the ocean: they go up and down. Perhaps a similar experience we get everywhere. There was a time thirty or forty years ago when the young generation showed much more interest in accepting and following the spiritual life. To my great sorrow, I do not see and feel the same inner urge today. I may be utterly mistaken. In no way am I criticising the young generation. I am one hundred per cent with them in their hearts and lives.
There is another factor. In those days, anything new that took place was supported by encouragement. The young people felt encouragement from deep within when they embarked on something new, challenging and illumining. But nowadays, it seems nothing significantly interests human beings in the way it did thirty or forty years ago.
People need new light and new consciousness. They want to come out of the old achievements, or you can say out of the quagmire of life, but they do not know which way to turn. They feel that the past has failed them. Now they are afraid of the future. They do not want to attempt anything new, precisely because uncertainty and fear loom large in their lives.
The love of the New Age movement was much more powerful in the past. Anything that is new, we should welcome. It may not remain or cannot remain new. If we want to achieve anything or become anything new, then we have to be very, very strict with our inner prayers and meditations.
Success depends on our determination and will-power. Progress depends on our surrender, inner and outer, to God's Will while we are praying and meditating most soulfully and serving humanity most lovingly.
Each moment presents itself to us with a new dream, a new reality, a new inspiration, a new aspiration and a new achievement.
Joop Koopman: How do you look for the good in various traditions?
Sri Chinmoy: If I sincerely pray to God for the fulfilment of God’s Will, then my prayer is bound to teach me how to see good realities in every human being. If each tradition hungers for God’s Love and Light, then everything that is good will come to the fore for the betterment of the world.
Today we see good qualities in others. If we appreciate them unreservedly, then those good qualities try to blossom inside our own life like a lotus — slowly, steadily and unerringly.
Without prayer and without meditation, it is almost impossible to appreciate good qualities in others and not be ruthlessly attacked by jealousy-snake.
Each tradition is right in its own way. We need a cosmopolitan heart to appreciate, admire and value all the traditions and to become a world citizen — inspiring, encouraging, illumining and fulfilling each tradition.
Joop Koopman: You think of Jesus Christ as “an unparalleled Prophet and the beloved Son of God, but also as a supreme Oneness-Friend of mankind.” What does “Oneness-Friend of mankind” mean?
Sri Chinmoy: The Christ said, “I and my Father are one.” Again, the Christ said, “I am the Way. I am the Goal.” Outwardly, it is difficult to comprehend how one person can be the possessor of the Way and the Goal. But we know that when there is complete oneness with the Highest Absolute, one can be anything or anyone, plus one can go far beyond duality.
Friendship means the expansion of oneness. As a supreme Son of God, the Christ knew that he was not only the Son of God the Creator. He knew well that God the Creator and God the creation are one.
When we think of the terms 'concern, encouragement, inspiration' and so forth, we feel the supreme necessity of friendship. If there is no friendship, this world will day by day sink into the ocean of oblivion.
It is friendship that keeps us alert and awakened to the realisation that we do not belong only to ourselves. We belong to all those who are around us, with us and for us. Around us is the whole world, and it is here that we must establish friendship, so that together we can bear the burden of the entire world. If there is no friendship, the world will not march forward. It will only go backward.
The Christ played the role of the Creator when he said that he and His Father are one.
Then, when he asked, “Father, why have You forsaken me?” he played the role of the creation. Creation desperately needs help from the Creator.
On the strength of his oneness with the creation, the Christ felt the suffering of humanity as his own. This suffering can be shared by one and all. Suffering exists, but when others come into the picture to alleviate the burden of their friends, then it definitely helps each and every human being to see the light of oneness. Oneness is self-expansion. If there is true friendship, then oneness blooms and blossoms.
Christ was the supreme Friend. He became the oneness, not only of the Heaven, but also of the earth.
As an unparalleled member of Heaven, he brought down Compassion in infinite measure to Mother Earth. Again, as a member of Mother Earth, he distributed the Compassion that he received from Father Heaven unreservedly and unconditionally to elevate the consciousness of the world and to show the world that there is Light, the Light that longs for the establishment of Truth here on earth.
Christ the Son received. Christ the Friend distributed.
Christ the Son received from Above.
Christ the Friend blessingfully distributed everything he had and everything he was to his world-citizen-friends.
Joop Koopman: What are the most significant points that Christianity and Hinduism have in common?
Sri Chinmoy: Not only Christianity and Hinduism, but also all the religions have in common one thing: love of God. They all value truth, compassion and forgiveness. These divine qualities loom large in the very depths of all religions. The followers of each respective religion are supposed to bring to the fore these divine qualities and practise them lovingly, cheerfully and wholeheartedly in their outer lives for the betterment of humanity. In this way, together we can weave a beautiful and fragrant garland of nation-souls.
Joop Koopman: What areas are the greatest challenges in our interfaith relations?
Sri Chinmoy: I have had the occasion to be part of several interfaith meetings. I have prayed and meditated in silence for a minute or two at these meetings. Quite often, we are apt to extol our own religions to the skies. I feel that the best thing will be for us to accept the extraordinary achievements of each faith as our own, very own. In this way, the entire humanity can derive benefit from the combined achievements of all faiths.
Joop Koopman: What are the most urgent lessons the East can teach the West?
Sri Chinmoy: The East can teach the West the power of silence. The West can teach the East the power of science.
The East is introvert. The West is extrovert.
There will be a meeting place where the East and the West can come together. Together they can say, “We have and we are,” and not “I have and I am.”
Published in Conversations with Sri Chinmoy
with Sri Chinmoy
at Aspiration-Ground in Jamaica, New York
Question: Many people feel today that there is a growth in spiritual influence in the world, and I wonder how you feel about this. Do you see this as a time of spiritual expansion for humanity?
Sri Chinmoy: Since the beginning of creation, there has been spirituality. God and God’s creation cannot be separated. God the Creator and God the creation are one. People have been praying from time immemorial. There are various ways to pray and meditate, and there are various ways to reach one’s destination. Spirituality is not the sole monopoly of any individual or of any country. Spirituality is universal. I take each individual as an instrument of God, and those who consciously pray and meditate are chosen instruments of God. There shall come a time when everybody will be awakened. Very often, we say that now spirituality has come to the fore and many people are practising spiritual life. But my inner feeling is that there has not been any time when there was no spirituality on earth.
Question: Do you feel that the degree to which humanity is aspiring changes from age to age or is it constant in your view?
Sri Chinmoy: It changes. Sometimes the weather is good, sometimes the weather is bad. So, for a few years, let us say for twenty, thirty or forty years, spirituality may not be as strong as it is at other times. Now a very significant aspect of spirituality is peace. If there is no peace, then spirituality in its purest sense has no value. Previously, peace was only a dictionary word. It was not a living reality. Although we use the word ‘peace’, people must have a conscious hunger for peace. But now, for the last thirty years, people have been paying more attention to peace.
Question: There are some people who believe there are different kinds of spiritual Masters. Some work openly in the world and their purpose is to work directly with humanity, physically. Others, some of whom have physical bodies and some of whom do not, work behind the scenes. Do you feel that this is true in your experience?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, it is absolutely true. It depends on the spiritual Master. Some have accepted life as such, while others do not want to accept it. Some want to pray and meditate inside the Himalayan caves, while others want to pray and meditate in the hustle and bustle of life. It is a matter of individual choice. We do not know and we cannot say which one is the better of the two. Some spiritual Masters of the hoary past entered into the Himalayan caves and did realise God, the Highest. Again, there are others who did not believe in austerity or renunciation. They believed in the acceptance of life as such. We have to accept life and then we have to transform it to make it a perfect instrument of God.
Question: As I understand it, some traditions hold that some of the Masters who are in seclusion or who may have contact with humans only mildly are nonetheless very involved in service. They simply don't focus on physical contact as the primary method, even if they have bodies. Is this possibly an avoidance of embracing life?
Sri Chinmoy: Excuse me, I can only speak about myself. I can only tell you what I have in my room. About other spiritual Masters, I am not entitled to say anything. I happen to be a spiritual Master. I am their spiritual brother. There is only one Guru and that Guru is God. For my students, I happen to be the elder brother in terms of spirituality. I tell all of my students all over the world always to remember one thing: that I am not the Guru. The real Guru is God Himself. The real Master is God Himself. My purpose is to take my students, who are my younger brothers and sisters, to the Father, our common Father, God. I know a little more than they do, but I will never claim that I am God or I am their Guru.
Question: How do you view the process of enlightenment? Do you feel that there is an ultimate goal that one can reach or is there an ongoing process of deeper and deeper God-realisation?
Sri Chinmoy: God-realisation is not a fixed goal. You cannot say that you will run one hundred metres and then you will reach the goal. We are walking along Eternity’s Road. The road is always ahead; there is no end. Some seekers may think that if you can come and sit at the foot of the God-realisation-tree, that is enough. They will walk, march, run, sprint and finally arrive at the foot of the God-realisation-tree.
Question: I am familiar a little bit with Sri Aurobindo's notion that there is a descent of a new consciousness in the world, a new level of awareness. Would this be similar to intuition?
Sri Chinmoy: There are levels of the mind: higher mind, upper mind, divine mind and so on. Then comes the Supermind. After the Supermind there is another level which is called sat-chit-ananda (Existence-Consciousness-Bliss). But the Supermind itself is far beyond the ordinary mind. It is not in the mind proper.
Question: Can you tell us something about your experience and understanding of the nature of angelic consciousness?
Sri Chinmoy: From the spiritual point of view, angelic consciousness cannot transform human nature. Angels are like flowers or beautiful children. A flower as such is not going to make me beautiful or fragrant. But it can give me the inspiration to pray to God to make my heart as beautiful and as fragrant as the flower. So angels can be a source of inspiration, but they cannot actually transform our consciousness.
Question: I have read in one of your books that you said one of your disciples was from the angelic world. Did I understand that correctly?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes.
Question: Why would an angel take incarnation in the human world?
Sri Chinmoy: Usually angels do not come to earth in a physical body. But they like to have different experiences. I am a foreigner; I come from India. I could have remained in India because India is a vast subcontinent. But I got the inspiration to come to America. It is exactly the same in the case of the angels. Angels usually do not want to come to earth because they are so subtle, beautiful and delicate. This world of ours is full of suffering and our human bodies are composed of gross matter, whereas theirs is angelic. Angels are so subtle, so beautiful, so ethereal, that they do not want to take on the solid mass of a human body. But again, some angels say, “No, we want to have the experience of earthly life.” So on principle they do not come, but every rule admits of exception.
Question: Something in them draws them to human life?
Sri Chinmoy: They want something new. They want to go somewhere. Similarly, I could have been satisfied in India, but I wanted to have something new from America.
Question: What would taking human incarnation add to an angel that they don't already have?
Sri Chinmoy: If they enter into human consciousness, then they become more reliable, dependable and efficient instruments of God. Let us say you have a small ferry. If you want to keep that ferry, you can carry me and a few other people across the river. But if you have an ocean liner, you can take hundreds of people. Why do spiritual Masters come into this world? They could have remained in the soul’s world. They come into this world to carry millions of people in their big ocean liners. So it depends on the individual. Either you want to help one or two individuals to become good, or you want to inspire countless people to become good, illumining and fulfilling. From where they were in Heaven, the angels can deal with only one or two individuals. But if they take human incarnation and inspire countless people, then they are doing greater service, infinitely greater service to God.
Question: What do you mean when you talk about a mental path versus the path of the heart?
Sri Chinmoy: The difference is quite noticeable. When we live in the heart, with the heart and for the heart, we always feel we can accept the world and become part and parcel of the suffering world. But when we are in the mind, we start criticising others and thinking that we are perfect. If I remain in the mind, I will see you as imperfect and myself as perfect. But if I live in the heart, then I will feel that what you have and what you are I have to claim as my own, very own. If we remain in the heart, we become one. Your imperfections I must accept as my own imperfections. And if you also live in the heart, you will take my imperfections as your own imperfections. Then if you are happy because you have done something great, I will feel that it is I who have done it and vice-versa.
Question: Thank you. That's a useful distinction to make. Some traditions or some teachers have used the notion of the path of the mind to mean something like jnana yoga.
Sri Chinmoy: The mind needs illumination. There are two rooms. One is the heart-room; one is the mind-room. The heart-room already has light in it. So we have to enter into the heart-room and then take the light from there to the mind-room. But if we enter into the mind-room first and find that the mind-room is unlit, how are we going to bring light into it? We have to be wise. If we enter into the mind and stay there, we will never come to the heart-room. But if we enter into the heart-room, we will get illumination in abundant measure and then finally in measureless measure. Then only shall we enter into the mind-room. We are not going to neglect the mind-room. Only we have to be wise. For the time being, we have to remain inside the heart-room in order to collect light and bliss. Then there shall come a time when we shall enter into the mind-room. Nothing on earth will remain imperfect. But we have to be very wise. Only the things that are inspiring, aspiring and illumining we have to accept in the beginning.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 18
PEACE AWARD
Canadian honored
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONSCanadian businessman and environmentalist Maurice Strong was presented the U Thant Peace Award on Thursday for his commitment to the United Nations and his efforts to promote environmental protection.
The award is presented annually by the Sri Chinmoy Centre, a non-governmental UN organization, in memory of former UN Secretary-General U Thant.
Previous winners have included Mother Teresa, South African President Nelson Mandela, former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev and Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa.
Published in Calgary Herald – Friday, May 3, 1996
NEW YORK — Environmentalist Maurice Strong received the U Thant Peace Award May 2 for his “lifelong commitment to the soaring ideals of the United Nations” and his “reverence for our beautiful and bountiful Planet Earth.”
Presenting the award on behalf of The Peace Meditation at the United Nations, Sri Chinmoy told the Canadian leader: “You convincingly manifest the powerful truth that to unite humanity in the cause of pre.serving our Mother Earth is not only good, kind and necessary but also practical, profitable and fruitful.”
Strong, who was Secretary-General of the 1992 U.N. Conference on Environment and Development, known as The Earth Summit, said: “l am overwhelmed to receive the honour that bears the name ofU Thant, and to receive it from the hands of Sri Chinmoy, who has been for so many years the custodian and guardian of the spiritual roots of the United Nations.
“That combination makes this the greatest honour I could possibly imagine.”
The presentation was made at the U.N. Church Center at a ceremony attended by about a hundred diplomats and U.N. staff members.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25, April-July 1996
In a gesture of unity, Sri Chinmoy on May 1 simultaneously lifted the Mayors from three cities in Slovenia, Austria and Hungary at a spot in the countryside where the nations’ three borders intersect.
A team of runners from each of the countries, carrying their national flags and a flaming torch, converged at the common border, where Sri Chinmoy meditated and did the lifts.
The Mayors of Kuzma (Slovenia), Felsoszolnok (Hungary) and St. Martin an der Raab (Austria) then joined the spiritual teacher in unveiling a plaque dedicating the spot to world harmony as part of the spiritual leader’s new ‘World-Oneness-Heart’ program.
During the ceremony, a Hungarian official presented Sri Chinmoy with the nation’s highest cultural award, the Pro-Cultura Hungarica Medallion, for his work in spreading Peace through culture.
MARIBOR, Slovenia — Later that same day, Sri Chinmoy lifted several Members of the Slovenian Parliament, as well as the Director of the Slovenia National Theater here.
Afterwards, he offered the opening meditation and a short esraj performance at the start of an international concert, organized by the Theater, featuring conductors and opera singers from 11 EEC countries.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 35, April-July 2004
OSLO, Norway — Sri Chinmoy offered the first concert ever at the Nobel Peace Center on April 30.
It was an invitation-only event attended by professors, government officials and Members of Parliament from various European countries, along with many Norwegian dignitaries.
The concert was introduced by the Oslo Deputy Mayor Svenn Kristiansen and ended with a short talk by Dr. Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo. Dr. Arne Naess, one of Norway’s best-known philosophers, and his wife Kit-Fai, were guests of honor at the event.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 44, Mid-April-July 2007
JAMAICA, N.Y. — In an unprecedented literary achievement, Sri Chinmoy has written 360 poems during a single 24-hour period.
Using his yogic powers of concentration developed during 20 years of meditation in an Indian ashram, Sri Chinmoy accomplished the feat “just for the joy of it.” He said he wanted to show the remarkable limits of human capacity when guided by inner willpower and the soul’s Light.
Beginning at the stroke of midnight April 28th, Sri Chinmoy wrote continuously around the clock at the gruelling pace of one poem every four minutes.
This easily topped his previous record of February 2nd, when he wrote 208 poems in a little over 22 hours.
That time a small group joined Sri Chinmoy midway during his task to type up his manuscripts and prepare them for printing. But this time disciples worked alongside him right from the beginning, and the entire book was typed, proofread, printed, collated and bound by the next day.
The following evening, during a large outdoor celebration honouring the book, Sri Chinmoy explained why he titled the book The Goal Is Won. “About 20 years ago the sprinter in your Guru won the race,” he said, referring to the time he became decathlon champion in his Indian ashram. “And yesterday the poet in your Guru again won the race.”
He went on to say how he often uses the symbolism of the Dream-boat and the Golden Shore. “Our first series of poems was entitled The Golden Boat. But this book now has touched the shore.”
Published in Anahata Nada, May 27, 1974, Vol. 1, No. 6
Sri Chinmoy is one of three guests interviewed on the weekly WNBC television series “The First Estate: Religion in Review” which is hosted by Dr. Russell Barber. The program begins with Sri Chinmoy playing the esraj, and after the three interviews are over, while the program credits are being shown, Sri Chinmoy plays again, in place of the program’s usual theme music.
Following is a transcription of Sri Chinmoy’s portion of the program.
Dr. Barber: That very peaceful music you have just heard Guru Sri Chinmoy play is one of over 1,000 of his original musical compositions for meditation. Sri Chinmoy is a spiritual teacher and leader of a world-wide religious organisation that is dedicated to an active outer life of service to humanity and a fruitful inner life of prayer and meditation. He is a prolific writer and artist, having written over 300 books and, in a single 24-hour span, 843 poems. He also created 100,000 paintings in just over eleven months. Since 1970 he has served as Director of the United Nations Meditation Group, conducting interdenominational meditation services for U.N. delegates and staff. And he is with us today to help us better understand the phenomenon of meditation. Welcome, Guru. It's a pleasure to have you with us. Guru, what is meditation, and what is its ultimate objective?
Sri Chinmoy: Meditation is our conscious awareness of God and constant oneness with God. When we meditate, our ultimate objective is to be constantly and consciously one with God. This has to be our main objective.
Dr. Barber: Does it differ from prayer in some way?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, it does differ from prayer. Although prayer and meditation lead us to the same goal, their approaches are different. When we pray, we speak to God, and when we meditate, God speaks to us. When we pray, we offer our prayer to God for something, and God listens to our prayers. And when we meditate, we hear God’s Command; we try to hear God’s dictates from above.
Dr. Barber: Guru, can everybody benefit from meditation, or is it something that only a gifted person can have?
Sri Chinmoy: We are all God’s children, so everybody can meditate. It is not for the selected few. If one is sincere enough, then one can meditate. Meditation is not the sole monopoly of any individual. Anybody can meditate, provided he has some sincerity in his heart.
Dr. Barber: Still, there are those who are given special gifts, and you, for example, as a teacher or Guru, must have realised at an early age that you did have some special religious gift. Could you tell me about that?
Sri Chinmoy: At the age of twelve I had quite a few major experiences, and these experiences have led me to what I am now. I went beyond the domain of the physical mind that doubts and suspects, the mind that is never satisfied with anything. I went beyond that mind, and also, by God’s infinite Bounty, I was in a position to have a free access to the Supreme Reality within me.
Dr. Barber: What kinds of special techniques are used by people who practice your form of meditation?
Sri Chinmoy: I ask my students to have a mind totally freed from thoughts. This is the first technique I offer. Then, after some time, I tell them to welcome only good thoughts, divine thoughts, the thoughts that are progressive, illumining and fulfilling. This is how I advise them to start their meditation, especially in the preliminary stages.
Dr. Barber: Well, for example, do they use a mantra, or a word to meditate on?
Sri Chinmoy: No, in our path we do not advocate mantra, incantation. We feel that our prayer and meditation are most effective. At the same time, we do not have a word to say against mantras. It is necessary for those who want to follow certain other paths. In our case love, devotion and surrender to God’s Will is the way to approach the Supreme Reality.
Dr. Barber: I understand that not everybody can be a disciple of yours; that you look into a person’s eyes and you can tell whether or not that person should be able to follow you. Would you look into my eyes and tell me whether or not I could be a disciple of yours?
Sri Chinmoy: I do not want to say in public.
Dr. Barber: I’m afraid it’s negative…
Sri Chinmoy: No, it is not for that, but then it will have a kind of commercial feeling. These things are very intimate, very soulful. When a seeker comes to me, at that time I have to take full responsibility of his entire life, as he has to dedicate himself totally to the inner command, to the Supreme within. So here on television, if I accept or reject someone, it will be an act of injustice to our spiritual belief, and your soul will not permit me to do this kind of thing on television. You have a very fine soul, and your soul will not believe in this kind of commercial acceptance of seekers.
Dr. Barber: Let me ask a question that is related to that. Is it possible for somebody of a particular religious faith — say a Jewish person or a Christian person — to be a disciple of yours and still maintain their faith?
Sri Chinmoy: Certainly. One can belong to any religion he wants to. Religion is like a house. He has to remain in his house. Then he has to come out to study. He has to go to school. We have implicit faith in all religions. Each religion is a house. You have to stay in your house; I have to stay in my house. But both of us are students. We can go to a common teacher.
Dr. Barber: So there are many paths?
Sri Chinmoy: Many paths that lead to the same realisation. Each religion represents a house.
Dr. Barber: Tell me for a moment about your work at the United Nations. How does meditation aid in the pursuit of world peace?
Sri Chinmoy: When we meditate, we acquire peace of mind, and once we have peace of mind, we simplify our outer life. Our mind is full of complicated thoughts and ideas, and it is constantly assailed by fear, doubt, anxiety and worry. But if we can soulfully meditate early in the morning, we see that there is a way to simplify our life and, at the same time, to see the Reality face to face.
Dr. Barber: How many disciples do you have, Sri Chinmoy?
Sri Chinmoy: I have about 900 disciples.
Dr. Barber: And of course your work goes on all over the world, doesn’t it?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes.
Dr. Barber: But your headquarters is here in New York?
Sri Chinmoy: It is in New York.
Dr. Barber: And do you find that you have many new converts to your brand of faith here in New York? Are there many new people coming in all the time?
Sri Chinmoy: Not all the time. As you know, I am very fussy, I am very strict, so I do not get disciples as some of the Masters get, as easily as possible.
Dr. Barber: Well, I know that you have met with religious leaders all around the world, and I’m very pleased that you’ve come to meet with us and our audience on The First Estate. Thank you very much for being with us.
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you, I am so grateful to you.
Published in AUM — Vol. 4, No. 4, 27 April 1977
BY CHARLENE OLDHAM
STAFF WRITER
NEAR A TABLE at Annam Brahma, a vegetarian restaurant in Jamaica, a large painting some of the patrons call a ‘birdscape’ rests on an easel.
The painting resembles a landscape, its thousands of tiny, brightly colored blue, green, red and purple birds forming hills and valleys for the two larger birds near the center. It is one of Jamaica-based peace leader Sri Chinmoy’s many variations for a series in which he drew seven million ‘dream-freedom-peace-birds’.
“He never said he was going to do seven million,” R. Ghose, the curator of Chinmoy’s art, said of the series Chinmoy started Dec. 29, 1991. “But when he finished each million, he kept saying he wanted to make the project larger. He was kind of on a roll.”
The native of Bangladesh has been on a creative roll for a while. According to a release sent out after Chinmoy finished his last bird on March 28, he has written more than 1,200 books and 22,000 songs in either English or Bengali. And he performed on 150 instruments in a single 14-hour concert.
Chinmoy also keeps busy as spiritual leader to followers in Queens and around the world. He teaches that enlightenment and self-transcendence come through meditation and exercise, and has eight centers in other countries as well as a large following in the United States. But Ghose emphasizes that Chinmoy is a teacher, not a religious leader.
“It’s a philosophy, not a religion,” she said while sitting at one of the red-clothed tables at Annam Brahma, which is run by some of Chinmoy’s students.
The restaurant’s back wall is crowded with books by Chinmoy and greeting cards and gift bags covered with the guru’s art. The ‘birdscape’ is displayed nearby.
The painting’s vivid colors have a high ‘joy factor’, as do many of the other paintings in the series, according to Ghose.
Alan Spence, a journalist for The Scotsman who saw an exhibit of Chinmoy’s in Edinburgh in 1994, wrote that Chinmoy’s bird art was “unusual and delightful” and that each bird was “executed with tremendous speed and confidence, like Zen calligraphy.”
Renee Phillips, editor in chief of Manhattan Arts International Magazine, said Chinmoy’s drawings were full of “spontaneity and purity.”
“It gives a very positive message to anyone who views it,” said Phillips, also the author of the book ‘New York Contemporary Art Galleries’. “Just the idea of being in front of so many birds is powerful.”
And, she added, each one of the birds is unique.
“If you stand there long enough, the birds become personified. They have their own personalities,” said Phillips, who last saw Chinmoy’s bird drawings at a 1992 exhibit in Soho titled ‘My 70,000 Soul-Bird-Flights’.
“It’s been a long time since I’ve seen them, but I still remember the birds,” she said. “I think it’s because their message was so universal.”
“Ghose said Chinmoy, who counts Raisa Gorbachev among the fans of his art, chose to draw birds because they are symbols of the soul and illustrate how humans can “elevate themselves.”
“The metaphor that Sri Chinmoy uses for the soul is very often the bird, because the bird takes flight from the earthly firmament to the sky,” said Ghose, a Chinmoy student for 27 years. “There’s something special about the bird that inspires mankind.”
Caption: The 7-million-drawing man, Sri Chinmoy, has a soft spot in his hearts for birds. He completed his 7-millionth bird drawing last month.
Published in the Sports section of Newsday – Queens – Sunday, April 27, 1997
Sri Chinmoy and a group of disciples took a journey to Quebec that ended up as a real ultra-marathon.
The bus left April 26 shortly after a 10-mile Sri Chinmoy Race in Flushing Meadow Park, Queens.
After a 13-hour trip, the group arrived in Quebec around three o’clock Sunday morning, in time for a short nap before a 13-kilometre Sri Chinmoy Run sponsored by the Quebec Centre.
Later in the day, Sri Chinmoy gave a concert at Laval University, and then the long trip home began.
The bus broke down near the U.S. border and was eventually abandoned. The Master and his students finally returned to Queens, in a chartered Greyhound, around dusk Monday.
Maintaining the lighthearted air that pervaded the whole trip, Sri Chinmoy invited the disciples to his house for an informal gathering, meditation and dinner, and it wasn’t until nearly midnight that the memorable Quebec ‘weekend’ came to an end.
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 6, No. 2-3-4 Feb.-March-April 1980
At age 67 Sri Chinmoy is lifting simultaneously with each arm 200 pounds — in each arm 40 pounds more than his bodyweight.
New York — 25, April. The international well-known Bengal meditation teacher Sri Chinmoy based in New York has shown with a feat of strength, that age is no barrier, if one has access to the source of power through meditation. That amazed even the experts. In 1988 Sri Chinmoy had tried to lift 160 pounds with each arm simultaneously in a similar feat of strength. At that time he failed and was able to lift only one dumbbell up about 1/2 inch high. Now eleven years later at the age of 67, he lifted with each arm simultaneously dumbbells of 200 pounds -his own bodyweight of 160 pounds plus 40 pounds with each arm — from a rack at the height of his shoulders. Mr. Franco Columbu, two-time Mr. Olympia, stated, “No one else alive today can lift such phenomenal weights. Sri Chinmoy’s mind and spirit are very, very powerful!”
When he had lifted the total weight of 400 pounds up more than 4 inches high after two hours of intense meditation and warm-up exercises, Sri Chinmoy stated: “God wants to show the world what He can do even with a fragile human body.” Since March 22nd of this year Sri Chinmoy has lifted up the two weights thirty-eight times. Sri Chinmoy’s motivation for such performances is to inspire other people to acquire inner peace, joy as well as inner and outer power by prayer and meditation.
“It is because of my prayer-life and meditation-life that I am able to accomplish these feats of strength. Everybody can get inner strength from prayer and meditation. ... This inner power will give us peace. This inner peace in the individual is the base for a true and lasting world peace.
“Because individuals inspire groups, groups inspire nations and a nation can also inspire the other nations to live peacefully and in oneness with whole humanity.”
Sri Chinmoy also uses his strength to honour the work of other people. In Pretoria Sri Chinmoy met President Nelson Mandela and honoured him with the Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart award, lifting the President overhead with one arm from a honorary platform. Sri Chinmoy has honoured already 2000 individuals from all walks of life with this price for uplifting the standard of humanity.
Sri Chinmoy is well-known through many initiatives in Europe. With these initiatives he has promoted world peace in the last 34 years. Among these are 90 Peace Concerts in Europe and the Global Peace Run. Since 1987 during the Peace Run several millions of people passed Peace Torches from hand to hand on all seven continents. On the occasion of the turn of the millennium in 1999 the Peace Run will follow a route of 20,000 km through all European countries on every day.
For his tireless and selfless efforts for peace Sri Chinmoy was honoured with the Nehru Medallion of UNESCO, Paris in 1995 among other awards.
Published in Die andere Realität, 4/1999, page 3
New York — It was a real meeting of the spirit ... and the body as well... April 23 when Sri Chinmoy lifted into the air Pir Vilayat Khan, head of the Sufi Order in the West, as part of his ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ programme.
“When two rivers meet, it becomes a place of pilgrimage,” Pir Vilayat said. “So this hall has become a place of pilgrimage.”' The lift took place at Columbia University.
After being lifted the Sufi leader said: “I’ve learned to trust myself in the hands of Sri Chinmoy.” Then he added, “Sri Chinmoy did to my body what he is doing to my heart — lifting it up.”
Sri Chinmoy replied: “Your greatness and your goodness I shall forever and forever treasure.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 18, April-July 1989
At the event, Pir Vilayat Khan said:
“It is a very special, very rare thing to find a genuine representative of spirituality. This is what we feel in the presence of Sri Chinmoy — authenticity.”
UNITED NATIONS — Ambassadors from several countries, athletes and civil rights leaders joined Sri Chinmoy April 22 in a farewell to Jesse Owens in a moving ceremony at the United Nations.
The programme, sponsored by Sri Chinmoy Meditation at the United Nations, paid a final tribute to the athlete whose triumphs at the 1936 Berlin Olympics were a victory for all those the world over who stood against Hitler’s notions of Aryan supremacy.
Ambassador Rüdiger von Wechmar of the Federal Republic of Germany praised Owens not only for being a sportsman but also for “his convincing fellowship as a human being.”
U.S. Ambassador William vanden Heuvel said Owens “ran an extraordinary race, not only in Berlin, but in all the years of his life.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 6, No. 2-3-4, Feb.-March-April 1980
Sri Chinmoy, a 55-year-old peace advocate, lifted and supported 7,063-¾ pounds with one hand on January 30, 1987. The dumbbell is the largest and heaviest in history. Chinmoy’s own weight that day was 162-¼ pounds. The spiritual teacher, who leads peace meditations at the United Nations in New York, lifts weights to demonstrate the power of inner peace gained through prayer and meditation and to inspire others to transcend their limitations. Just 10 days prior to the record Chinmoy had lifted 3,081 pounds. He started lifting on June 26, 1985 and at that time the most he could lift with one arm was 40 pounds. Chinmoy has ended his weight lifting and now taken up musical instruments. He hopes to be able to play 100 different instruments by the end of the year.
Published in the Sports section of The Daily Dispatch, Wednesday, April 22, 1987
Braving light showers, several hundred students of spiritual Master Sri Chinmoy celebrated his 15 years in the West, 10 years in Queens, with a parade last Saturday, April 14 that started at 12 noon at Hillside and 188th St. and continuing to Queens Blvd. Banners and flags flew celebrating Chinmoy’s numerous achievements.
Published in The New York Voice, Vol. XXI No. 4, Saturday, April 21, 1979
JAMAICA, NY — Paula Radcliffe, who is the world record-holding woman marathoner, came to Aspiration.Ground on April 20, three days after winning the London Marathon, to be lifted by Sri Chinmoy as part of his ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ program.
“I don't think I have ever before been in a place which felt so peaceful and so serene, yet at the same time so powerful,” she said afterwards. “It’s very moving.”
By using our inner strength, she added, we “can make the world a better place, as Sri Chinmoy is doing.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 38, April-Early August 2005
The Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run was launched in 70 countries this spring, bringing the Torch of Peace to the far corners of the globe.
In the U.S., runners left New York on April 19 on a four-month journey that was to carry them through almost all the 50 states.
A 9,500-mile Peace Run was held in Russia, with teams taking off from Moscow and travelling in four separate directions.
The eastern team covered some 3,700 miles, ending up at Chita in the far reaches of Siberia; the northern team went nearly 3,000 miles to Murmansk on the Arctic Ocean.
In the Balkans, runners passed through the various countries that emerged from the breakup of the former Yugoslavia: Bosnia, Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Slovenia and Macedonia.
Major events were held in Belgrade and, for the first time since the war, in Sarajevo. In Macedonia, President Kiro Gligorov held the Torch.
In Italy, runners carried the Peace Torch into St. Peter’s Square, where they were received by Cardinal Virgilio Noe on behalf of the Vatican.
Segments of' the Peace Run will continue to be run through the fall
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 28, April-August 1997
On April 18, The Westport News, Connecticut, printed a story on the April 13th celebration which was written by Jack Kenny (Conn). The article is reprinted below.
Sri Chinmoy, an Indian Spiritual Master with more than 100 disciples in his Norwalk center, celebrated the ninth anniversary of his mission in the United States last Friday in the Unitarian Church on Lyons Plains Road.
Taking part in the celebration were more than 300 of his disciples from centres in the Eastern United States and Canada.
On hand to welcome Sri Chinmoy on his first visit to Westport was First Selectman John Kemish, who gave a brief address at the beginning of the five hour celebration.
Kemish said that it is his wish to see all political figures and legislators, from presidents to mayors, become sincere seekers after the Infinite Truth.
He commended Sri Chinmoy for his genuine and selfless work in spreading spirituality, and expressed “pleasure at seeing so many who are seeking self-realization, the realization of the soul.”
The celebration included many varities of music, including acoustical guitar performances by two disciples, Mahavishnu John McLaughlin and Carlos Santana, who are also popular recording artists.
The Master, who arrived here April 13, 1964, has made the West his permanent home, and resides in Jamaica, Queens, N.Y.
Sri Chinmoy teaches that through love, devotion, and surrender to God, and sincere meditation, man can achieve God-realization, conscious oneness with God.
Caption: OFFICIAL WELCOME — First Selectman John Kemish extends an official welcome to Sri Chinmoy, Indian Spiritual Master, during a celebration of the ninth anniversary of the Master’s mission in the United States, last Friday in the Unitarian church on Lyons Plains Road.
Originally published in The Westport News, Connecticut, April 18, 1973
UNITED NATIONS — Sri Chinmoy offered a Peace Concert for the Millennium in the Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium here on April 17.
Special guests included Roberto Cantoral, President of the Society of Authors and Composers of Music of Mexico, who presented Sri Chinmoy with a Heart of Gold. The Society had named Sri Chinmoy a recipient of its Heart of Gold Award at ceremonies in Mexico City Jan. 21, but the Award presentation took place at the UN.
Cantoral cited Sri Chinmoy’s “untiring struggle for world peace, manifested through concerts and other events throughout the globe,” as well as the other “humanitarian and selfless causes which he pursues.”
Sri Chinmoy said: “I wish this heart of gold to grow inside my prayerful heart so that my heart will be as beautiful, as pure and as divine as your blessingful offering to me today.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 27, April-early August 1998
by Sri Chinmoy
Video of Sri Chinmoy lifting 200 pounds with one arm is broadcast onTV Channel 5 in New York.
I am sure you do not watch television at four o’clock in the morning, but had you been watching Channel 5 last night at four o’clock, you would have seen me lifting 200 pounds with one arm! Dhanu went to the store of the man who sold us the video camera that takes the weightlifting pictures and he said that he saw me on television. His little child was crying, so he had to get up at four in the morning. Then he turned on the television and saw me lifting. He was so happy and proud because he sold us the video camera which takes pictures of my weightlifting.
Published in My Weightlifting Tears and Smiles, part 3
JAMAICA, NY — Actors and civil rights activists Ossie Davis and his wife, Ruby Dee, were lifted by Sri Chinmoy at Aspiration-Ground April 16 as part of the ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ program. Also lifted that day was New York Knicks superstar Walt Frazier.
“Part of my heart will always be in this garden where we find what the world hungers for ... so beautifully illustrated in the life and person of Sri Chinmoy,” Davis said, after being lifted.
Ruby Dee declared: “It is with deepest gratitude and a sense of truly being lifted up in spirit that we stand here now.”
Walt Frazier said: “I thought I’ve been to the pinnacle ... in basketball with championships, but this was a different feeling, a very galvanizing experience.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 34, April-July 2003
Early in the morning on Thursday, International peace leader Sri Chinmoy brought the power of his intense determination and childlike enthusiasm to excel in a new and surprising field of endeavor — the vertical jump.
Just 53 days after starting his new venture, Sri Chinmoy’s latest jump places him beyond the realm of “world class athletes” for young American men between the ages of 20 and 25 years old. According to the recently published research in Athletic Science Bulletin, a vertical leap of 26'' is predictive of world class athletes for men 1/3 of Sri Chinmoy’s age and much taller in height. Jumps of 24'' are predictive of “excellent athletes” for American boys 1/4 of his age. The video taped jump by the 5’7'' Indian born athlete was seen by hundreds of people from many countries at a special program in New York. Why does a renowned spiritual leader such as Sri Chinmoy devote himself to such leaping pursuits?
“Age is in the mind; age is no barrier,” says Chinmoy. “When the inflexibility of the mind surrenders to the enthusiasm of the heart, then we can accomplish many, many, unimaginable things. I wish to encourage old people not to surrender to old age,” says Chinmoy, “but to grow into the heart of a 7 year old child. Then there will be no end to our progress.”
On April 13th, there will be an international celebration to honor Sri Chinmoy’s 32nd anniversary of his arrival in America from India.
Published in Asia Online, No. 118, Volume II, Apr 15 – Apr 21, 1996
By DAVID BURKE
NEW YORK (AP) — An unusual blending of Indian mysticism and the often agitated world of United Nations politics marks its third anniversary Friday.
For the past three years the Indian spiritual master, Sri Chinmoy, has been conducting weekly interdenominational meditations for U.N. delegates and staff. at the U.N. Church Center here.
The lunch hour sessions strike a note of incongruity amid the heated debates and political manoeuvring that characterize life at the Secretariat building across the street.
“The U.N. members are trying to bring about peace through political means, which is absolutely right according to their understanding and enlightenment. I feel, according to my own realization, that the way I am bringing down peace will be effective,” said Sri Chinmoy after a recent session. “Each of us knows how he can be of service to mankind.”
Elizabeth Addison, a U.N. staff member from South Africa who is secretary of the U.N. meditation group, describes the meditations as “a sea of serenity in the middle of our daily activities.”
Sri Chinmoy came to the United States from his native Bengal, India, in 1964 after spending 20 years in an ashram, or religious community, practicing meditation and spiritual disciplines. Besides holding meditations for U.N. personnel, the 42-year-old yogi is spiritual head of some 40 meditation centers throughout the United States, Canada, Europe and Australia. He has written more than 20 books on yoga and Eastern mysticism and been invited to lecture at many of the world’s major universities.
Sri Chinmoy teaches a mystical approach to God which emphasizes love, devotion and surrender to the divine will. His philosophy, currently being taught in a course at the University of Connecticut, sees surrender to God not as a submission but as an unfolding.
“It is the unfoldment of our body, mind and heart into the sun of our soul living in us. To surrender to this inner Sun is the greatest triumph in life. The hound of failure can not reach us while we are in that Sun. The Prince of Evil fails to touch us,” he said.
His approach to spirituality, which he has discussed in private meetings with Pope Paul and former U.N. Secretary-General U Thant, is compatible with all religions, he said. The different religions are like petals of the same flower, he continues. “Let us make a garland of these divine flowers and offer them at the feet of God.”
Published in THE SAN JUAN STAR — Saturday, April 14, 1973
The 15th anniversary of Sri Chinmoy’s arrival in the West this April 13 triggered a stream of congratulatory letters.
Excerpts from a few of these letters follow:
“As United States Ambassador to your native India, as Ambassador to the United Nations — where you have served so selflessly and so well — and now, as United States Senator from New York, I have followed your important work in America with growing admiration ... You have brought joy and spiritual enlightenment to countless Americans, and indeed, to the people of many nations, and for this, we are all very much in your debt.”
— Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan
“On the occasion of your 15th year of spiritual leadership in the United States, I am pleased to extend my congratulations to you.”
— New York Governor Hugh L. Carey
“Poet, writer, artist, musician and, most importantly, spiritual force for the fulfilment of goodness in mankind, you have made many contributions to New York City.”
— New York Mayor Edward I. Koch
“Your roles as teacher, writer, poet, artist, musician and spiritual leader lead me to believe you are in the fullest sense the ‘Renaissance Man’ of our times.”
— New York State Senator Hugh T. Farley
“As a spiritual leader, teacher, writer, artist and musician, you have enriched the lives of many people in Queens, our City, at the United Nations headquarters and across our nation.
— Queens Borough President Donald R. Manes
“The many lives you have touched, with your prayers, words, songs, art and deeds, proves that you are a messenger, a catalytic atom of that Great Power that guides us all through this beautiful experience ... life. Your fifteen years here in the West ... only proves that you were chosen by Him, because His divine love always, has met and always will meet every human need and the world is indeed grateful.”
— Roy Allen, Producer/Director of “The Way to Go,” WCBS-TV
“Having long earned my living with words — as a teacher and a broadcaster — I know of the power words have. They can be used as friends or as weapons. Your words have touched me deeply. For, your words do not claim to be wiser or better. Your presence, your accomplishments, the love of those devoted to you in your gentleness and strength speak louder and more meaningfully than any mere words in voice or print can!"
— Joel Martin, Host, “Long Island Spectrum,” WBAB Radio
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 5, Number 4, April 1979
Citing “the importance of leaving a valuable legacy for all future generations,” the Government Whip of Australia, Kay Elson, proclaimed Australia the world’s first “Sri Chinmoy Peace-Continent” on April 12.
The Government Whip speaks on behalf of the Australian government.
On April 12 and 13 five countries officially became “Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossoms.”
Prime Minister Said Musa named Belize as Central America’s first “Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossom-Nation” on April 12, the same day Australia became a Peace-Continent.
The following day, Prime Minister Mart Laar of Estonia and Bulgaria’s Deputy Minister of Culture, Panteley Tsankov, also proclaimed their countries “Peace-Blossom Nations.”
That same day, in a proclamation jointly signed by five National Party and Parliamentary Group Chairpersons, Sweden became the 21st “Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossom-Nation.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 27, August 1998-April 1999
NEW YORK – Sri Chinmoy gave a short concert and read his poetry at a reception hosted by the Indian Consulate here on April 11.
The Consulate, where Sri Chinmoy had worked as a clerk when he first arrived in America in 1964, also held an exhibit of his artwork.
After his performance, the spiritual teacher presented one of his paintings to the Consul General, Shashi Tripathi, and also one to the Indian Consulate.
The reception concluded with a short concert by the Bhajan Singers, led by Ranjana, who had coordinated the evening’s activities.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 33, March – July 2002
UNITED NATIONS — An 11-day exhibit of Sri Chinmoy’s soul-bird drawings was held in the main lobby of the United Nations.
UN Under-Secretary-General Anwarul Chowdhury and Ranjana Ghose, exhibit curator, spoke at the April 10th opening reception, which Sri Chinmoy attended.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 44, Mid-April – July 2007
Edited by Sri Chinmoy Videos
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed live on the Steve Powers Show WMCA radio in New York. In this interview, Sri Chinmoy responds to questions related to spirituality in the modern world.
Video by Vasudeva Server
Sri Chinmoy appears on the TV programme ‘Newsline’ in Westchester, New York.
Video from Vasudeva Server
Sri Chinmoy plays the esraj and answers questions on WOR-TV’s ‘Straight Talk’ in New York.
New York — The New York-based artist, musician and peace philosopher Sri Chinmoy has reached his goal: He just completed his seven millionth "Dream-Freedom-Peace-Bird". The native Indian painted over 200,000 of his birds in the shape of coloured line drawings in four days only on his peace concert-journey for the 50th anniversary of Indian Independence in Augsburg and Rome in March. Amongst the personalities, who congratulated him for his project, are Mother Teresa and Nelson Mandela.
Published in the German Bavarian daily subscription newspaper, Münchner Merkur, Weekend 5/6 April 1997, World Mirror, page 10 (Circulation: 400,000)
JAMAICA, NY — Jeff Goldblum received an inner and outer boost April 4 when Sri Chinmoy lifted him at Aspiration-Ground and presented him with the “Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart” Award.
After meditating with the actor, Sri Chinmoy told him that in the inner world he was a “most aspiring heart ... and a most illumining soul.”
He added: From now on, “My prayerful love, joy and concern shall be always with you, in you and for you.”
Goldblum replied, “Wow! Gosh! I am overwhelmed with this honor ... and your prayer and your beautiful words and all your beautiful faces .... I feel so humble and grateful to be with you .... I'll never forget this moment.”
Later that day, Sri Chinmoy lifted other luminaries in the art and music world, including artist Peter Max.
Sri Chinmoy presents a book to actor Jeff Goldblum left, at Aspiration-Ground
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 34, April – July 2003
NEW YORK (April 3) — The children stood in rapt silence, their hands folded in prayer, as the artist drew each of them a special painting.
As the paintings were handed out, one by one the small faces broke into broad grins.
The painter was Sri Chinmoy, and the children and their parents were attending the opening celebration of their Guru’s new Jharna-Kala gallery.
The block-long gallery, located right next door to the former Jharna-Kala gallery in the Soho art district, was given to the disciples free-of-charge in exchange for renovation and painting work.
The transformation of the building from a printing and greeting card warehouse into a sparkling new gallery took place in a week’s time, with disciples working almost round-the-clock.
The exhibit will be open through the end of April.
BEFORE ... renovating an old warehouse
AFTER ... into the new Jharna-Kala gallery
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 3, Number 3, April 1 1976
with The New York Times
at Annam Brahma restaurant in Jamaica, Queens, New York
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy, I was watching a video where you spoke of oneness and your drawings. What do seven million birds mean when you speak of oneness?
Sri Chinmoy: To me, each bird signifies a new hope, a new inspiration, a new journey. Each bird, according to me, embodies oneness. Birds fly in the firmament. They are free. While they are flying, we see that they have an inner openness and an inner oneness. If we have openness and oneness, like the birds, we can enter into various fields of activity.
If you say that I am a jack of all trades and master of none, I will fully subscribe to your view. I draw, I sing, I write, I do weightlifting and quite a few other things. In my case, my life-tree has quite a few branches, but I do feel the oneness of the branches with the trunk, with the tree proper. Each branch has its own significance. Each branch can offer something new, although it belongs to the same tree.
I am a student of peace, and I try to learn my subject by offering it to the seekers who are also longing for peace. I feel we are sailing in the same boat. A student always wants to learn. If he becomes a teacher or a professor, he may not be inclined to learn anymore. But if he remains a student, then he constantly learns new things.
Interviewer: How did you come to Queens?
Sri Chinmoy: I came to America in 1964. I lived in Manhattan for a year or so, and then I lived in Brooklyn. I have been in Queens for about 30 years, in Briarwood. Truth to tell, it was difficult for me to adjust to Manhattan. The hustle and bustle of life was not congenial to my life’s activities. It is not that I dislike Manhattan — far from it! I go to Manhattan twice a week to offer my peace meditations at the United Nations, but I feel that Queens is more peaceful in comparison.
Interviewer: When do you meditate at the United Nations?
Sri Chinmoy: I meditate at the United Nations on Tuesdays and Fridays from one to two o’clock. We have been offering these peace meditations for the last 27 years. When the United Nations celebrated its 50th anniversary, our peace meditation group celebrated 25 years of dedicated service to the United Nations. We are half the age of the United Nations. Our meditation sessions originated under the late Secretary-General U Thant, who was very kind to me.
The first Secretary-General was Trygve Lie, then Dag Hammarskjöld, then U Thant. He came from Burma. He was a close friend of mine, and he inspired me to start the peace meditations at the United Nations. The delegates and staff who are interested come and meditate with us. Over the years we have organised many, many programmes honouring the countries that long for oneness and peace. I have also given many talks about world peace, oneness and harmony at the United Nations.
Interviewer: Are your activities for the staff and delegates?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. When we have special functions, quite a few ambassadors and delegates from different countries come. Each country, like each branch, has something unique to offer to the world.
Interviewer: You seem to do so many things!
Sri Chinmoy: Life is activity. It is like the ocean. The bottom of the ocean is peaceful, but on the surface it is all tumultuous. Activity and life go together. If we want to become good citizens of the world, we have to be part and parcel of the world. We cannot enter into the Himalayan caves and ignore the world. If I consider my fellow citizens to be members of my family, then there has to be mutual give and take. I give you what I have; you give me what you have. One person does not and cannot have everything. But if we are united, I offer you my goodwill, good wishes and whatever I have, and you offer me what you have. Only in this way can we establish a oneness-world-family.
I have been to many parts of the world and met with world leaders. This same theme we have discussed: how we can bring about world peace. We sincerely try. Still world peace is a far cry, but we have made an attempt. There is nothing wrong in making attempts. If we fail, we fail. I take failures as the pillars of success. Yesterday we failed; today we are failing. That does not mean that tomorrow also we are going to fail.
It is the same in all spheres of life. Last year, at the Olympics, it seemed that Carl Lewis would fail in the long jump. He was not even among the first three places. Then all of a sudden he became the gold medallist.
Interviewer: Do you play basketball?
Sri Chinmoy: In India I used to play basketball. Now I practise taking free throws from the penalty line. Usually I throw a hundred times, and then I take a little rest before throwing another hundred times. I practise on a regular basis when the weather permits it. My highest score is 79.
Interviewer: No kidding — 79 out of 100!
Sri Chinmoy: In India I also played soccer. For many years I was captain of the soccer team in our spiritual community. I was also a volleyball captain and instructor. Here in New York I have played tennis. Some great tennis players have been very kind to me. They have come and played with me here at our court in Queens. Monica Seles, Steffi Graf, Ilie Nastase and Ramesh Krishnan came at different times to encourage me. After playing a few sets, I lifted each of them with one arm using a special apparatus. I have lifted people from many walks of life, and they all got joy. We call the programme Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart. These world-citizens are great in their own fields, so I have honoured them in my own way. In India, whenever people do something great, they are lifted up on the shoulders of their colleagues.
Interviewer: So this has a symbolic meaning?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, it is symbolic.
Interviewer: May I ask you about your bird drawings? This idea came to you about six years ago?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, in December 1991, to be precise.
Interviewer: Was it a dream, a vision, an understanding?
Sri Chinmoy: It was a special inspiration. It came to me in a flash, but it did not come from my mind. I do not use my mind to know what I am supposed to do from one moment to the next moment. Being a seeker, I only pray to God to guide me in His own Way. I pray: “Please make me a choice instrument of Yours. Do utilise me. Please give me the capacity to inspire people and at the same time enable me to be of better service to You.” That is my prayer.
This year my Beloved Supreme has inspired me to offer fifty concerts honouring India’s independence. India achieved her independence fifty years ago.
Do you come from Japan?
Interviewer: I was born there, yes.
Sri Chinmoy: This year I was there for two months. My most favourite place is Lord Buddha’s statue at Kamakura. I have been there seven times, and two or three times I have given concerts in front of the Lord Buddha.
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy, who are the living or historical men whom you admire most?
Sri Chinmoy: Among the world figures of our time, there are many whom I admire, but first and foremost is President Gorbachev. After him come Mother Teresa, the present Pope1 and President Nelson Mandela. There are other world figures whom I have met and greatly admire, like Archbishop Desmond Tutu, President Vaclav Havel and several Secretaries-General of the United Nations.
I would like to say something about my first few choices. In Mother Teresa I find two aspects: the mother and the sister. One moment she is the mother of compassion; the next moment she is the sister of affection. When I see her and talk to her, she blesses me as a mother blesses her child, and again she shows me the utmost sisterly affection.
The Pope also has two aspects: that of a father and that of a grandfather. According to me, he is not only the Holy Father, but also the Holy Grandfather. A father believes in justice. If his children do something wrong, the father will be upset, and he may take action. But the grandfather is all forgiveness for his grandchildren. In his eye, the grandchildren cannot do anything wrong. In this respect, the Pope is like a grandfather.
In my humble opinion, President Gorbachev is the world’s greatest man. He could have acted like his predecessors, like Stalin and others, but his heart came to the fore. Now there is one Berlin; previously there were two Berlins. He was the main instrument to liberate Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Poland and so many other countries in the Eastern Bloc. I am not saying he was the only instrument, but he was the main instrument to liberate those countries. I know how difficult it is to unite two countries, but he has done it. Because of him, there is now one Germany. But his greatest service has been in his own country. He has opened the door to the West. You may call it democracy or something else, but there is an openness now which did not exist previously. How far he has succeeded is up to God and humanity to decide. Humanity will always misjudge us. What is important is how we are judged in God’s Eye.
Before President Gorbachev came to power, world peace was only a dictionary word. Discussion about disarmament and reducing nuclear weapons all came from him. He started it; he was the pioneer. Many people did not trust him in the beginning, but he proved he was sincere. When President Gorbachev took over, for a few years he could have acted like an autocrat, the way his predecessors did, but he did not do this. Instead, he introduced perestroika, glasnost and democracy.
To be frank, politics is not my forté. I am a spiritual seeker. But if I see that somebody is trying to elevate the consciousness of humanity, then I offer that person my wholehearted support. President Gorbachev showed how human beings can be united. In his case, he acted. Many other political figures, forgive me, only talk about peace. One moment they propose world peace; the next moment they drop bombs somewhere. They use the term ‘nuclear weapon reduction’; then we see that they are increasing their weapons. But in President Gorbachev’s case, when he said something, he did it. That is why I take him as the world’s greatest living figure.
Another rare quality President Gorbachev has: he is sincere and brave enough to say that he has made many Himalayan blunders. There are many political leaders who will never admit that they have made any mistakes. President Gorbachev writes in his memoirs that he has made mistakes and now he is trying to rectify them. We are human beings. To err is human; everybody makes mistakes. But there are some who admit that they have made mistakes, while others do not want to admit this. People who admit that they have made mistakes are, according to me, not only great but good people.
Interviewer: Let me ask you about spirituality. I don’t know so much about President Gorbachev, but can I assume that you are admiring him from a spiritual point of view, the way that you admire Mother Teresa and the Holy Father?
Sri Chinmoy: Spirituality has two wings. One we call aspiration, and the other we call dedication. With our aspiration, we pray to God. With our dedication, we serve Him. In the case of the Holy Father and Mother Teresa, we see that they are aspiring. They are praying every day to God. Again, they are also dedicating their lives to humanity.
In President Gorbachev’s case, the whole world can see and feel how many things he has done to serve mankind. He may not pray to God early in the morning like Mother Teresa or the Holy Father, but his very life he has dedicated not only to Russia, to the Soviet Union, but to the entire world. Now he is in Turkey; last week he was in Argentina. He goes to so many places. Why? They invite him because they see something very special in him. They see that he has light. That is why each country adores him. Again, a prophet is not honoured in his own country, so he lost the election very badly. But wherever he goes, people appreciate him. They see that he sincerely means what he says. For him world peace is a reality in his life. His dedication aspect we accept as part and parcel of the spiritual life. He may not pray in the Christian way, like the Pope or Mother Teresa, but he is getting messages from within, and he is trying to express and reveal these messages to the world at large. That is why, for me, he is truly spiritual.
Interviewer: Did you say, “He who serves, prays?”
Sri Chinmoy: Certainly! We serve others because we see them as the embodiment of God. God manifests Himself in and through each human being in a particular way. In a family each and every one may have a different vocation: one will be a doctor, another a musician and so forth. But they are one family. In the evening they come and eat together. Each individual is unique in his own way, and this uniqueness has to be utilised for the betterment of the world.
It is absolutely true that he who serves God is also praying, and in the same way, he who prays is also serving God. Let us say that someone is praying inside a cave in the Himalayas. If he becomes a good person, there will be one less undivine person on earth. In that way, the person praying in the Himalayan caves is also serving humanity.
Again, he who is offering his service is also praying in a special way. An unaspiring person will not dedicate his life even for a fleeting second. A good person will dedicate his entire life. This dedication is nothing other than aspiration. One who embodies light cannot be separated from one who offers his light to the world at large.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 11
BRISBANE, Australia — Sipra, a 39-year-old schoolteacher, has never been one to mince words, and when she decided to express her spiritual teacher’s philosophy of self-transcendence on April 2, she set off a lot of sparks.
She set a new world record for fire-eating by “consuming” 7,095 burning sticks in two hours, breaking the previous record of 6,606.
“The mind is always limiting,” explained Sipra, a disciple of Sri Chinmoy. “But when we get out and do something, we find we do have the capacity to transcend ourselves beyond that limit.”
She was aided in her feat by the inner presence of her spiritual Master, Sri Chinmoy, whose photograph she frequently glanced at and whose music was playing on a small tape recorder. Also of help were the heaping spoonsful of ice cream fellow-disciples handed her whenever she burned her tongue.
Sipra did the fire-eating in honour of the upcoming anniversary of Sri Chinmoy’s arrival in the West from his native India on April 13, 1964.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 10, Nos. 2-5, February – June 1983
Friendship team take in Chester en route
RUNNERS taking part in the World Harmony Run visited Chester as they spread their message of international friendship.
The global relay aims to improve understanding between different nations, with runners passing through 70 countries carrying a flaming torch as a symbol of harmony.
The run started in Lisbon the Portuguese capital on March 2 and reached Great Britain on March 23.
En route the runners are visiting schools, community groups and local and national government organisations to talk about "Life on the run", to share their inspiration and enthusiasm for the goal of world harmony and to create goodwill among peoples and nations.
In Europe, the torch is being carried through 45 countries covering a distance of 24,000 kilometres. The culmination of the European leg will take place in Budapest, Hungry on October 28. Globally, the runners will take in 70 countries.
The World Harmony Run was founded by Indian philosopher and athlete Sri Chinmoy, 73, and is organised by the Sri Chinmoy marathon team, the largest ultra-distance running organisation in the world.
Medallist
It is supported by top athletes, including American Carl Lewis, a nine times Olympic gold medallist.
The international runners were greeted outside Chester Town Hall by the Lord Mayor, Cllr Terry Ralph, before moving on to Wrexham where they met with the Mayor and Mayoress, David and Jackie Rogers. Later they made their way to a reception at Llangollen Town Hall on the last leg of the day.
Above: International runners were greeted outside Chester Town Hall by Lord Mayor Cllr Terry Ralph before moving onto Wrexham.
Left: Runners preparing to leave Chester on route to Wrexham and the next stop of the journey.
Pictures: Mandy Jones
Published in Chester Evening Leader, Friday, April 1 2005
NEW YORK — Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala gallery opened to the public in a special March 31 preview that drew celebrities from both the art and entertainment world.
Two thousand of the Guru’s paintings were placed on exhibit at the renovated gallery at 154 Wooster St. (at the corner of Houston St.) in Manhattan’s famed Soho art district.
Opening night brought a varied crowd including artist Paul Jenkins, well-known art collector Robert Scull and actress Ultra Violet — star of many Andy Warhol movies.
Just before the doors were opened, Sri Chinmoy conducted a short meditation with a small gathering of disciples in the gallery and said:
“My Lord Supreme, to You I offer my eternal gratitude for having painted in and through me out of Your infinite Bounty over ten thousand paintings in 100 fleeting days.”
He added that God has played the role of aspiration in and through him, and now will be playing the role of inspiration in and through those who view the works of art.
As the guests walked through the gallery. Sri Chinmoy sat off to one side, working on a series of miniature drawings. As each visitor departed, Sri Chinmoy exchanged a few words of greeting with him and offered him an orange as prasad, or blessed food.
During the month the gallery is being operated by Sri Chinmoy’s disciples, it will remain open seven days a week from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. On Fridays and Saturdays, it will be open until 9 p.m. The Jharna-Kala (Fountain-Art) exhibit of Sri Chinmoy’s paintings will run through the end of April.
Sri Chinmoy discusses his paintings with a group of friends at the opening of his Jharna-Kala exhibit [Photo by Sarama]
Published in Anahata Nada, April 1, 1975 Vol. II, No. 4
by Anthony Hixon
at the Jharna-Kala Gallery
154 Wooster St, Soho, New York,
Mr. Anthony Hixon, interviewer: We’re talking to Ultra Violet, who is an actress and a singer. And she’s here at the Jharna-Kala show. What do you think of the Jharna-Kala show? Do you have any opinions on the paintings?
Ultra Violet: I have lots of opinions about everything. I love art and I love colour and light and I think the show was very clean, very bright and very joyous. And I’m sitting next to a green palm tree. I love green, green is very healing. And I think what the world needs is more healing, more healing.
Mr. Hixon: True, healing, but what manner of healing?
Ultra Violet: There are many forms. You can be sick in the body, in the mind or in the spirit. Actually you have to work on three planes. Some people think there is food for the mind, for the soul and for the body — three different kinds of food, and you need them all in order to be well balanced.
Mr. Hixon: Thank you very much. You have beautiful green eyes with which to see that green colour.
Ultra Violet: Thank you, I will try.
Mr. Hixon: We’re talking to Mr. Robert Scull, on my right, who is a renowned art collector and Mr. Paul Jenkins, who is a renowned artist. Mr. Scull, is this the ordinary kind of opening for a painter in New York City?
Mr. Scull: Oh no, it’s much more spiritual, much more quiet. The people are really a very charming bunch who I very rarely see at art show openings. I don’t attend too many openings but those that I have been to, have been different from this one. Here everything seems so nice and quiet, so tranquil and spiritual.
Mr. Hixon: Mr. Jenkins, the question is, does this seem to be an ordinary sort of opening to you?
Mr. Jenkins: No, it’s like an after-gathering of one of Sri Chinmoy’s meditations. I feel no different here than I would at the United Nations Chapel or at the little church in Queens. And his disciples have made it so warm, inwardly warm. Another thing is the feeling of abundance. What’s here is an abundance of colours, an abundance of things that come through your mind when you meditate. And I don’t look at these paintings with a tough eye, as an art critic would. I look at them for what they are, for the experience of them, for his joy.
Mr. Hixon: Sri Chinmoy has been able to do ten thousand in three months, which is a phenomenal number of paintings. Do you have any comment on that, on the speed at which he works?
Mr. Scull: It is an incredible output. I think that amount of paintings done in three months must be coming from a deep autobiographical well of feelings and images. I don’t think it can be done any other way. You wouldn’t have a display of such a wide variance of feeling, colour, mood. It’s really an extraordinary thing for someone to put so much into ten thousand paintings in a few months. It’s really hard labour, as well as an act of love. Remarkable.
Mr. Hixon: Now, he’s a beginner. Do you get the sense that he is really a beginner or do you feel that he’s come out of that stage?
Mr. Jenkins: Was Monet a beginner? Was Picasso a beginner when he was about to die? The artist is always rediscovering the child. I don’t mean that he is childish, I mean he finds the child aspect. And we must remember also that Freud said that to be creative is to be prodigious. And that’s one thing that is misunderstood in the art world. Everybody feels that the fewer things you do the better you are. Not from Freud’s standpoint. To be creative means to be prodigious.
Mr. Hixon: Thank you very much, Mr. Jenkins.
Mr. Hixon: We’re talking to Mr. Donald Keys who is the representative for the World Association of World Federalists at the United Nations. Mr. Keys, what do you think of this show?
Mr. Keys: First of all, it’s pretty staggering. Secondly, I was just thinking that in the traditional religious artistic expressions for many ages, whether the Hindu, Christian or others, the style is very tight, very ceremonial, very crystalised. Here is the expression which is modern religiosity, totally free, more than contemporary. I think it’s very refreshing.
Mr. Hixon: Thank you very much.
Mr. Keys: You’re welcome.
Mr. Hixon: Sri Chinmoy, you are a spiritual artist. Is there any special message in your work?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I have a very short message to offer to the world at large with regard to my paintings. The Supreme in me, my Inner Pilot, has played the role of aspiration. Now the same Supreme wants to play the role of inspiration in all my brothers and sisters of the world. Inspiration is the seed; aspiration is the tree. Through my surrendered oneness I have become the aspiration-tree. Through the surrendered oneness of my brothers and sisters with the Supreme, they will become the inspiration-seed. I have offered my aspiration-tree at the Feet of the Supreme and I am sure my brothers and sisters will place their inspiration-seed at the Feet of the Supreme also. The seed and the tree must go together. They are inseparable. One is God’s Vision; the other is God’s Reality. Inspiration-seed is God's Vision and aspiration-tree is God’s Reality.
Mr. Hixon: Thank you very much.
Sri Chinmoy: You’re welcome.
During the course of the evening, Channels 11 and 9 News interviewed C.K.G. and excerpts from these interviews were shown on television at later dates.
Published in AUM – Vol. 2, No. 4, 27 April 1975
The festivities have already begun for Sri Chinmoy’s upcoming 50th birthday celebration: a series of 50 two-mile races in the New York area.
The first Sri Chinmoy Two-Mile Race was held 29 March in Westport Conn. Sri Chinmoy himself ran in the race, finishing in 13:42 with a 6:51 pace.
The Master also ran in two-mile races in Weston, Conn. on 4 April, on Compo Beach, Westport, on 5 April, and in Flushing Meadow Park in Queens on 9 April, finishing in 13:56, 13:54 and 13:44 respectively.
By the end of May, eight of the two-mile runs had been held.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 7, Nos. 2-5, February 1981-May 1981
A Peace Concert was given at Yale University on March 28 and at the Manhattan headquarters of Bharatiya Vidyan Bhavan (USA) on March 29.
The Bhavan concert — the 21st in the series Sri Chinmoy is offering in honor of the 50th anniversary of India’s independence — was part of a Bhavan program celebrating Netaji’s birth centenary·
Indian Consul-General Harsh Bhasin was guest of honor.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 26, November 1996-March 1997
Sri Chinmoy completed another two million ‘soul-bird’ drawings March 28, reaching his goal of seven million.
It took him slightly over eight months to progress from five to six million, but just five and a half days to complete the final million.
He dedicated the drawings to the soul of Shakpura, the tiny village in East Bengal where he was born.
The artist began his bird drawings on Dec. 29, 1991 while visiting Malta.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 26, November 1996-March 1997
UNITED NATIONS — The Indian Government soulfully greeted the children of the world March 27 when its U.N. Ambassador presented a painting by the renowned Indian spiritual Master and artist Sri Chinmoy to the head of UNICEF’s “International Year of the Child” (IYC).
Ambassador Rikhi Jaipal presented the painting on behalf of the Indian Government to Assistant U.N. Secretary-General Dr. Estefania Aldaba-Lim, Special Representative for IYC, at a luncheon at the U.N. Church Centre.
“I consider it a great honour to be asked to present this beautiful painting, which seems to have a childlike quality about it and therefore seems a most appropriate gift,” Ambassador Jaipal told some 200 dignitaries as he handed over the work of art.
“There can be no higher religion than our common allegiance to humanity, which is inherent in the Charter of the United Nations and which is indeed the message implicit in the teachings of Sri Chinmoy,” Ambassador Jaipal declared.
Dr. Lim replied: “As this painting travels around inspiring people to the beauty and joy of childhood, it will bring about the greater consciousness that we in the Secretariat are completely committed to.”
The U.N. Meditation Group Choir then sang a song which Sri Chinmoy had composed for the IYC entitled, “This is my year.”
The painting, which depicts the artist’s vision of the world-child, was an expression of the Government of India’s oneness with the cause of the International Year of the Child.
The painting will be displayed around the world as part of UNICEF’s untiring efforts to promote the cause of IYC. The first exhibition, sponsored by the European-American Bank, will take place in New York.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 5, Number 3, March 1979
Galloping Guru
For Sri Chinmoy, 360 books, 130,000 paintings and 3,000 songs aren’t enough. Now the Indian spiritual master, who teaches most of his meditation at the United Nations, has been bitten by the running bug. Chinmoy wrapped up his second official 26-mile marathon of the year Sunday — the “Heartwatchers” run in Toledo, Ohio — crossing the finish line in 3 hours and 55 minutes. That shaves 35 minutes off the· 4 hours and 30 minutes he posted March 3 in Chico, Calif. Says the 47-year-old guru, “Running is an aid to spiritual life since it offers individuals an opportunity to go beyond their own physical limits.” Ommmmmmm!
Published in the Philadelphia Daily News, page 28, PeoplePaper People, Tuesday, March 27, 1979
For Sri Chinmoy, 360 books, 130,000 paintings and 3,000 songs aren’t enough. Now the Indian spiritual master, who teaches most of his meditation at the United Nations, has been bitten by the running bug.
Chinmoy wrapped up his second official 26-mile marathon of the year yesterday — the “Heartwatchers” run in Toledo, Ohio — crossing the finish line in 3 hours and 55 minutes. That shaves 35 minutes off the 4 hours and 30 minutes he posted March 3 in Chico, Calif.
Says the 47-year-old guru, “Running is an aid to spiritual life since it offers individuals an opportunity to go beyond their own physical limits.”
SRI CHINMOY
Published on page 2 of the Cape Cod Times, Monday, March 26, 1979
NEW YORK — Sri Chinmoy and about 200 of his students were guests of honor March 25 at the 200th performance of the off-Broadway hit “The Exonerated,” for which Harit Allan Buchman is lead producer.
Afterwards, Sri Chinmoy met and lifted several current and previous cast members — including Brooke Shields, Robert Vaughn, Jill Clayburgh and Montel Williams — and other celebrities who had come for the occasion, as well as five of the former death row inmates who had been portrayed in the play.
The program included a song Sri Chinmoy had written about the exonerated prisoners, as well as a short esraj concert by Sri Chinmoy.
Delbert Tibbs, left, one of the death row inmates portrayed in the play, and Academy Award winning actress Marisa Toniei, right, pose with Sri Chinmoy after being lifted.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 34, November 2002 – March 2003
COLOGNE, Germany – An overflow crowd of 8,500 came to Cologne’s giant Sports Hall March 24 to hear the first in a series of peace concerts Sri Chinmoy is offering around the world this year. Some were unable to enter for lack of space.
Coming from all over Germany as well as neighbouring countries, the audience listened in near pindrop silence as the Master played and sang a selection of his own compositions.
The concert was entitled “Peace: God’s Beauty in His Oneness-Home.”
At the end of the three-hour event, the Master told the audience: “Beloved Germany, breathlessly I am bowing to your soul. Soulfully I am loving your heart. Devotedly I am admiring your life. To me, stupendous is your soul, generous is your heart and precious is your life.”
He said that since Germany has offered to the world the universal music, “music is, therefore, your universal birthright. An unconditional oneness-heart is also your birthright.”
For Sri Chinmoy, the Cologne concert was the beginning of a long journey, with 19 more peace concerts to come. It was also a fitting tribute to an even longer journey that began 20 years ago when he first came to the West.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 10-11, December 1983-March 1984
Sri Chinmoy, the 68-year-old spiritual leader based in Queens, set a remarkable powerlifting record by hoisting two 500-pound dumbbells over his head on
March 7[February 16]. The 1,000-pound lift bettered Chinmoy’s previous best lift by 100 pounds. “Sri Chinmoy is a pathfinder for humanity,” said former Olympic discus thrower Al Oerter in a press release, “No one has been where Sri Chinmoy is now.” Said Sri Chinmoy of his record lift: '“It is not physical power. It is inner power, and this inner power comes from prayer and meditation.” Sri Chinmoy has inspired a Marathon Team that organizes many long-distance running races each year in the New York City area. For more information on the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team, check the Internet at www.srichinmoyraces.org. In addition, for the past four years the Sri Chinmoy Center in Woodstock has offered meditation classes, workshops, and concerts on a regular basis. All classes are free of charge.
Published in POUGHKEEPSIE JOURNAL, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000
interview Sri Chinmoy
Question: Could you say a few words on your purpose in coming to the West?
Sri Chinmoy: In 1964 I came to the West to be of service to the Supreme in the aspiring mankind. To be absolutely true and honest, the Supreme in me, who is my Inner Pilot, commanded me to come to the West and serve Him in the West.
Question: Thank you very much. There seems to be a growing number of young people in the West who are interested in spirituality. Could you comment on that — if you see any reason for that or any future to it?
Sri Chinmoy: In the West people are very interested in the spiritual life and yoga. Especially the young generation is deeply interested in yoga. As we all know, yoga is conscious oneness with God. In order to establish this conscious oneness with God, we need to love from within, love from without. Young people today are crying for love. The love that binds is not the love that they are seeking. The love that expands, the love that emancipates, the love that makes them feel that they are of one and, at the same time, of many — this is the love that young people are seeking. Young men and young women have taken to the spiritual life precisely because they have felt an inner hunger for the divine love. I beg to be excused, but perhaps this love they did not get from their families or from their individual churches. If they had discovered or found this love in their parents, in their religious leaders, in their churches, then they would not have had to look for it in the Eastern approach.
The spiritual life is not the sole monopoly of India. Spirituality is for everyone. But there are different approaches. A Westerner is bound to have one approach to Reality; an Easterner will have another approach to Reality. But the Goal is the same. The Western approach is the approach of prayer, mostly of prayer. The Eastern approach, or Indian approach, let us say, is the approach of meditation. In yoga we try to synthesise the two approaches: prayer and meditation. We feel that one can realise God only through meditation, but again, if we know how to synthesise prayer and meditation, then we can expedite our spiritual journey. When we pray with folded hands, we feel that we are speaking to our Almighty Father and that He is listening to us. And when we meditate, we feel that He is talking to us and we are listening to Him. It is like the conversation we are having right now. You are asking me something and I am listening. Then it goes the other way. When we pray, we reach high, higher, highest. And when we meditate, we bring down into our system Peace, Light and Bliss from above. Seekers in the young generation want to speak to God and also they want to hear God’s Voice. Only if we pray can we go up, up, up and tell God what we have to say. And when we meditate we also hear what our Lord has to tell us. So the seekers feel the need of both approaches; that is why they are inclined to follow the path of yoga.
Question: Why at this period in history is the West, which has been developing materialistically, now beginning to develop spiritually?
Sri Chinmoy: Now that the West has reached the pinnacle of material prosperity, the West feels in the inner world that it is totally bankrupt. In this world everybody wants satisfaction. A poor man wants satisfaction, a multimillionaire wants satisfaction. But a multimillionaire may come to realise that no matter how much money he has, even if he wallows in the pleasures of wealth, he may not or, let us say, he cannot get even an iota of real satisfaction. That is because satisfaction is an inner awakening, an inner achievement, an inner realisation. The West has been blessed by material wealth, material gifts; but what the West has is not enough to make it happy. So now the West wants to be blessed by inner wealth, which is satisfaction. The West feels that if it dives deep within and listens to the dictates of its inner being, the Inner Pilot, then inner satisfaction is bound to loom large. The message of matter the West has always listened to and fulfilled. But now it wants to listen to and fulfil the message of spirit. Not only is material perfection needed, but the perfection of the spirit is also needed.
It is like having two friends. I have listened to one friend all the time and now I feel I have to pay some attention to the other friend. Matter is not to be neglected; it is also God’s creation. But if we listen to the dictates of the spirit, then only can material wealth be used for the right cause, for a divine purpose. Let us say matter is the body and spirit is our inner existence. If there is no body, how can we manifest? The soul is within us, but in order to manifest its divinity, the soul needs the body. And again, the body needs the soul in order to realise the highest, the Absolute. If there is no deity inside the body, then the body is of no use. Again, how can a deity remain in the street? It has to have a home.
What the West is doing now is diving deep within in order to become the life of silence. Once it has become the life of silence, then it can become the life of sound, expression, revelation. At this stage, the West feels that realisation is of paramount importance. And once realisation has taken place, then this truth can easily be offered to mankind. So the West is entering into the inner world in order to bring to the fore the wealth of the inner world.
Question: Could you say something about your activities at the U.N.?
Sri Chinmoy: At the United Nations there are many nations united together. The United Nations is like a lotus that has many petals. Each petal is necessary in order to form the lotus. Each nation has something to offer to the world at large. Twice a week we offer our devoted and dedicated service to the soul and the body of the U.N. We go there to invoke the presence of the soul of the U.N. We try to elevate the consciousness of the delegates, representatives and members of the staff. The delegates and representatives are trying to bring to the fore the good qualities of each nation in a political way. They want to bring about Peace, Light and Bliss in infinite measure so that the world will not surrender to war, but to love. Through our prayer and meditation we are trying to do the same thing, so that the world will not surrender to war, but to love. Through our prayer and meditation we are trying to do the same thing, but our approach is the inner approach. We are not saying that our approach is better. Far from it. But we feel that if we sow the seed, then it will eventually become a tiny plant, and finally it will grow into a banyan tree and produce flowers and fruits. This is our way. We feel that the seed has just germinated. They feel that the tree is already there, that the flowers and fruits are there, and that it is up to the world to accept the fruits, to eat the fruits and become energetic and dynamic.
Question: How do you find the response; do you find it is growing?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, it is growing like anything. Previously it was like a hard rock, but now we feel that it is like fertile soil. It is responding. It is not only because we are praying and meditating, but because the U.N. members also have an inner urge to do the right thing, to grow into the divine light. It works in two ways. We will never say that we are working very hard and that is why we are getting the benefit. No. I have taken one step ahead and you have also taken one step ahead. So we are coming to a meeting point. The inner world is coming forward with its inner wealth and the outer world is then entering into the inner world with its aspiration. So they are meeting together.
Question: How did you come to begin doing this work at the U.N.?
Sri Chinmoy: The U.N. authorities were kind enough to give me the opportunity to be of service. That was in 1970. Since then, it has been extremely easy for us to be of real service. Also, the late Secretary-General, U Thant, was extremely nice and kind to us. He showered his goodwill, affection, love and admiration on us for our selfless service. I had the golden opportunity to meet with him on a few occasions. He came to one of our functions and he encouraged our activities right from the beginning. He observed our activities and he was extremely nice, sympathetic, kind and appreciative of our spiritual activities at the U.N. I have dedicated a copy of one of these magazines, Meditation at the United Nations, to the late Secretary-General. There are many dignitaries who offered their soulful tributes to him in this magazine. I will send you a copy. Pope Paul has also been very nice to us. He deeply appreciates our activities at the United Nations. I have had the occasion to have a private audience with him twice, so he knows all about our activities at the United Nations.
Question: Do you have any comments on the world food problem — the fact that many people are starving and more will be starving? Some people say that that is due to the fact that it requires much more grain today to feed a cow than a person would eat directly.
Sri Chinmoy: Speaking from the spiritual point of view, I wish to say there will always be some problem, either a food problem or physical problems, mental problems, vital problems, psychic problems. There will be no end to our problems. What we have to do is go to the root of all these problems. The root is ignorance. If I am making a mistake, then I have to rectify it all at once. If you are making a mistake, then it is your bounden duty to rectify it. If I know that I have done something or I am doing something wrong, then my inner awakening will prevent me from doing that thing. So it is not a matter of too little meat or too little grain. The real problem is ignorance. There are many things we do wrong every day; we can’t help ourselves. We have surrendered to ignorance. That is why problems are in our mind, problems are in our body, problems are in our vital. Problems are everywhere. These problems can be solved only when we can surrender to the light, the inner divinity within us.
Question: Can you explain to us your philosophy of love, devotion and surrender?
Sri Chinmoy: We all know human love. Human love is to possess and be possessed. We feel that today or tomorrow we will possess someone. But to our wide astonishment, we find that before we possess that person we ourselves are mercilessly possessed by that person. Once we have possessed someone, we feel that we are strangling that person in the name of love, or we are already strangled in the name of love. But divine love is not possession. Divine love is only expansion. Real love is total oneness with the object loved and with the Possessor of Love. Who is the Possessor of Love? God. Love is the inner bond that connects man with God. We must always approach God through love. Love is the first step. The second step is devotion. The third step is surrender.
In the human world, devotion is attachment. We feel that if we are attached to someone, then we will get Peace, Light and Bliss from that person in abundant measure. But eventually we come to realise that our attachment is nothing short of our ignorance. We feel that if we are attached to a human being, we will get what he has and what he is. But, unfortunately, what he has is darkness and what he is is ignorance. And when he is attached to us, we do not feel that we are able to give any light to him. So attachment is something that constantly is taking us away from our reality. But if we have real devotion, devotion to a higher cause, to some higher reality, to the light within us, to the truth above us, at that time the highest Truth can operate in and through us. Attachment is to the world around us, the world which is full of ignorance. But when we are devoted, we enter into a higher world to bring down Peace, Light and Bliss from above and bring to the fore our own inner divinity. This is devotion.
Then comes surrender. We can surrender to our boss, who is equally ignorant and who will lord it over us, or a slave can listen to his master out of fear. That is one kind of surrender. But spiritual surrender is different. It does not arise from compulsion; it comes spontaneously from our joy, inner joy. In surrender to God, I become one with Infinity and I feel Infinity as my own reality.
There is a great difference between the surrender of laziness or utter helplessness and dynamic surrender, which is surcharged with aspiration. If out of laziness or helplessness we say, “I have surrendered. Now I don’t have to do anything,” this is not enough. Our surrender has to be dynamic, constantly aspiring to grow into or merge into the Infinite. Our surrender has to be conscious and spontaneous. When we surrender consciously and spontaneously to the infinite Truth, Peace, Light and Bliss, we become a perfect channel for these qualities to manifest in and through us on earth. In the West, surrender has been badly misunderstood. Here surrender is seen as submission to something or to somebody else. It is seen as a loss of individuality, an extinction of individuality. But this view of spiritual surrender is a mistake. If we really want to be one with the Infinite, the Ultimate, the Boundless, then we have to enter into it. It is like the tiny drop surrendering its individuality and entering into its source, the vast ocean. At that time, it doesn’t lose anything. It becomes the ocean itself. When we enter into the Ultimate, we do not lose our so-called little individuality. On the contrary, we become the Infinite itself. On the strength of our total oneness, we and the Infinite become indivisible.
When we surrender to God, we feel that God is our most illumined existence. The difference between man and God is this: man is God yet to realise totally who he is, and God is man yet to be fully manifested. Man is God; he is definitely God, but he has not realised fully who he is. And God is man, but He has not yet fully manifested Himself on earth. When we surrender our earthly existence to the divinity within us, we come to realise that man and God are one and identical.
Question: What is the cause of this separation between man and God?
Sri Chinmoy: The cause of this separation is ignorance. We feel that “I” and “my” will give us real joy. It is like a child. If he is very energetic, dynamic or aggressive, he feels satisfaction only when he strikes someone or breaks something. That is his satisfaction; that is his peace. But a grown-up gets joy only by remaining calm and quiet and tranquil. Unfortunately, individuals feel that by maintaining their individuality and personality they can be happy. But that is wrong. Only by entering into universality can we be happy. Individuality and personality will derive satisfaction only from universality. A tiny drop, when it enters into the ocean and loses its individuality and personality, becomes what the infinite ocean is. But before that, if it fights for its own individual existence, what can it do as just a tiny drop? So it is the ignorance in the drop that makes the drop feel that it can be satisfied by maintaining a sense of separativity. It is absurd.
Question: What about the fact that we take physical incarnations? Isn't that separation right there? I mean, just the fact that we all live in individual homes and do different tasks and things like that?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, but this is not individuality; It is only the necessity that comes from having respective tasks. With my hand I write, with my mouth I eat, with my eyes I see. But even though I do different things with the different parts of my body, we have to know that all are members of the same family. Each individual also will do what he is supposed to do, but not with a sense of ego. He will do it with a sense of oneness. God has given me the capacity to do a particular thing. He has given you the capacity to do something else. So let us combine our capacity. But I will not say that my capacity is superior to yours and you will not say that your capacity is the only capacity worth having. The difficulty with the world is that everyone feels that he is infinitely more important than everyone else. Here is where the problem starts. You stay with your capacities, I stay with mine, and we don’t unite our capacities. That is why problems start.
Question: When people in America began to take an interest in Eastern spirituality, many of them were disillusioned with social action and the consciousness of social problems, and they just wanted to meditate and be quiet. But now people are beginning to form communities to work together and to develop a little bit of that sense you were talking about. What is your view of the relation between spirituality and social consciousness?
Sri Chinmoy: Spirituality and social consciousness must go together. Spirituality is not for the recluse. It is not only for a limited number of people who go off to the Himalayan caves. If someone feels that by entering into a Himalayan cave he will do the best type of meditation, he is making a deplorable mistake. Again, if someone feels that he will go to Central Park and sing and dance, and that this is spirituality, he is also wrong. We are going from one extreme to another. We have to have a balance. In my own way, I shall pray and invoke the Supreme, who comes first in my life. Then I shall go to the office and share with my colleagues the inner wealth which I have achieved, or I shall throw light on the activities that I am involved in. Meditation and the everyday life have to go together.
But first we have to know the supreme secret. The supreme secret is God comes first. From the One we go to the many. It is like a tree with many branches. How am I going to get to the branches unless I first climb up the trunk? Early in the morning, if I pray and meditate, that means that I am climbing up the tree. Then after two hours, when I enter into the office, that is like going to the different branches of life. This is how we can combine spirituality with society. Society is like the branches and spirituality is the tree trunk.
Question: What is the purpose of ignorance?
Sri Chinmoy: In this world there is light, more light, abundant light, boundless light and infinite Light. If we take ignorance as destruction, then we are mistaken. We have to see that what we call ignorance consists of limited light. Even in the darkest night there is some light. Otherwise, we couldn’t exist at all. A child, in comparison to his elder brother, naturally is ignorant; but the child also has some light in him. So what we call ignorance is light in a different form. I as an individual, you as an individual and she as an individual have limited light — let us say infinitesimal light — compared to God, who is infinite Light. But through our prayer and meditation, we are growing into God’s boundless and infinite Light and becoming all that God is and all that God has.
This life, as you know, is a kind of game that we play; we call it a cosmic Game. What we call ignorance is nothing short of an experience which God is having in and through us. If we become conscious of the fact that we are only His instruments, then we are not bound by ignorance. We see that there is someone, the Inner Pilot, who is playing His cosmic Game in and through us. If we know that we are mere instruments, then there is no ignorance, there is no light; there is only the Supreme, who is everything. He is the Doer, He is the action, He is the result; He is everything, everything. But if we feel or think that we are doing everything, we are making a Himalayan mistake.
Question: Is it necessary to have a Guru, or teacher, to come to this realisation?
Sri Chinmoy: The person who realised God for the first time didn’t have a human Guru; God was his Guru. But, at the same time, we have to be wise. In this world for everything we need a teacher. Knowledge we can get from books, but still we go to a school for years and years and study under the guidance of a teacher. We feel that if there is a teacher, then the teacher can expedite our journey. Otherwise, in the morning I shall study something and in the afternoon I will doubt whether the thing I learned is correct or incorrect. I am confused. But if the teacher says, “Yes, it is correct,” then immediately I will believe it. We need a spiritual Master in order to expedite our realisation.
A spiritual teacher is like a private tutor. In the ordinary life, when we go to school, the teacher gives us marks. If we fail the examination, then we have to study again and again. In the spiritual life it is not like that. In the spiritual life the tutor privately, and with much affection, teaches us how to stand bravely in front of ignorance and fight ignorance. A private tutor does not give marks; he only teaches the student how to pass the examination. This is what a spiritual Master does.
When I go to school and advance from primary school to high school to college and university, my teachers give me a diploma. But once I have my diploma, I don’t remain in the school. No. My professor has helped me in getting knowledge, wisdom; but once I have it, I don’t always remain his student. In the spiritual life also, once I realise the highest Truth, at that time I don’t have to be under the guidance of a Master.
If I know there is a way to reach my destination sooner than otherwise, then why should I act like a fool? I can come to Boston from New York by plane or by car. By plane if I come, it is a matter of half an hour, or forty-five minutes, whereas by car it takes me five hours. Now, if I can come here in half an hour, then I can do many things. I can have a most significant interview with you; I can hold a meditation in the evening, I can do many things. So time is a great factor. The sooner we can accomplish something, the better for us. God-realisation is our first goal, God-revelation is our second goal, God-manifestation is our third goal. We have three supreme tasks to fulfil. Our first task is still a far cry. So if we have a little wisdom, naturally we will try to run the fastest.
Question: The opportunity is not open to everyone. Not everyone finds the right teacher.
Sri Chinmoy: No sincere effort will end in failure. If I am sincere and if you are meant to be my teacher, God will bring us together. But again, there are many wrong forces operating in the world, and I may be deceived by somebody who is not meant for me. But this cannot go on forever. After some time, my own inner being will tell me that this Master is not meant for me.
There are many ways to know which Master is meant for me. The person who gives me the greatest joy is my Master, even if he is not someone who has millions of disciples. Many people make a Himalayan blunder. When they see that somebody has thousands and millions of disciples, immediately they think that he has something; otherwise, nobody would have gone to him. But this is absolutely wrong. Yes, he may have many disciples, but that doesn’t mean that you have to become his disciple. If you feel inner joy in his presence, if you feel from within that he is the right person, this is what matters. Unfortunately, it usually does not happen like that. People have no sense of discrimination; they don’t go deep within. To accept a Master is a most important thing, because it is the Master who guides, moulds and shapes the student in his life of aspiration.
If somebody says that there is a set fee, that if you give him thousands of dollars then God-realisation will come, kindly don’t believe him. If God-realisation could be achieved by material wealth, then all the rich people on earth would have realised God. But, unfortunately, it is not like that.
We are in a terrible hurry. If we hear that somebody can give us God-realisation overnight, we go. In the ordinary life, it takes us twenty-two years to get a Master’s degree, which represents ordinary human knowledge. So how can we expect to get the highest knowledge, inner knowledge, if we don’t study for ten or fifteen or twenty years? Our difficulty is that we want to simplify everything. We want to get everything ready-made, like instant coffee. But it is not like that. How can one get a Master’s degree in one day? He goes to kindergarten, high school, college and then one day he gets his Master’s degree. But if a kindergarten student feels that he can get his Master’s degree today just because his elder brother has got it, then he is just fooling himself. His elder brother has studied hard for twenty years. But then again, there are, unfortunately, some false Masters who tempt the seekers and say that they can give it overnight. Unfortunately, I don’t have that capacity.
I take my disciples’ spiritual life as a serious matter, a most serious matter. What I can give you will take time, and what you have to offer me, your aspiration, will also take time. Aspiration has to increase little by little. My role is to bring down Compassion from above and this also has to increase little by little. It is like this. On your part you will climb up and on my part I will come down and bring down light. There should be a simultaneous effort by the spiritual Master and the disciple. With his inner cry the disciple goes up, and the Master comes down with the Smile of God. This is the role of the spiritual Master. At this moment he identifies with the seeker and he climbs up with his disciple’s inner cry. Then the next moment he comes down with God’s Smile. The perfection of the seeker is his cry and the perfection of God is His Smile. When a seeker can cry from the inmost recesses of his heart, this is perfection. And when God smiles with his heart’s Delight, this is perfection.
Question: Do you believe there is only one teacher for each individual?
Sri Chinmoy: In the spiritual life there should be only one teacher, because spirituality is one subject. It is not like history, geography and science. In school we study different subjects and we need different teachers. But God-realisation is one subject, so we don’t need more than one teacher. But if you have studied under the guidance of a teacher and that teacher is unable to take you any farther, then what will you do? History you studied in primary school and you are also studying it in college. The teacher who taught you in primary school was not in a position to teach you in college. So naturally you had to find a different teacher since your first teacher could not take you to the highest course.
Question: What happens if you disagree with some of your Master's teachings?
Sri Chinmoy: If the Master is the right one, then the student is bound to feel the truth in the Master’s words, because the Master is the disciple’s own higher reality. If somebody is my Master, I have to know that my Master is my own illumined reality. He is not a different reality. No! Just because he is my higher, more illumined reality, I have to listen to him. If he is a different person, a different reality, then naturally I won’t be able to listen to him all the time and subscribe to his views. This moment he is telling something right, but the next moment he may tell me something totally wrong. But if he is my reality, which is infinitely more illumined, then how can he be different from me? And it won’t be difficult for me to listen to my highest reality.
Question: In the East there is more of a tradition of seeking a teacher like this. But in the West we are more into being individual. Could you comment on that please?
Sri Chinmoy: What you are saying right now does not apply. There was a time when the West did not feel the need of a teacher. But now the West does. Now you see the Indian Masters are coming and many people go to them to get inner instruction. There was a time when the West felt that it was beneath its dignity to listen to Eastern philosophy. But right now Eastern philosophy is not only accepted but embraced by the Western world.
Question: You experienced God-realisation. When did this happen and how did it change your life afterwards?
Sri Chinmoy: When I was twelve years old, I realised God. Actually this realisation took place in a previous incarnation, but it took me twelve years to revive and assimilate my inner powers in this incarnation. The inner book that I studied I knew well, but in this incarnation I had to revise it. To revise the book it took me about twenty years. I lived in an ashram in south India from the age of twelve to thirty two.
Question: And then you came to America?
Sri Chinmoy: Then I came to America. I did not have the vaguest thought of coming to the West, but my Inner Pilot commanded me to come here to be of service. I was brought up in a very small place in India and from there I was thrown into New York, the capital of the world, let us say. From where to where!
So again, it was my obedience that brought me here. I listened to the dictates of the Inner Pilot. Tomorrow if He tells me to go to some other place and be of service to Him there, I will gladly go, because for a God-lover there is no specific home. Wherever he is needed, wherever he is wanted, wherever he is commanded by the Supreme to go, there he has to be.
Question: How do you go about spreading your teachings? Do you write?
Sri Chinmoy: I have written considerably, That is to say, the Supreme in me has written about 240 books. Whether they are worth reading or not, God alone knows. But as I said, I am the instrument; He is writing in and through me. I just entered into the art world. Very recently I completed ten thousand paintings in three months’ time. But if I say that I did it, then I am telling the worst possible lie. The Supreme in me is doing it. And according to my receptivity, I am offering Him the opportunity to act in and through me.
It is just like sunlight. I can leave my windows and doors open and, again, I can keep all my doors and windows shut. If I allow the sunlight to enter into my room, then my room will be illumined. If I don’t allow it, then my room will be all darkness. It is the divine Grace that is operating.
Question: What is the greatest thing we can do for our children?
Sri Chinmoy: Here in the West, there is a kind of freedom that I do not endorse. Some parents say that America is the land of freedom and they give their children the freedom to find out for themselves what is best for them. I tell you, this policy has ruined thousands and millions of young children. In the formative years, when children are being brought up, parents should always tell the children what is best for them.
Parents say, “Let them grow up. When they get older they will see for themselves what is best for them.” This is what many parents have done in America and they have lost their children. When the child comes into existence I know the child needs milk. I feed the child milk. I do not say, “Let the child drink milk or water, whichever he prefers, and when he gets older he will realise that milk is better for him.” By that time he will have left the world. So what I know is best I will give. Let the child drink milk until he is ten or twelve years old and then, if he does not like milk, I shall let him drink something else.
If I know that the best thing for me to do early in the morning is to pray, I will encourage my child to do this. But if I say, “No, I have come to this realisation at the age of forty, so let my son also wait until he is ready,” then I am making a deplorable mistake. For forty years I did not accept the spiritual life but wallowed in life’s ignorance. How much I suffered and how much suffering I caused for my dear ones! But now I know that the spiritual life is the answer. So when I have the child in front of me, I will inspire him to pray and meditate. The thing that I feel is best I will tell my child. Then, when he grows up, if he feels that what I have said is not the right thing for him, then he can accept something else. But I shall guide him along the road I have discovered to be right until he is old enough to choose his own road.
In the beginning, if the child is not instructed, if the child is not taught, how will the child learn? The child cannot be left to learn in his own way. The lesson has to be given right from the beginning. I know a truth which I will tell my children. Later, if they discover that there is a higher truth or that the truth I have taught them is wrong, then let them reject it. But unfortunately, it is not happening this way in the West. Here I see thousands of children who have been misguided by their parents in the name of freedom.
Question: At what age can you get a child to start meditating?
Sri Chinmoy: Anytime, at the age of six months, even. Perhaps the child cannot utter a word, but if you are Christian, you can show him a picture of the Christ or something beautiful. God is expressing Himself through beauty. A child can appreciate the beauty of a flower. At that time, the flower itself is God for the child. Then, when the child can speak, let him say, “God” a few times as his prayer. As he advances in years, he can be taught higher meditations. We give our children the only real freedom when we give them the truth, the reality. Real freedom is not just to go and strike someone and move around like a vagabond. No. Real freedom is not to do anything we like. Real freedom is to do everything the way God wants us to do it. That is our freedom. God is all-Light, all-Freedom, and if we listen to Him, only then do we enjoy freedom.
Question: What do you think of marriage? And what do you think the spiritual place of a man and a woman is in this life?
Sri Chinmoy: It entirely depends on the individual. If an individual feels the need of marriage, I tell him that if he gets married, he can feel that he has four hands, four eyes and so on. He has double strength, double capacity.
Then again, if someone is not meant for marriage, if he doesn’t feel the necessity of marriage, then I tell him that he should feel he is running the fastest. There is nothing holding him back from his goal, whereas if he is married and the marriage does not work out, there will be tremendous suffering and life will become unbearable. So the individual has to make the choice.
There is no hard and fast rule that one cannot realise God if he is married or if he is not married. No! It all depends on what God wants from him. If he feels from within that God wants him to get married, that God wants him to have that experience, then he is doing the right thing by getting married. If he feels that God does not want him to marry, then he should not do it.
Question: Can a husband and wife have different teachers?
Sri Chinmoy: If the husband and wife have different teachers, it is like going to the same goal along two roads. Problems will arise if the husband says that his road is clear, sunlit, whereas the wife’s road is full of obstacles. Then trouble will start. But if the husband says, “I like this road and you like that road. So you go your own way, I will go my way, and we will reach the same destination,” then it is all right. If the husband does not try to convert the wife and the wife does not try to convert the husband, that is the right thing. But when a feeling of comparison or competition enters, then all is lost.
Question: But does the union of two people diminish at all when they are following two different paths to the same thing?
Sri Chinmoy: No. The only thing we have to know is how much understanding and respect they have for each other’s path. But it is always safe if they have the same Master, if they are walking along the same road. If the husband and wife follow the same path and the husband becomes tired, exhausted, assailed by doubt, then at that time the wife becomes his helper. And if the wife becomes assailed by doubt or fear, then the husband can be of real help. So if they follow the same path, it is a great advantage.
But if the wife says, “I want to follow the path of the heart,” and the husband says, “I want to follow the path of the mind,” what can they do? At that time the husband and wife have to be very careful. Each has to know that the other is doing the right thing, according to his or her own capacity and understanding. They should have mutual respect for each other’s realisation.
Question: What about the place of women in the spiritual life at this time of "women's liberation" and all that? What is the woman's real place in a spiritual sense and a man's real place?
Sri Chinmoy: In God’s Eye, there is no man, there is no woman. In God’s Eye they are one. Man is the face; woman is the smile. Without the face, how can there be a smile? Again, if there is no smile, what good is the face? So both are equally important.
Question: We don't want to take much more of your time.
Sri Chinmoy: I am so grateful. Nothing gives me greater joy than to be of dedicated service to you. Both of you have extremely beautiful souls, devoted, spiritual souls. You are serving God the Supreme, and I am also serving the Supreme. Here I have been doing something and you have been doing something. We are members of the same family. If I kept my capacity only for myself and if you kept your capacity only for yourselves, then we couldn’t become one. When we unite our capacities, then only is God pleased with us.
Journalist: Thank you very much.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Speaks, part 1
UNITED NATIONS -— The Legion of Mary, an international Catholic service organisation, presented Sri Chinmoy with its "Our Lady, Queen of Peace'' award during a meeting of The Peace Meditation at the United Nations on March 22.
The award was made by Dr. Charles Mercieca on behalf of the Legion.
The Master was also presented that day with the Albert Einstein Peace Medallion by the founder and president of the Albert Einstein International Academy Foundation, an educational and research organisation headquartered in Independence, Missouri.
Dr. Marcel Dingli-Attard, who made the presentation, is a Maltese diplomat.
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 20, MID-DECEMBER 1990–MARCH 1991
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed for public radio at Annam Brahma restaurant in Jamaica, Queens, New York.
DELHI — Sri Chinmoy was among the Indian leaders — who included Prime Minister Indira Gandhi — presenting the prizes to winners of the Asian Veterans Athletics Championships held here the weekend of March 19.
The three-day series of track and field competitions, held in Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, drew masters athletes from the length and breadth of Asia.
Sri Chinmoy presented the awards to the winners of the 20-kilometre walk and the 400-metre dash on the final day of the meet.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 10, Nos. 2-5, February–June 1983
The leader of The Peace Meditation at the United Nations, Sri Chinmoy, presented the annual U Thant Peace Award this year to the United Nations Development Program (UNDP).
The presentation was made March 19 during a ceremony on U Thant Island, in the East River.
Dr. Uner Kirdar, who accepted the award on behalf of UNDP, said: “You are granting us the biggest honour.” The award, he added, belongs to UNDP field workers and those “whom we are privileged to serve.”
In a subsequent letter to Sri Chinmoy, the head of UNDP, Bradford Morse, wrote: “This award ... gives us new inspiration, dedication and energy to serve in the best manner millions of human beings in poor countries ...”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 12, December 1984–March 1985
UNITED NATIONS — The Director of the United Nations Meditation Group, Sri Chinmoy, held a special meditation March 17 for staff members working at UNICEF.
Members of the Meditation Group sang a song about UNICEF the Master had composed for the occasion.
Sri Chinmoy with United Nations guards.
Published in Anahata Nada, March 1, 1977, Vol. 4, No. 2
CANBERRA, Australia — The continent of Australia has declared its capital a Sri Chinmoy Peace Capital.
Canberra is the second national capital to be dedicated to the cause of peace in Sri Chinmoy’s name. Ottawa was named a peace capital last year.
At the Canberra dedication March 16, Ros Kelly, Federal Minister of Arts, Sport and Environment, read out the official proclamation hailing Sri Chinmoy as “an international Ambassador of Peace” ... (whose) “life and deeds have inspired millions with a commitment to inner growth as the foundation for global change.”
Canberra started as a dream of visionaries, she continued, and peace also started as a dream. “As the vision of Canberra has become reality, so too humanity’s long-cherished dream of world peace will gloriously blossom.”
The Canberra dedication coincided with the arrival in that city of runners from the 1993 Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run. The Australian portion of that relay run, covering 2,000 miles, goes from Melbourne to Brisbane.
Two other major Australian cities — Sydney and Melbourne — were also declared Sri Chinmoy peace cities on March 21. In the U.S., Philadelphia and Charlottesville, Virginia, were recently dedicated to peace in Sri Chinmoy’s name.
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 22, DECEMBER 1992 – MARCH 1993
JAMAICA, N.Y. — Sri Chinmoy cooked a 22-course meal March 15 to honour the third anniversary of Annam Brahma restaurant.
He began cooking at one o'clock in the morning and finished nearly 14 hours later.
Dinners were sent air express to disciples around the world, who ordered them from as far away as Europe and Australia. Some 265 meals were sent to distant Centres, and about 200 were consumed that day in the restaurant.
Sri Chinmoy embarked on the project as a fund-raising effort for the restaurant, which Nishtha took over three years ago.
Cooking a 22-course meal.
Published in Anahata Nada, April 1, 1977 Vol. 4, No. 3
by Abhinabha Tangerman
by CASPER POSTMA
Not all the unusual things deemed common in the exciting and mind-altering sixties have escaped everyday life. The Beatles may have ended, the flower-power withered and men’s hair length returned to above the ear: the gurus have remained. Indian enlightened masters, who in the wake of Beatle George Harrison have tiptoed into many a teenage brain, have over the course of the years permanently nestled in Western society. With Baghwan [Osho] as most famous representative.
Yet the times change for gurus as well. Sri Chinmoy, hailing from Bengal but a resident of New York since 1964, shows how an enlightened master as a campaigner for world peace can successfully key into new trends. At first glance, there is nothing unusual about him. Shortly before his visit, his disciples distribute flyers showing a slender man dressed in traditional Indian garb, holding a flute to his lips. Old news, is the first thing that comes to mind.
But when Sri Chinmoy presents himself to the press on Saturday night, just before his peace concert, it is another man than the one gracing the brochures. No garments, but a flashing sports outfit draped with a fashionably padded coat in light blue and yellow and a lilac polo short barely visible underneath. Yet not only the clothing is different. His posture is also much less fragile than the picture suggests; the sturdy neck and broad shoulders remind one rather of the muscles of a boxer than the corporeal casing of a guru.
Next to the table from where Sri addresses the press a structure to lift standing weights is positioned. Two signs indicate that the weight to be lifted is the same as the guru’s own. Although the set-up features prominently during question time the guru does not give a demonstration, despite an announcement. But if we are to believe the documented information moving such weights is a simple task for Sri Chinmoy. One year ago the master astounded the world by raising a dumbbell weighing 3200 kilograms with one arm in front of 24 witnesses in New York. Seemingly an impossible achievement.
Inner source
Yet he casually dismisses sneering questions suggesting his performance is more akin to a circus act. “Physical fitness can help us in our inner life. The body must first become a pure and perfect instrument of the inner and the spiritual. I am not a bodybuilder and neither a weightlifter. I am a seeker of truth and a lover of God. My inner and outer secret is prayer and meditation. The capacity to lift these weights comes from an inner source.”
Apart from developing these remarkable physical capacities, Sri Chinmoy has also found time to write 700 books, compose 6000 songs and create 140,000 paintings. He also played many church organs all over the world, including the one in the Vatican. From the tower of the Grote Kerk [Dutch church] as well several tones have spread out over the city last Saturday, a follower reports. “Sri Chinmoy has set himself the goal of playing on 100 big church organs,” she adds full of admiration. It seems the guru and his disciples primarily believe in the magic of big numbers. He shrugs if a quick calculation is presented that he must have made ten paintings a day since he was 16 years old. “Go and see for yourself in Manhattan. There they have exhibited 20,000 of them,” he says somewhat irritable. When a next question is not forthcoming the mind of the master temporarily leaves the room. The neck bends, the eyes half close and turn away. Meditation or demonstration?
Although every now and again a little cynicism is expressed during the reception, the appreciation of Sri Chinmoy in America is huge. Ever since the days of U Thant he meditates every Tuesday and Friday in the chapel of the United Nations building in New York. People like Pablo Casals and Leonard Bernstein praise his musical gifts and creativity. And luminaries like Muhammad Ali, Coretta Scott King and Pope John Paul II pose with him in newspaper photographs. Sri was active in the pop scene as well. He saved rock star Carlos Santana from drugs and alcohol.
The peace concert in the Congresgebouw reveals Sri’s current followers. Mostly youngsters, many of whom come from surrounding countries, especially Germany. The Prins Willem-Alexander hall is unable to house them all. A great number has to stand outside disappointed. Sri remains unperturbed under the scramble in front of the doors. In a dazzling orange brocade garment, he elicits serene melodies from a host of instruments. Gently flowing tones that submerge a great part of the hall into meditation.
“Through a healthy body and meditation, you can transcend yourself. You will more easily achieve better things,” states the enlightened master. His followers, most of them in white, are dressed in sportswear or something looking like it. When Sri plays they fold their hands devotedly under their chin. They meditate for peace, a healthy body and better achievements. Sri Chinmoy is the guru of the eighties.
Why not?
Sri Chinmoy in action as a weightlifter in the US [left]
The peace concert in the Congresgebouw (World Forum concert venue) [right]
Published in the Dutch newspaper, Haagsche Courant, in The Hague, 14 March 1988
UNITED NATIONS — Nearly 100 Indian officials from the Indian consulate and the U.N. Secretariat gathered here March 13 for a special tribute to India sponsored by Sri Chinmoy: The Peace Meditation at the United Nations.
India’s Consul General in New York, P.A. Nazareth, and his wife were guests of honour.
Sri Chinmoy, who has been conducting peace meditations at the U .N. for the past 17 years, presented the Consul General with a plaque, and the Meditation Group singers sang a song Sri Chinmoy had composed about him.
Deeply moved, the Consul General declared: “I have never been so honoured before in my whole life. This is something I’ll never forget.”
He said he accepted the honours as “a very moving tribute to India.”
He also praised Sri Chinmoy’s work for peace at the United Nations and elsewhere, comparing Sri Chinmoy to “a great tree rising above the forest, trying to communicate the vision he sees to the rest of the world.
“This is not just a meditation group but a whole peace movement,” the Consul General said. “It is certainly as important as anything done in the great conference halls of the United Nations.”
The programme ended with many Indian members of the audience joining the Consul General, Sri Chinmoy and the Meditation Group singers onstage to sing India’s national anthem.
Indian Consul General Nazareth and his wife join Sri Chinmoy in singing the Indian National Anthem at the U.N. programme honouring India.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 15, December 1986 – March 1987
by Bob de Jong of Veronica TV, Holland
Question: Sri Chinmoy, why are you doing this weightlifting?
Sri Chinmoy: I am doing it to inspire my brothers and sisters. This world belongs to one Person, God the Creator, and we are His children, God the creation. Now I am in Holland. I have come to see my brothers and sisters here in Holland. I feel that if I can be of inspiration to them, I will be very, very happy. From weightlifting, I get inner joy, inner strength and inner peace, peace of mind. If you have peace of mind, then you do not quarrel with others, you do not fight with others, you do not declare wars. So that is why I do weightlifting.
Question: Have you done any sports before in your life?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. I have been a sportsman all my life. When I was young, I was an athlete. According to Indian standards, I was a very good athlete. I was also a decathlon champion. I was good in sprinting, jumping, throwing and so forth. But that is all past history.
Question: There are a lot of traditional weightlifting techniques, but now you are using none of these techniques. So how can you do it?
Sri Chinmoy: In my case, it is a matter of inner inspiration. You will be surprised to learn that there was a time when I disliked weightlifting immensely. In India, I was a sprinter and I thought weightlifting would be detrimental to my running career. Here, in America, I ran for quite a few years and I inspired my students all over the world to run. My right knee became badly injured, perhaps from running, so I gave up running and then I got the inspiration from within to lift weights so that I can keep physically fit. That is how I started.
As you can see, I do not know any weightlifting techniques. I do not have the physique of a bodybuilder or weightlifter. I entirely depend on God's Grace. God's Grace acts in and through me in all that I do. Not only in my sports life, but in my literary career, in my art and in all my activities, I entirely depend on God's Grace, God's Compassion. He is the One who helps me, guides me and protects me. He does it through me and I just try to become a good recipient. I try to offer Him my own receptivity, and He performs everything in and through me according to my receptivity.
Question: You talk about God. In Holland, people will say we are Christians, so we have a Christian God. There are people in other countries who have their own God.
Sri Chinmoy: There is only one God, but we use different terms. In Dutch you use one word. In Bengali, I use the word 'Bhagavan', in English, they say 'God', and in French 'Dieu'. Each language has a word for God, but it is the same Person. An individual may be called Mr. So-and-So, his children call him Father or Daddy, and his friends will call him by his first name, but he remains the same person.
Question: Why do you think it is possible that we have wars between people and they all say they are fighting for their God? How is it that there is only one God and so many opposing sides?
Sri Chinmoy: It is our misconception of God. God is all love. Let us say God is the Father and we are two brothers. If we are quarrelling and fighting, will our Father be happy? No. The Father will be happy only if his two sons are happy and peaceful.
So each religion starts with love of God. Is there any religion that will say it hates God or hates humanity? There is no such religion. It is only our misconception of God. Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Islam, Buddhism, Jainism — they will all say they love God. But if you really love someone, how can you make that person unhappy? If we say that we love God and we continue to quarrel and fight with one another, is it not absurd? We want to make our beloved God happy. We want to make our Father happy. Who wants to make his Father unhappy and miserable? Nobody wants. But in our actions, unfortunately, we are making God sad and miserable. No religion will advocate war, quarrels, fighting and an unhappy life.
Question: Let us return to the topic of sport. Let us say there are two sportsmen. They may fight each other, even if it is a friendly fight. It could be boxing, it could be wrestling. If both of them pray, would that be good?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. If they pray, then they will have protection from God and they will show their best capacities, but there will be no animosity involved. Suppose two boxers are fighting. Naturally, each one wants to win. On the one hand, they can bring to the fore their animal propensities, animal qualities, and destroy the opponent. On the other hand, each one can feel that this is an opportunity to transcend their own capacities. They can try to bring their hidden capacities to the fore. According to our philosophy, we are always trying to transcend ourselves, we are always trying to improve. So, while transcending ourselves, if we defeat someone, then it is not a mistake. But if we try to defeat someone by hook or by crook, by adopting foul means, then that will be a most deplorable mistake.
Question: I know quite a lot of sports people and some of them pray. They say, "Please, Father, let me win the world championship today." Sometimes they succeed. Is that prayer good?
Sri Chinmoy: That prayer is good, but it is not the best prayer. The best prayer is to say, "Let Thy Will be done." The Saviour Christ offered the entire world this most significant message, "Let Thy Will be done." I wish to tell you about another great sportsman, one of the greatest, Muhammad Ali. Everybody knows Muhammad Ali. He is a very close friend of mine. About ten years ago, before one of his fights, he meditated with me for about fifteen minutes. He is a Muslim, so he was praying to Allah and I was praying to God, but it is the same Person. We prayed and meditated together. That night he won the fight. My prayer was only "God, let Thy Will be done." Although Muhammad Ali is my close friend, I knew that whatever God wanted to do in and through Ali will be the best thing. When we offer this prayer to God, God does the best for us.
Question: It could also mean that he would have lost. That could have been the best.
Sri Chinmoy: Absolutely. In this case, God wanted him to win. That was the best from the spiritual point of view. But if God wanted to give him the experience of failure, then he would have gained a very significant inner experience in another way. Sometimes God gives us the experience of failure when He wants us to establish our inseparable oneness with our competitors. At that time, if our prayer to God — "Let Thy Will be done" — is sincere, then we are equally happy because we love God. The Person whom we love most knows what is best for us. So we pray to God to do His Will, not our will. Otherwise, at every moment we would pray to God, "Make me the winner, make me the best." From the highest spiritual point of view, that is a mistake. We should pray to God for His Will to be executed in and through us. That is the best prayer.
Question: I have been a professional sportsman and in my life several times I have had the feeling that I could do more than what I was actually doing. Does that sound familiar to you?
Sri Chinmoy: It has happened many, many times in my case also that I could not offer my best capacity. Many times I felt that I could have done far, far better in running, but I did not do it, could not do it. Even then, I was not unhappy because at the very beginning I had offered my soulful prayer to God, "Let Thy Will be done." My mind will say that perhaps I was forced to hold something back, but my heart will say no. I prayed to God for His Will to be performed in and through me. Whatever timing I did in the race, that was the timing God wanted me to show to the world at large. So I was perfectly happy.
Question: If sports people would like to meditate, how should they do it?
Sri Chinmoy: Every morning, when they get up, before they enter into the hustle and bustle of life, they can pray to God to give them a peaceful day, a happy day. They can utter the words, "O Lord God, today do grant me a peaceful day." That is one way, the way of prayer.
The other approach is through meditation. You can try to make the mind absolutely calm and quiet. Focus your concentration right on your heart. Try to feel that only in your heart you exist and there is nothing else. Here you are envisioning your own inner existence, your own divinity. Do not have even an iota of thought. The mind must be calm, quiet and absolutely silent.
With prayer, we use words to approach God. We say, "My Lord Supreme, do make me a choice instrument of Yours so that I can please You and fulfil You in Your own Way." When we are in deep meditation, on the other hand, we feel that God is doing the things that are necessary to be performed in and through us. He will act in and through us. We just try to be a perfect instrument of His.
While I am praying, I feel that God is high in Heaven. My prayer is going up to Him. While I am meditating, the elevator is coming down. God the compassionate One is descending into my heart and He will do the needful. This is how we feel God.
Question: Is it true that by praying and meditating anybody can become a better athlete?
Sri Chinmoy: It is definitely true. It is like having another friend on your side in a tug-of-war. If the other person does not pray or meditate, then he will be all alone, whereas you will have your prayer-friend and meditation-friend on your side.
So many world-class athletes pray and meditate. Just last week, the great Olympian Carl Lewis came and meditated with me for about an hour or so. He has been my friend for several years. During the last Olympics in Los Angeles, he came and meditated with me at the hotel room because he felt the need. He knows that his prayer-life has helped him considerably. He has prayed and meditated with me many, many times.
When you pray and meditate, you increase your inner strength, inner capacities. If your capacity is increased from your prayer-life and your meditation-life, then you should do it. It is like having two extra friends to inspire you. We all want to have friends. Friends can be of great help to us in our hour of need. During sports, we desperately need friends to come to our rescue. So here, prayer and meditation are two excellent friends to help us.
Question: Do you lift these heavy weights with the help of prayer and meditation?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. I give 100 per cent credit to my prayer-life and meditation-life. In my case, it is not 99½ per cent or 99¾ per cent, but 100 per cent. Even today, when I lifted my bodyweight with my left arm and then my right arm, I know that if my inner Guide did not protect me, I would have dropped it or I could not have lifted it at all. For everything I do, I depend on His Grace, His Compassion, His Protection.
If God grants us His Compassion, out of His infinite Bounty, then is there anything we cannot do? I am a drop, but the moment I enter into the ocean, I become the ocean. Similarly, my finite will, finite capacity, is next to nothing, but the moment I identify myself with God's infinite Will, I am able to accomplish so much. Otherwise, how could I think of lifting such heavy weights at this age? I would be the first person to doubt it. But again, I know I have not done it, I have not done it. Who has done it? God, my Inner Pilot. He is infinite, eternal and immortal. For Him to do this kind of thing is so easy. So for everything, I give Him 100 per cent credit. I know what I can do. I can do nothing. I have written thousands of poems, composed thousands of songs and created thousands of paintings. I know that it is His unconditional Grace at every moment that has enabled me to do these things. I do not deserve it. I know there are many people who are infinitely more talented than I am, but out of His infinite Compassion, He has chosen me.
In the bodybuilding and weightlifting world, look at the biceps and triceps of the champions. How huge they are! But when it comes to lifting, perhaps they are not invoking the highest Power, supreme Power.
Question: If there is a sports competition, can you see by the aura around people who will win?
Sri Chinmoy: Definitely I can see, and then, if it is the Will of God, on very rare occasions, I can tell the person. I will give you an example. One day before the 200-metre final at the Olympic Games in Los Angeles, Carl Lewis came to meditate with me in my hotel room. Afterwards, I asked him if he would like to know the results of the race the following day. I told him that he would stand first, second would be Kirk Baptiste and third would be Thomas Jefferson. It was God who showed me the results and God who wanted me to tell him. The next day, the race took place and the result was exactly what I had told him. If God had not shown me the result, I would not have been unhappy at all. My goal was only to pray most soulfully with Carl Lewis. Whomever God chose to be the winner, it was up to God's Will. But God wanted me to see the result and God wanted me to tell Carl Lewis.
Question: My last question is, would you kindly address the young Dutch public who watch my programme? I would like to give you some time to talk to the young people. What would you like to give them as a message?
Sri Chinmoy: My message is very simple. This is Holland. Holland is famous for flowers — tulips. If they can remain as beautiful and as pure as the flowers of Holland, then they will be able to accomplish much from life.
This is the land of flowers and flowers symbolise purity. There are many places on earth where it is not so easy to find flowers. Here, it is so easy. Just look around! The flowers that you are seeing with your outer eyes, if each child can feel the same beautiful flower — a tulip or any flower — inside their heart, it will help them tremendously.
The moment we lose purity, we lose practically everything. Each child is a dream of God. God Himself is dreaming His highest Dream in and through each child. If he sees that the child has a pure heart, then God can manifest Himself in and through that pure heart easily. So my advice to the children of Holland is to maintain their pure hearts as long as they can. Once they lose purity, everything is confusion. If the mind is full of confusion, then how are you going to accomplish anything? Always God wants a purity-heart. If we can have that purity in our heart every day, we can accomplish something very special, very meaningful and very fruitful.
So this is my soulful message to the children of Holland, the land of flowers: to maintain their purity-heart throughout their lives.
Published in Conversations with Sri Chinmoy
by Sri Chinmoy
on 19 March 1988
After my television interview, a man from the Dutch radio station also wanted to interview me.
We were sitting face to face, and he was asking me many spiritual questions. At one point he stood up and came over to me and said, “There are some people who are very, very close to God, and I can see you are one of those.”
Published in The World-Experience-Tree-Climber, part 6
Sri Chinmoy speaks with
the BBC’s UN correspondent, Brian Saxton at the United Nations in New York
Mr. Saxton: Sri Chinmoy, can you explain the technique used in your Meditation Group?
Sri Chinmoy: Certainly. Here we pray and meditate in silence. We feel that when we pray, we speak to God. And when we meditate, we feel that God speaks to us. So in silence we pray and in silence we meditate.
Mr. Saxton: Is this related to any particular religion?
Sri Chinmoy: No, this is not related to any religion whatsoever. This is an approach to God, to the ultimate Reality. We have faith in all religions. We do not speak ill of any religion, for all religions are serving a special purpose to bring about peace, light and harmony. But ours is not a religion. Ours is just a path that leads to God-realisation, our ultimate Reality.
Mr. Saxton: What kind of people attend your meetings here at the United Nations?
Sri Chinmoy: Here at the United Nations we have a few delegates and quite a few members of the staff.
Mr. Saxton: The United Nations is, of course, a very political place. Do politics ever enter into your work?
Sri Chinmoy: Politics, as such, does not enter into our work. But we feel that politics can be illumined and raised to a very, very high state of consciousness so that humanity can be transformed, illumined and fulfilled. We pray and meditate to purify our mind. Once our mind is purified and illumined, then this mind of ours — which creates so many problems for us, which constantly creates confusion, doubt, worries and anxieties — will become a perfect instrument for us to use to have a better world or, we can say, to bring to the fore a new face of the world. We do not use politics as such, but we try to bring into politics the light and the bliss that we get from our prayer and meditation.
Mr. Saxton: And this is what you hope people will gain from your work?
Sri Chinmoy: This is what we are trying to offer to the world at large.
Mr. Saxton: You mentioned a few moments ago that certain delegates attend your meetings. Do you think diplomats gain anything special that is particularly useful to their own work?
Sri Chinmoy: I do hope that they get peace of mind. It seems to me that all human beings have everything save and except peace of mind. The delegates are dealing with the world problems, so what they need first and foremost, as far as I can see, is peace of mind. When they come and pray with us, and become one with us, they do feel peace of mind. And then, when they go back to their respective offices, they can solve the problems that they have been facing with new light, new inspiration, new aspiration and new illumination.
Mr. Saxton: Do you sometimes feel that despite these very high aspirations and targets, that sometimes your work is often overshadowed by politics?
Sri Chinmoy: No, it is not overshadowed by politics, for we do not make any comparison between politics and spirituality as such. Here we pray and meditate in silence. We try to do everything in silence. Politics is in the outer world, whereas our prayer and meditation are in the inner world. On the strength of our sincere prayer and meditation, we try to bring to the fore the peace, light and bliss that we have. And then this peace, light and bliss we try to offer to the world, the political world, so that the political world can also be illumined, perfected and fulfilled.
[After the formal interview, Mr. Saxton continued to ask Sri Chinmoy about his path and about peace of mind with the questions following.]
Mr. Saxton: What is your basic philosophy?
Sri Chinmoy: Our basic teaching is love, devotion and surrender. We love God, not in a human way but in a divine way. In human love there is constant demand — I give you something, you have to give me something. It is always mutual give and take. But in divine love we give unconditionally. Then it is up to God to give us what He wants to give us. We know that in reality God has already given us everything; only right now we are trying to feel that He has done this. This is our divine love. Right now I am one individual, but when I try to love the world in a divine way, at that time I grow into the universal heart. Human love ends in frustration and frustration ultimately is destruction; whereas divine love is constant illumination.
Human devotion is attachment. I may be attached to you and you may be attached to me, but this does not serve any divine purpose. Divine devotion is dedication to a higher purpose, to a higher way of life, to an ideal or goal. It grows out of our promise to our inner being to manifest our inner divinity here on earth.
Human surrender is the surrender of the slave to the master. If the slave does not please the master, the master will dispense with his services. So the slave is all the time afraid of the master. But divine surrender is the surrender of our less illumined part to our higher part. Right now we are not fully aware of our highest height. But once we become aware of who we are, we try to surrender our lower self to our higher self. The tiny drop is not aware of the ocean, but when it merges into the ocean, it becomes the ocean itself. As long as it maintains its individuality and personality, the tiny drop is just a tiny drop. In divine surrender, the finite in us surrenders to the infinite in us and we become inseparable.
Mr. Saxton: How would you characterise real peace of mind? How can someone really come to terms with themselves and be totally peaceful with themselves in their minds?
Sri Chinmoy: When we have peace of mind, when we have tranquillity, we feel that there is nothing that we have to achieve, nothing that we have to do for ourselves. Everything has been done by the Almighty, by our Heavenly Father. Right now we are hankering after name, fame and many other things. But when we have peace of mind, we feel on the strength of our oneness with the rest of the world that everything the world has is ours.
Mr. Saxton: But how do you reach that state?
Sri Chinmoy: Through prayer and meditation. When we pray and meditate every day, our necessities diminish. Right now we may have twenty desires. But if we pray and meditate, over a period of time our desires will decrease. From twenty it becomes ten; then gradually it becomes five or six. Then, when we do not have any desires, if we can live even for five minutes without any desires, then we are bound to get peace of mind. If we can surrender our individual will to God’s Will, then easily we can have peace of mind. Now we separate our will from God’s Will. We may want a particular thing, although we know perfectly well that God wants something else from us. He wants us to be freed, to be liberated from the meshes of ignorance, but we enjoy the worldly life, or pleasure-life. But eventually we will care only for the aspiration-life, Him to serve, Him to fulfil, here on earth and there in Heaven.
Mr. Saxton: It has been very interesting talking to you.
Published in Flame-Waves, part 10
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed live from New York on a national ABC Radio programme called ‘Australia Talks Back’ where host Sandy McCutcheon explores the question, “Where have all the gurus gone?” After performing a Peace Concert at the Lincoln Center in New York that evening, Sri Chinmoy gives the answer to Australian listeners (morning, March 12). Of all the gurus who had been popular during the 1960s and ’70s, Sri Chinmoy is the only one to be interviewed on the programme.
The director of the United Nations Meditation Group in New York, Sri Chinmoy, who is visiting at the request of his disciples in Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth, spoke last night at University House, ANU.
Sri Chinmoy is the head of an international spiritual organisation with about 60 centres throughout the world. He is the author of more than 250 books of spiritual poetry, essays, plays, stories and lectures and has painted more than 100,000 mystical paintings.
He teaches a mystical approach to God based on love, devotion and surrender to the Divine Will.
He said yesterday that he and his disciples tried to see and feel the presence of God and worked for mankind through prayer and meditation.
Sri Chinmoy, 44, came to the West in 1964 after 20 years in a spiritual community in his native India practising intense spiritual disciplines. He spends about two months every year travelling to centres around the world “inspiring my students” and has lectured in the United States, Canada and Western Europe. This is his first visit to Australia.
He has already addressed meetings in Perth and Sydney and will go to Melbourne today. About eight of his 30 Australian disciples are travelling with him.
Sri Chinmoy in Canberra yesterday
Published in The Canberra Times, Tuesday, March 9, 1976
New York (APA). With a lot of muscle power and allegedly even more inner power the Indian-born peace guru Sri Chinmoy set a new weightlifting record: with his own bodyweight of exactly 170.5 lbs., the almost 69-year-old man lifted two 500-lb. dumbbells in a special lifting cage in his home in New York, as the Sri Chinmoy Centre International informed us. This is together 1,000 lbs.
Published on page 36 in Tiroler Tageszietung, Wednesday, 8 March 2000
Tiroler Tageszeitung is a German-language daily newspaper published in Innsbruck, Austria. Circulation: 117,000
JAMAICA, NY — Sri Chinmoy lifted Vice President Isatou Njie-Saidy of the Gambia, two of her country’s Ministers and several members of the Gambian delegation accompanying her during a visit to Aspiration-Ground March 7.
We will leave here “with our spirits lifted high,” she said afterwards, as “ambassadors of Sri Chinmoy, so that we can pass on that same spirit to the rest of society.”
She promised that she and her colleagues would “take it upon ourselves to ensure that we deserve” the ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ Award she received from the spiritual leader.
Sri Chinmoy told her, “With your inner spirit and outer enthusiasm, readiness, willingness and eagerness, you are going to ... change soon the face and fate of the world.”
Vice President Isatou Njie-Saidy of the Gambia holds the World Harmony Torch with Sri Chinmoy during their March 7 meeting.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 37, December 2004 – March 2005
REYKJAVIK — Sri Chinmoy honoured 12 Members of Parliament, including its President, Halldor Blondal, on March 6 when he lifted them into the air with one arm from an overhead platform as part of his “Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart” program.
“I hope that your hard work will bring blessings to all nations,” President Blondal declared.
In Reykjavik, Sri Chinmoy greets Steingrímur Hermannsson whom he lifted into the air on March 6. Sri Chinmoy had previously lifted him 14 years ago during his tenure as Iceland’s Prime Minister.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 24, November 2002 – March 2003
NEW YORK — The New York Road Runners Club presented Sri Chinmoy with a special service award at its fourth annual awards dinner March 5.
In presenting Sri Chinmoy a silver bowl in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the running community, the Road Runners called him “a man who by his example has changed lives throughout the world.”
Publsihed in Anahata Nada, Volume 10, Nos. 2-5, February – June 1983
Sri Chinmoy continued his concert and lecture series at New York universities in March, making 14 public appearances on university campuses or in nearby churches. Excerpts from the Master's talks follow:
State University of New York (SUNY) at Albany (March 4):
“When we pray, our Father-Friend lovingly feeds us. When we meditate, we soulfully feed our Father-Friend. ... Our soulful prayer makes us our Lord’s choice instruments. Our fruitful meditation makes us our Lord's Vision-Voice.”
Union College and University (March 4):
“The desiring man tells me that human life is full of difficulties. The aspiring man tells me that human life is full of opportunities. The self-giving man tells me that human life is God’s constant Vision-Manifestation.
“Each difficulty discourages and delays our success-life. Each opportunity encourages and expedites our progress-life. Each Vision-Manifestation of God helps us march faster towards our destined Goal.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 4, Number 2, March 1978
Even the most prolific of writers such as Shakespeare or Arnold Bennett would have no match for the spiritual master or guru Sri Chinmoy, who arrived in Perth yesterday.
During one 24-hour concentrated session, Sri Chinmoy says, he once wrote 834 poems.
Recently he also completed 10,000 paintings in 24 hours.
“If even one of the paintings give you something in spirit, then it is all worth while,” he said.
“I do it not to compete with others but to compete with myself.”
He said that the exercise gave him great joy.
Yesterday Sri Chinmoy called on the new Dean of Perth, the Rev John Cornish, because the guru was to lecture last night in St George’s Cathedral.
The dean had earlier had an anonymous phone call from a woman who said that the lecture should not be allowed.
“I spoke to her gently and she calmed down, Dean Cornish said.
The two spiritual leaders discovered yesterday that they had more in common than leading their flocks.
They were both born in 1931, the guru in August and the dean in October.
Sri Chinmoy was born in Bengal but now lives in New York, where he conducts meditation twice weekly for delegates to the United Nations.
He teaches a mystical approach to God based on love, devotion and surrender to the divine will. — Jill Crommelln.
The Dean of Perth, the Rev. John Cornish, with the Indian guru Sri Chinmoy in Perth yesterday.
Published in The West Australian, Perth, Wednesday, March 3, 1976
Visiting guru Sri Chinmoy said in Perth today that political philosophies and ideals were misdirected and not carried out.
The guru, who has lectured on his beliefs all over the world, says people can be pure, perfect, peaceful, divine and right by talking to God.
This, he says, can be done by praying, meditating and believing in the link between us and God.
The guru encourages his disciples to work and participate in society. This way men establish links between each other and help overcome the mind’s battle within itself.
The guru is a prolific writer and artist. He has published more than 260 books of spiritual poetry, lectures, essays, stories and plays. He has also painted more than 100,000 works which have been exhibited in museums, schools, galleries and business establishments.
Guru Sri Chinmoy will conduct a public meeting in St George’s Cathedral tonight and at Winthrop Hall tomorrow night. He will also plant a tree for peace at Nedlands rose garden this afternoon.
Guru Sri Chinmoy
Published in the Final Edition of the DAILY NEWS, Perth, WA, Tuesday, March 2, 1976
Video from Vasudeva Server
Sri Chinmoy lifts his own body-weight of 155 pounds — with both his right arm and his left arm separately — and is interviewed on the Norwalk-based television show The Fairfield Exchange.
A new series of Sri Chinmoy races for children under 10 and adults over 50 — “Green Leaves and Ripe Fruits” — was inaugurated on 28 February.
The 400-and 800-metre events are held every Sunday, rain or shine, at 5 p.m. in Flushing Meadow Park, Queens, and in other cities as well.
The ripest fruit to participate so far has been 82-year old Arati. Several five-year-olds have also entered.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 9, Nos. 1-4, January-April 1982
NEW YORK — New York-based peace leader Sri Chinmoy returned to New York recently after a two-month goodwill tour of southern Africa which included meetings with Nelson Mandela recently and Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe on New Year’s Day. About 300 members of the Sri Chinmoy Centres International, including 100 from New York City, accompanied Sri Chinmoy.
President Mandela was presented with the U Thant Peace Award by Sri Chinmoy at the ANC National Headquarters in Johannesburg. While offering the award to the President, Sri Chinmoy said, “Your life of unconditional sacrifice and your beloved country’s miracle-transformation are inseparable ... Your triumphant peace-loving and oneness-building spirit the entire aspiring world shall forever love, cherish and adore.”
President Mandela responded to Sri Chinmoy, “This U Thant Peace Award from you is one that I am going to respect a great deal and which encourages me in the difficult work that we are doing. To be appreciated by an organization like yours is a real shot in the arm. I cannot express in words my joy. What you are doing is in the interest of the entire humanity and the world.” A group of Sri Chinmoy's students performed songs composed by their teacher in honor of the 76-year-old South African leader and Nobel Peace Laureate.
Published in The Gary Crusader, Volume XXXIV No. 41 – Saturday, February 24, 1996
Chinmoy in the Kuppelsaal
A Phenomenon, Sri Chinmoy, a New York Meditation teacher of Bengali origins, is also a musician and a Messenger of peace…
2800 listeners followed his call to a “Peace Concert” at the Kuppelsaal in Hanover, and were transported away from their daily routines by his Indian sounds and gave restrained applause between the pieces (ovations would have destroyed the atmosphere) when the Master changed to flute or synthesizer.
“In the silence there is power,” his friends say. And what strength he developed through training and spiritual concentration, Chinmoy proved before the concert. With a special rack, he lifted members of the audience into the air with one arm; Guests from the GDR particularly appreciated this gesture. Chinmoy wrote a song for them, by the way.
It is about “Oneness-Happiness”.
Published in Neue Presse, Hannover, Thursday, February 22, 1990
The guru to the United Nations will visit Adelaide next month.
Sri Chinmoy will lecture at the Napier Lecture Theatre 5 Adelaide University on Friday, March 12.
The 44-year-old spiritual master poet and painter, based in New York, gives twice-weekly meditation sessions to UN delegates and staff. He also delivers monthly lectures at the world body.
The guru gained international recognition when two of the world's most prominent rock guitarists, John McLaughlin and Carlos Santana, devoted their lives to him.
They recorded an album, “Love, Devotion and Surrender,” which is based on his philosophy. McLaughlin has since dropped out of the movement.
Published in the Sunday Mail, Adelaide, VOL. 47, February 29
The television program, ‘Terry Katz Nelson’s City Scene’, about Sri Chinmoy, is watched by Ashrita Furman and many others across the New York area. The TV is set up in the basement of Sri Chinmoy’s home in Jamaica, New York.
The following interview was broadcast on radio station WRNW in Briarcliff Manor, NY, on 19 February 1976, at 2:00 p.m.
Question: What approach to God do the follower’s of your religion take?
Sri Chinmoy: First of all I would like to make it very clear that ours is not a religion. Ours is a path, a path that leads to God-realisation. In order to reach this destination some people pray, while others meditate. In our case we do both, but the emphasis is on meditation. There is a definite difference between prayer and meditation. When we pray, we talk and God listens. When we meditate, God talks and we listen.
Question: What benefit do you derive from meditation?
Sri Chinmoy: First and foremost, when we meditate we get peace of mind. The world has everything except peace of mind. Then, the world has become very complex. We want to simplify our lives so that we can run towards our goal without countless distractions. When we meditate, we simplify our earthly life so that we can run faster towards our goal. When we meditate, we see the reality in everything. Right now there are many things on earth which do not seem real to us. But when we meditate, we see the essence, the reality-seed, in everything.
When we meditate properly, we come to realise that God is not only in Heaven hut He is also on earth. In the West there is a belief that the Father is in Heaven and the son is on earth. But when we meditate properly, we feel that wherever the son is the Father also has to be. If the son is on earth, the Father is also on earth. In His entire creation, the Compassion-Light of the Supreme reigns. Meditation makes us feel that there is no place where God does not exist. And it is through meditation that we bring to the fore the living presence of God in all our multifarious activities.
Question: How can a person learn to meditate?
Sri Chinmoy: If someone wants to learn how to meditate, either he has to go to a spiritual teacher or he has to study some spiritual books. If the seeker does not care for a spiritual Master, then he has to study some spiritual books. The difficulty here is that each individual seeker has a specific way to meditate. A book will give general instructions with regard to meditation, but if the seeker has no teacher, he has to select from the books the things that will suit him. If the seeker accepts a Master, the Master will give him at the very beginning the inner guidance that will help him learn how to meditate properly. This is the advantage of having a Master.
Question: If someone does not want to study spiritual books and does not want to go to a spiritual Master, then what should he do?
Sri Chinmoy: In this case he should try to make his mind absolutely calm and quiet when he wants to meditate. Then, if he sees that there are some good thoughts arising in his mind, he should let these good thoughts play in his mind. If he has thoughts of love, joy, peace, and bliss, then he can let these thoughts grow and play in his mind or in his heart. But if he has thoughts of fear, doubt, jealousy, insecurity and other negative forces, then he should try to destroy them immediately. He has to feel that his mind is his door. He has quite a few friends and quite a few enemies who are trying to come in, but he will allow only his friends to enter the door, not his enemies. His friends are love, joy, peace, bliss and so forth. This is the simplest form of meditation.
Question: Will it be easier to meditate if one knows how to concentrate first?
Sri Chinmoy: If one wants to start with concentration, then usually it will be easier for him to meditate. There are three spiritual terms that go together: concentration, meditation and contemplation. Concentration paves the way for meditation. If one knows how to concentrate, then it will be easier for him to meditate. And if one knows how to meditate, then it will be possible for him to contemplate. Concentration is the practice of focusing our attention on a particular subject or object to the complete exclusion of anything else. Our entire mind will be concentrated only. on that particular subject. Nothing else in God’s creation should be allowed to enter into our mind. We will focus all our attention on one particular object.
When our power of concentration becomes strong and vigilant, we can try to meditate. In order to meditate we make our mind calm, quiet and tranquil. We try not to have any thoughts at all. Then, when we are successful in our meditation, we can try to contemplate. Contemplation is the third stage and it is both the most important and the most difficult. The seeker becomes one with his Beloved Supreme on the strength of his proper contemplation. He feels that he and his Lord Supreme exist as one; there is nothing separating the two. They become one and inseparable.
To come back to your question, if one knows how to concentrate, then it will be easier for him to learn how to meditate, although one can learn meditation without practising concentration first. The best thing is to start with concentration. It is like walking up a ladder. The first rung is concentration, the second is meditation and the third and ultimate is contemplation. I would advise the beginner to start with concentration. But if a beginner finds it too difficult even to concentrate, then he should start with japa. Japa means repeating a syllable or a word or a few words over and over again. He can start with ‘peace,’ ‘joy,’ ‘love,’ ‘God’ or any divine word that gives him satisfaction. This will help him considerably if he cannot concentrate right at the very beginning.
Question: Do we really need a spiritual teacher?
Sri Chinmoy: Whatever you want to learn, you will be able to learn faster and better with a teacher. Suppose somebody wants to learn how to sing. Naturally, he will go to a singing teacher. After he has studied under the teacher’s guidance for some time, there comes a time when the student has learned everything. Then he no longer needs the help of a teacher. We need a teacher for everything: singing, dancing, swimming. Meditation also needs to be learned properly, and he who is wise will go to an authority on this subject in order to learn it.
People come to me because they feel that I am familiar with this subject and I can offer them some light, some peace of mind, some inner and outer guidance and assurance. As I said before, books are available in the market about how to concentrate and meditate, but most people need direct guidance if they really want to learn well. People go to school just because they feel the necessity of a teacher to give them direct knowledge and guidance. In the inner life also, if one wants to make fast progress, then one goes to a spiritual Master. I am not the only one; there are a few others on earth. But if one likes my method of teaching or my course of study, then he will come to me. If one likes somebody else’s method, naturally he will go to that other Master. Eventually, my students and the students of other Masters will arrive at the same Goal. All the true spiritual paths lead to the same Goal. The destination is one, although we are walking along many roads.
Question: How many disciples do you have?
Sri Chinmoy: Right now about a thousand students all over the world. These are my actual disciples — those who have outwardly and inwardly accepted me as their spiritual Master. But I also have followers. Followers are those who read my writings and try to get some inspiration and wisdom from my writings. The difference between the followers and the disciples is that the disciples try to follow certain spiritual disciplines regularly. They pray, they concentrate or meditate, they try to follow my advice as sincerely as possible. The followers are not as strict as the disciples. They are also trying to make progress, but in their own way. So altogether I have about a thousand disciples in about fifty Centres all over the world.
Question: I was told you will be going to Australia next month. Why are you going there?
Sri Chinmoy: I have been invited by the disciples in four Centres of mine there to hold meditations and give spiritual talks. I shall be there for two weeks giving talks at various places. For the last four years my disciples in Sydney, Melbourne, Perth and Adelaide have been inviting me to hold meditations, give talks and offer my dedicated service to the Australians. So now I am going at last.
Question: Do you give spiritual talks often?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, very regularly. For the past three weeks I have been speaking at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. I gave a series of seven talks there. Two days ago I gave a talk in Cape Cod. Twice a week I go to the United Nations and also I have centres in Connecticut, New Jersey, Manhattan and Queens. I am occupied every day.
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy, thank you very much for being on the air with us today.
Sri Chinmoy: I offer you my heart’s sincere appreciation and gratitude for having given me the opportunity to serve your listeners.
Published in AUM – Vol. 3, No. 2, February 27, 1976
In the February 18, 1973, Leisure section of the Sunday News, this announcement about the WNEW-FM meditations appears in the column ‘Radio Round up’:
“Each morning at sunrise, the Dave Herman Show on WNEW FM presents a two-minute meditation by Sri Chinmoy, a yogi who conducts bi-weekly meditation services for United Nations delegates.
Background music is played by two members of the Mahavishnu Orchestra — John McLaughlin and his wife, Eve.”
on the national television show Alla Ricerca Dell’arca (In Search of the Ark)
Excerpts from the conversation between Don Antonio Tarzia, General Director of the Italian publishing firm Edizioni Paoline; Venanzio Ciampa, writer and director for Italy’s RAI national television; his father Virgilio Ciampa; and Sri Chinmoy. Don Antonio Tarzia’s questions were translated by Venanzio Ciampa.
Don Antonio Tarzia: We are religious people. It is important for us to be religious and to work for God. On the other hand, I also have to manage a publishing company. I have to be a manager in everyday life and produce very actively.
Sri Chinmoy: God is both the Creator and the creation. He is in Heaven and He is also on earth. In Heaven He is the Creator and on earth He is the creation. But the God who is in Heaven and the God who is on earth are the same Person. When the Saviour Christ said, “I and my Father are one,” Christ was on earth — in the body. But He was inseparably one with His Father in Heaven.
The creation is the manifestation of the Creator. Your publishing company is part of the creation. In this case, God is manifesting His Light through publishing.
Heaven and earth are like the tree and its fruit. We cannot separate the two; they are one.
Don Antonio Tarzia: How do you feel that we can reach out to God?
Sri Chinmoy: There are two main roads. One road is the road of the mind and the other is the road of the heart. Which road do you want me to speak about? Which road do you want to follow?
Don Antonio Tarzia: The heart-road.
Sri Chinmoy: I also like the heart-road. The heart-road is the safest road. We call it the sunlit road. When we are in the heart, we cry. We cry to God to give us love, to give us peace, to give us joy. If our cry is sincere, immediately He gives us what we want. Here the heart is playing the role of a child. When a child cries for milk or a toy, even if his mother is in the other room, immediately she comes running to him. Similarly, if from the bottom of our hearts we soulfully cry to God for His Compassion and Love, immediately He will give them to us. But our cry has to be sincere, the way a child’s cry is sincere.
The heart-road is the road of love. You do not understand English, and I do not understand Italian. But as soon as I saw your eyes, immediately I felt something very pure and very loving in you. And also I feel that you see something in me. So we have been communicating with our hearts. My heart has entered into you and your heart has entered into me.
Virgilio Ciampa: Don Antonio said that some of the terms you use in your philosophy about life and God are very similar to those of St. Paul, but you are not Christian. How is that possible?
Sri Chinmoy: When we are thirsty, we all drink water. But different people call it different things. In Bengali I call it ‘jal’. In Italian it is ‘acqua’ and in Spanish it is ‘agua’. But it is the same thing. If I am thirsty, I will run for ‘jal’. If you are thirsty, you will run for ‘acqua’. If he is thirsty, he will run for ‘agua’. We are running for the same thing, but we are calling it by different names.
Virgilio Ciampa: I totally agree with you. At the end of those two different roads is the same God, the God of everyone, and everyone just speaks different dialects.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, the destination is always the same. Here the destination is water. You are running because you are thirsty, and I am running because I am thirsty. But our destination is the same, and when we reach our destination, our thirst will be quenched.
Venanzio Ciampa: St. Paul talked about becoming Jesus, and you, coming from a completely different background and culture, are also talking about the same thing — only using different words. You both were able to reach the same goal — the bottle of water, or God. Please tell us more about the spiritual message that you are spreading.
Sri Chinmoy: My message is very simple. We are all God’s children. In God’s Heart-Garden there are roses, chrysanthemums and all different kinds of flowers. We are all flowers in God’s Heart-Garden. Every day all of us are blossoming. Because we are in His Heart-Garden, we have beauty and fragrance. He has given us beauty and fragrance so that we can be of service to Him on earth — to God the creation.
Venanzio Ciampa: Thinking of the problems in the world, one has to wonder if we are really making progress.
Sri Chinmoy: Sometimes when we are practising the long jump, we start running and then hesitate a little. So we go back again and take a longer running start. When we come to the board, we say, “Am I going to make the leap? Perhaps I will not be able to cover the distance.” So we go back and take an even longer run. This time we do the jump and cover our distance. But if we had jumped the first time, definitely we would not have been able to cover the distance.
Venanzio Ciampa: Nietzsche said that sometimes the more you dig in profundities, the more bad things you find.
Sri Chinmoy: In India, if you want to get a beautiful lotus, you have to step into the pond because the lotus grows under the water. If you step into the pond, your feet will sink into the mud. Now, what will you do? You will go into the pond, take the lotus and then clean off your feet.
If you want to take a rose from the garden, you cannot just take the flower. You also have to take the stem so that the rose will look beautiful. When you pick the stem, you find thorns. But you can remove the thorns and still keep the stem and the beautiful rose.
Venanzio Ciampa: But how does one have the knowledge to remove those thorns?
Sri Chinmoy: There is a difference between knowledge and wisdom. If you have wisdom, you can do anything. Wisdom does not come from the mind; it comes from the heart and the soul. From the mind comes intellectual reasoning. The mind’s greatest achievement is the intellect. But much deeper than the intellect is wisdom. Real wisdom comes from the soul’s light. Similarly, there is something called will, adamantine will. That will does not come from the mind; it comes from the heart, from the soul.
To human beings, wisdom means having studied the great philosophers or Keats and Byron and Shelley. I come from a poor Indian village. Someone will say, “Oh, he needs wisdom. Let him go to Oxford or Cambridge, and somebody there will give him wisdom.” But that wisdom is no wisdom. It is only jugglery of the mind. Real wisdom is in the heart.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 17
On June 19, 2003, Sri Chinmoy lifted Academy Award-winning actress Helen Hunt at Aspiration Ground in Jamaica, Queens, New York, as part of the ‘Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart’ programme. Almost a decade later, on February 15, 2013, Helen Hunt is interviewed on the ‘Late Show with David Letterman’ and speaks about her extraordinary meeting with Sri Chinmoy. The interview is broadcast to millions around the world.
by K. K. Madhavan Nayak
by Radha Ramachandran
OF all the visionaries and seers who have carried Mother India’s gospel to Western shores, none has transformed America’s image of the traditional guru more profoundly than Sri Chinmoy. Author, poet, composer and artist, Sri Chinmoy has dazzled America with an outpouring of creativity, blazed a new trail at the UN with his twice-weekly meditations for diplomats and, more recently, become well known in the sports world because of his penchant for running marathons.
At the same time, he has avoided the pitfalls that have tarnished so many of our country’s spiritual expatriates. He never charges any fee for his meditation instruction or public lectures. He requires the highest spiritual standards of his disciples, turning away many would-be devotees who fail to make the grade. Moreover, his own disciplined life has won the respect of cynical journalists, artists, university professors and Government officials across America. The prestigious library reference work, Current Biography, calls him “probably the most respected exponent in the West of Bhakti Yoga.”
In Sri Chinmoy’s hands, Bhakti yoga has become a dynamic integration of Eastern and Western ways, for the guru believes that the highest spirituality includes not only inner Self-awakening but also outer God manifestation.
Carrying this philosophy to its logical conclusion, he has become the founder and foremost practitioner of a new 20th-century style yoga which uses the power of spirituality, not only to illumine the consciousness of seekers, but also to reveal and manifest the Divine in the outer world through art, music, poetry, sport and all aspects of life.
Eloquent Testimonial
No dry statement of philosophy can be more convincing than the sheer force of personal example and Sri Chinmoy’s own life serves as an eloquent testimonial to the creative energy of this yoga. During the 18 years he has been living in the US, he has become known as a modern-day “Renaissance Man” of the Western world.
He has written 400 books of spiritual poems, plays, stories, essays and questions-and-answers — including a volume of 843 poems done in 24 hours using yogic powers of concentration. He painted 140,000 works of art, which have been exhibited in a number of museums and galleries in the US and Europe. And he has composed more than 3,000 Bengali and English devotional songs, which makes him one of the most prolific song-writers in the world. His music has come out on several record albums and has been performed at concert recitals throughout North America, Western Europe and Australia, including Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Centre in New York.
“Each painting, each poem, each thing that I undertake is nothing but an expression of my inner cry for more light, more truth, more delight,” he declares.“If one painting of mine inspires a seeker to lead a better or higher life, then I shall feel that I have succeeded.”
Reclining in an easy chair in his unpretentious, two-storey wood-frame home in Queens, New York, his eyes half-closed in meditative calm, Sri Chinmoy gives every appearance of living in a world of endless time. Yet, even as his soft, melodic voice answers a visitor’s questions, on some other level a tempest of energy is working inside him.
Sri Chinmoy calls his works Jharna-Kala or Fountain Art. “Like a fountain, this art flows spontaneously,” he says. “Constantly, something is coming to the fore and giving me infinite inspiration. Sometimes, when I look at my own hands, I don’t believe it. It’s like watching a machine. They are just dancing. It’s not that I am seeing how much I can do. Only the inspiration is just carrying me.”
His Jharna-Kala paintings have won him several art awards and one of them — dealing with a UN theme — was selected by the Government of India for presentation to UNlCEF in honour of the International Year of the Child.
Involvement With UN
Sri Chinmoy’s involvement with the UN dates back almost a decade — to the spring of 1970, when he was first invited to begin conducting meditations for peace for delegates and staff officials. He has also been the inspiration behind a number of colloquia and conferences at the UN which have brought together diplomats, high UN officials and world religious leaders for discussions on world peace. Ambassador Zenon Rossides from Cyprus has said of him: “His work is far more important than all the conferences of the UN. It’s far more important than all the declarations of the UN.”
New York Daily News reporter Tom McMorrow described one of his UN meditation sessions thus: “He ascends the pulpit and chants three times ... After the chant there’s silence: the yogi, in a trance, looks out over the people and, as he gazes into one pair of eyes after the other, there would seem to be a sound in the air, though there is not. Certainly something is there.”
During the 45 minutes or so the meetings last, there is seldom a rustle, or even a cough heard in the audience, and the diplomats and the UN officials seem immersed in the silence. The only movement comes from Sri Chinmoy’s eyes, as occasionally the pupils roll back and disappear behind his upper eyelids, so that all that is visible are two slits of white. At times his mouth may drop open and a tiny air-bubble will form between his lips, for a minute or two, he stops breathing. Then he comes out of his samadhi trance, pranams and the meditation ends.
Such meditations one might expect to find in some secluded spiritual enclave, high in the Himalayas, and not amid the hustle and bustle of modern American life. Those who have “discovered” Sri Chinmoy in America’s urban capital have been, as might be expected, singularly impressed.
Dr A. Alagappan, Secretary of the Hindu Temple Society of North America, commented: “When a person becomes perfect, he wants to shed the benign radiance on others. While India has many holy people who have been able to do this, we in New York are blessed with one person who has been silently and steadfastly doing this. This is Sri Chinmoy.”
L. L. Mehrotra, formerly India’s Consul General based in San Francisco (and Sri Chinmoy’s one-time boss when the latter worked in the Indian Consulate during his early years in America), said of him: “Sri Chinmoy belongs to that stream of thought and sentiment which has shown us The Light for ages ... I know that, even after I and you and everyone is gone, his voice and his message will be with us, for that is the Message Supreme to which I bow.”
The Master Lecturer
Sri Chinmoy’s reputation has spread into the academic community as well. The Master has lectured at over 150 universities in the US, as well as many in Europe and Australia. During a visit to California he was named an honorary visiting scholar at the Pacific School of Religion, a part of the Graduate Theological Seminary in Berkeley, California. And when he presented a complete collection of his works to the Harvard Library, Dean Krister Stendahl of the Harvard Divinity School lauded his writings as a “significant piece in that wonderful puzzle of the totality of human religion.”
From the academic world to the sports world might seem like a long jump, but not for Sri Chinmoy, who excelled in this particular event and was decathlon champion during his teenage years in the Sri Aurobindo Ashram near Pondicherry. Sri Chinmoy sees sports, particularly long-distance running, as a perfect spiritual metaphor. The runner sprinting to the finish-line evokes the image of the spiritual seeker running towards the Supreme Goal; and the athlete’s one-pointed effort to surpass his previous achievements. Sri Chinmoy feels it represents the aspirant’s eternal striving for even greater spiritual perfection. “The real winner,” he says, “is not the one who wins the race, but he who loves to run sleeplessly and breathlessly with God, the Supreme Runner.” The guru has discussed his sports philosophy with such figures as boxing star Muhammad Ali, Olympic triple gold medallist Emil Zatopek and champion marathoner Don Ritchie.
Spiritual Athletics
As might be expected, Sri Chinmoy has encouraged many of his disciples to participate in sports. His Sri Chinmoy Centre has sponsored a number of public races in the US, Canada, Britain and Australia — including two full marathons. The spiritual teacher has also inspired his students to carry out noteworthy athletic events along spiritual themes — such as the famous 9,000-mile “Liberty Torch” relay run across the length and breadth of America to celebrate the country’s 1976 Bicentennial. The runners carried aloft a flaming torch, which was passed from runner to runner to symbolise the rekindling of spiritual values in the US. As a result all of these activities the popular Runner’s World magazine awarded Sri Chinmoy a citation in 1978 for “dedicated service to humanity through the promotion of running.”
Practising what he preaches, Sri Chinmoy is an active sportsman himself, averaging about 70 miles a week of running. In the morning, one can usually find him playing tennis at a local high school, where some hundred of his disciples gather each day before work for sports practice, meditation, and prasad.
It was during his ashram days that Sri Chinmoy developed the habit of sleeping only an hour or two a night, drawing the energy and rejuvenative power he needed from meditation. He entered the Sri Aurobindo Ashram at the age of 12, remaining there for 20 years. During this period he had many deep inner experiences and developed the capacity to enter into Samadhi and communicate with God at will. He remained in Pondicherry until 1964, when an inner command directed him to come to the West.
Quality, Not Quantity
Since then, some 60 Sri Chinmoy Centres have been established across the US, Canada, Puerto Rico, Europe, Australia and Japan. Even so, the Master’s following remains relatively small, since he accepts only those prepared sincerely and wholeheartedly to embrace the spiritual life. For his disciples that means regular morning and evening meditation, a vegetarian diet and abstinence from all drugs alcohol and cigarettes. Chastity is required, except in cases where the disciple is married.
“I’m not interested in collecting thousands of disciples,” he explains, “I’m interested in quality not quantity. When I accept a person as a disciple I take full responsibility for his spiritual life and I make an inner promise that I will take his soul to God. I want only sincere dedicated seekers.”
“There are other gurus and other paths to God,” he continues. “My path is the path of love, devotion and surrender to the Almighty Supreme. First we have to love God. Then we have to devote ourselves to Him alone. Finally comes surrender. This is the last stage. We place our life at God’s Feet and we say: ‘No matter what you want to do with my life, I am ready.’ When we surrender our very existence to God, we become everything that God has and everything that God is.”
To the Western world, with its emphasis on individual freedom, such a philosophy of spiritual surrender is difficult to accept. Whether the West is ready yet for the traditional-style discipline that illumined Indian seekers through the centuries remains to be seen.
But Sri Chinmoy transforms this discipline into a philosophy and lifestyle that Westerners respect and, if any of our modern spiritual teachers will bring America to the highest Vedic realisations, there is a good chance that it will be India’s own Sri Chinmoy.
Published in THE ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY OF INDIA, FEBRUARY 14, 1982
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed on the cable TV programme ‘Father Tom and Religious Leaders’ on Telecare, in Rockville Centre, Long Island, New York.
Listen to the interview...
NEW YORK — India’s departing Ambassador to the U.S., Siddhartha Shankar Ray, and his wife, Maya Devi, received a moving farewell Feb. 13 shortly before returning home.
Tributes from ambassadors and luminaries around the world were read out in a special function hosted by Sri Chinmoy.
“Physically tall, patriotically and culturally taller, politically infinitely taller, self-givingly taller than the tallest: This is our beloved Ambassador Siddhartha Shankar Ray.” This was part of Sri Chinmoy’s soulful appreciation of him.
The event included a performance by Sri Chinmoy's students of several Bengali songs, including special ones the spiritual leader had composed about Ambassador Ray and his wife.
“You have given us so much of your love,” Maya Devi remarked. “I am always very happy when I am amongst you.”
When she and the Ambassador return to India, she said, “I would not like to feel that spiritually we are not as close to you as we are today.”
For Ambassador Ray, “It was a tremendously moving, a tremendously emotional evening.”
“Every time I visit you,” he said, “it is a new kind of joy that comes into me. Maya and I leave refreshed, with new spiritual vigour....”
The Ambassador ended his remarks by teaching his mostly American audience the Bengali way of saying farewell — using a term that affectionately and charmingly expresses the feeling of arriving rather than departing.
“I am not saying goodbye,” he said. “I will tell you Ashi, which means ‘I am coming’, and you will respond, Esho, which means, ‘Yes, come!’”
That wintry February night, in a small hall in New York’s Hunter College, America cried out to India’s beloved elder statesman: “Esho, esho!”
Sri Chinmoy with Ambassador and Mrs. Ray
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25, Mid-December 1995 – March 1996
CORONA, NY — Sri Chinmoy went to Vishva Seva Ashram in Queens on Feb. 12 to inaugurate its new temple.
The Master meditated as the temple priest performed the Shivratri rites, then gave a short talk on Shiva. Afterwards, the Bhajan Singers performed.
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 20, MID-DECEMBER 1990 – MARCH 1991
A half-hour interview with Sri Chinmoy on WCBS-TV’s ‘The Way To Go’ airs in New York, NY, USA. The interview is conducted by Dr. James P. Carse, professor and Chairman of the Religion Department at New York University.
Listen to the interview...
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed in Washington, D.C. by Body, Mind and Spirit magazine during the ‘Heart-to-Heart’ Festival.
Question: In your own words, who are you?
Sri Chinmoy: If anybody asks me who I am, immediately I say I am a Truth-seeker and a God-lover.
Question: Tell me about your weightlifting.
Sri Chinmoy: I believe that we have to be integral. The spirit and the body must go together. If I have peace of mind in my inner life, then I shall not quarrel with you and fight with you. Nations, like individuals, are insecure. If one nation has peace within, then that particular nation is not going to challenge other nations. It is because we do not have an iota of peace that we quarrel with others, we speak ill of others, we find fault with others. Peace of mind gives us joy in boundless measure.
When I lift up these weights, I try to unite both the inner world and the outer world with my inner peace. I am a student of peace. Every day, since my childhood, I have been praying and meditating. From the life of prayer, I get peace and this peace gives me strength. My weightlifting is the manifestation of my inner strength. This is my soulful service that I have been offering to humanity.
Question: You are saying that weightlifting is the manifestation of an inner strength?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. Because of my prayer-life and meditation-life, God, out of His infinite Bounty, has given me inner strength. So this inner strength I am trying to manifest through matter.
Question: How do you lift people?
Sri Chinmoy: With a oneness-heart. I have lifted people from all walks of life to offer my oneness to them. We all belong to one family. In a family, somebody is a doctor, somebody is an engineer, somebody is a football player. But they are all brothers and sisters of the same family. So here also, on the strength of my oneness with people from various fields, I am lifting them up. My sole objective is to be of service to mankind.
Question: How do you feel about the attention that you get? Is that sometimes a hindrance for you?
Sri Chinmoy: No, because I know that I am not the one who is getting the attention. I know that I am not the doer. If somebody offers me love or admiration, I know that it is my Inner Pilot who is receiving it. I am only an instrument.
Question: So it is not Sri Chinmoy?
Sri Chinmoy: It is not Sri Chinmoy. It is the One who, according to my receptivity, according to my capacity, is manifesting Himself in and through me. So if you speak highly of me, I know I am not the one who deserves it, I am not the right person. But there is Someone who has given me the capacity to draw your appreciation and that Person deserves the credit, not me. I am not the doer; I am only an instrument, a channel. So if you appreciate me, this appreciation is going directly to the Source and not to me.
Question: So it is a measure of how successful the Source has been?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, according to my capacity and receptivity. The One who is inspiring me and trying to manifest in and through me I call my Inner Pilot. Your appreciation directly goes to Him.
Question: You have had this special relationship with God since you were a child?
Sri Chinmoy: I have been praying and meditating since the age of four. Now I am 57.
Question: So you have always known?
Sri Chinmoy: I came from a religious family and I was fortunate enough to follow in the footsteps of my brothers and sisters.
Interviewer: Well, you have been very gracious to meet with me and I want to thank you very much for taking the time. I wish you well.
Published in The Upanishads: the Crown of India’s Soul
UNITED NATIONS — Sri Chinmoy joined ambassadors from Israel, Panama and Liberia February 10 in a programme commemorating Abraham Lincoln and the emancipation consciousness.
The Jewish people, who have been fighting for liberation since the time of the ancient Pharaohs, have felt especially attracted to Lincoln, declared Ambassador Soffer of Israel.
They see Lincoln not only as the emancipator of the Negro slave, but also “as a dreamer of peace and as the spokesman of a way of life,” he declared.
Ambassador Illueca of Panama said Third World countries feel that “the symbol of Abraham Lincoln and his emancipation consciousness are a permanent source of inspiration, strength and positive action.”
Ambassador Thomas of Liberia spoke of how Lincoln urged Congress to recognise his nation in 1862, when it was one of the world’s only two black republics.
Lincoln’s own life, he declared, exemplified “the spirit of freedom and justice for all.” Ambassador Young of the U.S. was unable to attend because he was involved in negotiations over South Africa. A representative of the U.S. Mission declared, however, that his “absence is a living proof that America still has that commitment to civil rights, human rights, social rights and freedom of all peoples.”
This programme, which was sponsored by the United Nations Meditation Group, was opened with a short meditation and musical dedication by Sri Chinmoy.
Sri Chinmoy has begun a statewide series of concerts and lectures that will bring him to each of New York’s thirty-seven universities.
The series began Feb. 10 a Columbia University, where the Master spoke on prayer.
“My prayer is a two-way conversation between my heart’s soulful cry and my Lord's blessingful Smile.” he said.
Identifying with the aspiring seeker, he said: “My life is a combination of my unanswered prayer and my unoffered prayers. My unanswered prayers are blessings in disguise .... But it is my unoffered prayers that pain me constantly.”
Published in Anahata Nada, March 1, 1978, Volume 5, Number 2
SURFERS PARADISE, Australia — Alison Streeter, who has swum across the English Channel 40 times — more than anyone else in history — was lifted four times by Sri Chinmoy Feb. 8.
She was the first woman to do a double crossing and the only woman to do a triple crossing.
Alison Streeter, perhaps the world’s greatest long-distance woman swimmer receives an award from Sri Chinmoy after being lifted.
Published in Anahata Nadia, Volume 34, November 2002 – March 2003
In summer 1993 the Bengali “peace philosopher” Sri Chinmoy, was a guest in Mayrhofen, who had already initiated world peace runs and peace meditations too, and who dedicates buildings of nature and of human beings all over the world to the cause of peace: part of it are the Niagara Falls, the Rhine Bridge in Vaduz, Matterhorn, Zugspitze and also the Canadian city Ottawa.
“If we can open the right paths inside, peace can be felt here and now,” the sage from the Far East formulated mysteriously and christened the Zillertalbahn to the name Zillertal Peace Railway.
The painting in the waiting-room, that the artist Toni Krauss painted for this event, shows peace doves below beaming sunshine and cheerful flower clouds, who blow their breath into the funnel of the locomotive, there passengers of different colours, which pushes the train in additions…
* This is a literal translation of the original German text, which is currently unavailable.
* Mayrhofen is in the Zillertal (Ziller river valley) in Austria.
Published in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, February 6th 1997, Circulation 400,000, Insert in Journey Paper
NUSA DUA, Indonesia — Bali’s eight major kings made a pilgrimage to this seaside resort on Feb. 6 to receive the blessings of an Indian spiritual teacher arid be honoured by him.
The assembly of eight Hindu kings, led by Sinoehoen, a Muslim king, came with their wives and children to the Bali Convention Centre to pay their respects to Sri Chinmoy and be lifted into the air by him.
During the event, Sri Chinmoy presented Sinoehoen with the “World-Harmony-Dreamer” Award and offered a concert of prayerful music.
The six-hour program also included performances by the spiritual teacher’s students and performances by members of Sinoehoen’s royal family of a song about Sri Chinmoy, and also a dance.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 35, Mid-November 2003 – March 2004
from World Affairs Center Inc.
Hartford, Connecticut
February 7, 1973
Sri Chinmoy 86-14 Parsons Blvd
Jamaica, N.Y. 11432
Dear Sri Chinmoy:
I want you to know how much we enjoyed having you with us on January 24th. There were many compliments on your program, particularly in the manner in which you conducted an interesting and intellectual subject.
It was a pleasure to work with your group.
Sincerely,
[signed by Miss Belsey Hart
Executive Director]
P.S. You might be interested to know that you were on the 12:00 noon news, Channel 3, Dick Bertel Show, February 6. We are still looking forward to seeing the Channel 30 program.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — The intellectual brilliance of the West opened its heart to the spiritual illumination of the East on Feb. 5, when Harvard University accepted 300 of Sri Chinmoy’s books.
“We seldom receive this many books at one time and have never received them all from one person’s hands,” said Peter Oliver, Harvard Divinity School Librarian. “It is a great gift for our students who are seeking their own path.”
Harvard Divinity School Dean Krister Stendahl told the Master that Harvard’s Center for the Study of World Religions seeks to study “such an understanding of the Ultimate Reality as your paintings and your work and your insight represent.”
Usually, he declared, the Center is limited to studying “the foundation period of religions far back. But the live and contemporary manifestations of insights are usually not part of that total picture.
Commenting on Sri Chinmoy’s paintings, which were on display as part of a three-week Jharna-Kala exhibit at Radcliffe's Hilles Library, Dean Stendahl said: “ ... as I sit in this room, as I see this Fountain-Art of yours, I feel it is beautiful and it might be the beauty of holiness. Therefore, we are very graced.”
Sri Chinmoy told the assemblage, “I am a seeker, and all these writings are expressions of my soulful aspiration. My aspiration cried, cries and forever shall cry for the total embodiment of divinity. Today we are in a temple of divinity. No other school, no other temple is as soulful, as meaningful and as fruitful as this divinity-flooded Divinity School.”
“Your gift [said the Dean] ... seems to me to be another and significant piece in that wonderful puzzle of the totality of human religion. Ultimately, only God can hold the whole thing together.”
Published in Anahata Nada, March 1, 1978, Volume 5, Number 2
January 23rd* (Durban, South Africa). His Majesty King Goodwill Zwelithini, leader of the 8½ million Zulu people of South Africa, addressed Sri Chinmoy at the Peace Concert offered by the Indian born spiritual leader last night at the Durban City Hall. King Goodwill, whose people primarily visit the Peace Concert, are “a blessing to me and my people. He [Sri Chinmoy] is propelled by the spiritual desire to see peace reigning among our people.”
Following the Peace Concert, the King told Chinmoy, “brother, brother, you cannot imagine what you have done for me and for our country! Only a few — not many — men of peace like you we need to bring peace to our country.” The Peace Concert was the first Indian sponsored event ever attended by King Goodwill.
In tribute to the Zulu King, who had flown to Durban from his place in Nongoma for the Peace Concert, Sri Chinmoy’s students sang a song composed by their teacher. “O Pilot-Zenith of your fond Zulu tribe. In your heart’s rainbow-sky, peace promise shall thrive.” This message is especially timely in that King Goodwill will be meeting in Nongoma tomorrow with President Mandela to finalise plans for a peace gathering of all the Zulu people.
Mahatma Gandhi’s granddaughters, Sita and Ela Gandhi, attended the Peace Concert and have become closely connected with Sri Chinmoy. The eldest granddaughter, Sita lovingly and devotedly has accepted Sri Chinmoy’s path. She wants to be a student of Sri Chinmoy’s philosophy and spirituality. Also present at the concert were the Zulu Queen, Prince Sifisco Zulu, Indian High Commissioner to Durban Lata Reddy, Acting Mayor Kamal Panday, and Mr. Obed Mlaba Chairperson of the Durban Executive Council.
Prior to the start of Sri Chinmoy’s peace-filled musical performance, Durban was dedicated as a Sri Chinmoy Metropolitan Area by Mr Mlaba. He stated, “For us, Sri Chinmoy, you represent the power of the heart and the spirit of God within each human being as we strive to bring goodness and peace into our lives.” Just last week the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa was dedicated as a Sri Chinmoy Peace Province.
Following the concert, King Goodwill offered an interview for Radio Zulu which was aired today. During his radio address, the King encouraged all his people to change their ways by becoming more peaceful and to attend Sri Chinmoy’s next Peace Concert.
Earlier this week the Pietermaritzburg City Council unanimously approved the dedication of their city as a Sri Chinmoy Peace City. It was here in 1893 that Mahatma Gandhi was mercilessly treated by the white train authorities and forcibly thrown out of the train on which he was travelling in the first-class section. Now, just over one century later, another messenger of peace has come from India to the same city, which is being dedicated to peace in his name. Here is proof that the world is progressing towards world peace!
* The Peace Concert was held on January 23rd, not January 24th as initially reported.
Published in Asia Online, a weekly publication from New York, No. 108, Vol. II. Feb 05 – Feb 11, 1996
Sri Chinmoy meditates at a press conference for the first-ever global Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run, at the UN Plaza Hotel in New York. Seated are, Olympic track and field champion Sudarhota Carl Lewis (left) and the Executive Director of the Peace Run Shambhu Neil Vineberg.
The first ‘Sunrise Meditation’ recorded by Sri Chinmoy is broadcast on the Dave Herman Show on WNEW Radio in New York at 7:10 a.m. During the two-minute segment, Sri Chinmoy does a brief reading and the background music is by Mahavishnu John McLaughlin. The show is scheduled to be broadcast every weekday morning at sunrise.
By GEORGE DUGAN
More than 800 New Yorkers sought inner peace yesterday at a series of three meditation sessions conducted by Sri Chinmoy, the Indian mystic and guru, at All Angels’ Episcopal Church, West End Avenue and 81st Street.
Most of the meditators were students or young adults, many of whom sat with hands clasped as in prayer through the sessions that ran from 6 A.M. to 9 A.M., 10 A.M. to noon and 2 to 4 P.M.
Clad in a blue dhoti, or robe, and sitting cross-legged on a throne-like chair covered with white satin, the guru appeared to be in a trance-like state, relieved only by the flicker of his eyes and an occasional, almost beatific smile.
All of the sessions began with about 20 minutes of unbroken silence as Sri Chinmoy faced his audience and sought to move from one level of consciousness to another.
His only words were to ask groups of followers to join in short musical interludes that served as a devout addition to the silence.
Steve Hein, a young corporation executive and a disciple of Sri Chinmoy for seven years, emphasized that most of the guru’s followers found in meditation an extension of their own religious beliefs.
“There are Jews, Protestants and Roman Catholics here today who have found a greater appreciation of their separate faiths through meditation,” he said. “It's like a direct approach to God.”
The guru was born in Bengal, India, 1n 1931. He reportedly had a number of deep, mystical experiences and at the age of 12 achieved, in Mr. Hein’s words, “a state of conscious union with God.” Sri Chinmoy came to the west in 1964 and built up his spiritual meditation movement in some 60 cities over the world.
His “disciples” — distinct from interested followers — number about 1,000 and serve without pay. Most of the movement’s expenses are met through the sale of the guru’s 260 books of spiritual poetry, lectures, essays, articles and plays.
Sri Chinmoy is director of the United Nations Meditation Group, conducts weekly sessions at the U.N., and has delivered a number of lectures there as part of the Dag Hammarskjold Series.
Sri Chinmoy conducting a meditation session at All Angels’ Episcopal Church on West End Avenue.
Published in The New York Times, February 1, 1976
Siddhartha Shankar Ray
On November 17, 1995, 9,000 peace-hungry American hearts came together in Washington, DC, for a signal event: the Peace Concert by renowned spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy, one of fifty such concerts offered by the international peace ambassador in honour of the fiftieth anniversary of the United Nations. Shri Siddhartha Shankar Ray, Indian Ambassador to the United States, opened the concert with the following speech:
How does one introduce a person who has written 50,000 poems and over 1,100 books — you have poetry, you have prose, you have essays, you have stories, you have plays. A person who has delivered more than 850 lectures, mostly on international peace, 200 of them at universities worldwide. A person who has composed 13,000 songs. A person who has painted more than 150,000 acrylics and watercolours. A person who has drawn pen sketches of four million birds in the span of only four years. A person who has participated in twenty-one marathon races for peace, and two hundred road races for the same purpose. A person who has lifted with his right arm, at the age of fifty-five, 7,063 lbs. A person who can play over a hundred different musical instruments, including the harmonium, esraj, flute, cello, piano, and organ.
Mahatma Gandhi once said, “Not to believe in the possibility of permanent peace is to disbelieve in the Godliness of the human future.” Sri Chinmoy is one of those rare individuals who not only believes in the possibility of global peace, but is actually working to achieve this goal.
Sri Chinmoy is all this and much more. He is indeed a multi-faceted genius, a· multi-splendoured personality, and also a poet, artist, musician, athlete, as well as a spiritual guide. He is an embodiment of Rabindranath Tagore’s immortal concept of the universal man. For over thirty years Sri Chinmoy has tirelessly dedicated his life to the pursuit of world peace and to the fulfilment of the unlimited potential of the human spirit.
Several honours have been bestowed on him by world leaders, but he is totally unmoved by all that. Nothing can really influence him. He has been named “The Twentieth Century’s First Global Man” and has been awarded the Nehru Medallion by UNESCO; the Gandhi Peace Award by the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan; Matsunaga Institute for Peace Award by the University of Hawaii; Gold Medal in Literature by the International Academy of Lutece in Paris; and the Order of Balboa in the Rank of the Grand Cross, Panama’s highest award.
Sri Chinmoy is a global ambassador of peace who has been serving the ideals and vision of the United Nations for more than a quarter of a century. He has offered more than 400 Peace Concerts and public meditations worldwide. Over 800 significant landmarks in fifty nations — including Niagara Falls, the Matterhorn, and Lake Baikal — have been dedicated as Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossoms as daily reminders of our need for peace.
Sri Chinmoy’s name, in fact, has become synonymous with universal harmony, global understanding and world peace. It is indeed a great privilege for us to participate in the Peace Concert tonight, dedicated to the fiftieth anniversary of the United Nations.
India, the land of his birth, has had several seers and sages throughout its thousands and thousands of years of history, who tried to put man in touch with his inner reality and offered nourishment for the soul. Sri Chinmoy belongs to the same tradition. His music and his songs are timeless and universal. The songs radiate their own particular emotional quality which transcends the barriers of geography and culture, religion and race.
As a commentator has written about Sri Chinmoy, “Here it is no longer a question of Japan, India or Islam. These songs come from Heaven itself. But there is no feeling of distance, for these songs remind us that this Heaven is inside ourselves.”
Indeed, the thousands of years of our spiritual history tell us to lift up our consciousness beyond time and space and enter the eternal and the universal. The music and melodies of Sri Chinmoy do just that. So let us now join Sri Chinmoy and become privy to a cosmic concert which will raise us from the individual state to the universal, and bring us all to the level of a common humanity, so that the world indeed becomes our family — Vasudaiva Kutumbakam.
Centuries ago, one of the spiritual seers said, “Man is the greatest truth. There is no truth greater than man.” Another seer said, “There is no difference between man and man, because God resides in every man.” Sri Chinmoy, in fact, is trying to tell all of us, all over the world, every nation, every country, what the Yajur Veda has tried to tell us, and we have to remember that, and take notice of Sri Chinmoy’s earnest efforts to bring a sense of universal brotherhood, universal love, universal compassion, and world peace.
The Yajur Veda says, “O strong One, make me strong. May all the living beings look on me with the eye of a mitra — a friend or brother. May I look on all living beings with the eye of a friend. May we all look on one another with the eye of a friend, brother, mitra.”
That is the message. And this will be the message of the cosmic concert that we shall be all listening to today under the able guidance and inspiration of Sri Chinmoy.
Sri Chinmoy’s Response
Our beloved Ambassador, Mother India's absolutely supreme Message-Light in the United States of America, to you I bow and bow. Out of your heart’s boundless bounty, you have bestowed your choicest blessings upon my aspiration-heart and dedication-life. This blessing of yours I shall treasure in the inmost recesses of my gratitude-heart.
Published in BHAVAN’S JOURNAL, Vol. 42 No. 21, Pages 61-63, January 31, 1996
Bob Dylan recites Sri Chinmoy’s poem ‘The Lock and the Key’ on the weekly one-hour satellite radio show, Theme Time Radio Hour, which he hosts in the USA.
Doubt is the lock,
Faith is the key.
Hate is the lock,
Love is the key.
Body is the lock,
Soul is the key.
Ignorance is the lock,
Light is the key.
God’s Heart has no lock,
Man’s mind has no key.
Published in The Dance of Life, part 2
Translated from Sinhala by Mrs. Darshanika Guruge
Dr. Ananda Guruge, the former Sri Lankan Ambassador to the USA, an eminent Buddhist scholar, was awarded the U Thant Peace Award on January 3rd, 1997 at Takamatsu, Japan.
Sri Chinmoy, who was on a seven-week peace mission in Japan, presented this peace award to Dr. Guruge. This peace award, which is presented to a person or organization, engaged in efforts in favour of World Peace has among its previous recipients the former Russian President Mikhail Gorbachev, Mother Theresa, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and South African President Nelson Mandela.
During the award ceremony, Sri Chinmoy declared that it was most appropriate to present this peace award in a country where there were many Buddhist Pagodas with Lord Buddha's holy relics.
At the same time, he introduced U Thant and Dr. Guruge as two distinguished brothers, two scholars of the highest level, role-models and clarion-callers of World Peace.
In his acceptance speech, Dr. Guruge mentioned that U Thant, the former UN Secretary-General was a great hero and he will treasure the award as one of the most precious momentoes that he has ever received in his lifetime.
After the Award Ceremony, Sri Chinmoy was invited to present a Peace Concert in front of the giant Kamakura Buddha statue. He used both eastern and western musical instruments for this concert.
Published in the Sri Lankan newspaper, Dinamina, January 30, 1997
Published in the daily Brazilian newspaper ‘Correio Braziliense’, page 25, 27 January 2000
Translation:
Brasilia, Federal District
Thursday, January 27, 2000
The Temple of Good Will, TGW — the most visited monument in the federal capital, located at Block 915 Sul — was chosen as the end point of the Peace Run that honoured the 500th anniversary of the discovery of Brazil, promoted by the Sri Chinmoy Centre, an organisation linked to the United Nations.
In Brazil, the run visited several cities in the country such as Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Curitiba and Foz do Iguaçu, covering 497 km.
In Brasilia, the remaining three kilometres were completed, on the morning of the 25th. The flame of the Torch of Peace, carried during the 500 km run, was passed on to the Sacred Pyre of the Ecumenical Fraternity, located at the entrance to the TGW Temple, in a special ceremony that was attended by various authorities and the people.
For the organiser of the event, Sanjay Rawal, “the TGW is the symbol of Peace, not just the unity and love for humanity.” Rawal said he chose the TGW to crown the race when he was there recently: “We went into the Temple and at the time we agreed that there was no better place.”
Olympic champion Joaquim Cruz arrives at the Temple of Good Will, carrying the Torch of Peace, accompanied by hundreds of people, including children and adults.
He Offers ‘Transcendental Peace’
BY TINA FERGUSON
The smell of burning incense fills the air, the light of flickering candles illuminates the darkness and the eerie stillness is broken only by the soft footsteps of Sri Chinmoy as he moves among his followers “bringing down transcendental peace.”
Chinmoy is a Far Eastern yogi, more commonly known to the Western world as a guru.
But, while such notables as the Beatles and Mia Farrow traipse off to India to seek salvation from the Western stress, Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose brought his “path toward God realization” to Long Island.
“The Supreme commanded me to come to the West to help the sincere seekers serve the Supreme in humanity,” the soft-spoken guru explained as he sat in “lotus position,” his eyes half-closed, in his Aum Center at Jamaica.
How does the “sincere seeker” serve the Supreme?
“Through the path of meditation, love, devotion and surrender — the way God wants us to,” the guru said.
CHINMOY’S PRETTY little white-frame house looks like any of the well-kept homes in the Jamaica Hills area.
But, while the exterior is typical, what takes place inside the Aum Center is indeed strange — to the Western world. Twice a week Chinmoy’s disciples gather at the center for silent meditation, lectures, blessings and private consultations.
A Thursday night visitor is instantly struck by the almost sleepy peacefulness that prevails as 30 men and women, some in “lotus position” on the living room floor, others seated upright on card chairs in the adjacent dining room, enter into a “deep plane of consciousness.”
No heads pop up, no eyes search a stranger as he walks among the “sincere seekers” to find an empty seat. He is awed by the serenity and dares not creak his chair lest the spell be broken.
He smells the incense. He looks around the room.
THE WALLPAPER is a non-descript leaf pattern. There is little furniture, only the card chairs, a big gold brocade chair and a few tables with candles, flowers and a photograph of Chinmoy in “highest spiritual form.”
His eyes scan the crowd. They rest upon a young girl in pink leotards sitting cross-legged, a bearded man in his early 20s, a stocky middle-age woman with her head between her knees, an elderly gentleman nattily dressed.
An hour passes unnoticed before a word is spoken ...THE FIRST SOUND is the barely audible voice of Chinmoy. Seated in “lotus position,” his hands above his head “embodying divine compassion,” the guru whispers: “I am bringing down [unconditional] peace, love and bliss.”
The stillness, more strange, returns ...
A song to the Supreme, a Sanskrit chant and a few announcements conclude the session.
Sri Chinmoy, 37, came to the U. S. almost five years ago. He had spent the preceding 20 years in a “spiritual community” in India.
When he first arrived in the U. S., Chinmoy worked for the consulate general of India. At the same time he set up his first Aum Center in a walk-up apartment in Manhattan’s Upper East Side. His disciples bought him the Jamaica Hills house last July.
“Those who support me take responsibility for my physical needs as I take care of their inner needs,” Chinmoy said, stressing there is no fee for his “inspiration.”
CHINMOY THEN WENT on to discuss his discipline.
“It’s not a religion, but a form of spirituality that leads to God-realization. It transcends religion,” he said.
The “lotus position,” he explained, is the most important posture of spiritual discipline in yoga.”
The flower, according to the yogi, stands for “purity which enters into us in the form of fragrance conveying our love.” The incense signifies “aspiration — we get inspiration to aspire to the highest.” And, he continued, the flame “illuminates darkness into light, imperfection into perfection and obstruction into immediate help.”
Chinmoy also explained the meaning of AUM: “an original sound which stands for God in three aspects — the creator, the preserver and the transformer.”
Chinmoy has close to 65 devoted followers who come to the Jamaica center regularly — from as far away as Philadelphia and Mahopac, Although he spends most of his time in Jamaica, the guru also visits his disciples in Miami, the West Indies, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
WHAT KIND OF people are Chinmoy’s followers?
“All types but mostly middle-age,” the guru responded. And, interestingly, he said, they are of all religions.
“I do not accept everyone as a student,” he explained. “I make the decision on the strength of their inner wisdom.”
For example, as a rule he does not accept alcoholics, drug addicts, sexual perverts or hippies.
“I feel it is like a contagious disease,” he said.
How do Chinmoy’s followers feel about their guru?
“I was completely relieved to find there was something true in the world,” an Astoria mother, who is also a biology researcher, described her first reaction to Chinmoy.
SHE ADMITTED SHE had been “very wary of this kind or off-beat spiritual group.” The 40-year-old mother of two, is separated from her second husband. She said she had been “very disillusioned” before she met the guru.
“The future was black. It seemed like people were going down hill,” she continued, slowly. “Now,” she said, “I have the feeling there is a stability and security in the world. People aren’t just rushing around blindly in the dark.
“One of the most important things about guru,” she went on deliberately, “is that although he’s concerned with spiritual matters, he is also concerned with living in the world. Guru’s philosophy is completely balanced. He has clairvoyant powers.
“Whatever he tells you actually works,” she emphasized, explaining that her financial position has improved “as guru said it would,” and she has found an apartment “just as guru said.”
“HE’S NEVER MADE a mistake as far as I’m concerned,” said an enthusiastic 35-year-old salesman from Mahopac. He claims his job has improved and he has resolved some marital problems since he joined Chinmoy and his followers nine months ago.
“This has produced an awareness I never had before — an awareness of what one is rather than what one could do, he said.
The Westchester resident, who says he attends Lutheran church regularly with his wife and three children, admitted he was “hesitant in the beginning.” But, he quickly added, “On seeing him for the first time, it was like meeting an old friend again.”
Chinmoy speaks of “love, devotion, and surrender to the Supreme.” But his disciples, who view him as the “Supreme messenger” talk of “love, devotion and surrender” to their guru as seen in the few lines from a poem written to Chinmoy:
There you stand
Like a torch
That is always burning
For all that looks
And turns to thee
Transcending the form
Perceive
The CHRlST in you ...
Left: Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose, in “lotus position,” his eyes half-closed, joins his disciples in silent meditation at their Aum Center, Jamaica Hills.
Right: His hands in prayer position, “embodying divine love and aspiration,” Sri Chinmoy brings down “transcendental peace, love and bliss” for his followers during a Thursday night session at the Aum Center. On the table to the right is a picture of the guru “in highest spiritual form.”
Published in the Long Island Press, page 34, Sunday, January 26, 1969

Sri Chinmoy is interviewed on ‘The Steve Powers Show’ on WMCA-AM Radio in New York.
Listen to the interview...
broadcast on the Steve Powers Show, WMCA-AM Radio in New York City
Steve Powers: I’d like to introduce you to a special guest. His name is Sri Chinmoy. I welcome you, Sri Chinmoy. My first question is: When did you feel that you wanted to devote your life to spirituality?
Sri Chinmoy: When I was quite young, I felt deep within me an inner urge to realise God and to be of service to God.
Steve Powers: Do you think that is in every person?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, it is within every person, but one has to cultivate this reality. It is like a muscle. If you take exercise, then you develop the muscle.
Steve Powers: Why is that not more natural to us? Shouldn’t that just come naturally?
Sri Chinmoy: It comes naturally, but the difficulty is that we have been wallowing in the pleasures of ignorance for millennia. Then there comes a time when we start walking along the right path. Once we are well established in our path, it becomes normal and spontaneous.
Steve Powers: Why do we have so many problems finding that path? Especially in our society today, people are awfully confused. People do not know which way to go, what to believe in, what not to believe in, what is the truth, what is not the truth, what is good and what is evil. And there is such tremendous input into our minds of new ideas that it’s difficult for us to know what is good and what is not.
Sri Chinmoy: Unfortunately, most people are living in the mind. In the mind, the question of good and bad thoughts, divine and undivine thoughts, plays a considerable role. But if we live in the heart where we find oneness and identification, then we go beyond duality. We suffer from confusion and live in confusion because we live most of the time in the mind — the doubting mind, suspicious mind, intellectual mind, sophisticated mind. If we can live in the heart — the loving heart, the aspiring heart, the oneness-heart — then this confusion will not arise.
Steve Powers: You are not an anti-intellectual as such, are you? You do believe in the intellect?
Sri Chinmoy: I do believe in the intellect. I have tremendous faith in the intellect. But at the present time, many intellectuals criticise feelings, inner feelings. Most intellectuals adopt a snobbish attitude. It is not that I am saying that intellectuals are bad or the intellect is very bad, no. But right now the intellect does not care for the light that illumines the world. Those who live in the intellect are satisfied with what they feel they have, and what they feel they have is a superior sense of reality. At times they look down upon those who live in the heart and who feel the necessity of the heart. But if the intellectuals feel the necessity of the light that we see in abundant measure in the heart and if they want to embrace that light, then we feel that they are doing the right thing. For the divine light has to play its role inside the intellect.
Steve Powers: Many people get up in the morning, swallow a quick breakfast, run out of the house and go to their subway, get to work and get completely involved with everyday survival. And before the end of the day it’s pretty tough to sit back and take a spiritual view of what’s going on because you have to go out there and hustle. You have to earn a living. Is there a way of integrating the spiritual life into what we call the economic life?
Sri Chinmoy: Our philosophy is the philosophy of wisdom: first things first. Most human beings are wanting in peace, peace of mind. They enter into the hustle and bustle of life right in the morning, and during the whole day they do not have even an iota of peace. We feel that if we can do first things first we are being wise. Early in the morning, if we can pray to God for at least a few minutes, that means we are doing first things first.
We feel it is money-power, material wealth, that will give us satisfaction. But it is not material power; it is the inner power, spiritual power, that gives us real satisfaction. If God the Almighty Father is satisfied with us, if He is pleased with us, then He will grant us peace of mind. And once we have peace of mind, no matter where we go and what activities we enter into, still we feel a sense of satisfaction. Right now satisfaction is a far cry. But early in the morning if we pray to God and meditate on God for a few minutes, then we get peace of mind to some extent. And this peace of mind is undoubtedly true satisfaction in life.
Steve Powers: Do you believe that God provides?
Sri Chinmoy: God does provide. He is the Creator and He is the creation. How can you separate the Creator from the creation? When you write a poem or when you compose a song, you feel your identification and oneness with the creation itself. God has created us, so how can He separate us from His own reality?
Steve Power: Now, let us go to our phones. Good morning, you are live on WMCA.
Caller: When I choose a particular Guru, should I look at him as a person or should I try to see him as just a pure channel of God?
Sri Chinmoy: If you have a teacher, then it is best for you to look at the teacher as a channel, as an instrument of God. You are an instrument of God and your teacher is also an instrument of God. But the difference is that the teacher has become a conscious instrument of God whereas right now you are an unconscious instrument of God. So by listening to the teacher, you will eventually become a conscious instrument of God, as the teacher is right now.
Steve Powers: When you say, Sri Chinmoy, that someone should look at his Guru as an instrument of God, are you saying that he should accept whatever the Guru tells him without question?
Sri Chinmoy: It entirely depends on his faith. If he has implicit faith in the Master and if he feels that the Master is really sincere, then it is advisable to listen to the Master all the time. But I don’t want him to make a mistake, a blunder, by blindly following the teacher when he does not have implicit faith in him.
Caller: If you learn peace and serenity from a Guru, you may have peace and serenity in your own mind and heart, but what do you do about people in the street who are not the same way?
Sri Chinmoy: If I practise spirituality, then I get peace of mind; and if you practice spirituality, then you get peace of mind. If he practices spirituality, then he gets peace of mind. So in this way the number increases. Today you get peace of mind, tomorrow your friends, your relatives, your acquaintances get peace of mind. Again, we believe in vibrations. When we see a spiritual person, a seeker or a saint, immediately we feel a kind of inner purity inside him and we get inspiration from deep within to lead a better life ourselves. Then, we also believe in the theory that birds of a feather flock together. If we become sincere and spiritual, then we shall be mixing with other spiritual and sincere people. In this way we can increase the number of good people here on earth.
Caller: How do you know whether you are speaking to God or just speaking to yourself and saying it’s God?
Sri Chinmoy: Satisfaction is the only thing that you want, that he wants, that I want. Satisfaction is of paramount importance. Now, I have eaten a mango. If I am satisfied, then it is more than enough for me. If you ask, “How do you know that you have eaten a mango?” then my answer will be: “If you want to see, then next time I am going to eat, you can be my guest. I will invite you to be with me and see for yourself whether I am eating the mango or whether I am fooling myself or fooling you.”
Steve Powers: In other words, experience it in part yourself?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. If you want a history professor to teach you history, then you have to come and sit in his class. Also, you have to have some basic knowledge about history. Only then will the professor be able to teach you. I am a spiritual teacher. If somebody comes and says, “How do you know that you have realised God?” then I will ask that person to come to me with the basic knowledge, the basic requisites of sincerity and purity. You come to me with sincerity and purity in a meditative mood for a few minutes, and I shall make you feel whether what I am saying is true or not.
Steve Powers: I think one of the callers was asking, in effect: If I become sensitive and mellow and spiritual, will I not get eaten up on the street by the sharks? Do you know what I mean by that?
Sri Chinmoy: I know. If I am one with you, then how can you destroy me? Just because I am not one with you, you can do some harm to me. Oneness is strength. When we identify ourselves with a higher reality, how can we be destroyed? How can we be devoured? A child identifies himself with his father. The father is strong; he is a man of knowledge. The child feels that nothing will harm him because his father is there. On the strength of his oneness with his father, the child feels he is quite safe; he can go anywhere he wants to because he has a father with wisdom, strength, capacity. So here also, if one practises spirituality, then one is consciously identifying oneself with the highest omnipotent Power. So how can we be devoured in the street? Identification solves all our problems. If we identify ourselves with a higher Source, a higher Reality, we have to know that this higher Reality definitely has enormous power, boundless power.
Steve Powers: One of the problems I think people have is that even if they pray and meditate or if they just try to be good, when they go out into the world they find there are people there just waiting to rip them off. They see no justice.
Sri Chinmoy: There is justice, but we do not know what God’s Justice is, or how it operates. Again, God’s Justice and His Compassion are inseparable. Good people and spiritual people can pray and meditate for divine protection, and also to illumine mankind. If we are assailed by undivine people when we go out, we can easily pray in the morning not only for our own protection, but also for the illumination of unlit people. If we can sincerely pray for the transformation of the undivine people in the world, then this world of darkness and chaos cannot remain as it is.
Steve Powers: You are telling me we can transform humanity as the direct result of prayer?
Sri Chinmoy: Prayer and meditation can solve all our problems. But we cannot expect immediate or overnight results. Everything takes time.
Steve Powers: But don’t you think people are living in very difficult circumstances who do pray, and then watch their children fall prey to drugs and crime and all sorts of abuses in our society?
Sri Chinmoy: Unfortunately, many people feel that this is their only life. Some people feel that this incarnation is the first and last. But we believe in reincarnation. There is a Sanskrit word, karma, the law of action and reaction. Who knows what we or our children did in our previous incarnations? Now we are totally oblivious of these former lives. Sometimes we do something wrong and only after a few years do we pay the penalty. But we do not realise that we may also have to pay the penalty for things we did wrong in previous lives. That is how God’s Justice works.
Caller: I was brought up in my daily life to ask God to help me with the things that I wanted out of life. But I find that I don’t have any of the things I wanted, and now God is asking me to do things for Him rather than to expect things from Him.
Sri Chinmoy: God will never demand from us more than we can offer Him. We are His beloved children. The mother will not place a heavy load on the shoulders of a small child. Even an ordinary earthly mother knows how much a child can carry. If the mother sees that the load is too much for the child, then she will not ask him to carry it. God is our eternal Father and Mother. He is everything to us. He will not demand of us something we cannot do. God is not imposing on you. God does not impose. Either you are making yourself feel that God expects something from you, or you are making yourself feel that you do not have the capacity to fulfil His expectations.
Caller: I have tried for several years to become a more spiritual person in my own way, with very little knowledge of it. I had one or two experiences which have frightened me. I don’t understand them and yet I believe in them. I would like to ask Sri Chinmoy how I could continue to further my knowledge and develop myself so that I could begin to experience more.
Sri Chinmoy: It is a matter of sincerity — how sincerely, how earnestly and how desperately you need to go beyond the experiences that you have already had. If you continue practising spirituality, which you have been doing for a number of years, then I assure you that you will make progress. It is a matter of regular practice. You have to practise regularly, soulfully and devotedly what you have been doing it is your regular practice that eventually will give you higher and deeper satisfaction.
Steve Powers: Sri Chinmoy, I know people who are most kind and gentle and yet have no belief in God. They seem to be fine human beings even though they have no interest in spirituality. From your point of view, do they need realisation of what you are talking about?
Sri Chinmoy: From my point of view, they do need realisation. They are kind, they are good, they are sympathetic, they are sincere, they are pure, they have magnanimous hearts. These are the divine qualities they have got from the highest Source. But this is not enough. These things do not and cannot complete our human illumination. For our total illumination, we need conscious and constant oneness with the highest Source.
Caller: I was trying to give some healing to my father who was not too well, and I felt some energy moving in my hands. Am I right to feel that this and other kinds of experiences that I’ve had may be coming from God?
Steve Powers: You are asking about healing? I guess first we have to establish whether you believe that there is a force of healing.
Sri Chinmoy: I do believe in the force of healing.
Steve Powers: And the source of the force?
Sri Chinmoy: The source of the force is God, the all-Good. God is omnipotent; again, He is all Love. So it is from His Love that the healing power comes into existence.
Steve Powers: If there is a healing power, why do we need specific methods in order to heal? In other words, let’s assume that God is the Source and He is capable of healing whomever He wishes. Why do certain people feel that they have to go through a number of incantations, wave the hand over the disturbed area four times to the right, three times to the left and so on? Why these systems?
Sri Chinmoy: It is a matter of faith. Some people feel that if they do particular things, then someone will be cured, while others feel it is not necessary. You are dealing with individual faith. Some people use incantations in order to reach a higher state of consciousness, while others feel it is all within them, so it is necessary only to pray and meditate. You pray to God to give you the capacity to please Him in His own Way, and God will do the rest.
If I pray to God for His own fulfilment in and through my life, naturally He will do what is best for me. Some people pray to God, “God, grant me this. If I have this, then only will I be able to become a good instrument of Yours. I am now suffering from a headache and stomach upset. If You cure me, I will be able to have a good meditation.” But others say, “No, I wish to please You in Your own Way. If it is Your Will that today I do not meditate, if You have something else for me to do, if You want to give me an experience of suffering, then this is best for me. I do not know what is best for me. What is best for me only You know.”
Caller: I have intellectual pursuits, but I do believe in a very, very deep spiritual life and I have become much more of what I would call a human being. But the more you become that, the more you are eaten, as you said before, by the sharks, by the life around you. What is to be done?
Steve Powers: That’s a very important question in our society. This woman feels that the more she allows herself to become sensitive, the more pain she feels and the more vulnerable she is to the sharks who seem to be constantly circling her.
Sri Chinmoy: I sympathise with her, I sympathise with you. But I wish to say that sometimes we see a dark tunnel before we see sunlight. Before dawn, the hour is the darkest. Right now we are experiencing the world as a harsh reality. The world is torturing us. We are trying to be good, kind, sympathetic, spiritual in every possible way, but in return we are being tortured by humanity. But we have to continue in our faith that God is all Power and that He is going to have a perfect creation. If we have faith in our own gradual perfection, then we will have the same kind of feeling about others. Right now if I look at myself and see what I am, as compared to what I was ten years ago, I would definitely notice an improvement. Ten years ago I was not, let us say, as divine as I am now. Ten years ago I was also, let us say, undivine. But I cried and I tried and my Lord was pleased with me, so He has granted me some light, some peace, some divine qualities. That’s why today I have become a better human being. So if I can make progress, I feel that others can also make the same progress. Today they are undivine, but tomorrow, like me, they can become divine. Not what one is right now, but what one will eventually become is what is most important. So these people who are now a threat to us need not and cannot remain a threat all the time because it is God’s Will that we make progress.
Caller: If God is all-loving, why does He permit suffering?
Sri Chinmoy: ‘Suffering’ is a term we see in the dictionary. When we suffer, we feel tremendous pain inside us; there is no joy inside us. But I wish to say that suffering is a state of consciousness. When we practise spirituality and yoga, we feel that this suffering is nothing but an experience. And when we dive deep within, we feel it is not we who are having this experience of suffering; it is God Himself. He is the Creator; He is the creation. He is the Doer; He is the action itself. So the more we identify ourselves with the Source, the more we feel that what we call suffering is not suffering at all. It is an experience that God Himself is having in and through us for the fulfilment of His infinite Vision. I call it suffering, you call it suffering, but God does not call it suffering. He calls it an experience. It is a state of His own infinite Consciousness.
Steve Powers: Nonetheless, the person who is suffering, in the common sense of the word, is in pain.
Sri Chinmoy: He is in pain because he has identified with the earth-reality. But if he identifies with God, then the suffering itself will be turned into delight.
Steve Powers: If I drop a hammer on your foot, will you feel suffering or will you feel delight?
Sri Chinmoy: If I remain in an ordinary consciousness, then I will feel it as suffering. But if I am in a divine consciousness, then either I will take it as delight or I will take it as an experience of God in and through me. At the age of eight or nine I had a serious operation. I told the doctor I would like to watch the operation. The doctor said it was a serious operation, but I said, “No!” Right before the operation I put a very concentrated force on it, and during the operation itself I was smiling at the doctor. The doctor was horrified. On the strength of our concentrative power, we can transform suffering into delight itself if it is God’s Will. And again, if we want to experience the suffering and take it as an experience, we can do this. But if we do not transform suffering into delight, and if we do not take it as an experience of God in and through us, then it will hurt us deeply.
Caller: I recently made a decision to change my lifestyle and let my family and friends know I was living a spiritual life. Instantly I was besieged with a barrage of complaints and criticisms.
Steve Powers: What you are talking about is the reaction of the people around you to your spirituality. I think that when people try to live a more spiritual life, there is a negative reaction from the people around them, who say such things as, “What, are you out of your mind?”
Sri Chinmoy: It is a matter of choice. If I really want God and if I really feel that my goal is situated to the north, then I shall walk to the north, no matter what others say. Others have not given me satisfaction, but now I feel that there is something or someone else that will be able to give me satisfaction. Those who are criticising you in no way have given you satisfaction. Now you are looking for satisfaction deep within by praying and meditating. If they criticise you, if they ridicule you, you must not pay any attention to them. In this world there will always be people to criticise us, and again, there will be people to sympathise with us and inspire us. So the best thing is to know what you want. If you want satisfaction, then you walk along the road of prayer and meditation.
Caller: I had a deeper study of religion for about seven years, which gave me a closer relationship to God. I tried to see the good in everyone around me, always to see them as God, as spiritual beings, as good children. At this time I lost a son in an accident. How am I supposed to accept this in my life? Is it God’s plan, or is this my reward for being good?
Sri Chinmoy: If we really sincerely pray to God, then we develop a specific quality within us of oneness with God. Eventually, we develop the capacity to say soulfully and sincerely, “Let Thy Will be done.” We ultimately feel that it is for a necessary experience that we have had a catastrophe in the family. After all, God loves the child whom we have lost infinitely more than we do. When we love God, we realise that His capacity for Love is infinitely greater than ours. You are God’s child, and the son whom you have lost is also God’s child. The Supreme Father always knows what is best for each individual.
Steve Powers: But don’t you still suffer the loss on a human level?
Sri Chinmoy: We do not suffer very much if our identification and oneness with God is complete. On the strength of our oneness we shall feel that for a few years God gave us another person to stay with us, and now he is needed somewhere else. We will suffer very little if our oneness is complete. But if we have established only a little oneness with God, then we shall suffer miserably on the human level.
Published in Truth’s Fountain-Melody
by Kamalakanta Nieves
Mérida, Mexico
Friday, January 23, 1998
In the meeting at Los Pinos, Sri Chinmoy received the ‘Corazón de Oro’ (Heart of Gold) Award from the Society of Authors and Music Composers. — A performance by his students of songs composed by the international peace leader. — A “man of prayers”.
CANCÚN, January 22nd — The day before yesterday, pacifist Sri Chinmoy met the President of the Republic, Dr. Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León, in his official residence at Los Pinos, where he received the ‘Heart of Gold Award’ from the Society of Authors and Music Composers of the country.
According to Mrs. Prakhara Harter, representing the peace leader in our city, during the private audience students could be heard singing songs composed by Sri Chinmoy.
“President Zedillo told the spiritual leader that he felt very happy for having received such a beautiful day and that he could now return to his duties, to do them better and make better decisions for the people”, she commented.
Sri Chinmoy replied to the President “You have a oneness-heart, a newness-mind; in you we find the vehicle for progress.” He also thanked Mr. President for all the improvements to the country achieved in a short period of time.
The Society of Authors and Music Composers has 30,000 members.
So far, the award has only been given to His Holiness Pope John Paul II, tenor Plácido Domingo, singer Juan Gabriel and the Director General of the WIPO Agency of the United Nations.
Upon accepting the award, Sri Chinmoy emphasised that “I am a man of prayers”.
Picture of the meeting that international peace ambassador, Sri Chinmoy, had last Tuesday with President Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León at the official Los Pinos residence. During the interview, the Bengali peace leader received the ‘Heart of Gold’ award from the Society of Lyricists and Composers.
Published in the major, regional Mexican daily newspaper, Diario de Yucatán in the section: Culture and Society in Cancún
BURLINGTON, Vt. — The Sri Chinmoy “Inspiration Marathon” was held here Sunday, Jan. 20, with only two days’ planning.
It wasn’t until Thursday evening that Chip and Sandy got the message that their Master wanted them to make arrangements for a marathon to be held the morning after a Jan. 19 University of Vermont concert.
Many of the disciples had lost their inspiration to practice running in the new year, Sri Chinmoy said, and he wanted to hold a marathon to give them new impetus.
Aided by the Centre's Race Specialty Chief, and Rabindra, who has organised three Sri Chinmoy marathons and ultramarathons, Chip and Sandy picked out and carefully measured a route, painted mile markers on the road, set up ERG and water stations at virtually every mile, and put up flyers announcing the race.
Some 36 runners, mainly disciples, completed the marathon. Sri Chinmoy, who was recovering from running injuries, ran the first 13 miles and the last two. Winner of the race was Rejean, with a time of 2:54.
“I hope this will inspire all of you to take your running seriously,” Sri Chinmoy said after the race.
One of the disciples, who had set a personal record in the run, jokingly said that if he could do this well without any training, there would be no need to practice at all.
“Ba, ha!” the Master replied. “Do you think this kind of Grace will be there all the time?”
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 5, No. 12 Vol. 6, No. 1, Dec. 1979 and Jan. 1980
HO CHI MINH CITY — Sri Chinmoy gave a short concert Jan. 17 at the Ho Chi Minh City Friendship House.
The cultural exchange program was sponsored by the Ho Chi Minh City Union of Friendship Organisations, which extends the hand of friendship to foreign visitors.
Afterwards, Sri Chinmoy lifted Tran Van Tao, president of the government-supported friendship group, and other officials. A special song for the occasion was performed by two separate choirs of Sri Chinmoy’s students.
One of the Union’s members also performed a song about Sri Chinmoy·
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 32, Mid-November 2001 – March 2002
by Boijayanti Gomez Badillo
200 participants from different parts of the world visit the city of Mérida – An Open Invitation to all Residents
Around 200 people from different parts of the world are currently in Mérida to participate in a “Peace Run,” set to take place next Tuesday, 20 January amongst numerous schools and streets of the city; the run aims to share the message of the significance of living in harmony with others, explained one of the group organisers.
Participants from the United States, India, Switzerland, Germany, England, Australia, Puerto Rico, Japan, Argentina, Venezuela, Italy, Australia and Russia, have already arrived and very cordially invite all residents of the Yucatán to participate.
The “peace relay” is promoted by the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team, a non-profit international athletic association that promotes personal development through sports.
The founder is Sri Chinmoy, a peace-seeking spiritual leader who was originally born in Bengal, India, and who has met with international figures such as Pope John Paul II, Mother Teresa of Calcutta, Princess Diana, the Dalai Lama, ex-president Mikhail Gorbachev, South African leader Nelson Mandela, Czechoslovakian ex-president Vaclav Havel, Queen Elizabeth II of England, and former Nobel Peace Prize Winner Oscar Arias.
Mrs. Lohita González Avila, the Mexican Coordinator of the Peace Run, explained that Sri Chinmoy, who has already arrived in the city and will be residing at the Holiday Inn for the duration of his visit, is the author of numerous books and poems, pursuits that are also combined with painting, music, and sports. Sri Chinmoy will also offer a “peace concert” in the city either this coming Sunday or Monday.
She also clarified that these scheduled activities are not connected to the armed conflict in Chiapas, and that this city was selected to undertake these ceremonies for other reasons, including the city’s culture and its prominence in the republic of Mexico.
She was also present at a ceremony yesterday with the mayor, Mr. Patricio Patrón Laviada, at the Municipal Palace, where the start of the “Peace Run” was celebrated.
Architect Domingo Rodriguez Semerana, Secretary of the Commune, who officially represented the municipality, formally received the Peace Run delegation.
Government representatives explained that all people, irrespective of age, gender or physical ability, are cordially invited to run with the torch for a short stretch.
In the morning, the relay will take place in various schools, and in the afternoon, the run will take place in El Paseo de Montejo, as well as other streets.
Additional details will be announced to the press at 13:00 today at the Government building (el Ayuntamiento).
Published in the major, regional Mexican daily newspaper, Diario de Yucatán (Yucatán Daily)
Kathmandu(Nepal): Following a two-week visit to Nepal, Sri Chinmoy has travelled to Myanmar as part of a goodwill to Southeast Asia. He lives in Queens and will be back here by the end of this month, says a press release issued by Sri Chinmoy Centre in New York.
While in Nepal, two world-peace-dreamers, King Birendra Bir Bikrarn Shah Dev and peace ambassador Sri Chinmoy had a heart-to-heart talk about peace manifestation on earth at the King’s Palace. The interview lasted 45 minutes.
Sri Chinmoy also held discussions with newly-elccted Prime Minister Mannohan Adhikari at Government palace (Singha Darbar). The Prime Minister told Sri Chinmoy, “You are conveying your message of peace and tranquility throughout the world.” During the interview, the Nepali leader held the Peace Torch, which every other year is passed from hand to hand as part of the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run, a 70 nation relay run for peace.
In Kathmandu, Sri Chinmoy offered several Peace Concerts of his soul-stirring compositions. Many dignitaries were present, including former Nepalese Prime Minister K.P. Bhauarai, Indian Anmbassador to Nepal, D. Prasad, the Speakers of the Upper and Lower Houses of Parliament, several Parliament Members and the Mayor of Kathmandu.
On December 21, the Kingdom of Nepal dedicated a 6,571 m high Himalayan mountain as a “Sri Chinmoy Peace Mountain” to the cause of world peace and friendship.
This mountain in the Langtang range of the Himalayas in northern Nepal joins more than 800 other significant landmarks that are part of the “Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossom” family worldwide. To mark the event, a Nepalese-style pagoda housing a commemorative plaque was constructed on a hill in the Nagarkot with a majestic view of the world’s highest mountains.
“I wish to share with you my sincere and heartfelt appreciation for your lifetime of service for the cause of world peace.” Nepal’s Minister of Education, Culture and Social Welfare, Mod Nath Prashrit, wrote to Sri Chinmoy for the occasion. “I am fully confident that this plaque will offer inspiration to all the travellers who see it.”
As part of the ceremony, Mr. Vinaya Shakya of the Nepal Mountaineering Association presented Sri Chinmoy with his association’s flag and spoke of the importance of the dedication to the people of Nepal. About 150 of the spiritual leader’s students from more than 30 nations were on hand to witness the historic event and several choral groups sang songs composed by their teacher for the occasion.
Other Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossoms include such noted peaks as Mt. McKinley, North America’s tallest mountain; Switzerland’s famous Matterhorn; the capital cities of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and other nations; Niagara Falls; the entire Russian-Norwegian border and Viet Nam’s Mekong Della.
Sri Chinmoy is accompanied on his tour by 150 members from Sri Chinmoy Centres worldwide. The Sri Chinmoy Bhajan Singers also perforrned several concerts for the people of Nepal.
Sri Chinmoy
Nepal, Nepal, Nepal, Nepal.
Within, without a self-offering heart.
Gurkha, to your indomitable strength.
Physical and spirituality I bow.
Nepal, in you shines a oneness-heart
Of a Hindu and a Buddhist.
Indeed, this is a gift supreme
Of your consciousness-light
For the world at large.
Sri Chinmoy with King Birendra Bir Bikram in Kathmandu
Published in Eastern Time newspaper, January 15, 1995, New York, NY, USA
A reminiscence by Sri Chinmoy
at an informal function in Merida, Mexico
I will never forget Ireland. Ireland was the first place where I was called “Guru” in the newspaper. Long live Sundar!
We ate our dinner and came out only to see a fight going on in the street. I will never forget!
Published in The Feet of the Supreme’s Compassion
with Sri Chinmoy at the Shangri-La Golden Flower Hotel in Xi’an, and a reporter for the ‘Beijing Science and Technology Report’, in Beijing
Sri Chinmoy: Good morning! Good morning! Your name is Gaia? Did you know that Gaia is also an Indian name? In India there is a very sacred city named Gaya. Bodh Gaya is a place of pilgrimage. Near that place, under the bodhi tree, the Buddha reached Nirvana. There he attained his full illumination so it is a very sacred place for us, a most sacred place.
I understand you have several questions. May I start answering them?
Question: Of all the many instruments that you play, which instrument do you like the most?
Sri Chinmoy: I play quite a few musical instruments. My most favourite instrument is the esraj. It is an Indian instrument and it originated over five hundred years ago during the time of the Moghul emperors. The greatest of all the emperors was Akbar. It was at his court that the musicians used to play this particular instrument, the esraj.
Question: What message do you wish to offer people through your music?
Sri Chinmoy: As we all know, music is a universal language. Here we do not have to learn Chinese. Of course, if we can learn it, it will be to our great advantage. And you may not know Bengali. But you do not have to learn Bengali. My Bengali songs will be able to enter into your heart. On the strength of their sweet melodies, they will be able to enter into your heart. Again, here I have heard quite a few Chinese songs and I was very, very deeply moved. I do not know a single word of Chinese, but in music there is no language barrier. It approaches the heart sooner than at once. That is why we can easily understand, appreciate and admire the music from other countries.
In that way, music plays a very special role in our lives. I have offered concerts in many, many places. My musical performances are based on my own inner feelings. Each person has to have tremendous faith in his own life. Being an Indian, I pray and meditate. This is my way of life, my lifestyle. And I try to convey the significance of my inner prayers and meditations through my musical performances.
I believe in God. Other seekers will say that they believe in Truth. My God and their Truth are identical. Still others believe in Light. The Lord Buddha believed in Light; he did not believe in God at all. His inner Light is the same as our God. God and Light cannot be separated. God and Truth cannot be separated. Again, if you have a strong belief in yourself, then your own belief is the same as my God. God can be Light, God can be Truth and God can be belief, a very strong belief, for which we use the term faith.
Question: How many instruments do you play during a concert?
Sri Chinmoy: When I play for two and a half hours, I usually play between twenty and twenty-five instruments. But when I play for an hour and fifteen minutes, I play about twelve or thirteen instruments. And sometimes I show off! I play one hundred instruments, but it is only for my students, to give them joy. Two times, I believe, I have played over one hundred instruments at a time.
My students are very, very kind and generous to me. They supply me with musical instruments from their countries, and I enjoy playing so many unique instruments. As you know, I am a "jack of all trades, master of none." I am a musician, and I am an artist. I am a poet, and I am a singer. I am also a weightlifter. But in all sincerity, I have to say that I am a master of none. Only one thing I would like to be the master of and that is my prayer-life and meditation-life. I started my life with prayer and meditation and I want to continue doing this until I breathe my last. The most important things in my life are prayer and meditation; the other things are all secondary.
Question: In the face of natural disasters, such as the tsunami that recently occurred, there are two ways in which we can respond. The first is to feel that human beings must respect nature much more. The second is to feel that human beings should come first and so we need even more advanced technology to protect humans from disasters. Which is your view?
Sri Chinmoy: I most sincerely subscribe to both views. Firstly, we have to respect nature. President Gorbachev and others are trying desperately to save Mother Nature. Here, there, everywhere, nature is being destroyed, so their Green Cross organisation is trying to preserve nature, preserve the environment. Nature is the expression of our inner life, our higher life. It is from nature that we get all good things — beauty, tranquillity, humility, simplicity and many other divine qualities. Above all, nature is spontaneous. When we develop the mind, we become so complex; we cannot do anything spontaneously. Nature helps us to regain our spontaneity. Like this, nature helps us in millions of ways to become good citizens of the world. That is why we must respect and adore nature.
Your second point is that we need even more advanced technology to protect humans from disaster. I also fully agree with this statement. Science and technology must make progress. But, forgive me to say, no matter how far we advance with our science and technology, if nature becomes furious, nature is not going to surrender to our scientific and technological achievements. The universal nature is infinitely more powerful than the scientific achievements of man. These achievements, I tell you, will be no match for Mother Nature if she becomes furious.
So these are two approaches: advanced technology and our respect for Mother Nature so that she does not get angry with us and torture us by creating natural disasters. Your two approaches are absolutely right, but if I am allowed, I would like to add one more approach which will not interfere at all with the first two. This third approach is prayer — prayer to the highest, to the strongest, to the most powerful One to protect us from harm, from nature's disasters, or from anything and anybody.
If we can apply all three approaches at the same time, then there is a great possibility for us to avert nature's disasters.
Question: Are you saying that we should bring forward our love, wisdom and technology at the same time?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. I feel that all three should be combined — love of nature, inner wisdom and the advancement of technology. Then we will be able to face nature's disasters. Inner wisdom is nothing but love, the feeling of oneness. If we sincerely love someone, then that person is not going to harm us.
This world is only one family. You are my sister; I am your brother. The whole world is a big family and it is composed of our brothers and sisters. Each individual in this family has something unique to contribute to the world at large. We can all live together peacefully or we can quarrel and fight and wage wars.
So this world of ours has two choices: one is to establish friendship, brotherhood and oneness. Another is to try to conquer or destroy others. When we adopt this approach, ultimately, we destroy ourselves.
What we, as human beings, actually want is joy, happiness and satisfaction. These qualities we can only get by uniting ourselves with other human beings. Those human beings are nothing but an extension of our own reality. When we establish our oneness with the rest of the world-family, we get joy and this joy lasts forever. But when we conquer someone by using superior strength and power, by hook or by crook, we cannot get permanent joy.
One approach is absolutely correct: the establishment of oneness with the whole world-family. The other approach is to sing the song of supremacy. We feel we have to prove that we are stronger than somebody else, or the world has to know that we are the stronger. That approach is the wrong one. Only through union do we get joy; not by division.
When we extend ourselves, when we spread our wings and claim the whole world as our own, very own, when we love Mother Nature, then the joy that we get will be everlasting. And this joy has in it sweetness, tremendous sweetness. We are longing for this joy, the joy of the creation.
Question: How can people have love?
Sri Chinmoy: If we do not have love, what are we aiming at? If we do not love the world, that means we can be neutral or indifferent to the world. When we hate the world, we destroy ourselves. Again, when we are indifferent, we do not get any joy. We have to love the world and accept the world as our very own. What for? For the betterment of the world.
Your question is, how can we have love? The answer is, if we do not love, what happens? The world that we are now facing is all hatred, all supremacy. By not loving one another, we are suffering so much.
But how to love someone or something? First, if we do not love ourselves, we cannot love others. If we are happy early in the morning, then on the street whomever we see, we try to greet or give a smile. But if in the morning we are unhappy, then we do not even look at others. We feel miserable and we may even go to the length of saying that if we see others, we have ruined our whole day. If we are happy inwardly, then the whole world is good for us. But if we are miserable deep within, then we blame the whole world. We never blame ourselves; we blame the world. And who is actually at fault? It is we who are to be blamed.
So how do we love the world? I want to say that we can love the world by creating joy. From joy we get love and from love we get joy. How do we create joy? We get it by doing something. A little child gets joy by playing with her doll. If I have faith in God, by praying to Him I get joy. When I get joy, I immediately find that I want to apply it in my day-to-day life. Then this joy is transformed into love.
I wish to say that we must pay attention to the things that give us joy. Then from joy we can get love. We have to start with joy. We came into the world to give joy and to accept joy from the world. But, unfortunately, many people are using the mind instead of the heart. That is why they find it so difficult to get joy from the world. The mind's only joy is to divide and divide. By cutting the reality into pieces, the mind tries to get joy. The heart wants to keep that reality intact. It does not want to cut the reality into pieces.
So our heart is the answer. The heart has joy and the heart has love, whereas the mind is empty of joy. Something more, the mind takes away all our inner joy that we derive from the heart. Because of the mind, we doubt others, we become jealous of others. If somebody is good or if somebody has achieved something remarkable, we use the doubting mind and we try to belittle that person or the achievement of that person. By doubting somebody or by becoming jealous of someone, are we getting any joy?
If we use our heart, on the other hand, to identify ourselves with that person, we get such joy! If we are using our heart to listen to a most lovely and beautiful piece of music, we will identify ourselves with the music, with the singer or with the melody. We may even feel that we are the singer, that we are carrying the melody. But if we use the mind, then we become jealous of the singer, jealous of the music and so forth.
So the heart and the mind give us two different experiences. One appreciates others and the other tries to minimise their glory. One makes us so happy and the other makes us miserable. If a Chinese song is being played and I hear it, if I use my heart, I will get such joy, such a feeling of oneness with the music. But if I use the mind, I will say, "Oh no, my Indian music is far better!" Again, in the same way, if you use the mind, you will say, "Indian music is silly. It just puts us to sleep. Once it starts, it has nothing else to do." But if you use the heart, then you will say, "Indian music is so beautiful, so soothing, so haunting."
When we use the critical mind, who becomes the loser? We do. By criticising someone, we will never, never be happy because our inner nature is all love, abiding love. That is why, in our philosophy, we give so much importance to the heart. The heart accepts the reality as such. The heart does not mind whether others are good or bad. By offering its goodwill to others, it becomes inseparably one with them. The mind, on the other hand, constantly plies between the good qualities of others and their bad qualities. This moment it says that so-and-so is a good person; next moment it tells us that we are wasting our precious time by remaining with that person. By approaching others with a heart of goodwill, we establish a kind of friendship or oneness with their soul and this gives us tremendous joy. But if we approach others with the mind, then we will only try to find fault with that person.
When we use the mind, we go near a flower and, like a mischievous monkey, we try to destroy the flower, petal by petal. But if we use the heart to approach a flower, we will appreciate the beauty and fragrance of the flower.
The heart gives joy and the heart receives joy. The mind tries to destroy the beauty or the reality that the mind sees. Naturally, those who are being criticised by others will respond in the same way. They will muster the strength to defend themselves. So the heart is mutual love and the mind is mutual destruction.
When goodwill works, immediately we open up our heart's door. This is how we liberate our heart. In your case, you have definitely opened up your heart. By opening up the heart, you have arrived at a particular destination. Tomorrow you will see that this is not the end. You have taken the first step. It is a very solid step and you are bound to feel love, joy, light, peace, bliss and other divine attributes inside your heart. This first step, the opening of the heart, is most satisfactory. Then tomorrow you will see that many, many divine qualities are blossoming inside you. Like a flower that blossoms petal by petal, in exactly the same way many, many divine qualities in your heart will blossom and they will give you tremendous joy. And you will feel that there is great meaning in your life — that meaning is to increase your love, joy, peace and bliss on a daily basis.
Question: Can you say something about science and technology in China?
Sri Chinmoy: As you know, I am a perfect stranger to science and technology. But I do love technology. Just because I am ignorant of a subject does not mean it is of no use. When I first came to China, I wrote a song for little children. There I have said that China's ancient wisdom is something unique.
Again, China's modern, scientific and technological progress is going together with its ancient wisdom. There is no conflict between the ancient wisdom of China and the modern speed. They are going side by side. When we dig deep within, we see the infinite wisdom that China offered to the world at large centuries ago and we also see that the progress China is now making in science and technology is faster than the fastest.
These two things are going together because China is not giving up on her ancient wisdom; she is not looking down on it.
Again, the Chinese are not making any comparison between the ancient wisdom and the modern speed. The Chinese are only eager to combine them, to put them together. It is like the inner and the outer going together. We need two legs to run the fastest. In exactly the same way, if we only depend on inner wisdom, we will not be able to walk side by side with the modern world. The modern world has the advantage of speed. How fast China is making progress in the outer world! By bringing to the fore the inner wisdom and combining it with the outer speed, which China is doing, China is moving faster than the fastest. Inner wisdom and outer speed can go together and China is proving it to the world at large.
Again, it is China's love of the ancient wisdom and her love of modern, scientific achievement that is connecting her inner qualities and her outer capacities. China's inner qualities are wisdom, all-embracing love of the world-family, oneness and light. China's outer capacity is speed, speed, speed. They can go together and here is the proof. China is doing it. For this great achievement, the unification of the inner and the outer, China deserves admiration from the entire world and from my heart. From my little heart, China deserves my appreciation and admiration, plus my gratitude and pride.
Question: How do you like the Chinese people?
Sri Chinmoy: I love them very, very much. Needless to say, they remind me of my Indian brothers and sisters. I have been to many places here in China. When I look at the Chinese people, I strongly feel this oneness between India and China.
Many years ago, your Premier Chou En-lai went to India, and Prime Minister Nehru and Chou En-lai became very, very close friends. Indians call China 'Chin", and India, or Hindustan, is 'Hind'. So Indians had a slogan, "Chin Hind bhai bhai," which means "China and India are brothers." Throughout the length and breadth of India, people sang this song so soulfully, "Chin Hind bhai bhai./" Hindustan and China are great friends, real friends; they are two brothers.
Question: How can people have faith when we face so much suffering in the world?
Sri Chinmoy: The sufferings that the world is now facing are unbelievable. Because of this tsunami, thousands and thousands of people have been killed. In one sense, we can say that Mother Nature is displeased with human beings. If we are sincere, each and every person on earth will see how many wrong things he has done individually and how many wrong things we have done collectively — nationally and internationally.
Sometimes we do wrong things unconsciously; sometimes we do them deliberately. A little child, for example, is unconscious of the fire. When he stands in front of the fire, just because he is innocent, do you think the fire will not burn him? The very nature of fire is to burn the child. As human beings, we have to be very frank with ourselves, whether we have done everything that is good within our capacity. Then we will see that human beings have done many, many wrong things consciously, deliberately and maliciously. Why? To show our supremacy.
So you can say that this tsunami is nature's revolt, nature's revenge. Mother Nature is like a real mother. She sees that her children are quarrelling, fighting and destroying everything, so she strikes them. She wants them to be good, exemplary citizens of the world. It is farther than the farthest from her mind to destroy the earth. She is only punishing her children to some extent so that they will turn over a new leaf.
This tsunami has given us a devastating experience. Again, the leaders of so many countries have united together to help those places that were severely affected. Human beings have once more brought to the fore their sympathy, which was practically buried in oblivion. Your Chinese Foreign Minister, Li Zhaoxing, has written a unique poem which I deeply admire. It is called "To My Distant Friends." This poem reveals his heart of implicit sympathy, love and feeling of oneness. So you see how this tsunami has brought forward the good, divine qualities of people. With our divine qualities, we can unite the world. Again, with our undivine qualities, we can destroy the world.
To come back to your question, how can we free ourselves from suffering? We have to first of all love others and establish the feeling of oneness with them. This oneness is based on our inner existence. When we truly sympathise with somebody, then we take away some of his suffering. Let us say somebody's mother has passed away. If you happen to be a close friend of that person and you go there to console him, then you definitely decrease his suffering. Because you are sharing the suffering, the members of the family do not suffer the full amount.
In the case of the tsunami disaster which has taken place, the Chinese Foreign Minister and also many other leaders of various countries, as well as individuals around the world, have brought to the fore their hearts, which are full of sympathy. The sympathy that the entire world has shown has really helped humanity. By exercising its sympathetic heart, the world has considerably decreased the suffering of those affected.
Suffering is there, but we can share it by establishing our oneness with those who are suffering. Always we have to have the feeling of goodwill. If, in your suffering, I go to be of service to you and vice versa, then we decrease the suffering.
A day will come when there will be another way of conquering suffering, and that way will be through light. Human life is composed of darkness and light. Darkness wants to envelop us and destroy light; light wants not to destroy darkness, but to illumine it. In the outer world, there will always be suffering, but there is a way to diminish the suffering and that way is the way of oneness, the establishment of oneness. If we use our sympathetic heart, our feeling of oneness, then the suffering is lessened to a considerable degree.
The ultimate goal of this Mother Earth, this earth-planet, is not suffering; it is joy. We came from Heaven, which is all joy. Now, on this particular planet, we are sad, unhappy, miserable, and for that we have to take the blame to a great extent. But consciously if we can expand and extend our love, goodwill and feeling of oneness, plus if we can go deep within, then there will be much less suffering. The ultimate goal of every human being is happiness. We know that we came from Heaven, which is nectar-happiness, and we are now passing through a longer than the longest tunnel which is dark and unlit. But we feel that at the end of the tunnel, no matter how long it is, light will again be waiting for us, and that light is happiness.
Question: What is your purpose in visiting China?
Sri Chinmoy: Every year I go out of New York at Christmas time. It is our annual vacation. This year I came to China for an exchange of culture. Right from my childhood, I have had tremendous admiration for China. India's greatest poet, Rabindranath Tagore, the 1913 Nobel laureate in literature, wrote a book on China [Talks in China] and I have learned much, much from that book. A great spiritual hero named Swami Vivekananda also wrote about China in his letters. In addition, since my adolescence, I have read much about China and I have tremendous admiration for your philosophers, for your artists and for your culture.
It is with a heart full of admiration and love that I came to China. Here it is a cultural exchange. My students and I sing and play music. We have developed a love for art and culture and we wish to observe and absorb the inspiring qualities of China while we are here. We have come to offer our goodwill, brotherhood and the feeling of oneness. We wish to offer what we have brought from our respective countries and again, from your beloved country, the country that we most sincerely admire, we wish to receive your good qualities and thus enrich our own qualities. By receiving from you what you have, we increase our inner wealth. And we will be so pleased if our goodwill, our music and our way of life can be of any service to you. So it is a mutual give and take.
Question: Can you please tell me about your connection with Mother Teresa?
Sri Chinmoy: Mother Teresa was my mother and my sister at the same time. One moment she used to be very, very strict with me, like a mother, and next moment she was very, very kind and affectionate, like a sister. Over the years, she told me three times that I must accompany her to China. What for? To be of service to China.
Alas, God did not fulfil her desire to come to China. But believe me, the day I arrived in China, I saw her soul very clearly. She came and blessed me because I fulfilled my promise to her to come to China. Then in Xiamen I gave a musical performance for little children. On that day, Mother Teresa's soul was so happy, specially when over a thousand children sang our song, "I am a great Chinese boy, I am a good Chinese girl."
I strongly feel and see that Mother Teresa's soul is guiding me during my visit to China. Her soul comes to me, you can call it a dream or something else, only to bless me and to guide me inwardly. It was her most sincere desire to come to China and be of service to China. She went to many countries during her life. She went to each place only with the view of serving the people of that country.
I am eternally grateful to Mother Teresa. She had a heart that was vaster than the vastest. She was not only for Calcutta, where millions and millions of people received her unimaginable compassion and affection, but she was also for the whole world. She was a unique individual that Mother Earth received from Father Heaven.
Question: Could you please tell me about your "Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart" programme?
Sri Chinmoy: There are so many ways to express one's oneness with the whole world. Each individual has a way. In my case, my Inner Pilot has told me to be of service in this particular way and that way is to lift some individuals overhead. In a football match, when a player scores a goal, he is lifted up by his fellow teammates. They do this to express their joy because he has done something good.
Here also, I see that there are people from all walks of life who have done many, many good things for the betterment of the world. I feel that it is obligatory on my part to be of service to them. I try to give joy to those who have contributed so much to the world at large. I lift them up, with either two hands or one hand. In this way, I have lifted 7,000 people over the years, and this includes many presidents, prime ministers and eminent figures, such as President Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu, Ravi Shankar, Muhammad Ali and others.
I also lift children, who are the future, and I have lifted quite a few octogenarians. In Indonesia I lifted one lady who was over 100 years old. How many people can live over 100 years? Again, she has done something great; she has shown longevity.
In any way, if someone has done something unique, I try to honour that person. Nobel laureates, scientists, politicians — we all belong to the same family. Some have already contributed their capacities to the world, and then I try to be of service to them by lifting them up and showing them my appreciation and admiration. And some are now budding. They are humanity's children. They are not fully blossomed, but they are the future, so I try to lift them and offer them my full support.
I do hope that I can be of service to the heart and soul of China while I am here.
Published in Conversations with Sri Chinmoy
Interviewer: What do you hope will be accomplished by the dedication of this Peace Airport?
Sri Chinmoy: Every day we are trying to have happiness in our lives. This happiness we can get only from peace. If I love you and you love me, then inside our love is peace. If we have peace, then we have everything.
Every day so many people are coming and going through this international Airport. From now on, if they feel a sense of oneness, then they will be happy and peaceful. This is a new idea, a new hope, a new dream and a new promise.
Interviewer: What is your message to the people of Davao City?
Sri Chinmoy: My prayerful message to the people of Davao is very simple: together we have to walk, together we have to dream, together we have to feel the necessity of oneness. Each individual in this beautiful place I regard as my own, very own. So to each individual I am offering my love, my affection and my oneness, as I am offering to the General Manager of the International Airport my affection, love and gratitude. He has done us a great favour by allowing us to be associated with this International Airport. For that, to the Manager and Engineer here, I am offering my deepest gratitude.
My message to the people of Davao is the same: my heart of love, my heart of joy and my heart of gratitude I am offering to each individual for the establishment of a world family, which will be flooded with peace, love and joy. This is my message of oneness that I am offering to each person in Davao City.
Interviewer: Thank you very much, Sri Chinmoy. I would like to express my deep gratitude to you for giving us the opportunity to talk with you.
Sri Chinmoy: I am very grateful to you, for you have given me the opportunity to be of service to so many of your countrymen. Thousands and thousands of people will have the opportunity to see that my heart of oneness is sincere and that I have come to serve all the people of Davao through my prayers and meditations.
Published in Peace-Blossoms on the Philippine Life-Tree

by PEOPLE STAFF
January 12, 1976, 12:00 PM
A ceremony of meditative silence, song and prayer draws to a close. At the invitation of guru Sri Chinmoy, his flock, numbering almost 50 this evening, rises from cross-legged humility on the floor of a frame house in Queens, N.Y. Disciples are mostly in Indian dress—women in flowing saris, short-haired men in white cotton pyjamas.
The few outsiders are sceptical as they approach the final benediction, a one-to-one moment with the guru himself. But the encounter is unlikely to leave even the most cynical unmoved. Offering a handful of tiny cakes he has blessed, Sri Chinmoy concentrates intensely on the recipient. Then his eyes begin to flicker wildly, and the pupils eventually roll up to leave only the whites visible. Sri Chinmoy has reached a state of meditative bliss called “samadhi” in his native Bengali. “I swear I could see a gold-colored aura suffuse his head,” exclaimed one first-time visitor later. “I don’t think I could ever succumb to a guru,” he added, “but there’s no doubt in my mind that as far as gurus go, this one’s the genuine article.”
At present count, about 700 individuals worldwide have dedicated their lives to Sri Chinmoy’s spiritual path. He advocates love, devotion and surrender to “the supreme.” His most publicized adherents are rock musician Carlos Santana, who now uses the spiritual name of Devadip, and the British jazz guitarist Mahavishnu John McLaughlin. As head of the meditation program at the United Nations, the slight, bald-headed guru has attracted diplomats and statesmen as well. He has lectured at Yale and conferred with the Pope, and his writings have been published in several languages.
Some of his commercially minded followers manage “divine enterprises.” Parsons Boulevard in Queens is dominated by stores with names like Guru Health Foods, Guru Stationery and the Blessing Light Supreme bookstore. The Smile of the Beyond cafe offers delicious ice cream, a favorite with Sri Chinmoy, whose weight fluctuates as dramatically as his eyes in trance.
These businesses, which are dedicated to manifesting spiritual conviction to the outside world, are as nothing compared to the guru’s own productivity. By avocation a painter, poet, songwriter and playwright, both in Bengali and English, Sri Chinmoy seeks constantly to “transcend” his own spiritual limitations. Recently he wrote 843 poems in 24 hours and then followed up with a staggering 16,031 paintings in the same amount of time. Disciples paraded up New York’s Madison Avenue in celebration.
Born to a railroad inspector in West Bengal 44 years ago, Chinmoy Kumar Ghose (sri—pronounced shree—is an Indian title of respect) claims to have achieved the highest state of “god-realization” as a 12-year-old. After two decades in an Indian ashram he emigrated to this country in 1963 and worked in the visa section of the Indian consulate in New York, slowly gathering the flock he leads today.
Asked if he misses Bengal, Sri Chinmoy deftly summarizes his spiritual philosophy: “I don’t miss anything or anybody, because inside me is the universal reality as inside you is the universal reality.” He avows that “if I get a command from my Inner Pilot I will be more than happy to go to the foot of the Himalayas or into a Himalayan cave—which I did in some of my previous incarnations.”
with special guest Sri Chinmoy
The completion of one million “peace-bird” drawings in a span of two years last week in Fiji is among the latest achievements of unusual international peace ambassador, Sri Chinmoy.
Currently visiting Rarotonga for a week with a large group, Sri Chinmoy unlike politicians and social activists believes that “freedom can come into being only when we have inner peace.”
That he demonstrates through his accomplishments in the fields of literature, music, athletics and through his art.
The message being our potential as individuals is boundless if we tap the unlimited source within, through prayer and meditation. His current peace tour of the South Pacific is with 140 of his students from New Zealand, Australia, Europe, North America and Japan.
They have already visited Samoa and Fiji, and from Rarotonga travel on to Tahiti.
Among their activities on Rarotonga this week are meditation classes that started last night and continue through to Thursday, and then 1 pm on Saturday. There is the nine and a half hour Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run on Saturday, and that evening the Sri Chinmoy Masters Games for athletes 50 years or older.
Sri Chinmoy will be giving a free concert for peace this Friday evening in the National Auditorium. Similar concerts in Fiji and Samoa he has dedicated to former Russian president Mikhail Gorbachev, whom Sri Chinmoy considers “the highest peace-dreamer, the deepest peace-seeker and the greatest peace-lover here on earth.”
Sri Chinmoy says “The greatest reward I can have is the opportunity to be of service to mankind. If I see that somebody is getting an iota of peace from my drawings or from anything else that I do, then I feel I have accomplished something because I have been able to share my inspiration and my aspiration with others.”
In a relaxed quietly spoken manner with his eyes closed most of the time, Sri Chinmoy wearing thongs, shorts and a shirt, in a media interview yesterday, explained how world peace had gained greater ground.
He said not long ago there was talk of world destruction through war, then the Cold War and now an end has most certainly been put to the Cold War era.
Now, Sri Chinmoy said people are talking even more about peace.
— Alex Sword
Sri Chinmoy, the Indian born and now New York based international ambassador of peace.
Published in Cook Islands News, Tuesday 11 January 1994, Rarotonga
by Sri Chinmoy
Four reporters came to interview me in Lima. One of them was 100 per cent my disciple. She had a soul’s connection with three or four disciples, and she was looking at me as if she had known me for a long time. Then she took the chair right near me.
She asked me a question in Spanish and I answered her in English. She was so surprised that I had understood her Spanish.
Then Agraha asked her something. Afterwards, he said he couldn’t believe how kind she was.
All the reporters were so nice. Usually you talk for ten minutes and the reporters write down two words. But these reporters were writing continuously.
Published in The World-Experience-Tree-Climber, part 5
DATUK S. Sarny Vellu is, without doubt, a heavyweight in local politics, being president of the MIC.
But spiritual strongman Sri Chinmoy lifted all 87kg of the Works Minister in a feat which had onlookers gasping.
Performing a feat which others at his age would think twice about, Sri Chinmoy also lifted muscleman Malek Noor and 10 others in a demonstration in Kuala Lumpur on Thursday night.
Sri Chinmoy is a renowned Indian spiritualist and a man of peace.
Sri Chinmoy, aged 57 and weighing 70.9kg, has lifted 1,000 people overhead with one arm in the past six months using a specially built platform.
The occasion, called Lifting up the World with a Oneness-Heart, honours individuals for their dedication and inspiration or recognises specific cultural or national groups.
Among those already honoured are sprinter Carl Lewis, singer Roberta Flack and director of the United Nations Children’s Fund James Grant.
Published in the Straits Times, Saturday, January 7, 1989, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Some Nuggets From Last Year You May Have Missed
HAROLD C. SCHONBERG
Ernest Fleishmann, manager of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, tried to contain Leonard Bernstein’s well-known choreographic convolutions on the podium. He gave the conductor a lot of keys and loose change to put into his pockets. “The idea was that every time Lenny jumped, he would rattle. Well, for five minutes, he was a little more constrained and then, because he becomes so very involved in his music, he forgot about the coins and went back to jumping.” And rattling.
Talking about Leonard Bernstein: The Indian mystic Sri Chinmoy sent him the lyrics of a song he had composed.
It went, in part:
Leonard Bernstein, Leonard!
Eternity’s singing bird.
Beauty truth, Truth beauty,
Nectar oneness your divinity.
Mr. Bernstein immediately composed a thank-you piece for sitar, flute, tabla, bass and drone. Mr. Bernstein’s poem:
Thank you, thank you, Sri Chinmoy —
You brought Leonard Bernstein joy.
Published in The New York Times, January 6, 1980
at the Ambarrukmo Palace Hotel in Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Question: What brings you and your students to Indonesia, especially to Yogyakarta?
Sri Chinmoy: I have come here to see the beautiful scenery of Yogyakarta, and also I have a very special feeling for Borobudur. Lord Buddha comes from India, and I have a very special admiration and adoration for him. He is for all mankind. So I would like to go and pay my homage to the Lord Buddha at Borobudur.
Question: You visit so many countries of the world. I would like to ask you the purpose of your travels.
Sri Chinmoy: The purpose is very simple. We feel that this world is all one family. You and I are brothers. And there is only one God. That God you call Allah, and I call Him something else. But it is the same God. Similarly, Mohammed, Lord Krishna and the Saviour Christ all came from the Highest. When you pray to Allah and a Hindu or a Christian prays to God, we feel that it is the same God with different Names.
I go to so many countries to feel my oneness with God’s children, with Allah’s children, and to offer my love. Everybody cannot live in the same house. I have come to see your place. One day you may come to see my place. The human family is so big. That is why we live here, there and everywhere. But we are all brothers and sisters, so when we travel, we go to visit our relatives.
Question: Is it true that your philosophy is love and brotherhood?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, my philosophy is love, good wishes and brotherhood. As I said before, we are all children of God, and we all belong to one family, even though we come from different countries. I am Indian, you are Indonesian, and somebody else may be another nationality. And we all have different names — that is how we recognise one another and distinguish one from the other. But we are all members of the same family.
Question: What do you have to say about those who do not believe in God?
Sri Chinmoy: Some people say that they do not believe in God, but I wish to say that they do believe in something. We believe in God — that is the positive aspect. They believe that God does not exist — that is the negative side. But in the end, they will reach a particular place that is another extension of God. It is like electricity. There is a positive and a negative aspect. We need both positive and negative to get the light.
Right now we are caring only for the positive aspect of God, but if some people are caring for darkness, we shall not mind because we know that eventually they will come to the same light. A day will come, after a few years or a few centuries, when they will realise that something is missing in their lives. They will be miserable because they have no satisfaction. God is light. How long can one deny light? Those who do not believe in God feel that there is no light. But one day they will be sick of staying in a dark room. They will say, “How long can we remain in this place? Let us open the door and see the daylight. Then only will we be satisfied.”
Having known the absence of light, these non-believers will sincerely love and adore the light. Once upon a time, perhaps we too were non-believers. That is why I always say that those who believe in God should show the non-believers utmost concern. If we speak ill of them or criticise them, it will only delay their progress.
In your family, when your children do not listen to you, you know that if you insult them, then they may take much longer to listen to you. But if you show them your concern, compassion and affection, then they will develop goodwill towards you, and they will listen to you long before they would have done otherwise.
Question: Your philosophy is so high.
Sri Chinmoy: My philosophy is oneness. The life-tree has so many branches. I am a bird, seated on one branch of the life-tree, and you are another bird, seated on another branch. Like that, we are all seated on different branches, but we all claim the life-tree as our own. It is your tree, and it is also my tree. You and I are seated on different branches, but these branches cannot be separated from the tree.
Question: Are you sure that your philosophy of love and brotherhood can solve all the problems of the world?
Sri Chinmoy: My philosophy and your philosophy are the same: love, love, love. If you have love for somebody, then you are not going to quarrel and fight with him. And if he has love for you, who will fight? It is because people do not have peace inside their hearts that they fight. If somebody inwardly feels that he is weak, he tries to cover up his weakness by showing aggression. He tries to show how strong he is.
Now, if I feel inwardly strong, I am not going to fight with you. And if you feel inwardly strong, you are not going to fight with me. A little child goes and pinches his older brother or strikes him. Why? He wants to show that he is stronger than his older brother. The older brother already knows that he is much stronger than his little brother. So, out of compassion, he forgives his little brother. He says, “No, I do not want to fight with you.” If we have peace, then we have love. And if we have love, then we have peace. Then where is the question of quarrelling and fighting?
How do we get this inner peace? If we do good things, we become good citizens of the world. We can read some spiritual books or pray and meditate or serve the world in some way. If we become truly good citizens of the world, then are we going to fight? The question of fighting does not arise at all.
He who loves God, he who loves Allah, is not going to fight. We pray to God four or five times a day to make us good human beings, to give us joy, to give us love, to give us peace. Who is going to pray to God, “God, give me the strength to destroy this person or that person”?
All those who want to become good people share the same philosophy: love, love, love.
Published in Sri Chinmoy answers, part 32
WHEN the Indian spiritual and meditation teacher Sri Chinmoy told Malaysian ‘Samson’ Malek Noor that he can lift Malek with one hand, Malek did not believe him.
Last night, 103kg Malek took up the challenge and walked onto a special platform at the lobby of Grand ContinentalHotel in Kuala Lumpur.
The 57-year-old Sri Chinmoy, weighing half Malek’s weight, concentrated deeply and after meditating, lifted Malek. “I am amazed with his inner strength with which he used to lift me,” said Malek later.Among those who were lifted by Sri Chinmoy last night were Works Minister Datuk S. Samy Velu, Bishop of the Anglican Church of West Malaysia Tan Sri John G. Savarimuthu and president of Malaysia Hindu Sangam Datuk S. Govindaraj.
Sri Chinmoy and his 186 students are on a short visit to Kuala Lumpur and will leave for Thailand tomorrow.They are here to promote peace among individuals.
Sri Chinmoy, who has led meditation sessions for peace at the United Nations headquarters as well as the US Congress, has lifted 1,000 people with one hand in the last six months through a programme called Lifting up the World with a Oneness-Heart.
The programme is to honour and congratulate individuals for their dedication and inspiration.
Indian guru Sri Chinmoy lifting body-builder Malek Noor up with ease
Published in The Malay Mail, Friday / January 6 1989
with Sri Chinmoy in Suva, Fiji, by telephone from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Canada
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy is not your ordinary, everyday Guru. He and his disciples are known for completing tasks of amazing magnitude. Record-setting feats of endurance are among the ways Sri Chinmoy and his followers pursue inner calm. The latest feat was just finished: one million sketches, and every one a bird — a million birds of peace. Sri Chinmoy himself has completed the sketches to celebrate the birthday today of Raisa Gorbachev. We have reached international artist and peace ambassador, Sri Chinmoy, in Suva, Fiji. Sri Chinmoy, you must be very pleased that you successfully drew one million birds. You must be glad that it is over.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I am extremely glad that it is all over. Each bird reminds me of freedom, and I feel that freedom lives in peace and nowhere else.
Interviewer: Can you tell me how you came up with the idea for this project? How long ago was it, and why did you decide to do this?
Sri Chinmoy: Two years ago, while I was in Malta, all of a sudden I was inspired to draw birds. Since then I have been drawing birds. I used to get and even now I still get tremendous joy each time I draw a bird. Each time I feel a kind of inner freedom.
I wish to tell you that Canada has a very special place in my art-life. About 19 years ago I started my art-life in the West by doing some paintings and drawings at the Sheraton Hotel in Ottawa. Also, last year 100,000 bird drawings of mine were exhibited in Ottawa. Our philosophy is the philosophy of progress, so from 100,000 I have come up to one million.
Interviewer: Are you sure that it is a million birds? How did you keep track?
Sri Chinmoy: Seven or eight students of mine have faithfully and devotedly counted them all, twice. It came to 1,001,919.
Interviewer: I imagine they were all doves. Is that correct?
Sri Chinmoy: No, they are birds of my imagination — in all different shapes and sizes. I have drawn them with ballpoint pens, felt tip markers, crayons, paint brushes and many other things.
Interviewer: Did you dedicate all the birds to Raisa Gorbachev?
Sri Chinmoy: I dedicated the Ottawa exhibit of 100,000 birds to Mrs. Gorbachev and I completed my one million birds yesterday, on her birthday. These one million birds will also be exhibited in Ottawa, around the end of March. I shall dedicate this new exhibit to my mother, who is now in Heaven. I would like to observe the centenary of her birth by dedicating this exhibit to her.
Interviewer: Why did you dedicate the first 100,000 to Mrs. Gorbachev?
Sri Chinmoy: She and President Gorbachev are very close friends of mine. I do not understand politics at all; I am just a truth-seeker and God-lover. But I feel that President Gorbachev is also a genuine truth-seeker and a true man of peace. That is why I have utmost admiration and love for him. I have met with him five or six times. My first meeting with him, strangely enough, took place in Ottawa four years ago.
Interviewer: What is your next project? Do you have anything else in mind now?
Sri Chinmoy: Right now, I have nothing in mind. Only I will do my regular prayers and meditations and, if it is the Will of God, I will embark on something else.
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy, thank you very much. Sri Chinmoy is a New York-based spiritual leader and international peace ambassador. He spoke to us from Suva, Fiji.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 3
with Sri Chinmoy
at the Cebu Midtown Hotel
Question: To be able to lift with just one arm the weight of 7,000 pounds is seemingly as impossible a task as trying to establish peace among the peoples of the world. Is it possible for you to explain how you are able to do such a feat, which is scientifically and logically impossible?
Sri Chinmoy: First of all, from the very depth of my heart I wish to thank you for asking me this question. Your question is, for me, more illumining than the answer could ever be. Impossibility is a word that we find in the English dictionary. But this particular word we do not find in our heart's dictionary. Our heart recognises no such word. In our heart we are all the time expanding our own reality and growing from the finite into the Infinite. There what we are dreaming of today is becoming the reality of tomorrow.
There is the reality of the mind and the reality of the heart. When we live in the reality of the mind, we are constantly separating ourselves from others. We sing only one song: my and mine. We know only one truth: division. When we live in the heart, we are constantly expanding on the strength of our oneness with everything around us. There is no division in the heart; there is only multiplication. At every moment we are multiplying our capacities and our inner divinity.
If I ask my mind whether I can lift 7,000 pounds, immediately it will say, “Impossible!” I do not need anyone else in the world to doubt my capacities. My own mind is by far the best doubter. It will do the job better than anybody else. But when I am in the heart, with the heart and for the heart, there is no such thing as impossibility because of the heart’s oneness. When I am in the heart, I become one with each and every human being on earth. If countless human beings are with me and for me, then lifting 7,000 pounds is not a difficult task.
So through my prayer and meditation I am able to expand my love for my fellow citizens of the world and enter into the Universal Consciousness. For the Universal Consciousness to lift up 7,000 pounds is absolutely nothing. It is like lifting up a grain of sand.
We pray and meditate so that we do not remain in the mind-reality, which is constantly dividing us. We want to remain only in the heart-reality that claims the whole world as its very own. If we remain in the heart and sing the song of universal oneness, we will be able to accomplish everything. The capacity of our heart far transcends the capacity of science. Our prayer-life and meditation-life can take us far, far beyond the domain of scientific capacity.
Question: Would it be possible for our provincial and city officials to unite in peace through your presence here and through the Peace Run?
Sri Chinmoy: We can only pray and meditate. Then it is up to God whether or not He fulfils our prayer and meditation. If we do anything with expectation, most of the time we are frustrated. But if we do the needful and say, as the Saviour taught us, "Let Thy Will be done,” at that time we are offering the best prayer and doing the right thing.
You may say that it is something noble that you are praying for. It is something noble, true. But God has His own time. We use the term “God’s choice Hour”. People often feel that if they ask for something good, then their prayer ought to be fulfilled immediately. But it does not happen that way. It is not like instant coffee.
First we sow a seed. Soon it germinates and becomes a tiny plant. Then it becomes a small tree, and finally it becomes a huge tree. So everything takes time. But just because something takes time, we must not lose patience. Overnight we cannot become the best human being on earth. A stairway has many steps, and we have to climb all of the steps to reach the highest height.
So I will pray, my students will pray, you will pray and the heart and soul of Cebu will pray. Just because we pray, we can hope and even be certain that there shall come a time when our prayer will be fulfilled. It can be in the very near future or in the distant future. We are doing the right thing by praying. And if we do the right thing, then naturally God will shower His choicest Blessings on our devoted heads and surrendered lives.
On the other hand, if we do not do the right thing, then nothing good will ever be accomplished. So let us start our journey by praying for oneness; God will blessingfully appreciate us. Then, at His choice Hour, He will definitely fulfil our most sincere longing.
Question: Do you have a message for the people of Cebu?
Sri Chinmoy: I wish to offer a soulful prayer to the Inner Pilot of Cebu on the strength of my heart's oneness with each citizen of Cebu.
O Inner Pilot, Supreme Pilot of Cebu, You have given us simplicity in our lives. You have given us sincerity in our minds. You have given us purity in our hearts. You have given us many, many good qualities out of Your boundless Compassion-Light.
Now we pray to You only for one thing: poise, poise, poise — inner poise in our central being. We feel that once we can establish ourselves in the beauty, light, delight, power and fragrance of inner poise, at that time all the divine qualities that You have already given us out of Your boundless Bounty will supremely and completely blossom.
Right now the divine qualities that we have are not enough to make us absolutely perfect citizens of the world. But if once we can swim in Eternity's sea of infinite inner Poise, then we are bound to arrive at our destined Goal. At that time our lifeboat will definitely arrive at the Golden Shore of the ever-transcending Beyond.
Published in Peace-Blossoms on the Philippine Life-Tree
From a public relations news release: “A 5-foot-8-inch East Indian gentleman has been spreading inner peace and yesterday raised one ton of weight with one arm using what he describes as ‘the power of inner peace.’
“Leader of regular meditations at the United Nations and U.S. Congress and honorary citizen of more than 20 states, Sri Chinmoy was recently invited to inaugurate a series of meditations for members of Great Britain’s Houses of Parliament. ...
“Sri Chinmoy led the members in silent meditation and answered a number of questions. At the conclusion, Lord Ennals remarked, “This is a great honor for us. In a place where there is often too much noise, it’s good to have this kind of silence.”
“A few days later Sri Chinmoy returned to his New York home and applied his meditative capacities to raising 1,317 pounds overhead with one arm, just over 17 months after starting weightlifting. Then the 160-pound spiritual leader went out of town for a week.
“Upon returning a few days ago he lifted 1,515¼ pounds with one arm. Then, just yesterday, as a Thanksgiving day tribute, Sri Chinmoy lifted 2,039 pounds on his first day attempting that weight. This represents nearly 13 times his body weight, far beyond the 600 pounds that ·anyone else has been reported to lift overhead with one or two arms.” — Roundup, C3
Published in the Religion section of ARIZONA REPUBLIC, Saturday, January 3, 1987
Video by Sri Chinmoy Centre, Brazil
In an interview at the end of the Peace Concert in Curitiba, Sri Chinmoy speaks about his reasons for visiting Brazil and the importance of peace in the New Millennium. In response to the interviewer, Sri Chinmoy also summarises his philosophy in a few words.
Peace Ambassador Sri Chinmoy will be offering a public peace concert tonight at 8 p.m. at Manila Cathedral. Admission is free.
The concert is part of the 61-year-old spiritual teacher’s month-long peace tour of the Philippines, which marks the start of a year that Sri Chinmoy predicts will be filled with brightness and luminosity.
Sri Chinmoy’s peace tour included a meeting with Cardinal Sin yesterday. He will also be meeting with President Ramos on Monday.
Sri Chinmoy is a poet, artist, composer and philosopher as well as a spiritual teacher. He has offered hundreds of lectures at universities around the globe, including talks at Siliman University in Dumaguete City and Southwestern and San Carlos Universities in Cebu City.
He is also the inspiration behind the biennial Oneness-Home Peace Run, a 70-nation relay for peace that passed through the Philippines last year. A prolific composer, he will be performing his own compositions at tonight’s peace concert.
Sri Chinmoy is visiting the Philippines with a group of about 150 students from around the world. Several of them will be offering free classes and workshops on meditation and ways of integrating spirituality into daily life.
A free workshop will be held at the Theosophical Society Lecture Hall at 1 Iba Street, near Florentino Street, Quezon City from 10 a.m. to noon on Sunday.
Published in The Philippine Star, Saturday, January 2, 1993
By YEOH OON CHUAN
WORLD peace advocate, peace missionary or goodwill ambassador, Sri Chinmoy has been affectionately referred to as all these but he sees himself as being just a “student of peace”.
The 67-year-old India-born but New York-based spiritual guru is in Malaysia to launch the “1999 Peace Run”, a torch relay focusing on friendship and peace through sport tomorrow.
It will be the continuation of the annual Peace Run first held in 1987. Next year’s run will involve all the countries in the world.
Accompanying Sri Chinmoy on this trip, his second visit to Malaysia, are 200 individuals from 15 countries who had studied under him.
Like Sri Chinmoy, who has demonstrated an ability to exercise the full potential of the human spirit, many of these disciples have accomplished goals they have set for themselves.
One of them, Vasanti Niemz from Heidelberg, Germany, said she was the first among the disciples to swim across the English Channel in 1985.
The 42-year-old employee of a soya food company said she led “a simple life” throughout 1998 so that she could save enough money to accompany Sri Chinmoy on his travels during her holidays.
Since 1964, when he first began his quest for world peace, Sri Chinmoy has written bestselling tomes, conducted concerts, met world leaders and even has a Himalayan peak named after him.
The 10km run on New Year’s Day will start at Dataran Merdeka at 7.30am. Participation is free.
Caption:
Sri Chinmoy lifting weights last month during the Lifting Up the World Programme in New York, watched by International Federation of Body Builders vice-president Wayne DeMilia
Published in The Malay Mail, page 12, Thursday, December 31, 1998
by Hick Ratliff,
Section D, Living Today, The Miami Herald
‘I do not act like a teacher or a preacher.’ Sri Chinmoy explains, ‘but I become absolutely one with the inner cry of those who are in front of me ... the inner cry is for peace, light and bliss. The outer cry is for name, fame and material possession.’
No one was impressed with what Indian guru Sri Chinmoy had to say as he sat cross legged between flowers and candles before 350 persons in the Hialeah-Miami Lakes High School auditorium.
Sri Chinmoy, author of 300 books, painter, musician, leader of a spiritual movement and director of the United Nations Meditation Group, faced the audience Tuesday night for about an hour and a half.
And said virtually nothing.
But folks didn't get huffy, storm out and demand their money back. For one thing the event was free. For another, silence can be peaceful and peacefulness can nurture meditation. and meditation — public meditation — is what the evening was all about.
WHILE MANY OF those present were Sri Chinmoy disciples (recognizable because the women wore saris and the men wore white shirts and pants) many others were curious folk who dabble in the inner peace movement.
"I’m into mixed bag," said Paddy Long, 50, a high school guidance counsellor. "I do white light meditation and, I don’t know, I guess you’d call it a Ram Dass of the senses... You concentrate on the feet and see the feet disappear then on the ankles...
"Basically what I try to do is quiet the chatterbox we call the rational mind.” He learned about the Sri Chinmoy session earlier that day he said, from a friend whose car he was fixing.
Addy Farinas, 41, the owner of a flower shop in Haileah, described herself as a follower of another guru — Paramahansa Yogananda.
BUT SHE SAW no conflict in attending a meditation with another master, she said, because they are all one — all united from one energy.
Meditation, she said, helps develop the spiritual side of her life.
The crowd was divided between persons in their late teens and early 20s, and those in middle age.
Younger attendees included Bill Luongo and Tom McCabe, both 18, who said they didn’t know a lot about Sri Chinmoy and had come to learn more.
"We’re seekers,” said Luongo with a quiet smile.
BEFORE THE meditation began. Sri Chinmoy’s disciples milled about, fixing up the stage and adjusting lights and microphones.
Some talked about his teachings. Michelle Samole, 24, is one of about 20 disciples who live in greater Miami, and has been a disciple for more than three years.
"He taught me ... the soul which lives inside of us is like a spark of divine consciousness ... By meditating, we can come in contact with divine consciousness.
"We do things everybody else does," she added. “We don’t hide in our houses and meditate all day." She and her husband, for example, both teach school.
“It’s not a matter of having to give up material things,” although disciples are asked not to smoke cigarets or drink alcohol.
THE IDEA, says another Miami disciple, Tom Pliske, is to improve oneself from, the inside, through a process Sri Chinmoy calls "love, devotion and surrender."
Sri Chinmoy arrived on stage unannounced, as the sound of talk filled the auditorium. But after Chinmoy stood silently and barely moving on center stage, with his palms pressed together chest high, the talking stopped.
Every motion stopped.
Sri Chinmoy pivoted his head very slowly from side to side. Candles reflected in his eyes, making them appear to flicker and glow.
Eventually he sat, took a bow in one hand and a musical instrument called an esraj in the other, and began to play.
THE ESRAJ looks like a cross between a sitar and a violin, and sounds, as one disciple put it later, "a bit other-worldly."
When he finished, he sat quietly again. The silence was broken occasionally by soft choruses and instrumental music, all sung or played by disciples. All the music had an Eastern flavor though some lyrics were In English.
Sri Chinmoy's audience, including many dressed in white, sat silently while he played an esraj and while his disciples sang. Some of the lyrics were in English, and expressed such questions as, “Problem … how to lighten?”
Caption: Sri Chinmoy audience, including many dressed in white, sat silently while he played an esraj and while his disciples sang. Some of the lyrics were in English, and expressed such questions as, “Problem ... how to lighten?”
Published in AUM — Vol.II-4, No. 1, January 27, 1977.
by Sri Chinmoy
with Daibel Faye of Radio Kan Kan, WBAI 99.5 FM, New York
Daibel Faye: Could you tell us what your mission is and what you are trying to achieve?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a student of peace. Only a student can learn, and peace is something that we learn from our day-to-day life. When we pray, when we meditate, we try to become a better person. If we become a better person, then we shall have joy, and this joy comes from our inspiration. I inspire you, you inspire me and both of us together try to inspire the whole world. This world of ours has everything save and except one thing — peace. Material wealth will not give us peace. Earthly possessions will not give us peace. Talks on peace will not give us peace. Peace we get only from our self-giving life. This self-giving life has to be sleepless and unconditional.
I happen to be a poet, a musician and an artist. Now, you may say I am a jack of all trades, master of none, but I have tried through my poems, through my music and through my art to offer my inspiration to the world. Each thing that I do is for inspiration. When I am inspired, I create something and then I try to share with the rest of the world the same inspiration. I feel we can become good citizens of the world on the strength of our inspiration. When we are inspired, we do great, good and immortal things.
I have met with many, many world figures. Although some of them are well known in the world of politics — such as President Gorbachev, President Mandela and a few other politicians of the highest rank — they are so kind to me. They never discuss politics with me. We only talk about world peace from the depths of our heart and not from our mind.
Here I have to beg the pardon of the listeners. The mind, no matter how great and cultured it is, will not be able to give us peace. Only a simple heart, a pure heart, a childlike heart will be able to give us peace. I have written considerably, I have given talks at various places. But I must say I get peace only when I share peace with others. That is why I give peace concerts all over the world. I have only one goal — peace, universal peace.
For many years I gave talks on world peace at the United Nations. But I found that my talks were of no avail. Only when I meditate in silence or play soulful music do I feel peace in the inmost recesses of my heart. At that time I feel I can be of true service to mankind. So in everything that I do I try to become a self-giving life founded upon my inner peace.
Daibel Faye: Well, it is quite refreshing to hear you go through all the different things that you do. Apparently you travel a lot, and yet you can manage to write all these books, to learn all these instruments and to practise them. It seems that you do not make a distinction between your private and professional life.
Sri Chinmoy: Mine is not a professional life. Mine is the life of prayer and meditation. I do not separate my outer activities from my prayer-life. You may ask why I have thrown myself into the hustle and bustle of life. For me, everything that I do has only one aim or goal — peace, universal peace. I feel that if I enter into a garden, there should be many flowers of various types. If there are different kinds of flowers, then individuals who enter into the garden can appreciate the flowers. In a shop there are many, many things. You can buy the things that you like, and I can buy the things that I need. Similarly, I feel that inside my heart-garden, inside your heart-garden, there are all kinds of beautiful flowers and they have a divine fragrance. When I enter into your heart-garden, I derive tremendous peace, joy, harmony, love and the feeling of oneness. In the same way, when you enter into my heart-garden, you also see and feel the same thing. This is how we grow together. Only on the strength of our oneness can we have peace. This oneness we can get only when we are happy. How can we be happy if we are not inspired? So right from the beginning we have to think of inspiration. Inspiration is of paramount importance. Anything great, good, divine and immortal that we are planning to accomplish in this lifetime has to come from inspiration. I go from this country to that country only to be of service to mankind. My service and my inspiration are like the beauty and fragrance of my heart-flower.
Daibel Faye: I understand that you have lifted over 92,000 pounds in a time space of three hours.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. On the 27th of November, in three hours’ time I lifted over 92,000 pounds. Again, I must say, it is not my physical strength. It is all God’s Grace. My biceps are not even 13 inches. I am not muscle-bound and I am of very short stature. For all that I do, I depend on God’s Grace. I can do nothing on my own. I entirely depend on God’s Grace for my poetry, music, art and sports. Everything that I do comes from my prayer-life and meditation-life.
Daibel Faye: Even though it is by God's Grace that you lifted all that weight, indeed, there has to be a physical connection. Even though God's Grace is responsible, there has to be a lifting process.
Sri Chinmoy: Let us use the term ‘faith’. Every day I try to increase my inner faith in God. He is full of Compassion, Love, Affection and Concern for His creation. When we look up, we see God the Creator, and when we look around, we see God the creation. God the Creator and God the creation are the same Person. When we pray to God the Creator, He tells us that He will be pleased with us only when we serve Him inside His creation.
This weightlifting that I do inspires many people. When it is on television, millions of people watch me. They get innocent joy when they see this 67-year-old man lifting weights. Especially people who are over sixty get tremendous inspiration. They say, “Oh, he is of our age. What is wrong with us? Why should we allow ourselves to be inactive? Why should we wallow in the pleasures of idleness?” Young people who are twenty or forty years younger than I am say, “If this old man can lift such heavy weights, what is wrong with us?”
My weightlifting is such an innocent thing. I am not boxing or wrestling with anybody. I am only trying to transcend my own capacity. I am only loving the divine in me, in you and in everybody. That divine is telling me to be of greater service to humanity. So when I lift weights, I have only one objective in front of me, and that is to serve mankind according to the limited capacity that I have been entrusted with. Again, my capacity is founded upon faith, and this faith comes from my prayer-life and my meditation-life.
Daibel Faye: That is very well said. We have seen people who use worldly material power to do wrong towards people. Thank God that those who have the divine power know how to manage that power and will hopefully do what you are doing, which is to promote peace and unity in the world.
Sri Chinmoy: There are two kinds of power. One power divides, the other power unites. When we use our mind-power, we try to exercise our superiority. We say, “I am superior to you; I am better than you.” This becomes our philosophy at that time. We divide ourselves completely from each other. When we live in the heart, we become inseparably one with others. Your good qualities and your bad qualities become part and parcel of my life and vice versa. My good qualities and my bad qualities belong to you in the same way.
The power of oneness is infinitely, infinitely stronger than the power of division. There shall come a time in the near future or in the distant future when we shall grow into the power of our oneness-heart, and this world of ours will be transformed. Now mind-power is trying to lord it over the whole world. But there shall come a time when heart-power, which is all oneness, will be found everywhere. We will have a world of universal oneness. At that time, there will be no destruction; it will be all fulfilment.
Now we are not fulfilled. We have one house, but we want to have two houses, three houses, four houses. We have one car, but then we want two, three, four, five, six. Each time our desires increase, we feel miserable. But when we aspire, pray and meditate, we know that if it is absolutely necessary, our Lord Supreme will bless us with a car or a house. Anything that we need, He will supply. In that way, we can have peace. Whatever we need, God will definitely bless us with, but He is under no obligation to please us by giving us whatever we want.
Right now the whole world is expecting and demanding from individuals, from countries, from humanity because we live in the mind. But if we live in the heart, then we will not demand. We will only grow and glow together. As I said before, when I pray and meditate, when I go from one country to another, when I give peace concerts, when I compose songs or write poetry, I have only one aim — to be of service to mankind. I want to serve mankind according to my very limited capacity, lovingly, prayerfully, soulfully and self-givingly. While I am doing this, I feel abundant peace in the inmost recesses of my heart.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 22
with Sri Chinmoy, after a public meditation
at Hialeah-Miami Lakes High School in Florida
Rick Ratliff: How did the meditation feel for you tonight? What did you feel from your audience?
Sri Chinmoy: I felt receptivity. Each individual has receptivity, and according to his receptivity each has received peace, light and bliss, which by God’s infinite Grace I brought down.
Rick Ratliff: In what way does it help in a meditation for you to face the audience?
Sri Chinmoy: When I face the audience, I devotedly become an instrument of the divinity that is within each individual. I do not act like a teacher or preacher, but I become absolutely one with the inner cry of those who are in front of me. The inner cry is for peace, light and bliss, whereas the outer cry is for name, fame and material possessions.
Rick Ratliff: When you participate in the meditation sessions at the United Nations, do you receive a different feeling from the audience?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, because those at the United Nations have been trained. Many of the members of the United Nations Meditation Group have been meditating with me for the last six years; therefore, they are experienced. Naturally, there will be a great difference when we meditate with experienced seekers, and with beginners. Today there were quite a few here who were absolute beginners.
Rick Ratliff: In a situation in which there are a number of beginners in an audience, can you be sure they are all meditating?
Sri Chinmoy: They are all like the members of a large family. In a large family there will be small children and there will be mature members, adults. The mother feeds the small children with one kind of food and she feeds the older children and adults with a different kind of food. Each person eats according to his capacity and his necessity. When I meditate with a large group like this, those who are advanced receive from me abundant peace, light and bliss. Those who are beginners get only an iota of peace, light and bliss because their inner hunger is not as powerful and their receptivity is not as vast as in those who are spiritually advanced. But just because they do have the hunger, they will definitely get something to eat according to their standard, like the small child in the family. When we are hungry, we go to the kitchen or to a restaurant to eat; but if we are not hungry, we do not go anywhere to eat. If they had not had any inner hunger at all, they would not have come here.
Rick Ratliff: Recent trends in the West indicate that a great number of people seem to feel spiritual hunger, and many have turned to the traditions of the East. In the past few years there have been a great many persons who have been declared spiritual Masters and so forth. Are all of these people true Masters?
Sri Chinmoy: That is up to the individual to judge. If an individual goes to a teacher himself, only then will he be able to judge whether the teacher is real or not. If he has never gone to see any teachers, he will have to depend entirely on the opinions of those who have visited the Masters themselves. But I tell seekers, as a general rule, that if somebody says that he will be able to grant them realisation overnight, or in a few weeks or months, then that particular person is not a real Master. If somebody says that he can grant them realisation provided they give him a certain sum of money, that person is not a real Master, for money-power cannot conquer God’s Love.
God-realisation is a vast subject. We cannot expect to learn it overnight. Just to get a limited amount of earthly knowledge we spend fifteen to twenty-five years in school. God-realisation means transforming our centuries-old ignorance. When we are trying to overcome ignorance and acquire wisdom-light, how can we expect to do this in the twinkling of an eye? It is impossible. So if some Masters proclaim that they can do this very quickly, or in exchange for some fee, then I tell the seekers that these Masters are not real.
Rick Ratliff: For example, one pays an initiation fee in Transcendental Meditation...
Sri Chinmoy: Of course, this depends on what you are promised in exchange for the fee. If you are taking a course, like a school course, to learn some specific thing, there may be a fee of five or ten dollars. If somebody is merely giving a course or teaching a technique of meditation, naturally he has the right to ask for a reasonable fee. But if somebody claims that he will give you God-realisation, and asks you to give him hundreds or thousands of dollars, or all your earthly possessions, then he is a false Master, and you will not get what you want from him.
Rick Ratliff: In terms of your own efforts, I assume you support yourself through the sale of your books?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, my three hundredth book was published last week. Mayor Beame of New York was kind enough to receive me on that occasion.
Rick Ratliff: Yes, I saw a copy of the article.
Sri Chinmoy: I also support myself through the sale of my records and tapes. By God’s Grace I am a singer and a musician, as well as an author.
Rick Ratliff: And you are a painter too, I understand.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, but I do not sell my paintings. They are only for exhibition. From my books and records I can manage to support myself. Also, although my disciples are under no obligation to give me money, they do give me love-offerings occasionally. This is not like a fee, but as one can give flowers or fruits to his Master, even so one can give five dollars or ten dollars if he wishes to. He is under no obligation; it is not like tuition for a school. It is a spontaneous offering of love.
Rick Ratliff: The way I became aware of you was from the back of album jackets of Mahavishnu and Devadip. From the experience of this evening, I see there is a quietness and placidity to the meditation which seems to be in sharp contrast with the early records of the Mahavishnu Orchestra — “The Inner Mounting Flame” and “Love, Devotion and Surrender.” I was wondering whether you enjoy that music.
Sri Chinmoy: Did you hear me playing at the beginning of the evening?
Rick Ratliff: Yes, I heard you.
Sri Chinmoy: That is an Indian instrument, the esraj. I started playing the esraj very recently, during this year. Now, Mahavishnu and Devadip are both great musicians. Just because they are great, they have developed remarkable ways to present their musical talents and capacities to the world at large. Long before they came into our spiritual family they were well established, and they had their set pattern. After having accepted our path, they received considerable spiritual inspiration and they have brought to the fore their spiritual music to some extent. So the spiritual music and the music that they played before are now combined and synthesised. I do not want to say that previously their music was non-spiritual. No, before, they had their own way of presenting their skills. Now, because they have become conscious seekers of the Absolute, their present music has an added factor, and it will gain more of this as they themselves grow inwardly.
Rick Ratliff: Have you enjoyed Florida?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I have been here for nine days and I shall be here for another five days.
Rick Ratliff: What did you think of Disney World?
Sri Chinmoy: Disney World is the world that has conquered human depression and frustration. Human depression and frustration are delaying humanity’s progress toward the transcendental Goal. When people go to Disney World, they do not get mere excitement. They get something infinitely more. Either consciously or unconsciously they get rid of the negative forces that take the form of worry, anxiety, insecurity, frustration and depression.
Rick Ratliff: Do you remember what some of the rides were that you went on?
Sri Chinmoy: I liked ‘America the Beautiful’ the most. It gave me abundant joy. I told my disciples that for me it was worth coming to Florida just to see the Bicentennial presentation of “America the Beautiful,” because there the soul and the spirit of America are embodied and represented in a most striking manner.
Rick Ratliff: Well, it was very good talking to you. I appreciate it. There is a world of questions I could ask.
Sri Chinmoy: Your questions have been most illumining. I am extremely grateful to you. In you I have discovered a very good, sincere and genuine seeker, and I wish you all success in your own way of aspiration and dedication to mankind. You are not a mere reporter. You are something infinitely more — you are serving mankind. You come to a spiritual teacher; then you share your experience there with the world at large. You are acting like a true messenger of light. I am a messenger, and you are a messenger. We are both instruments. You are not an individual reporter and I am not an individual teacher, but we are one. We have only one supreme cause: to serve humanity, to elevate the consciousness of humanity. What you want, you are doing in your own way. What I want, I am doing in my own way. What each person wants, he tries to do in his own way. Each individual on earth should be doing only one thing: serving humanity according to his capacity. Our careers may be different — I am a spiritual teacher and you are a reporter — but we are aiming at the same goal.
Published in AUM – Vol. 4, No. 1, January 27, 1977
in San Juan, Puerto Rico
Moderator: Sudha (Miss Carmen Suro) Panel: Vijaya (Mrs. Sarah Casanova), Agni (Mr. Jose Luis Casanova), Prajna (Mrs. Haydee Casellas), Mr. Pedro Dacosta
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thanks to the courtesy of ‘Foro de la Comunidad’ (Community Forum), I have the privilege and the pleasure to introduce to you the figure of Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose. To many here in Puerto Rico he is well known. Many know, ‘Una Pausa en el Dia’ (A Pause in the Day), the column in ‘El Mundo’, the daily newspaper where Sri Chinmoy expresses his teachings.
Sri Chinmoy is a spiritual figure, a great Master, philosopher and Hindu yogi. He is the spiritual director of the Aum Centre in San Juan and the Aum Centre in New York. Sri Chinmoy is with you.
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you. I am extremely happy to be here at this TV station and at the same time, I am most grateful to the authorities of this T.V. station WKAQ for granting us the opportunity to be here. We do hope that we will be able to serve, to some extent, those who will be seeing us and listening to us. Again I wish to offer my deepest sense of gratitude to this T.V. station, WKAQ.
Question: Master Chinmoy, I believe that there are two wars, the inner and the outer. When and how will these two wars stop?
Sri Chinmoy: You are right, there are two wars, the inner and the outer. The inner war is the war that our inner being or the soul fights against limitations, ignorance, doubt and death. The outer war is the war that man fights with man, nation fights with nation, country fights with country. Now the question is: when and how can these wars come to an end? These wars can come to an end only when the inner war first stops. That is to say, when in the inner world, the inner being or the soul conquers ignorance, fear, doubt and death. Then in the outer world there will be no necessity to wage war. We fight because deep inside us there is disharmony, there is fear, there is anxiety and there is aggression. When deep within us there is peace, joy, plenitude and fulfilment we shall not invite war. So the outer war will come to an end when the inner war is resolved, when the inner war stops. Both wars will come to an end and are bound to end in the process of human evolution.
Question: Master Chinmoy, I have read in some Eastern books that man is greater than the gods. I wish to hear from you if this statement is correct?
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you. I am glad that you have read Eastern books. There often it is mentioned that man is superior to the gods. What we actually mean by that is that there are many, many gods in the vital world. According to our Indian scriptures, as many human beings, so many are the gods. So, these gods, what do they actually do? They help us at the time of our need. When we suffer from headache or stomach-ache or some minor diseases they come and help us and we pray to them. But there is something else that is called liberation. Liberation or Self-realisation can be had only by a human being. When a soul enters into the human being and starts making progress, in the process of evolution, his soul becomes fully liberated and fully realised; when this particular human being has fully realised himself, he has realised God also. But the gods do not have that opportunity. They do not take the human form. They live in the vital world and from there they operate. So, unless and until they enter into a human body and human form and go through the process of reincarnation, they cannot have the Self-realisation or liberation that we human beings have. When we have Self-realisation, we know that there is nothing greater than that self-realisation. That means we have crossed the barriers of ignorance and travelled across the sea of ignorance and death. That is why we say that man is greater than the gods, superior to gods, because man gets Self-realisation whereas the so-called gods who are in the vital plane do not care for it and do not get it.
Question: Can you explain further what liberation is?
Sri Chinmoy: Liberation means the actual freedom from fear, freedom from doubt, freedom from ignorance and freedom from death. Now, as soon as you come into this world you become a prey to ignorance, fear, limitation and doubt. But through our spiritual practise and by living the inner life, we enter into the consciousness of the Divine and there we start growing and a day comes when we are well established, fully established, in the spiritual consciousness of inner life. We become totally free from ignorance. Now we are caught by ignorance, we are wallowing in the pleasures of ignorance; but a day dawns when we will be free from ignorance, and the moment that we are free from ignorance, we are liberated for good.
Question: Is there a special means that would accelerate this process of liberation?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, there is a special way and is called “conscious aspiration”, and this conscious aspiration should come from the body; from the physical, the vital, the mental, the psychic and the soul. Of course, the soul has been all the time aspiring. The physical, the vital, the mind and psychic have to be aware of this aspiring consciousness, and when we consciously aspire in all different parts of our being we will be able to accelerate the achievement of liberation.
Question: Master Chinmoy, from the spiritual point of view does the New Year have any special significance?
Sri Chinmoy: From the spiritual point of view the New Year has a special significance. On the eve of the New Year, a new consciousness dawns on earth. God once again inspires each human being, each creature with new Hope, new Light, Peace and Bliss. God always wants us to move farther, farthest; He does not want us to look back. We know when a runner runs fast, while running fast if he looks back, he drops to the ground. Similarly, if we constantly look behind at the year that we are leaving aside, thinking of our sorrow, miseries, frustrations and all that, we lose everything that we gained. But if we look forward, ahead, we see hope dawning deep within us, we see a new light illumining our consciousness.
Each New Year is like a rung on the ladder of consciousness; we have to climb up the ladder of consciousness and each New Year serves the purpose of a rung in the ladder. When the New Year dawns, we have to make ourselves conscious of the fact that we are going to transcend ourselves. We have to go beyond the present capacity, beyond our present achievement. And when we have that kind of firm determination, God showers His choicest blessings upon our devoted heads and He says, “New Year dawns, a new consciousness dawns deep within you. Run towards the destined goal.” And we listen to God, we listen to the dictates of our inner soul, we run towards the Ultimate Reality. The New Year energises us, encourages us, inspires us to run towards that Ultimate Truth.
Question: When God thinks of me what does He really do?
Sri Chinmoy: God actually thinks of you all the time. It is I or somebody else that has to think of you at a particular time. But in God’s case, God being All-Awareness, He always thinks of you. But He does not use his mind to think of you. We use the mind to think of a human being. In God’s case, the mind is not required. So whether we think of God or not, God is constantly thinking of us. So in your case God has been thinking and will think of you, because deep within God it is you who are always there and at the same time, in you is God’s Own Reality. So God does not need to think of you. He is All-Awareness and we are deep in His Heart all the time.
Question: Master Chinmoy, will you explain briefly to us what is Yoga?
Sri Chinmoy: Yoga means union. Union with whom? It is the union with God. By practising Yoga, that is, spiritual discipline, we unite ourselves with God.
Published in Earth’s cry meets Heaven’s smile, part 3
Appreciation from 12 U.S. Senators and Members of Congress have been read into the Congressional Record honoring Sri Chinmoy’s 50th birthday year.
In remarks delivered last week, Sen. Paul Tsongas (D-MA) lauded the leader for his many contributions saying “Sports enthusiast, artist, musician, poet, and Director of a Meditation Group at the United Nations, Sri Chinmoy in a very brief period has accomplished more than most people do in a lifetime.”
Benjamin Rosenthal (D-NY) and Geraldine Ferraro (D-NY) were among those members of Congress who detailed in their remarks, programs for world betterment that they had co-sponsored or appeared at jointly with Sri Chinmoy.
The spiritual leader, a columnist for the New York Voice, was also cited by Congressman Joseph Addabbo (D-NY) as “one of the world’s foremost authorities on Eastern philosophy.”
Published in the NEW YORK VOICE, 12/26/81
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Appreciation from 12 U.S. Senators and members of the House of Representatives have been read into the Congressional Record honoring Sri Chinmoy’s 50th birthday in remarks delivered last week, Senator Paul Tsongas, Democrat of Massachusetts lauded the leader for his many contributions saying “Sports enthusiast, artist, musician, poet and Director of a Meditation Group at the United Nations, Sri Chinmoy, in a very brief period, more than most people do in a lifetime.
Senator Tsongas added: “We wish Sri Chinmoy in all his endeavours that help so many, success in the years ahead and best wishes for a long and continually fruitful life.
Congressman Benjamin Rosenthal and Geraldine Ferraro, both Democrats of New York, were among those members of Congress who detailed in their remarks, programs for world betterment that they had cosponsored or appeared at jointly with Sri Chinmoy.
The spiritual leader was cited by Congressman Addabbo, Democrat of New York, as “one of the world’s foremost authorities on Eastern philosophy.” Sri Chinmoy has conducted meditation at the United Nations since 1970 and is the leader of the international Sri Chinmoy Centre.
Besides his work at the United Nations, Sri Chinmoy is also renowned for his meetings with world leaders for the cause of peace and for his achievements in poetry painting and music and his lectures at major universities around the world. He is also the leader of the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team which sponsors athletic events all over the world,
The Sri Chinmoy Centre is headquartered in New York with branches in such major American cities as Boston, San Francisco, Washington DC, Chicago, Seattle and Miami and internationally in Zürich, London, Paris, Rome, Tokyo and Melbourne.
Sri Chinmoy began teaching in America in 1964 after studying Eastern spiritual sciences for 20 years at a Pondicherry Indian Ashram.
Published in Overseas Times 12/25/81
Sri Chinmoy, an Indian spiritual and meditation teacher was recently honoured by 12 US congressman whose appreciation of his work has been read into the congressional record according to a press release of the Sri Chinmoy Centre in Washington D.C.
Senator Paul Tsongas, Democrat of Massachusetts in remarks delivered December 15 described Chinmoy as a “sports enthusiast, artist, musician, poet and director of a meditation group at the United Nations and said, he “in a very brief period has accomplished more than most people do in a lifetime.
Representative Benjamin Rosenthal and Geraldine Ferraro (Democrat–New York) spoke of Chinmoy programs for “world betterment” in which they had participated with him. Representative Joseph Addabbo (Democrat–New York) called him “one of the world’s foremost authorities on Eastern philosophy.”
The Congressmen’s actions coincide with Sri Chinmoy’s 50th birthday.
Chinmoy began teaching in the United States in 1964 after studying at an Indian Ashram in Pondicherry. The Sri Chinmoy Centre has its headquarters in New York and branches in Boston, San Francisco, Chicago, Seattle, Miami, Zürich, London, Rome, Paris, Tokyo and Melbourne.
Published in INDIA ABROAD 12/25/81
Washington D.C.: Appreciation from 12 US Senators and members of Congress was read into the congressional record honouring Sri Chinmoy’s 50th birthday, according to a press release.
Published in News India 12/25/81
by Henry Dyer
THE National Stadium tracks will come alive when the Sri Chinmoy Games — a track meet for men and women over 50 years will be held for the first time.
And the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run — the world’s longest running relay will be going through the country after 80 countries.
It will be the last leg of the relay which has involved over 500,000 people from around the world.
The Peace Run was devised by Sri Chinmoy, 62, who is here in the country on a Peace Tour in the South Pacific.
The current Peace Run began in Australia in March last year with Canberra, Sydney and Melbourne being dedicated to world peace.
Runners from the tour group will start off at Sukuna Park carrying a flaming torch of Peace to Ratu Nausori Park where the National Sevens will be held before returning to the National Stadium for the beginning of the Sri Chinmoy Master’s Games.
The “Ambassador of Peace” as he is renowned for is 62 years old and he was a [running] student of former world sprint champion Carl Lewis, who was also a student of the Peace man in meditation classes.
The group was in Apia, Western Samoa, where the Samoan Sports Minister won the celebrity 100m race-walk.
Sri Chinmoy considers sports at any age an important factor for the development of inner peace, for spiritual growth and a positive balanced lifestyle.
The winner of any athletic event to him is not the only one who stands first, but also the person who goes beyond his or her previous achievement or just gives his best.
Two of his students Carl Lewis and Muhammad Ali are just examples of his teaching and many others.
Interested athletes are to be at the Stadium before the Masters Games begin at 5 pm.
Published in THE FIJI TIMES — SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1994
An article about Sri Chinmoy’s Peace Concert appears in the Guang Ming Daily newspaper, a Chinese-language newspaper published in Malaysia.
Guang Ming Daily
January 8, 1999 (Friday)November 21st, Wuyin Year of the Lunar Calendar
Penang/D11 (Penang 7th)
SRI CHINMOY, who is known as the messenger of peace, will hold a peace music concert at the Penang Chinese Assembly Hall at 8:00 pm on the 9th of this month (Saturday).
The music concert is free and open to people from all walks of life to listen to this once-in-a-lifetime event.
Dr. Nayak Polissar, the head of the Sri Chinmoy Centre, said so at a press conference held in Huatang today.
Those present also included Huatang Acting Chairman Wang Jilong, General Affairs Deng Guobin, Chen Sencai, Ke Jinshu and Zhang Jinxiang, etc.
He said that the music concert will be hosted by the Penang Chinese Assembly Hall and presented by the Sri Chinmoy Centre.
The multi-talented Messenger of Peace Sri Chinmoy will be presenting music at the aforementioned concert to celebrate the spirit of goodwill in Malaysia.
He went on to say that the 67-year-old Sri Chinmoy had composed thousands of songs in the past, expressing his inner feelings for peace.
At the concert on the 9th of this month, he will use at least 10 different instruments to perform his selected works.
The instruments used include those from India, Japan and Europe and various musical instruments and flutes from other countries.
Among the songs performed will also be his ode to Malaysia and its historical heroes, which will be sung by the International Sri Chinmoy Peace Choir.
Sri Chinmoy has held no less than 550 peace music concerts in many countries around the world. In several places such as Tokyo and Washington, the number of audiences attending the concerts exceeded 10,000.
In addition, he said, the Sri Chinmoy Centre is also holding a ‘Peace Run’ on Sunday (Monday) and will run to Penang Island, making goodwill and peace visits at 10 to 15 schools.
He pointed out that the ‘Peace Run’ will start on the morning of the 11th of this month at 7:30 from Batu Ferringhi Sands Hotel, and visiti Peiping and along the way Choi School, Tanchen Bungah National School, Special Education Primary and Secondary School, Tanjung Sitiya National High School, Penang Girls High School, Pulau Pool Skating, Abbey Secondary School, Allan Girls Primary School, and Wright Street Abbey Primary and Secondary School are scheduled to disperse at 1:30 pm.
The Sri Chinmoy Centre is a United Nations cultural and educational institution, NGO, based in New York.
Left photo: Messenger of Peace Sri Chinmoy is playing a difficult musical instrument.
Right photo: Dr. Nayak Polissar, Director of Sri Chinmoy Centre (2nd from right) at the press conference, Zhang Jinxiang and Ke Jin from left, Acting Chairman Wang Jilong, and Bosandini on the right.
His Highness, Malietoa Tanumafili II, has been described by the visiting International Ambassador for Peace, Sri Chinmoy, as “simple, kind-hearted and a true man of peace”.
In Apia on 21 December Malietoa Tanumafili II, Head of State of Western Samoa, offered his warm welcome to Samoa to International Ambassador of Peace Sri Chinmoy during a private interview at his official residence.
The spiritual leader, who is visiting Samoa from 20 December to 29 December, with more than 150 students from 25 nations, praised the Head of State, stating, “I have met with many leaders from many countries, but none as simple, as kind-hearted, as pure or as self giving as you. You are a true man of peace.”
To Sri Chinmoy, Malietoa responded: “I believe that you, Sri Chinmoy, are the one who is bringing peace to earth.” Sri Chinmoy is a leading proponent of global peace by fostering peace within individuals of all nationalities and faiths, and by initiating a wide variety of ongoing grassroots activities.
During their meeting, Sri Chinmoy presented the Head of State with the “Lighting [Lifting] Up the World with a Oneness-Heart” Award for the Samoan leader’s dedicated service to his people and to the world at large. This award has been presented to heads of state, Nobel laureates and other eminent world servers for their unique contributions to humanity.
After receiving the medallion, the Head of State lovingly placed it upon his head, as he described to Sri Chinmoy the Samoan Custom “when one receives very sacred gifts.”
During their meeting the two men held aloft the Peace Torch of the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run, a relay run for global harmony and peace which spans more than 80 nations and involves millions of citizens and world leaders every two years.
During his stay in Samoa, Sri Chinmoy will offer two Peace Concerts for the public on December 22 and 28 at 8.00pm at the John Williams Building free of charge.
During the programmes he will perform his own peace filled compositions on 15-20 instruments from around the world.
Students of Sri Chinmoy offered free classes on meditation for people of all faiths and walks of life on 23 December at 7.30pm at St. Mary’s Primary School Savalalo and on 27 December at 7.30pm at the Marist School at Mulivai.
“When we meditate,” explained Sri Chinmoy, “we make the mind calm, tranquil and full of peace.” He added, “Let us first have individual peace. From individual peace we will have collective peace.”
Caption:
Mr Sri Chinmoy and Malietoa Tanumafili II
Published on pages 1 & 2, in the Samoa Observer, Friday, 24 December 1993
Sri Chinmoy answers questions posed by a reporter in Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Question: I would like to ask what the basis of your meditation is.
Sri Chinmoy: It is very simple. We all know what prayer is. With folded hands, we pray to God, whom you call Allah. At that time, we ask God to take us to the highest Height and to give us joy, peace, love and light so that we can become good citizens of the world.
When we pray, it is like climbing a tree. We feel that God is at the top of the tree and we are begging Him to come down and give us His inner Treasures. Again, we are climbing up the tree and going high, higher, highest.
When we meditate, it is like climbing down the tree. We have received many delicious fruits, and now we are bringing them down and we shall offer them to our dear ones and to humanity at large. With meditation we come down and share our fruits — that is, our joy — with others.
Question: Is your meditation like a religion?
Sri Chinmoy: No, there is no religion involved. I was born a Hindu and perhaps you were born a Muslim. If we remain all the time in our respective religions, I may say that my Hinduism is the best and you may say that your Islam is the best. Then a third person will come to contradict us both and say, “No, Christianity is the best.” Like this, the religions may at times compete.
But ours is a way of life. We want to become good citizens of the world, and for this we have to love the Divine in humanity. There is not a single religion that does not love God. When we only care about loving God and we do not worry about whose religion is the best, then there is no problem. Our love of God becomes a way of life. But if we remain in the competition-world, we will claim that our own religion is the best.
I always say that our path is not a religion, but a way of life, based on love of God. So there is no problem.
Question: So you can say you are still a Hindu?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I am a Hindu. I was born in the Ghose family. My surname is Ghose, which is a Hindu name. How can I deny it? I was born into a Hindu family, so I am a Hindu. But when I mix with my friends, I only use the name Chinmoy. My friends know me as Chinmoy. They do not have to use my surname. Similarly, if I can establish my oneness with the rest of the world and see others as my friends, or as my brothers and sisters, I do not need to think of religion at that time. We have to establish our love and oneness with others, although we all have different religions. Real religion is love of God.
If I truly love God, then I have to go beyond the boundaries of religion and feel my oneness with all of God’s children. But if somebody asks me what religion I was born into, immediately I will have to say that I was born into the Hindu religion.
Question: What can you say about world peace?
Sri Chinmoy: This world has everything save and except peace. Powerful countries say they want peace. Everybody talks about peace. But when we talk about peace, many times we are only juggling with the word ‘peace’. We know the word ‘peace’ so well, but we are only throwing balls into the air.
The problem is that everybody wants peace in a very peculiar way. I may say that as long as I am your lord and you are my servant, we can have peace. I want peace provided I am allowed to stand in front of you. It is not enough for me to stand alongside you. No, I have to be one step ahead of you and you have to remain behind me; then only there will be peace. This is what the world thinks and feels.
But we can never get peace by lording it over others. It is only when everybody is on the same footing that there will be peace. Real peace lies in inseparable oneness. If you are here, I am also here. If you are there, I am also there. This is peace.
Question: Your meditation group wants world peace, but I do not think it is a big enough group to make an impact on world leaders.
Sri Chinmoy: Our meditation group prays and meditates. We feel that if the world is going to change, it will have to change in the heart first. Prayer and meditation come from the heart, not from the mind. The mind is not going to give us peace. It has to get peace from somewhere else, and that place is the heart.
The soul has infinite peace. The heart has peace to a certain extent because it is receiving peace from the soul. But if we can regularly pray and meditate, then our heart will be in tune with God all the time and it will definitely get peace in abundant measure.
The heart is ready and eager to give peace to the mind, but right now the mind is not receiving what the heart has to offer. People who are in the mind are only using the word ‘peace’. They do not feel the necessity of peace, whereas those who live in the heart because of their prayer and meditation do feel the necessity of peace. It is through prayer and meditation that we can intensify and expand this feeling in our heart and eventually bring the message of peace to the mind. I believe that all those who pray and meditate are helping people who sincerely want peace in the world.
Question: Do you believe that world peace will be a reality?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I do believe it, only I cannot say that tomorrow the whole world will be inundated with peace.
It is like sowing a seed. Today you have put a seed into the ground, but you cannot expect a tree to grow overnight. First it has to become a tiny plant and a sapling, and only after that will it grow into a giant banyan tree. Right now our prayers and meditations are like seeds. It will take time for them to germinate; but it is only a matter of time.
Question: I was invited to your musical performance, but I see that you do not play music by composers like Mozart or Beethoven. You play in a different way.
Sri Chinmoy: I do not dare to compare myself with the great, immortal composers. I am only playing the music that I have composed from my soulful heart. I am a man of prayer. From my prayer-life and my meditation-life I have received inspiration, and this spiritual inspiration I try to convey to the world at large through my music.
Mine is soulful music. It has peace in it. In every way I am trying to offer peace, through my music as well as through my prayer and meditation. Music is part and parcel of my spiritual life.
Question: Is it all right if people call you a prophet?
Sri Chinmoy: No, no, no! I am not a prophet and I do not claim to be a prophet. I am a God-lover. I love God and I pray to God. What I claim to be, every person can also claim to be. I say that I am a God-lover and you can also say the same thing. We are all in the same boat.
Published in You Belong to God
SUVA'S Lord Mayor, Councillor Manoa Dobui, declared the capital city a Sri Chinmoy Peace Capital on Saturday in honour of a visiting peace ambassador who ended his tour of Fiji yesterday.
Sri Chinmoy and 200 students sponsored a peace run over the weekend that looped from Suva to Nausori, and a track meet at the National Stadium.
Suva becomes the sixth Sri Chinmoy Peace Capital, joining the capital cities of Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Iceland and Scotland.
At Saturday’s dedication ceremony, presided over by the Deputy Lord Mayor David Blake.lock, Sri Chinmoy said: “Suva is known as the city of surprises.'”
Noting that a few centuries ago Fiji was a warlike nation, he went on: “Now, here on the soil of Suva and in the heart of Fiji, the dance of peace and universal oneness is reigning supreme.”
Sri Chinmoy arrived in Fiji on December 30 after a stop-over in Samoa.
His visit to Fiji also included a public concert last Wednesday at the Suva Civic Center.
He flew out of Fiji yesterday for the Cook Islands and Tahiti.
He then returns home to New York later this month.
Published in THE FIJI TIMES — MONDAY, JANUARY 10, 1994, page 5
ATHLETICS is not only about winning and beating others — it is about competing and inspiring other athletes to bring out the best qualities in each other.
That was the message at the Sri Chinmoy Masters Games at the National Stadium on Saturday.
The Games was inspired by peace ambassador Sri Chinmoy who was in the country on a peace tour of the South Pacific.
Sri Chinnmoy took part in the 100 metres event.
Among those who turned up to witness the event was Parliamentarian Vincent Lobendahn who participated in the celebrity walk.
The Games also marked the end of the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run the world’s longest running relay that went through 80 countries.
On Saturday runners from the Chinmoy group carried a torch to the Ratu Cakobau Park in Nausori where they handed it to the town mayor Pita Mawi.
From there the group proceeded to the National Stadium.
Sri Chinmoy spokesperson Vasanti said the purpose of the run was to promote peace through sports. “For older athletes it is not so important to win but to complete the race,” Vasanti said.
The oldest athletes were Daniel Tui Cakau and Sarama Minoli both 67. Local fun run veteran Joeli Bera 57 also participated.
Athletes took part in the one mile, 100 metres, 200 metres, 400 metres and 800 metres in six age categories.
Published in THE FIJI TIMES — MONDAY, JANUARY 10, 1994, page 28
These questions were presented in writing to Sri Chinmoy by Mrs. Barbara Callen of New York City. A few days later, on 4 January 1967, Sri Chinmoy answered them orally during an interview with her. Mrs. Callen records his exact words, taking everything down in shorthand.
Question: Is the soul always with the person during his lifetime, or can it leave him temporarily, even making its home elsewhere?
Sri Chinmoy: As a rule, the soul always remains with the person during his lifetime, but it can leave the body for a few minutes, or a few hours at most, while the person is asleep. It can also leave the body for a short period while the aspirant is in a deep state of meditation. Then one can see one's own body. One may see it as a dead body or a dynamic body or as a shaft of light facing one's soul, or in many other ways. Of course, at that time, one sees the body with the eye of one's own soul. To come back to the question, the soul must remain with the person during his lifetime.
Question: During sleep, does the person's soul make journeys?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. The soul makes journeys to different levels of consciousness. There are seven higher worlds and seven lower worlds. Generally the soul travels in these worlds during sleep. Almost everyone's soul is fortunate enough to have access to some of these worlds, but very few are conscious of these experiences while they are happening, or remember them after they awake.
Question: Can a person's body and consciousness so change during his lifetime that he becomes fit for a finer soul to enter him?
Sri Chinmoy: A finer soul does not enter him. But if the person's body and consciousness are transformed totally, then the soul that he already possesses will be in a position to fulfil its Divine Mission here on earth most effectively, in all its supernal, detailed perfection.
Question: Does a change, such as purification, during the lifetime, change the soul?
Sri Chinmoy: It is the same soul which accepted ignorance and now, throwing away the veil of ignorance, comes closer to its own Divine plenitude and Divine Manifestation.
Question: When we think another's thoughts, we let ourselves 'tune-in' to his 'psychic' agitations. However, if we 'tune-in' to one whom we believe to be grounded in the source of his being, his soul, would this be a valid practice, at least until one's own spiritual unfolding developed?
Sri Chinmoy: First of all, let us be clear about the use of the word 'psychic'. As I use it, 'psychic' is not a synonym for 'occult', but pertains to the psychic being. There is no agitation in the psychic being, which is a divine spark, to say the least. We usually let ourselves 'tune-in' to others' vital or mental agitations. Certainly it is a valid practice to 'tune-in' to an enlightened soul. That is what one should do in the beginning or until one has the capacity to unfold oneself spiritually. That is why we say that if you remain calm and quiet and allow the Divine thoughts of your spiritual Guide to enter into you, you will become flooded with Peace. This kind of 'tuning-in' is not only a valid and correct practice, but is essential for one who has placed himself under a spiritual Master.
Question: How does one know if his soul is happy?
Sri Chinmoy: First of all, one has to believe that one has a soul. One has to know and feel where the soul abides, that is its location in the body. In order to know and feel the soul, one has to aspire. During his ardent aspiration, his spiritual journey, he can actually discover whether the soul is happy or not. He will feel that his soul is happy only when he sees and feels joy within and without, and also when he does not find fault with God’s creation and God’s Divine Dispensation.
Question: Are there two sets of instructions within the person, one from his deepest nature which includes and unfolds all in goodness and compassion — and the other, which is clever about 'me' and 'mine'?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. There are two sets of instructions within the person. Goodness and compassion come from the very depth of one's being, whereas, me and mine come from the surface. Me and mine cannot come from the very depths.
Question: Can the soul be equally represented in dreams either by an old woman, wrinkled and wise, as well as by a young baby babbling a new language?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. The soul can be represented in dreams by an old woman or by a young baby. In order to give a particular experience to the outer being, the soul can assume any form in dreams. One's own soul can be compared to the gradual growth of a seed into a tree. This is what we call the evolution of the soul.
Question: Is the soul both male and female?
Sri Chinmoy: The soul itself is neither male nor female. But when the soul starts its journey and takes a female body — then in all its incarnations it will take a female body. If it once takes a male body, then in all its incarnations it will take a male body. It is impossible to change the sex. In the whole history of mankind, there has been an exception here and there… but very rarely.
Question: Does the soul get new instruction in its development, or does it merely uncover what it has always known?
Sri Chinmoy: If you say 'experience' rather than 'instruction' the question would be more accurate. Only God, or the Cosmic Self, can instruct the soul.
The soul is uncovering what it has always known, but while it is uncovering, it is growing and enriching itself by taking into itself the divine essence of its earthly experiences. Meanwhile, the physical consciousness is becoming more and more conscious of the soul's unlimited Divine capacity. In essence, the soul, being one with God, is uncovering what it has always known. But in the process of evolution, its "becoming" and "knowing", "knowing" and "becoming" move together and are complementary processes in the lap of the Supreme Truth.
Question: Is it the soul that must surrender to the Cosmic Self?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. The soul has to surrender to the Self — the Self which, in Indian terms, is called Param Atman, which is unmanifest. This Self does not take human incarnation, nor enter into creation; whereas the soul accepts a human body and accepts limitation, imperfection and ignorance. Each human being has an individual soul. This individual soul, which takes a human body, is not all-pervading, omniscient or omnipotent. The Self is. The soul, in its upward evolution, can some day merge into the Self and become as powerful as the Self.
Question: The individual soul limits itself in time and space by taking on a body — but the Self (Param Atman) is outside of time and space; one who has the vision of the Self sees totally the creation and the Beyond. Is this correct?
Sri Chinmoy: This is absolutely correct.
Question: Is it the soul that makes the decision in selecting a new body in each incarnation?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. It is the soul that makes the decision in selecting a body, but with the direct approval of the Supreme or the Self. The choice is made to give the soul the opportunity to manifest more and more of its inner Divinity in each incarnation and to fulfil the Will of the Divine here on earth.
Question: Does the soul experience loneliness? If so, how does this differ from the superficial need to have the company of others, whether we like them or not, but simply because we want someone to talk to?
Sri Chinmoy: The soul experiences loneliness only when the body, vital, mind and heart, which are supposed to cooperate with the soul in fulfilling the Divine Mission on earth, do not cooperate. At that time it experiences loneliness. But it does not act like a human being. It does not waste its time, as would a human being, who feels that just by talking to others the sense of loneliness will disappear. The soul, in its loneliness, aspires most intensely to bring down Peace, Light and Power from above into the physical, the vital, the mental, so that the total being can cooperate with the soul to fulfil the Divine. When Peace, Light and Power descend into the physical, vital and mental, the person becomes conscious of his inner life and true happiness. With Peace, Light and Power, a higher consciousness descends. With this higher consciousness, the person will naturally respond to the soul's need.
Question: Does the soul make demands on a person so that he has to change his ways?
Sri Chinmoy: The soul does not make demands as such. It is not like a mother making demands of her child at every moment, saying, "I am telling you such and such for your own good." What the soul does is to send a kind of Divine Inspiration. This inspiration can, at times, be so vivid and spontaneous that the person may feel it to be a kind of inner imposition made by his inner self on his outer personality. The soul does not demand. On the contrary, it sympathises with human failings and imperfections and tries to identify itself with these failings, and then, with its inner light, it tries to help the person to change his ways.
Question: How different is this from the demands the ego makes?
Sri Chinmoy: We now know that the soul does not make any demands. When the ego makes a demand, it is all self-centered — 'I', 'me' and 'mine'. The ego wants to possess and be possessed. When the soul wants to have something, it is not for its own personal benefit, but is for the fulfilment of the Divine. The ego, by feeding the outer personality, wants to fulfil itself, and this is simply impossible, as there is no end to its cravings. The ego eventually meets with frustration; whereas the soul, by fulfilling the Divine Will, realises its own absolute fulfilment.
Published in AUM – Vol. 2, No. 6, 27 January 1967
AMERICAN philosopher Sri Chinmoy is in Fiji with about 210 students and followers as part of a goodwill tour of the Pacific.
Sri Chinmoy, 62, is a poet, philosopher, artist, composer and peace ambassador from New York.
After spending three days in Nadi, Sri Chinmoy travelled to Suva yesterday.
He will hold a free peace concert tomorrow at the Suva Civic Centre.
During the concert, Sri Chinmoy will perform his own compositions on a variety of instruments.
Members of Sri Chinmoy Centres International have flown in from America, Canada, Britain, France, Switzerland, Australia, Japan, New Zealand and Russia for the Pacific tour.
Sri Chinmoy International’s public relations officer, Nishtha Baum, described the movement as a non-denominational group with members from different walks of life.
Ms Baum said that in this way, Sri Chinmoy would evoke a peaceful atmosphere to create a lasting sense of inner peace.
“A master of meditation, Sri Chinmoy, infuses his music with a spiritual quality that touches people’s hearts in a most unusual way.”
According to Sri Chinmoy, this experience of inner peace is the cornerstone for world peace.
“Many who have witnessed his deep trance-like meditations and haunting music have described it as a transforming experience,” said Ms Baum.
Sri Chinmoy has staged hundreds of such peace concerts around the world and written books explaining his philosophy of peace.
Sri Chinmoy and his accompanying students will also sponsor a Masters track meet for men and women over 50 at the National Stadium next Wednesday afternoon.
The track meet is part of his programme of promoting the cause of peace through sports.
The organisation sponsors sporting events like a peace run and a round-the-world relay.
Ms Baum said that Sri Chinmoy, a champion sprinter in his youth, sometimes participates in track meets.
Sri Chinmoy comes to Fiji after a nine-day visit to Western Samoa where he staged two peace concerts and paid a courtesy call on the head of state, Malietoa Tanumafili II.
His current tour also includes stops in the Cook Islands and Tahiti.
SRI Chinmoy ... on tour in the Pacific with a 210-strong group.
Published on page 14 of THE FIJI TIMES, Tuesday, January 4, 1994
Translation:
Chen Xiaobing reports
Do you know what is the longest and largest peace run in history?
It is the Peace Run started by Sri Chinmoy in 1987. On the sixth day of autumn, after ten years, the Peace Run once again arrived in Singapore!
Founded by Sri Chinmoy, the Sri Chinmoy International Marathon Team travels to various countries every year to promote peace with the Peace Run, to date reaching more than 10,000 people on 7 continents around the world.
At least 400,000 kilometres have been run for peace.
In our country, the public reaction is also warmer than in past years. Last Saturday the weather was not beautiful, and as the ‘Peace Run’ was about to begin, it rained heavily. Cold water suddenly poured from the sky, before the more than 300 members of the public and organisers could reach the ceremony. Without waiting for the rain to stop, old and young alike ran the final metres.
This is the Peace Run’s second time in our country, this time logging a distance of about 11 kilometres. From the East Coast water park everyone ran back together, but the heavy rain covered them for 7 kilometres.
The people present that day did not know each other, but this is a non-competitive relay run. I saw everyone passing the Peace Torch one by one, while running and talking, making the cold morning overflow with warmth and friendship.
Can a 67-year-old lift an elephant and an airplane?
This extraordinary man, self-taught from the heart, is not only a writer, a painter and a musician, but also an athlete — and especially, a messenger of peace.
Originally from India, Sri Chinmoy has a body weight of 143 pounds, yet in one evening he performed 33 lifts weighing a total of 92,000 pounds.
Last month he also showed his skills in New York, lifting a 31,000-pound airplane and three elephants with weights of over 5,000, 7,000 and 8,000 pounds.
This evening he is giving a Peace Concert at Orchard Parade Hotel in Singapore. For more information the telephone number is 7789768.
Captions:
He lifted an airplane of about 30,000 pounds at an airport in New York.
Sri Chinmoy (bottom right), 67, used a platform to lift an elephant of 8,000 pounds, 20 times his own body weight.
Published in Shin Min Daily News. Tuesday 12.22.1998
Shin Min Daily News is a Chinese-language afternoon newspaper based in Singapore.
HOLY cow: A 71-year-old Indian man lifts the last in a series of 100 fully-grown Jersey cows, plus three children, in his effort to do ‘something great’. Sri Chinmoy performed the feat using a shoulder-lift machine at a farm near Taupe, on New Zealand’s North Island. This last and heaviest lift was 650kg (or 1433 lbs) comprising the cow at 400kg (881 lbs) and the children. Mr Chinmoy says he tries to be an inspiration for others.
Published on page 26, THE HERALD, Wednesday, December 18, 2002
In a related item, on December 12th, Sri Chinmoy, Director of Peace Services at the United Nations, invited Mr. Bill Pearl, 5-time Mr. Universe and world’s foremost weightlifting authority, to visit his personal weight training gym to observe the spiritual man in action. There, Mr. Pearl witnessed Chinmoy lift the equivalent of his own bodyweight, 154 pounds, overhead with one arm. Sri Chinmoy then lifted Mr. Pearl’s bodyweight of 214 pounds overhead with one arm.
In amazement, Pearl stated, “There is no human being I know of over 50 years old and perhaps only two or three individuals in the world that can lift their own weight with one arm.”
Olympic wrestling gold medalist Dan Gable has said, “Sri Chinmoy has controlled his mind completely. He has conquered his mind totally. It’s like what I would try to do when I would face a wrestling opponent. Sri Chinmoy is using his will to surpass his mind, and he is using his mind to conquer his body. He is putting his thoughts into a higher state to allow him to have a superior capacity.”
Why does he do it? Sri Chinmoy tells us, “You may think that concentration, prayer and meditation are only for the inner life. But I wish to say no! We can also use the inner strength for the outer life as well. From meditation and concentration we get power, and this power can be executed in the physical as well.”
That just goes to show that sheer size isn’t everything!
Mr. Bill Pearl and his wife witness Sri Chinmoy lift 214 pounds overhead with one arm.
Published in Wrestling World, April ’88
Sri Chinmoy’s Peace Concert in the Kaplan Penthouse at the Lincoln Center, New York, is introduced by Mr. James Irsay, announcer for WQXR Classical Radio Station of the New York Times.
Peace Concert introduction by Mr. James Irsay:
We have come tonight to see a very special person, a man who has more than a glimmer of hope, for he feels the inevitability of peace amid all the horrible wars and hatreds that concern us all. His hope and his vision are what he so eloquently expresses in his music, which comes from a deep spiritual source. Let us all discover in his music the lover of peace, and then let us all be lovers of peace and share his heart’s aspiration for a better world.
Published in My Prayerful Salutations to the United Nations.
By Joe Joyce
IN AN OCHRE ROBE and sitting yoga-style on the bed of his room on the sixth floor of the Hibernian Hotel, in Dublin, the guru said: “I have come to serve the divinity in humanity.”
Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose, born in Bengal in 1931, “spiritual teacher, philosopher and poet,” as a handout described him, was in Dublin to address the Philosophical Society in Trinity College last night on ‘Attachment and Detachment’. He left an ashram (spiritual community) in India in 1964 for New York, where he now lives. Since then he has established centres across America, the Caribbean and the Far East and he also holds a weekly meditation in the Peace Room of the United Nations building in New York.
“As a servant I offer what spiritual life I have to serve mankind,” he said, explaining his mission. “Meditation helps us to achieve peace of mind and to come out of ignorance. It leads us to the distant ultimate goal of becoming consciously one with God. We have to reveal Him and manifest Him on earth through constant dedication to mankind, through our love and our peace.”
How does he instruct people to meditate? “I go deep within myself,” he said, straightening his posture, his eyelids drooping as he concentrated for a moment. “And then I go into your own soul, and then it will tell me what you need and want, what your mind does not know, and then I will guide you in your meditation.” He went silent again, eyelids drooping and pupils dilating, while my pen tapped nervously on the notebook. Then he said, “you have a fine aspiring soul,” and added: “I do not flatter.”
ORGANISED RELIGION
Continuing, he spoke of organised religion which he welcomed but for the barriers it erected. “All are absolutely true in their own ways and being a spiritual man, I embrace them all.” All the time he interrupted with quotable quotes from his writings and lectures: “Human love is an express train — destination, frustration; divine love is a local train — destination, illumination.”
He said that his path would never require his disciples to leave the world as some of the other Indian traditions told their followers to take to the Himalayan caves. Love was all-important; human love, which was to possess and to be possessed; and the other kind of love, which was to accept, expand and liberate.
He concluded with another quotable quote: “When the power of love replaces the love of power, man will have a new name — God.”
Published in THE IRISH TIMES, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1970
Reprinted in The Expanding Light, pages 54 and 55
Orange-robed and head shaven, the only Guru to visit Ireland sat on his hotel bed yoga fashion last night and explained why he came to Ireland. Indian spiritual masters and eastern mystics have interested the western world for the past few years but in 1896 an Irish woman, Miss Margaret Noble, daughter of a Dublin clergyman, decided to follow the Indian spiritual life under her teacher, Vivekananda.
The holy spiritual man, Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose, said that the devotion of Margaret, later named Nivedita (Dedicated), to the spiritual life inspired him. “When I was 14 or 15 I had a stirring desire to see Ireland,” he said.
Sri Chinmoy, born in Bengal, is a genuine Yogi, and is a spiritual teacher, philosopher and poet.
In 1964, when the western world followed the example of the Beatles pop group and expressed an interest in the spirituality of the East, he was invited to the West by a group of American aspirants and he has toured the whole of the western world since.
Sri Chinmoy was here last night to lecture to a group at Trinity College, Dublin, on “Attachment and Detachment.” “While you live in your body you are attached to the material things, but when you live in the soul you are detached,” he said. “This does not mean you are indifferent — indifference is a bad thing — but when you are detached you do not interfere in another person’s life.”
He is the only spiritual teacher to be allowed to hold meditations in the Peace Room in the United Nations Building.
Published in the IRISH INDEPENDENT Dublin, Ireland, December 2, 1970
Sri Chinmoy may not have weightlifted MP Mac Harb as promised, but those who were on hand for the ceremony to mark Canada becoming the first North American 'peace-blossom nation' found it all uplifting anyway. Charles Enman reports.
It’s official now — Canada is a “Sri Chinmoy peace-blossom nation.”
Yesterday afternoon at the Château Laurier, international peace crusader Sri Chinmoy unveiled a plaque that announces Canada as the first North American nation to be so consecrated.
The 300-odd souls in attendance had been promised a demonstration of weightlifting prowess by Sri Chinmoy but were disappointed. Sri Chinmoy had accumulatively lifted several thousand kilograms in New York City only days ago and had strained himself in the process. Alas, sometimes the magic doesn’t work.
But from his first, quiet entry into the Adam room at the Chateau, all eyes and ears were on this quiet man of 67 who seemed so attentive to everything going on, yet somehow removed at the same time.
Standing on a small square of carpet beside the stage, he presented a rose and a wrapped gift to each of several dozen invited guests — parliamentarians, ambassadors, athletes.
Make no mistake, on a good day Sri Chinmoy could have lifted MP Mac Harb as promised. In fact, a video showed him lifting six firefighters at once, then an elephant, and finally a small plane.
But the truly impressive feat he pulls off, speakers asserted yesterday, is getting a fractious world to listen to his appeals for world peace.
“You know, the parties in Parliament rarely come together in one unit to celebrate anything,” Mr. Harb told the audience. “We have been able to do this because of Sri Chinmoy’s leadership for peace around the world.”
Designating Canada as a peace-blossom nation follows the signing of a statement by the five House Leaders in Parliament dedicating Canada to the cause of world peace.
Other designated nations include New Zealand, South Africa, Zimbabwe we, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Finland, Nepal and Malta.
David Kilgour, Secretary of State for Latin America and Africa, said Canada’s peacekeeping efforts “have truly reflected the principle of the peace blossom.” Those efforts will continue, he assured the crowd.
Local politicians, members of Parliament and ambassadors from seven countries paid tribute to the peace- blossom program and to Sri Chinmoy himself.
Indian High Commissioner Rajanikanta Verma was effusive: “I am proud you come from India,” he said, “but people of such greatness really belong to the world.”
And Sri Chinmoy himself? He was listening attentively but seemed immune to sudden increases in hat-band size. He took off the white suit-jacket that seems to be a signature item in his wardrobe, then mounted the stage slowly, limping a bit from his recent exertions and from chronic back and knee problems.
Eyes shut, brow knitted in concentration, he chanted to the crowd:
“Greatness-mind you are, goodness-heart you are, oneness-life you are.” No doubt moving, but you had to be there. The text on the peace-blossom plaque ends with these words: “As Canada opens its doors and its hearts to people of every nation, may this dedication inspire other nations to join us in heralding the message that we are all brothers and sisters of one world family and that world peace begins within the heart of each individual.”
Mr. Chinmoy was born a Hindu in India, moving to New York in 1964.
He has been holding peace meditations at the United Nations for 32 years. His free concerts and lectures for peace have been given around the world.
Leading religious leaders have welcomed his work, including Pope John Paul II and the late Mother Teresa.
Several sites are being considered for the peace-blossom plaque.
Brothers and sisters should eat together, so the ceremony ended with the serving of chocolate cake, a cake in the form of the flag of Canada, the peace-blossom nation.
Sri Chinmoy’s truly impressive feat, speakers asserted yesterday, is getting a fractious world to listen to his appeals for world peace. Photo, Chris Mikula. The Ottawa Citizen
Published in THE OTTAWA CITIZEN, Tuesday, December 1, 1998
UNITED NATIONS — Sri Chinmoy conducted a special meditation at the U. N. Church Center chapel last month to commemorate the death of former U.N. Secretary-General U Thant.
A photograph of U Thant and Sri Chinmoy, taken shortly before the Secretary-General’s retirement, stood upright on a table in front of the silent gathering of U.N. officials and staff.
For about a half hour, Sri Chinmoy concentrated on the photograph of U Thant, and then said: “Divinely great he was; supremely good he is. The greatness of his earth-height his body-consciousness is carrying. The goodness of his Heaven-Delight his soul has left for ... Mother Earth to claim as her very own and treasure forever and ever.”
Sri Chinmoy, who is Director of the United Nations Meditation Group, said the Group has a special place “for our beloved brother U Thant in the inmost recesses of our gratitude-heart for he has helped us unreservedly with his aspiring heart and with his illumining soul, both inwardly and outwardly.”
Sri Chinmoy spoke of his frequent correspondence with the former Secretary-General, who many times offered his encouragement and inspiration for the Master’s service to the soul of the United Nations and aspiring mankind.
Afterwards, Sri Chinmoy invited tributes from U.N. staff. One speaker, Donald Keys, U.N. representative of the World Association of World Federalists, spoke of U Thant’s sadness “that he was unable to serve more, do more, be received more by mankind. We will all endeavour to take up more effectively the little part that we may play in realising these dreams for him.”
Sri Chinmoy meditates on the photograph of U.N. Secretary-General U Thant during a commemoration service at the United Nations Church Center chapel. Photo by Lelihan
Published in Anahata Nada, December 1, 1974, Vol. I, No. 12
Sri Chinmoy appears on the television show ‘The Way To Go’ hosted by Ormond Drake, Professor Emeritus, New York University in New York.
“The presence of Sri Chinmoy on The Way to Go was inspirational, I am certain, to our viewers. To me, personally, his presence was transforming. I look upon the visit as the highlight of the twenty-two-and-one-half years of the program’s life.” — Ormond Drake
Part of the programme in soulful remembrance of the late President of the United States, John F. Kennedy, sponsored by Sri Chinmoy and the Meditation Group, is televised live by WNBC-TV across New York.
During the evening, tributes to the late President are given by Ambassador Eamonn Kennedy of Ireland and Ambassador Zenon Rossides of Cyprus, Patricia Reilly (Representative of ACTION), Donald Keys (Planetary Citizens) and Jeff Kamen (WPIX-TV), as well as a performance of several songs about Kennedy, written by Sri Chinmoy.
Statements are also received from Senator Edward Kennedy, Lillian Carter (mother of President Jimmy Carter), Archbishop of New York Cardinal Terence Cooke, and Betty Williams of Ireland (joint recipient of the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize).
in San Juan, Puerto Rico
by Mr. Jim Knight and Mr. George Riddell
from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
Jim Knight: Ladies and Gentlemen: Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose, the Spiritual Director of the Aum Centres of Puerto Rico and New York, has come to Puerto Rico for the fifth time. A man with profound insight, with abundant spiritual wisdom, with a glowing heart to serve the Supreme and humanity, Sri Chinmoy was born thirty-six years ago in Bengal, India. He spent his childhood and youth in a spiritual institution in South India where he practised the spiritual discipline and prepared himself for his divine mission. He was prompted by the Divine within him to come to the West and share his spiritual realisation with the sincere seekers of the Supreme.
So in 1964 he came to the United States. He has lectured on Indian philosophy and Yoga to many groups both large and small: schools, churches, synagogues and other interested groups. In 1965 he began the publication of his spiritual writings in a small monthly journal, entitled AUM, which dealt with the Indian spiritual discipline and the higher Light and Wisdom of Yoga.
In July, 1965 he came to Puerto Rico on a lecture tour and it was here that the first Aum Centre was established. The following year the Aum Centre of New York City was established. Since then Sri Chinmoy has been helping the disciples of both Centres, besides helping groups in different cities such as Washington, D. C., Miami, Florida and Jamaica, West Indies. He comes to visit his Centre in Puerto Rico every few months and we have the pleasure of having him here this morning. He will be glad to answer any questions and we are going to do that in just a few moments. First of all, let’s give you the address. The Aum Centre here in San Juan is located at Miramar Avenue, Stop 11, Santurce..
Now this morning we have Sri Chinmoy here in the studio. He will give us an example of a prayer chant in Sanskrit to start the program.
[Sri Chinmoy sings a Shloka from the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad]
Ladies and gentlemen, you have been listening to Sri Chinmoy Ghose chanting a prayer, which, to those of us in the western world, was quite foreign. We are going to get into that and find out what that was about and we have very many questions to ask Sri Chinmoy this morning.
With us in our studio we have Miss Dorothy Eisaman, Mr. and Mrs. Jose L. Casanova, Miss Carmen Suro, Mr. Ramon Torres Pena, Mr. Ed Belville and acting with me this morning in the process of asking the questions, is Mr. George Riddell.
Mr. George Riddell: One of the first questions that comes to us: there is evidently a very sacred note in that chant and I was wondering if you might interpret it for us in English, to know what it was about?
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you. This chant is one of the most famous chants in India. From time immemorial, this chant has been sung, chanted by the seekers of Truth. The seers, the sages of the Upanishads sang this chant. The significance, the meaning of this prayer is:
Lead me from the untruth to the Truth,
Lead me from darkness to Light.
Lead me from death to Immortality.The firmament of India still resounds with this soul-stirring chant of the Vedic and the Upanishadic seers of India.
Mr. George Riddell: Typical themes like that seem to run through all religious hymns and chants and now that you mention ‘Vedic’, I wonder if Yoga itself is a part of another religion of India or is it a religion in itself?
Sri Chinmoy: Yoga is no religion. Yoga transcends all varieties of religion. It is something infinitely deeper than the so-called ‘religions’. Yoga is the Living Breath that makes us feel that God is within us, of us and for us. Yoga is the direct communion with God. It is our union with God that Yoga teaches us. And at the same time, it is the language of our inner and spiritual life. Right now, I am speaking in English in order to convey my feelings, thoughts and ideas. Similarly, if I want to speak to God, commune with God, then the language that is required is called Yoga.
Mr. George Riddell: Do you meditate or do you pray? In Yoga, how do you communicate with God?
Sri Chinmoy: In Yoga we pray, we concentrate and we meditate. When we pray, we get an inner feeling, that is to say, with our hearts we feel that we are crying for something. When we concentrate, we focus all our intense attention on something, it may be an object or it may be a person. And when we meditate, we enter into the deeper regions, deeper planes of consciousness.
By prayer, we enter into the Kingdom of God, by concentration we can also enter into the Kingdom of God and also, of course, by meditation. These three ways, prayer, concentration and meditation, are the most effective ways to commune with God.
Mr. George Riddell: Some of the other members here may have some questions that they wish to ask and I think we should start with the ladies first.. Miss Carmen Suro may have a question.
Question: Yes, I would like to ask the Master what is the difference between Experience and Realisation in the spiritual life?
Sri Chinmoy: The difference between Experience and Realisation in the spiritual life is this: a realised person can say, “I and my Father are one; I and God are one”; whereas an aspirant having many spiritual experiences, or even one, can say and feel that he is slowly but inevitably growing into the realisation of God.
Experience shows and tells us what we will eventually become, the possessor of God-Consciousness. But in realisation, we come to know what we truly are: absolute oneness with God forever and through Eternity. This is the difference between Experience and Realisation.
Mr. Jim Knight: One question has interested me. Everybody in all religions tries to relate himself to God and I wonder, Sri Chinmoy, if you could give us a short explanation of what Yoga says of God. What is God and what is the relationship between God and man?
Sri Chinmoy: God and man … this is the eternal question and the eternal answer. God is the living Breath and that living Breath is in man. Man has a goal and the name of that goal is God. In God is man’s satisfaction, achievement and fulfilment. Through man is God’s Satisfaction, Achievement and Fulfilment. Man needs God to realise his true Self. God needs man to manifest Himself on earth.
Mr. Jim Knight: Are you saying that God and man are one and the same?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. God and man are one and the same. God is man yet to be fulfilled in His Infinity and man is God but he has yet to realise it.
I have to grow and God has to flow. I grow as a human being into His highest Consciousness and God flows into me and through me with His Infinite Compassion.
Mr. George Riddell: Now, according to Yoga, when your physical being ceases to exist or when you do what we call ‘die’, what happens to your spiritual self?
Sri Chinmoy: When we die, our physical body, the physical sheath enters into the physical world and is disintegrated by burial or cremation. The vital sheath enters into the vital world. The mind enters into the mental world. Then slowly the soul goes back to its own region. There, usually, it stays for a few years… it depends on the individual soul… according to its necessity and according to its preparation. Now after taking rest for some time, the soul feels that the time is ripe for it to enter into the world once again to fulfil its divine mission. God-realisation takes a good many incarnations.
Before the soul enters into creation, it tries to observe the environment, the situation and the family from above; which family it is going to accept. Then the soul goes to the Supreme for approval. Sometimes it gets this approval; sometimes the soul comes into creation merely with the knowledge of the Supreme. Again it starts its journey, it tries to unveil the inner Divinity and at the same time, it tries to manifest the Divine in the field of creation. So this is how the process of reincarnation continues.
We believe in reincarnation. We know that we have millions of desires to be fulfilled. At the age of four I had many desires; at the ages of ten, twenty, thirty, forty, sixty, these desires are not yet fulfilled. Neither we nor God will be satisfied unless we are fulfilled. First we get our fulfilment in satisfying our desires in the ordinary human life. Then we have our fulfilment in achieving our higher aspiration. Right now, we want money, name, fame and all this. Later we try to achieve Light, Peace and Bliss with our spiritual aspiration. In one incarnation, in one short span of life, we cannot do all that. We need many incarnations. That is why, according to our Indian philosophy, reincarnation is a positive fact and a positive truth.
Mr. George Riddell: Speaking of reincarnation, this brings to mind the idea of the wheel of Karma. Now on the wheel of Karma, a person or a soul is reincarnated in human form. Or can he be reincarnated in other forms?
Sri Chinmoy: Let me say as a preface to my answer that the soul is in this table, the soul is in the chair, the soul is in the plant, the soul is in everything. The soul, of course, is in human beings. It is all a matter of the degree of manifestation. The Christ had a soul, I have a soul, we all have a soul. In the case of the Christ, He had the Supreme’s all-pervading Consciousness. In the ordinary person’s case, his degree of manifestation is not anywhere near that. Similarly, the soul that is in this table, this chair, is nowhere near our soul in degree of manifestation.
But, in answer to your question, once the soul has come into human incarnation, once it has accepted human life, it does not, as a rule, accept animal life. Once upon a time, we were all in the animal kingdom, but as a general rule, the soul does not enter into animal incarnation from the human state. But very rarely it happens that people are still in the animal consciousness although they have a human body. They are in the animal kingdom with their passions and lust, lowest vital desires. In such cases the Supreme allows the particular human being, the human soul, to enter into a particular animal to enjoy itself, to work out and throw away all these lowest vital movements. There the soul remains, say for six or eight months or a year. But it does not mean that the soul has to remain perpetually in the animal kingdom. No. And only in very rare cases does the soul go into the animal world. We have got a human body and from here we grow — from man we grow into the superman.
Miss Dorothy Eisaman: Master, am I correct in saying that we who are believers in God must grow in Grace daily?
Sri Chinmoy: You are absolutely correct in saying that the believers of God must grow in God’s Grace daily. A true believer of God feels that his very existence on earth, his inner and outer achievements and fulfilments are entirely due to God’s Grace; also he is truly fortunate to see that his so-called personal efforts too, are an act of God’s Grace. At every moment he feels that without God’s Grace he is nothing and with God’s Grace, he is everything.
Mr. George Riddell: Listen, that last one is definitely in line with much of Christian preaching and I find that what you say is very similar to the pronouncements of the Christian churches. I am not familiar with the Moslem or the Hebrew religion, but it seems to go through all religion and probably through the Hindu religion in India and various other religions throughout the East.
Now, this Grace, I was wondering if, according to Yoga, will this Grace be flowing from God all the time, or would this Grace flow directly to a particular man from God, or does it flow through other mediums between God and man? When a man feels that he is Grace, does he know that he gets it directly from God or does he get it through these other mediums? I think I have made myself clear.
Sri Chinmoy: If the aspirant is of a very high calibre, he can get this Grace directly from God. Otherwise, the beginner needs a helper, a teacher or a guide in order to bring down God’s Grace into him. The Grace is all the time descending, showering, but the beginner is not conscious of this fact that there is a constant shower of God’s Grace. And ordinary human beings are totally ignorant of the fact that there is such a thing as Grace. They think, “As you sow, so you reap.” This is true to some extent, but there is also God’s Grace which can expedite our life’s journey and at the same time negate, nullify our wrong actions. So to come back to the question, it depends on the individual, where he stands. But again, we have to know that God’s Grace is something which we badly need in our day-to-day life, in our outer life as well as in our inner life. God’s Grace is our real meal, the energising, fulfilling meal. The Bible has taught us that man does not live by bread alone and we, the seekers of Truth, add to it that man can live and does live by God’s Grace alone.
Mr. George Riddell: Does anyone else have a question? Mr. Casanova!
Question: It seems that modern man has made quite a mess of the world with constant wars, riots, rebellions, strikes, delinquency, traffic accidents, etc. All ordinary corrective methods seem to be a total failure. Do you think, Master Chinmoy, that this is a natural order of things or is there any way for modern man to live in peace and have universal love and order?
Sri Chinmoy: You are right. We have made a mess of the world. Now, from the spiritual standpoint, this is not the natural order of things. Far from it. The most natural thing in our human existence should be the life of peace, universal love obeying faithfully a universal law and order. Now your question is, “How can man do that?” Man can do that by thinking God’s thoughts and by living God’s Truth. Impossible it might seem today, but tomorrow it will be not only possible, but inevitable. United, let us raise our consciousness into that Golden Tomorrow.
Mr. George Riddell: In Yoga, do you have a Scripture, as we have the Bible?
Sri Chinmoy: We have many scriptures in India. Among these are the Vedas, the Upanishads and the Gita. Just as your Bible is a collection of writings and not one particular piece of writing, so are our scriptures a collection of religious and spiritual books. The most loved and revered scripture of India is a book that I have mentioned, the Bhagavad-Gita. This book, by the way, is often called the Bible of India.
Mr. George Riddell: The Gita is also used in Islam?
Sri Chinmoy: They have their Koran. The Koran is a sacred book as we have the Gita and you have the Bible.
Mr. Jim Knight: One of the great, perhaps the greatest Indian political leader of all time was the Mahatma Gandhi. How did he relate to Yoga?
Sri Chinmoy: Mahatma Gandhi… what was his position?
Mr. Jim Knight: What was his position in relation to Yoga?
Sri Chinmoy: ‘Mahatma’ means ‘Great Soul’ and so he was. But from the strictly spiritual point of view, Mahatma Gandhi was not a yogi. He was a patriot, political leader, martyr. But he was not a self-realised soul like Ramakrishna, the Buddha and others. You can say he was a religious saint. Self-Realisation he did not have, but he had boundless love for humanity and his interpretation of God is unique. He said, “Truth is God. Denial of God we have known. Denial of Truth we have not known.” For him, religion was nothing but Truth. He lived the life of a saint. God gave him boundless love and compassion. This was Mahatma Gandhi. But when the question of Self-Realisation, self-discovery comes in, he cannot be placed on the same footing as the Christ, Ramakrishna, Buddha and so on.
Mr. Ed Belville: Sri Chinmoy, the question in my mind is: why do we need a teacher or guru? Or is it important to have a teacher to follow the spiritual path?
Sri Chinmoy: In this world we cannot do anything without the help of a teacher. The teacher may be necessary for a second or for a year or for many years. If I want to learn music, at the beginning I have to go to a musician. If I want to learn how to dance, I have to go to a dancer. If I want to learn about the sciences, I have to go to a scientist. In order to learn anything in this world, we need a teacher at the beginning. Then how is it that we do not need a teacher to help us in our inner, spiritual life?
A soul enters into a human frame, a human body, and then the human being grows and completes his first year of existence, his second year, third year and so on. What has the mother done during these years? The mother or the parents? They have taught him how to speak, how to eat, how to dress, how to behave. He learns everything from his parents. Without their guidance, he would grow up a human animal, an abnormal being. The parents played their part in the formative years of the child.
Similarly, in the spiritual life the necessity of a teacher is inevitable because the spiritual teacher has to teach the student how to pray, how to meditate, how to concentrate. Then, when the student learns and he goes deep within, he can do all this by himself.
Right now I am here in Puerto Rico. I know that New York exists and that I have to go back to New York. What do I need to get me there? An airplane and a pilot. So in spite of the fact that I know that New York exists, I cannot get there alone. I need help. Similarly, we all know that God exists. You want to reach God, but someone has to help you, carry you. As the plane takes me, carries me to New York, someone has to carry you to the Consciousness of God which is deep within you. Someone has to show the path in order to enable you to enter into your own divinity, which is God. So this is the answer — that at the beginning, we need a teacher.
Mr. Ramon Torres Pena: Master Chinmoy, what do you mean by ‘concentration’?
Sri Chinmoy: Concentration is the open secret of focusing all one’s attention on a particular object or person in order to enter into and have one’s identification with that object or person. The final stage of concentration is to discover and reveal the hidden ultimate truth in the object of concentration. What concentration can do in our day-to-day life is unimaginable. It most easily separates our heart’s Heaven from our mind’s Hell so that we can live in the constant delight and joy of Heaven and not in the perpetual worries, anxieties and tortures of Hell while we are here on earth.
Mr. Jim Knight: I have another question deviating just a little bit from what we have been talking about. Most of us in the western world who are ignorant of Yoga have a tendency to think of a Yogi as someone, let us say, sitting with his legs crossed, or someone standing on his head, someone doing particular exercises or things that seem strange to us. How or why does a Yogi perform these feats? How does it relate to his religion?
Sri Chinmoy: Some people take these exercises to keep the body fit, freed from physical ailments and so forth; while others take them in order to get realisation. But realisation can never be had by merely doing Hatha Yoga exercises. What these exercises actually do is to help the seeker enter into the true spiritual life.
In the beginning a child, when he reads, he reads aloud in order to convince his parents that he is reading. But a grown-up person does not do that. He reads silently. Right now most of us are physically very restless, no better than a monkey. We cannot stay more than a second without getting restless. But there are aspirants who just sit and make their minds calm and quiet and then they enter into the deeper regions of the being. It is these physical exercises and postures, when we do them, which relax our body and give us peace of mind for a short period of time. But these exercises will never give us realisation… never! These are the preliminary stages. We say in our true spiritual system that the beginners in Hatha Yoga are like kindergarten students. And one can easily skip kindergarten. But we have to go from kindergarten to grammar school, high school, college and then to university. Concentration, meditation and contemplation are taught in the higher courses. Otherwise just by taking these physical exercises and making the body strong, the athletes, the boxers, the wrestlers would all have realised God by this time. All the sportsmen would be God-realised souls!
I must emphasize the fact that Hatha Yoga exercises are far superior to the western system of exercises which are often done abruptly, vigorously and, to some extent, violently. The Hatha Yogic exercises are done calmly, quietly, in a meditative mood. They strengthen the nerves and calm the mind, unlike most of the western exercises.
The body is necessary. We must have a sound and solid body so that the soul can act in and through the body in the field of manifestation. But if we expect something more from the body, then we are being foolish.
Mr. George Riddell: Are you a vegetarian?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a strict vegetarian. Sorry, I take eggs, so I cannot say that I am a strict vegetarian. But I take no meat or fish. I stopped eating meat and fish when I was twelve years old, the age that I entered seriously into the spiritual life.
Mr. George Riddell: Are you married?
Sri Chinmoy: No, I am not married.
Mr. George Riddell: Do you practise celibacy?
Sri Chinmoy: Of course. Without celibacy, there can be no true spiritual life, not to speak of God-realisation.
Mr. George Riddell: We have one question from our radio audience. Someone has called in with a question. Her question is: “What do you think of the communication between the living and the dead? Do you think there is a communication?”
Sri Chinmoy: There is a way to communicate with the dead. As a matter of fact, there are various ways. If one has occult powers or spiritual powers, one can easily communicate with anybody living or departed. What we call ‘death’ is not the extinction of consciousness. It is only a transition. Today I am here; tomorrow I will be in New York. Similarly, now I am here on this earth; after some years, I will be somewhere else in one of the other worlds. On the strength of our Self-Realisation, we can enter into the soul of a person who is either here or elsewhere; either in heaven or in hell.
On earth we can make either a short-distance call or a long-distance call to any part of the world. The telephone is the medium. Similarly, our conscious oneness with God or, we can say, our Self-Realisation, enables us to commune with anybody, whether here on earth or there in heaven.
Mr. George Riddell: In your answer you have mentioned something that has disturbed my mind. You said something about “heaven and hell.” How does Yoga relate to heaven and hell?
Sri Chinmoy: Heaven and hell are two planes of consciousness. With our human mind we feel that heaven is elsewhere and that it is full of joy; whereas hell, we feel, is full of torture. This is not the case. Heaven and hell are two planes of consciousness into which we daily enter. When we do good things, we are in joy, we are in heaven. When we do wrong things, we are in hell. Each moment we are experiencing heaven and hell. Heaven is right here, deep inside us. It is up to us whether to live in our inner heaven or in our outer hell.
Mrs Sarah Casanova: Some persons are disturbed by the problems surrounding them. They think they can find escape in suicide. Do you think this is a door that we can open at our sweet will to escape from responsibility and suffering?
Sri Chinmoy: I have been hearing for the past few years, from many people, this very idea of committing suicide. Suicide is by no means an escape. There is no escape, there can be no escape. We can escape from this room but we’ll be caught in another room. We think that we can escape from this world by killing ourselves. Unfortunately, this is not the only world. There are other worlds as well. In this world I will take my life, but in another world I will have to continue my existence. Nay, I will be caught. God’s Consciousness is all-pervading and He will be able to catch me, the thief.
To come back to your question, suicide can never be an escape. Why do people commit suicide? They commit suicide because they feel that they are miserable, frustrated; others do not understand them. They feel that by committing suicide, they will be freed from countless responsibilities, inner turmoil and pain. Or they feel that they will be mercilessly punished for their wrong actions and prefer to take their life first. So they need an escape. Now who escapes? Not a divine hero. A hero fights; a thief escapes. A coward escapes. But not he who is on the right path. If I am on the right path, I will not try to escape. He who wants to commit suicide is a coward. He does not face the world. First of all you have to face the world, live in the world in order to establish your divine qualities on earth. We have to accept. If we do not accept the world, what are we going to face? When we face the world, if there is anything wrong with the world, we can rectify it. So those who are committing suicide are committing the worst possible mistake. To be sure, there is no escape for them either in this world or in any other world. They are not only killing themselves, but are also killing the fruitful possibilities of their future incarnations.
Mr. George Riddell: There are many people in the United States who claim that with the use of certain drugs they are able to get closer to God. Of course the Chinese have been using opium for centuries and centuries. How do you feel about using stimulants, drugs, etc., to stimulate the mind in order to get closer to God?
Sri Chinmoy: Let me start out by saying that there are two ways of approaching the Truth. One way is that by meditation, prayer and concentration, we know the real Truth, we feel the real Ecstasy, we see the real Light, we experience Existence, Consciousness, Bliss. These last three go together and we can come into that state only through meditation and oneness with God. But those who are taking drugs are putting the cart before the horse. They are deceiving themselves into thinking that they already know the Truth. At the same time, they are not aware of the fact that by taking drugs, they are damaging their inner, spiritual faculties which are of paramount importance in order to enter into God’s kingdom. Let me make it clear to you.
If you throw me into a sea and plunge me, immerse me forcibly in the water, not allowing me to come to the surface, then what shall I see? All blank, all white. And that is what actually happens to those who have taken to drugs. They get an experience… all white! But when I pray, when I concentrate, when I meditate, I enter into the Living Consciousness of God. This is the positive and natural way of entering into God. God is Natural and I am His son, you are His son; we have to follow the natural process. But by taking to drugs and using these artificial means, people are unconsciously, if not deliberately, negating the real Truth.
I have two or three students who used to take drugs. They have had first-hand ‘experiences’. They tell me now that when they were taking drugs, it was nothing but self-delusion and self-annihilation. Now what they experience is self-acceptance and self-fulfilment. So this is the difference that they have now discovered. Needless to say, that I am proud of their present spiritual achievements.
To come back to your question: no man can come closer to God by taking drugs or stimulants. He can come closer to God only by loving God and meditating on God.
Mr. George Riddell: We are just about coming to the end of our time now. We have time for one more question.
Mr. Ed Belville: I would like to ask one more question before we sign off. May a Westerner become a real Yogi?
Sri Chinmoy: Your name is Mr. Ed Belville. We are greatly honoured to be here at this Radio Station WHOA where you have brought us, Mr. Belville, and made all the arrangements. At this hour you are asking me this particular question. I wish you to remember this question some day, either in this incarnation or in your immediate future incarnations.
You are a westerner; you are an aspirant, a sincere aspirant. You are bound to realise God, you are bound to become a Yogi in one of your forthcoming incarnations. Then you will see whether a westerner can become a Yogi or not. A Yogi is he who is in union with God’s Consciousness. Yoga is not the sole monopoly of India and a Yogi is not the sole product of India. I am God’s son, you are God’s son. We have the equal right, the equal privilege to go to our Father, to enter into our Father’s Consciousness. Many western spiritual masters have entered into God’s Consciousness and received what the Indian Yogis have received. You too, can do it. For God-Realisation, geographical boundaries do not exist. God’s Consciousness pervades the length and breadth of the world and beyond. So, being a westerner, a human being, you are caught by God’s all-pervading Embrace. You cannot escape; you also have to have Self-Realisation. Then only will ignorance leave you.
Westerner, Easterner, Northerner or Southerner, all must needs have this union with God; all can and all must become a Yogi. It is a matter of time, either today or tomorrow. God will not allow anyone to remain unrealised or unfulfilled.
Mr. George Riddell: Well, that is all the time we have now. We thank you very much, Sri Chinmoy Ghose, for the privilege of having you here and for accepting our invitation to come here and explain yoga to us.
Published in AUM — Vol. 3, No. 9,10, Apr. — May 27, 1968
and AUM — Vol. 3, No.11,12, June — July 27, 1968
SOLO, Indonesia — Sri Chinmoy offered a concert of prayerful music for the King of Surakarta during a visit to the King’s Palace Dec. 10.
The spiritual teacher lifted King Pakoeboewono XII with both his right and left hand.
“You have ruled your country for 60 long years with your love, concern, compassion, wisdom and self-giving,” the spiritual leader said.
The 81-year-old monarch, known by the honorific name ‘Sinoehoen’, said that he had first seen and met Sri Chinmoy “in the spiritual world 25 years ago and many times since then. God brought us together. Sri Chinmoy guided me and told me many important things that came true.”
The King also hosted a banquet for Sri Chinmoy and about 300 of his students, who had accompanied him to the Palace.
Indonesia’s kings are responsible for maintaining their country’s spiritual and cultural heritage and serve as advisors to the country’s political leaders.
Sinoehoen is Indonesia’s oldest and most respected king. His kingdom includes the city of Solo and the surrounding region on the island of Java.
Deeply moved by his meeting with the spiritual teacher whom he had been seeing in visions for many years, Sinoehoen bestowed upon Sri Chinmoy the title of ‘Prince of the Royal Family’.
“Sri Chinmoy has the key to open up the heart of the whole world,” the King declared.
Sri Chinmoy discusses prayer and meditation with the King of Surakarta, known as Sinoehoen, during one of their meetings.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 35, Mid-November 2003 – March 2004
The interview took place the day after Sri Chinmoy’s weightlifting demonstration at York College the previous evening. Sri Chinmoy's feats included lifting the equivalent of his own bodyweight overhead in each arm simultaneously, doing a standing calf raise with 1,500 pounds and a seated calf raise with 740 pounds.
CBS: What was the purpose of last night's event?
Sri Chinmoy: It was an act of my offering, self-offering, which I call inspiration. We are all citizens of the world. If I can inspire others, and if they can inspire the rest of the world, then we can have a better world. It is by virtue of inspiration that we can do good things for mankind. We are all longing for peace, peace, peace. And I feel it is our inner strength that will be able to give us peace. Inner strength is nothing other than oneness, universal oneness.
*Interviewer: A five-time Mr. Universe called it “an amazing show of strength for any man, at any age, at any body weight.” Sri Chinmoy, why do you lift such huge objects?
Sri Chinmoy: I do not want to brag, but it is an act of my self-offering, which I call inspiration. I try to inspire others. If I can inspire others, and if they in turn inspire the rest of the world, then we can have a better world. It is by virtue of inspiration that we can do good things for mankind. We are all longing for peace, peace, peace. I feel it is our inner strength that will be able to give us peace, and inner strength is oneness, a universal oneness.
CBS: What kind of diet plan are you on in order to be able to lift all this weight?
Sri Chinmoy: My diet is absurd, to tell you the truth! I was 180 pounds a few months ago and I wanted to lose weight, so I started taking only 200 calories per day, believe it or not. For two months I took 200 calories, sometimes 250 calories maximum. In that way, I came down from 180 pounds to 144. Yesterday my bodyweight was 143 pounds.
But I do not advise anybody to follow my diet. It applies to me but medical science will say that it is absurd, ridiculous. I have about fifteen students who are also medical doctors. They are shocked that I could live on 200 calories. Even yesterday, before I left in the evening to lift up such heavy weights, I took only 200 calories. So my way is absurdity.
CBS: Are you a vegetarian?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a strict vegetarian. We have an Indian restaurant in this neighbourhood. It is called Annam Brahma. My students there cook for me. I have been a strict vegetarian for over fifty years. I feel that if we eat vegetables, we will absorb the consciousness of Mother Earth. Mother Earth is so kind and compassionate to us, and she has infinite strength. But if we eat meat and fish, we absorb the aggressive and restless consciousness of the animal kingdom. We believe that this restlessness weakens us. So my students all over the world do not eat meat and fish. We are trying to get rid of this restlessness which we find in the animal world.
CBS: It was a pleasure talking to you. Thank you very much for your time.
Published in The Inner Meaning of Sport and
*A Mystic Journey in the Weightlifting World, part 1
Thursday, Nov. 27
CONCERT: Sri Chinmoy Thanks* — a solo presentation of his art as philosopher-musician. He will sing and perform his own compositions on the esraj, cello and flute. Time: 8 pm. Place: Ethical Culture School (33 CPW). Free.
Sri Chinmoy will be performing on flute, cello and esraj at the Ethical Culture School on Nov. 27th.
* ‘Sri Chinmoy Thanks’ refers to the lecture, entitled ‘I Thank You’, Sri Chinmoy will deliver on the evening of Nov. 27th, 1980.
Published in Wisdom’s Child, NEW YORK GUIDE, 11/24/80
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy, can you tell us what it is that you are trying to express through your life?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a seeker. I pray to God and meditate on God daily. From my prayer-life and from my meditation-life I get inspiration. This inspiration I try to offer to humanity in my very humble way.
Interviewer: How does that philosophy relate to weightlifting?
Sri Chinmoy: I feel that the physical and the spiritual must go together; they cannot be separated. When we pray and meditate, we get an extra supply of energy, which you can call strength. This strength can be utilised for a good purpose. If I can inspire anybody in this world, then I feel that my life is meaningful. With my weightlifting, I am offering my physical strength to inspire people.
There are people who feel that physical is physical and spiritual is spiritual; they are like the North Pole and the South Pole. My feeling is that they are not like that at all. To me, they are the shrine and the temple. When we pray to God, we need both a temple and a shrine. The temple is our body and the shrine is our soul. So the physical capacity and the spiritual capacity must go together.
When I lift heavy, heavy weights — elephants and so forth — I try to inspire my fellow citizens. They can also try to inspire others in a similar way, but it does not have to be with weightlifting. They can write extraordinary poems, compose songs or do something else in any walk of life. So this inspiration is not confined to weightlifting.
Interviewer: It seems to me that you are doing things which defy the normal limitations of age.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, you are absolutely right! Age surrenders. There is no age limit here. When we pray and meditate, we go far beyond the domain of the mind, the physical mind that doubts our capacities. When we pray and meditate, we identify ourselves with something vast and infinite. So there is no age limit, but we have to go far beyond the domain of the physical mind which binds us and at every moment discourages us. It says, “You cannot do this, you cannot do that, it is not possible for you.” But when we pray and meditate, when we live in the heart, there is no such thing as impossibility.
Interviewer: How did you happen to take up the sport of weightlifting?
Sri Chinmoy: As I said, I am a man of prayer. I got an inner message to enter into the weightlifting world. Weightlifting was not my forte. I was born as a poet and singer. Then here in the West, in America, I embarked on playing musical instruments, composing songs and so forth.
Again, when I pray and meditate, I get messages from within. I use the term ‘Inner Pilot’. My Inner Pilot has commanded me to enter into weightlifting. In my youth, I was a good athlete, according to our poor Indian standard. I never used weights. I thought that if you are musclebound, you cannot be a good athlete. But now the theory has changed. I see that world champions have excellent muscles. Now my Inner Pilot has commanded me to serve Him through weightlifting, where the barriers of the mind can be lifted.
Interviewer: Is that also why you compose music and so forth, because you get an inner command?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, for the same reason. Whenever I am asked to, I write poems or compose songs, paint and so forth. Everything I do, I do at the behest of my Inner Pilot.
Interviewer: Do you have a preference for any particular activity?
Sri Chinmoy: No, it depends only on whichever way my inner being compels me to be of service to mankind. I will not say that because of my weightlifting I am able to do more paintings, no. Only I am doing it because I am asked to do it. Somebody is commanding me and I am faithfully obeying Him. I have no idea if this is the way in which I will be able to reach more people.
Interviewer: Do you get personal satisfaction when somebody is inspired by your example?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, definitely. When I am of service, even to an individual, if somebody can accept my inspiration, I feel extremely satisfied. If I can be of service to even one individual, I feel that it is a tremendous help in improving the standard of humanity. Whatever I am doing in the field of sports or athletics — we have many, many places where we hold our long-distance running races — it is all for inspiration. Anything that our organisation does, it is with the one-pointed view that everybody should be inspired. Similarly, as we are trying to inspire others, even so, they have every right to inspire us.
Published in A Mystic Journey in the Weightlifting World, part 1.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE? — Indian spiritual Master Sri Chinmoy of Jamaica set what is considered to be a world record at 12 a.m. this morning when he completed 16,031 paintings in 24 hours. The paintings, which ranged from two by three foot canvases to wallet-sized miniatures, were completed in his home “in order to inspire humanity.”
Published in LONG ISLAND PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1975
of Sri Chinmoy’s weightlifting
Since Sri Chinmoy resumed weightlifting in September 1998, at the age of 67, the media has followed his adventures with great interest, airing footage of his elephant and plane lifts, as well as his double-arm, seated calf and standing calf raises. Sri Chinmoy’s daring feats and his love of self-transcendence, specially in the face of his advancing years, have offered inspiration for young and old alike. Moreover, the paradox of a man who is at once a spiritual leader, a musician, a poet and a weightlifter has captured the imagination of people worldwide who have posed the question, “Is he one man or ten?” Sri Chinmoy’s weightlifting anniversary on November 17th was seen around the world multiple times on the following news and sports programmes:
CNN Sports Illustrated
CNN International
CNN Headline News
CNN Spanish
NBC News Channel
ABC News One
ESPN International
Channel 10 Sports Tonight, Australia
CTV Canada
National TV, Germany, Austria, Switzerland
National TV, Russia, Channel One
National TV, Yugoslavia
WWOR Channel 9 New York
WABC Channel 7 New York
WTMJ NBC Milwaukee
WBNS CBS Columbus
WDIV NBC Detroit
KGW NBC Portland
KFOR NBC Oklahoma City
SNTV Associated Press Broadcast Sports
RADIO Berlin One Radio
CNN Radio (Sports)
Agence France Press
Daily News, New York
The Queens Tribune
Queens Courier
Queens Chronicle
The Times Ledger, New York
The Weekly Thikana (a Bangladesh paper in New York)
The New Probashi (a Bangladesh paper in New York)
India Post, New York
Delo (Czech Republic)
Trhák (Slovakia)
Published in The body’s fitness-gong, the soul’s fulness-song
Meeting with the President of India
The Meditation Group Singers and Sri Chinmoy met with Giani Zail Singh, the President of India, for a brief session of prayer, meditation and spiritual discussion on 30 October. Mr. Singh meditated with the group and listened attentively as the singers sang a song composed by Sri Chinmoy in his honour. “I really feel l that your prayers are like those of my dear ones,” the President told the group near the close of the meeting. “(Hearing) your words will help me live up to the expectations you have for me.”
Mr. Singh was in New York recovering from open heart surgery. The Meditation Group wishes him a speedy and vigorous recovery. Photo: Richard Howard
Published in Secretariat NEWS, United Nations Headquarters New York, 30 November 1982
An interview recorded for
Immediately after Sri Chinmoy played the organ at the Sydney Opera House on 30 November 1987, he was interviewed in the organ console by David Rumsey, Chairman of the Department of Organ and Sacred Music at the New South Wales Conservatorium of Music and organist with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra.
David Rumsey: Thank you very much, Sri Chinmoy, for coming to the Sydney Opera House this evening and playing for us. You have a very unique style of playing the organ. As many other musicians have said, you combine a kind of Eastern as well as a Western-style. Your own style is, perhaps we might say, Eastern; whereas, the organ itself is very Western. For many centuries, the organ has served the Christian church as a spiritual kind of musical instrument. Do you also find spirituality in the organ?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I find spirituality in the organ, more than I find it in any other instrument. Here I see that the organ is not only the king of all the musical instruments but it is also the queen of all the instruments. It is extremely powerful and it has a very subtle, delicate touch at the same time. When you think of a king, you think of somebody who is very powerful, like a sovereign, and, when you think of a queen, there is softness and sweetness, a delicate touch. So the organ combines both God the Man and God the Woman.
David Rumsey: So, in your music, you are finding an expression of God which comes from within you and is expressed by the organ, sometimes as king, sometimes as queen?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes.
David Rumsey: Those are very beautiful sentiments. I have seen you on videotape speaking about soulful music. Do you find the organ is, what we might call, a ‘soulful’ instrument?
Sri Chinmoy: It is soulful and, at the same time, powerful. Sometimes the soul does not express power. But I see that the soul of the organ expresses power as well. In the case of an individual, he can express his inner capacities through power or through love or through other divine aspects. But the organ has the capacity to express many divine qualities at the same time.
David Rumsey: Do you find that, through the organ and the sounds that it makes, there is a kind of awakening of spirituality, an expression of spirituality?
Sri Chinmoy: Not only the awakening, but also the expression and revelation of the inner being.
David Rumsey: Since you are a poet as well as a musician, I find it very interesting to compare the inner spirituality of poetry with the inner spirituality of music. In the Western tradition, for example, they have gone almost separate paths in the last two or three hundred years. Maybe four hundred years ago, music and poetry were rather more similar and, when we go back to the ancient Greeks, music and poetry were almost one and the same. Now, in your poetry and music, do you find a similar kind of spirituality?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. In my case, I find poetry and music go together. Poetry has the vision and this vision is expressed through music. We have the vision, let us say, of tomorrow’s dawn. But, although we have the vision, there is no way to reveal and manifest that vision. Music expresses the vision that poetry embodies. First we have the vision of reality deep within us and then music brings that vision to the fore.
David Rumsey: Regarding the improvisation which you just played, did it have a particular title or any particular ideas?
Sri Chinmoy: No, there was no particular idea. I do not use my mind. I see myself as a child playing in my own heart-garden. In the garden, there are many beautiful plants and I play hide-and-seek. I move around, I play with the leaves and plants and flowers. I enter into my heart-garden and I enjoy nature’s beauty deep within me. So, I do not use my mind. A child does not use his mind. He just plays with the flowers, with toys or dolls. In my case also, I play with the flowers, leaves and fruits.
David Rumsey: It is just creativity, just being creative.
Sri Chinmoy: Creation for creation’s sake. There is no set method, there is no hard and fast rule that I have to do this, I have to do that. A child uses his heart, he does everything spontaneously. So, in my case also, I try to do everything spontaneously, like a child.
David Rumsey: Your spontaneity comes through very clearly in your music. You have also been quoted as saying that music is next to meditation for a spiritual person, or words to that effect.
Sri Chinmoy: Music and spirituality must go side by side. A Truth-seeker and God-lover pays more attention to God the Creator. Twenty-four hours a day he is ready to pray and meditate. He wants to embody God’s infinite Light. A seeker is more conscious of God, fortunately or unfortunately, than a musician. A musician has the universal language deep within him but he does not know that the source of the universal language is silence. Language is not the source. Silence is the source. Sound is not the source. The source is silence. Meditation helps us to dive deep within. Silence is the source and sound is an expression.
When we enter into a temple, we see the shrine inside it. For me, meditation is the shrine inside the temple. Music is the temple. Without the temple, there can be no shrine and, again, without the shrine, there can be no temple. So, music and spirituality have to go together. Spirituality reminds us of God the Creator and music reminds us of God the Creation. Universal beauty we get through music but silence, Transcendental Silence, we get from meditation. They are like the obverse and reverse of the same coin. But we have to know which one has to be brought forward — the inner divinity or the outer reality. Inner divinity has to come forward to express the outer reality.
David Rumsey: Over the last two or three thousand years, there have been periods of Western civilisation — such as the times of the ancient Greeks and the Renaissance — where it has been considered important to look at all the things that make up a completely rounded person, a whole man: intellectual life, sport, music and so on. Many people have spoken of you, with all your interests, as a kind of Renaissance man.
Sri Chinmoy: I am jack of all trades, master of none!
David Rumsey: I think it is not just a question of being a jack of all trades, though. It is something that you have been able to use, in a sense, to transcend yourself. You set yourself a certain goal and you move in a certain direction — just as, in music, you have taken up the organ only relatively recently. Previously, you have played the Indian esraj, the bamboo flute and many, many other instruments.
Sri Chinmoy: Tomorrow I will be playing about thirty instruments in Melbourne.
David Rumsey: Do you find that the organ, then, is a kind of transcendence in your own life?
Sri Chinmoy: In my case, the organ seems to be the highest peak. I have been playing quite a few instruments for the past ten years. Sometimes I play up to one hundred instruments. Usually I play thirty instruments in my concerts. But the organ is like the highest pinnacle, it is the culmination. When I play the organ, I feel myself complete. It is something deep within me. It is like the blossoming of the tree, a fully blossomed tree. Whereas, when I play other instruments — flute or cello or violin or viola — there I see a few beautiful flowers on a particular branch, a few most beautiful flowers. But, when I play the organ, I feel that the whole tree has blossomed fully and gloriously to my satisfaction. Here I feel my hunger, musical hunger, is satisfied completely.
David Rumsey: Well, Sri Chinmoy, thank you very much for granting us this interview. You have been very gracious and thank you very much once again.
Sri Chinmoy: You have been extremely kind to me. My heart is all gratitude to you. I have heard so much about you and I am extremely, extremely grateful to have been allowed to play here and to be here with you. My heart is all gratitude to you.
David Rumsey: Thank you, Sri Chinmoy, thank you very much.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 38
Documentary Film
Premiered in New York, August 1975
A ‘Silver Journey to Infinity’s Soul’ production.
Directed and produced by Tarun and Prabhat.
Narration and production assistance by Uma Yvonne Hannemann.
This iconic film covers the highlights of Sri Chinmoy’s artistic achievements from 1974-1975.
Eight members of Auckland’s Sri Chinmoy athletic and meditation group, recently spent Saturday night together in a most unusual celebration — by running up to the summit of Auckland’s Mt Eden 350 times.
The occasion was to celebrate spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy’s most recent accomplishment of lifting overhead a 350-pound dumbbell from a powerrack, with one arm. The 55-year-old guru, weighs only 159 pounds and achieved his remarkable feat after only 15 months of training.
Running between, midnight and dawn, Sri Chinmoy’s Auckland students logged up 350 ascents of the mountain, one trip for every pound Sri Chinmoy lifted.
All have run marathons before and helped organise this year’s Sri Chinmoy 1000 mile race in New York in which Siggy Bauer of Raetihi lost his world record but finished second.'
Sri Chinmoy started weightlifting when running injuries forced him to give up ultra-marathons.
His rapid progress has astonished the world’s weightlifting community and inspired countless tributes from many top competitors.
Published in Central Leader, Tuesday, November 18, 1986, No. 48
By DONALD SINGLETON
Sprong, sprong, sprong, sprong, sprong . . .
Ashrita Furman, 24, disciple of guru Sri Chinmoy, stationery store manager and former Columbia University economics major, is hitting his pace on his customized pogo stick, 98 jumps to the minute, the rubber tip of the stick barely clearing the ground after each clean little jump.
Sprong, sprong, sprong . . .
Ashrita Furman, who was known to the world as Keith Furman before Sri Chinmoy gave him the disciple name Ashrita, is out to break the Guinness Book of World Records mark for pogo-stick jumping. The record stands at 100,000 continuous jumps in 18 hours. Ashrlta Furman plans to do 24 hours, from noon yesterday until noon today. At 98 jumps to the minute, with five minutes off every hour, that will be 129,360 jumps.
Has an entourage
Sprong, sprong, sprong . . .
Ashrita and his entourage — a jump-counter, a pogo stick maintenance and repair expert and others — are gathered outside the entrance to the Arsenal, the Parks Department headquarters in Central Park. Groups of children on their way to the zoo pass by. “Miss Jones, what’s that man doing?” “He’s jumping on a pogo stick, Susie.” “Oh.”
Sprong, sprong, sprong . . .
Ashrita is jumping to honor the third anniversary of Sri Chinmoy’s painting marathon on Nov. 16, 1975, when the guru knocked off 16,031 paintings in a 24-hour period. Ashrita’s father, Bernard Furman, is a lawyer. “He told me to be sure to bring a friend with me in case they try to commit me,” says Ashrita as he jumps.
Sprong, sprong, sprong . . .
“One of the girls in my office just ran up and said, ‘Mr. Davis, somebody’s out there jumping on a pogo stick for 24 hours, and he doesn’t have a permit!’ ” said Park Commissioner Gordon Davis as he watched Ashrita bounce off a few dozen sprongs. “Well, if he’s crazy enough to jump for 24 hours on a pogo stick, I guess I’m crazy enough to let him do it without a permit.”
News Photo by Dan Jacino
Ashrita Furman out for record
Published in DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1978
To celebrate Sri Chinmoy’s Jharna-Kala marathon of completing 16,031 paintings in 24 hours, Ashrita Furman jumps on a pogo stick for the same amount of time.
Spiritual history was in the making recently in Rome as the Pope met with Indian spiritual master, Sri Chinmoy, director of all-faith meditation sessions for peace at the United Nations and U.S. Congress. Having already met once before with Pope John Paul II and three times with his predecessor, Pope Paul VI, Sri Chinmoy was warmly greeted by the pope on October 14.
Sri Chinmoy offered the pontiff a special series of songs especially composed for him, stating, “Holy Father, I have come to you for your very special blessings. You are the salvation-king. I have set to music some of your most powerful utterances made by you in America.”
The pope, obviously deeply touched, offered Sri Chinmoy his gratitude: “Nice, nice, nice! God bless you and your divine activities.” In an unprecedented display of spiritual ecumenism, the previous day Sri Chinmoy had been invited to play on the organ at St. Peter’s Basilica during a special celebratory mass. He performed for 5 minutes at the beginning and 15 minutes at the completion of the mass.
Sri Chinmoy meets the Pope.
Published in Big Red News, November 14, 1987
Spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy practices different sports, among them also weightlifting. At the 14th anniversary of his weightlifting this 68-year old sportsman and the initiator of various peace activities held an exhibition named Lifting up the World with a Oneness-Heart in New York. He invited many sportsman, diplomats and friends and he lifted them. Among those, who were his “weights” — first they had to climb up to a special platform and then he lifted them overhead — were nine time Olympic Champion Carl Lewis, baseball player Steve Finley, 8-time Ironman Triathlon winner Paula Newby-Fraser, boxers Jose Torres and Donny LaLonde, basketball coach Jack Curran and TV star Joe Franklin (on the photograph). Many body builders and 15 United Nations ambassadors were present.
Sri Chinmoy — he is also the initiator of the Peace Run, which was in Slovenia at the beginning of November — lifted also Sport Boat, an elephant and some “usual” weights. By some information he lifted almost 43 tons in a few hours. “I just simply like to make people happy and with each new achievement I try to inspire them.” he said after the exhibition. Published in Delo
Translated from an article on page 7 of Delo Chronicle, Slovenia’s daily national newspaper.
Lewis Freedman on running
Daily long runs are part of the basic philosophical and religious teachings of Sri Chinmoy, the spiritual leader with a worldwide following who not only ran 13 miles of Sunday’s Philadelphia Marathon but brought 40 of his students from Queens, N.Y., to aid in the administration of the race.
Chinmoy, 50, originally from India, prefers not to call his organization a religion, but a way of life.
“Religion binds us,” he said in an interview in the Franklin Motor Inn lobby after the 26-mile, 385-yard race. “We call it the code of life, the code of living.”
The code of living taught by Chinmoy, whose 300 students in his center in New York and at 60 other centers worldwide call him “guru,” stresses a natural-foods diet, yoga, meditation and running. “Run and become, become and run,” is a slogan of the group.
“If we run, then we become,” said Chinmoy. “We see our capacities fully manifested. We bring to the fore our hidden capacities.”
Chinmoy himself began running long distances about four years ago. He said he had been a provincial decathlon champion in 1958 and 1959 in India, but as a runner he basically was a sprinter. He had been telling his disciples that it was good for them to run, “and I felt I must also participate. I participate according to my very limited capacity. When I run they [his students] encourage and inspire me.”
Although several followers of Sri Chinmoy run marathons, and he claims a Canadian runner in the 2 minute, 25-second range 1 among them, Chinmoy seems to have a chauvinistic outlook 2 toward mileage volume.
Female followers, he said, should not run more than 45 miles a week. “For men, it entirely depends on their capacity, 75, or 80 miles.”
Because of his reverence for those who use their bodies athletically to inspire others, Chinmoy regularly honors athletes at his teaching center. One such honoree, last year, was Gary Fanelli of Oreland, perhaps the Philadelphia area’s best long distance runner.
Fanelli, who ran briefly with Chinmoy on the course Sunday said, he was the guest of honor at a dinner in New York just before the New York Marathon in 1980. He has since been presented with a song about himself written by the guru’s followers. 3
Running is an important part of the health lifestyle Chinmoy espouses, but it is not perceived as the ultimate end.
The end, “the destination,” said Chinmoy, for his students, is “to become good citizens of the world, to become perfect instruments of God. We try to become good and perfect citizens of the world.”
Although Bill DeVoe of Queens was disappointed he didn’t run faster than 2:25:48 in winning the race for the second straight year, DeVoe called the victory and receipt of the first Jumbo Elliott Trophy “good compensation.”
Chinmoy was not the only notable participant, although like him, former city councilman and Olympic rower Jack Kelly, one-time Olympic steeplechaser Browning Ross and Moses Mayfield, winner of the first two editions of the race in 1970 and 1971, were not in it for the duration.
Ross’ advice to the pack, although not what he practices himself, was: “When the going gets tough, quit.”
Mayfield, 36, employed in the housekeeping department at Temple University, showed up for sentimental reasons. He has been back in training for three months after an eight-year absence from the sport and he ran one loop of the river course, 8.4 miles, looking very strong.
He was not prepared, he said beforehand, to even be tempted into going longer. “l won’t be foolish,” he said. He passed the five-mile point very comfortably in 28:43.
Sri Chinmoy
“If we run, then we become”
Published in The Philadelphia Inquirer, Wednesday, November 11, 1981
Following are some inaccuracies in the article.
1 The Canadian marathon runner’s time referred to, is 2 hours, 25 minutes, not 2 minutes, 25 seconds.
2 While Sri Chinmoy recommended that a select group of women runners restrict their weekly training, it was not a general mandate. As early as 1978 some of his women disciples had already run ultra-marathons, such as the 47-mile run on August 27th of that year, and the years that followed. Over the decades, Sri Chinmoy encouraged women to compete in 24-hour races and multi-day events including 7-and-10-day races, and distances of 700, 1,000, 1,300 and 2,700 miles — to the world’s longest certified footrace, the Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race. Many of these pioneer women runners went on to achieve national and international rankings. Sri Chinmoy always championed the cause of women’s participation in sport.
3 The song for Gary Fanelli was written by Sri Chinmoy and sung by Sri Chinmoy’s students.
A daily newspaper in Bratislava, Slovakia
Question: Could you tell us what you were talking about during your interview with our President?
Sri Chinmoy: President Kováč was extremely kind and compassionate to me. He was appreciating what I am doing in Slovakia and the Czech Republic, and I appreciated and admired him for his many, many good qualities. I often use the term ‘interdependence’. Your President has such a good heart. He tries to bring forward the good qualities of all human beings and also all nations — the neighbouring nations and nations quite far from here.
Question: Did the President offer any comments about Slovakia’s relations with the Czech Republic?
Sri Chinmoy: About the Czech Republic he said, “We have to coexist. We have to feel that this is our common homeland.” He had such nice things to say about your common history. About America also he said such nice things. American democracy is his source of freedom. Something else most significant he said: that no matter where someone has come from, if he is a citizen now here in Slovakia, he will be treated as one. There is no stranger here.
Question: What is your own feeling about Slovakia and the Czech Republic?
Sri Chinmoy: In my heart, Czechoslovakia is still one country. The Czech Republic and Slovakia are like complementary souls. With their mutual determination-strength, they shall proceed. It is not by virtue of a feeling of competition with each other, but only through self-transcendence that they shall run faster than the fastest. It is only through self-transcendence that we shall become good citizens of the world. Self-transcendence is our goal, and not competition.
Question: Are you personally in favour of the division of Czechoslovakia?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a student of peace. Division is something that I cannot appreciate. If division takes place, it is a most painful experience. I want oneness, oneness, oneness. In a family, for years and years, brothers and sisters live together. When they are young they need one another. Then when they grow up, they want to show their supremacy. One brother thinks he is superior to the other brother. When they were growing up together, that kind of jealousy, rivalry, insecurity, superiority complex or inferiority complex they did not have. But as they grow up, all kinds of unhealthy, undivine qualities enter into them. Previously they said, "If our bad qualities divide us, at least let us try to be interdependent." If they are interdependent, then when they are grown up, they may not stay with their parents, they may live separately, but at Christmas time and on special days, they will meet together.
Here it is exactly the same. Division is not the answer. But if a painful division takes place, then let us try as much as possible to live with goodwill. Once upon a time you were brothers. If you cannot stay together under the same roof, at least try to be interdependent and have utmost goodwill towards one another. If you need something, you will just make a phone call and your brother will come to your rescue, and if he needs something, then you will come to his rescue. So division has taken place, but division is not the final answer. The goal is coexistence, interdependence. By division alone we do not get any satisfactory result.
Question: Do you foresee a time when all of Europe will be united?
Sri Chinmoy: It is not only possible; it is inevitable. Previously the European countries were quarrelling and fighting. Now the European countries are trying to create a oneness-home. Previously, the American states were separate. Now America is one. Australia is one. Canada is one. But when it comes to Europe, each country has its own individuality, its own way. Sometimes when neighbouring countries were practically on strike, they did not get any kind of sympathy from other nations. But now, European countries are having summit meetings and they are trying to feel their oneness.
Europe is one continent. Why should Europe be divided into pieces? Europe is like a tree. This life-tree has many branches. Because of the trunk, there are branches, flowers and fruits. If the branches are cut off, then there will be no flowers, no fruits. Now wisdom is dawning on the European leaders. So many countries in Europe are trying desperately to have a common home. Then Europe will have oneness-strength like America has. America has fifty states, but when necessity demands, they are all one. Here also, Europe now feels the supreme necessity of oneness. There shall come a time in the near future when Europe will have its oneness and the division that we have had for so many years will disappear.
In this respect, your President is showing absolutely the best way: he is appreciating his neighbouring countries, he is appreciating America and many other countries. By appreciating others, we bring to the fore their good qualities and they become strong, stronger, strongest. If I say one nice word about you, you will feel obliged to say something nice about me. But if I criticise you ruthlessly, you will also speak ill of me to your heart's content.
Your President is a man of sincerity, a man of integrity, a man of determination, a man of sacrifice, a man of self-giving. So many good qualities he has at his disposal. When he speaks, immediately you see wisdom, compassion and love. When he gave me the Presidential Medallion, I thanked him from the very depths of my heart. Then, while holding the Medallion, I said to him, "In you I see three persons: a friend, a father and a supreme pilot. Your heart of love has made you a true brother-friend of Slovakia. Your soul of wisdom has made you the father of your nation. Your constant sacrifice, inner and outer, for your country has made you its supreme pilot. All your citizens are inside your boat, and you are steering it safely and unmistakably. Your boat is bound to touch the Golden Shore, where there is only peace and peace and peace."
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 20
After Sri Chinmoy lifted a fully fueled twin-engine Beechcraft plane using a modified standing calf-raise machine, at Tweed Airport in New Haven, Connecticut, he was interviewed by a reporter from the New Haven Register. The weight of the plane, the fuel and the lifting apparatus was 13,040 lbs.
Reporter: You lifted heavy things like planes and elephants many years ago. What made you resume it again now?
Sri Chinmoy: I wanted to see if age has anything to do with physical fitness. I have found that it is our human mind that creates the problem. If we can go beyond the mind by challenging the mind, then the physical body obeys us. But the mind makes us feel that we are very old.
Now I am 67 years old. The moment I use my heart, I feel that I am 20 years old. So I try to use my heart when I do these kinds of weightlifting feats. When I use my heart, I feel oneness with the aeroplane. Everything helps me and everybody helps me when I use my oneness. Whereas if I stayed in the mind, I would not be able to lift heavy weights at all.
The human mind is full of division at each and every level. Our mind appreciates our right hand more than our left hand, for example, even though they are both part and parcel of our body. Since the right hand is stronger than the left, our mind prefers our right hand.
Reporter: Is lifting a plane different from lifting anything else?
Sri Chinmoy: Elephants are totally different from planes! As soon as you see the elephant standing in front of you, you get frightened because it is so huge. The one that I lifted was over 8,000 pounds, and when it was standing on the lifting platform it was only a few feet away from me. When I lift an elephant, for some reason I feel that I need more strength.
When I lift planes, I get a feeling of lightness from the plane itself. Plus I get a kind of inner thrill or joy because I fly in planes.
Reporter: Yes, it is hard to think of an elephant as light!
Sri Chinmoy: The mind immediately makes us feel that the elephant is such a solid object. How will it be possible to lift it? So I do not use my mind at all; I use my heart and try to establish my oneness with the elephant.
Reporter: Does that mean that this 13,000-pound plane was easier to lift than the elephant?
Sri Chinmoy: Strangely enough, even though the plane is so large and heavy, it has a kind of charm. That charm takes away the weight of the plane. I feel that I am flying with the plane. When we think of an elephant, on the other hand, a kind of unfettered fear enters into us. So everything depends on our inner feeling.
Reporter: What are you trying to prove when you do these things publicly?
Sri Chinmoy: I lift these heavy weights to inspire people. Inspiration is joy. You are so kind to come and watch my lift in this bad weather. Perhaps you will mention it in your newspaper or it may come out on your local television station. In this way, we are trying to spread our inspiration.
When we, as human beings, are inspired, we do many good things for ourselves and also for the betterment of the world. If we are not inspired, then we will have nothing to offer to the world. We may even try to destroy ourselves or others. Inspiration can bring us so much happiness and, if we are happy, then we will also get peace. Inside happiness abides peace. If we are happy, then we will not quarrel and fight with others. We will not find fault with them. If you are happy, you will be kind to me and I will be kind to someone else, and from there it will spread. So this happiness comes from inspiration. That is my simple philosophy.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 14
Every Tuesday at noon about 100 men and women, some dressed in costumes of distant homelands, file into the quiet chapel of the Interdenominational Church Center, just across the street from the United Nations.
There they meditate with and listen to the preachings of Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose, a spiritual leader from India, who for the last seven years has conducted services in the United States and several other countries around the world.
Usually a dozen nationalities are represented in the austerely furnished chapel and the garb of those present often creates a spectrum of color.
There might be a married couple from Burundi, for instance, in swirly, flowing dashikis, a Sikh in a Brooks Brothers suit and an enormous, dazzlingly red turban, or a woman in a demure silk sari
Invited by Delegates
Sri Chinmoy began his meditation series at the interdenominational Church Center a few weeks ago at the invitation of a group of United Nations delegates, but Chinmoy has been involved with the U.N. in other ways.
Last spring he conducted a lecture series in the Dag Hammarskjold Library Auditorium at the invitation of Secretary-General U Thant. He was invited again this fall for a similar series.
“No, the Master isn’t paid for his talks,” said David Gershon, a school teacher who is a disciple of the guru. The meditation forums are open to the public free of charge.
“Sri Chinmoy asks only that one comes with a reverential and open mind.”
A meditation session with the guru is partly an exercise in silence.
Sri Chinmoy is a slight, baldish man with deep-set, shining eyes. Those in attendance are asked to remove all footwear at the entrance of the chapel. A disciple explains that it is the “Indian way, one does not wear shoes or sandals in the presence of the Holy.”
The guru himself is clad in a diaphanous saffron robe, and a faint fragrance of the perfume of sandalwood paste emanates from his person. Sri Chinmoy paces a bit at first, an unhurried shuffle as if in preparation for contemplation, and then, with gentle, light steps, he moves up to the podium.
Suddenly, even though it is hardly audible, an “om” pierces the stillness, rising into a crescendo, ringing about the room, and again, suddenly, there is silence.
In the dimness of the room, the elevated figure of the guru stands out in an eerie silhouette as wafts of incense float through the air.
‘Love, Devotion, Surrender’
For the next 30 minutes, silence prevails. Each person is in a trance of his or her own. Then the guru steps down, approaches the congregation and begins his sermon, generally a reading of his 22 books, which have been published by Harper & Row both in hard-cover and paperback editions.
A hymn concludes the session, and then the delegates and the disciples leave. Sri Chinmoy steps briskly out of the church center and into a car and drives home to Queens, where there is a Sri Chinmoy center, world headquarters for the guru’s movement. It has 14 centers in Europe, the Far East, the Caribbean and the United States.
“My philosophy is very simple,” Sri Chinmoy said the other day in halting, but clear English. “It is love, devotion and surrender to the Almighty.”
His explanation:
“Divine love is different from human love in the sense that it isn’t possessive. The most important aspect of my philosophy is total surrender to the will of God. I define God as One With Form, and so you find my disciples coming from different religions.”Sri Chinmoy does not ask his disciples, of whom there are at least 75 at the Queens center, to relinquish their own religious upbringing. He describes his philosophy as essentially a form of theology.
“The three steps vital to ultimate surrender to the Divine," Sri Chinmoy said, “are Realization, Revelation and Manifestation.”
He believes there are various ways to reach the God-head, but the path of love is the swiftest.
An Individual Experience
In a sense what all this philosophy means is that through concentrated meditation each disciple can arrive at his own timetable in experiencing divine bliss.
When Sri Chinmoy came to the United States seven years ago, he worked in the Indian Consulate in New York and began to set up meditation classes. The classes soon attracted enough of a following for him to give up his job and to preach full-time. He is not a United States citizen.
While Sri Chinmoy’s work is described strictly as a “one-man philosophy thing” by one of his disciples; many say that he has brought them peace.
An Indonesian delegate to the U.N. General Assembly, who seemed too embarrassed to disclose his name, because, he noted, “I am a Moslem by faith,” said: “Meditation gives inner serenity for me, something I need simply because I move about and travel so much in my work.”
France Vacher, a French woman who has worked at the U.N. since 1948, said:
“I’ve seen the U.N. grow, and with it, problems — both its problems and mine. Sri Chinmoy’s prescription for peace of mind is just right for me. I think it was an act of destiny that we met.”
“He has given my wife and I real purpose in life,” said David Gershon. “Through Sri Chinmoy we have found joy in life.”
The Gershons, David and Gail, met at Sri Chinmoy’s center in 1968 and were married by him, Indian style, the next year. Mr. Gershon teaches school in New Jersey; and his wife is a secretary at Cowles Communications.
Liz Addison, a South African, who works at the United Nations as a secretary, said:
“Religion was a completely dead thing for me. Life became meaningful only after I met Sri Chinmoy,”
Miss. Addison helps to organize lectures for the guru at the United Nations.
Sri Chinmoy also lectures widely at Ivy League schools, such as Harvard, Yale and Princeton, and at Oxford and Cambridge Universities in England several times a year.
He recently summed up what his teachings are all about by reading a verse from one of his books:
“God’s compassion does three things for us: In the morning it argues with ignorance-night and saves us; in the afternoon it threatens ignorance-sea and guides us.
“In the evening it conquers ignorance-cry and liberates us.”
Published in The New York Times, November 8, 1971
SPECIAL REPORT
Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose a well-known yogi, gave a lecture* on the “Philosophy of Yoga” last October 30 in the AV Room.
The speaker pointed out that yoga is often equated with the body discipline, which is only the preliminary to the real practice. Yoga proper, he explained, is composed of concentration, meditation, and contemplation on the Transcendental Reality — God (Aum).
There are many paths to the goal of spiritual union with the Transcendent Being and the most common are: KARMA Yoga (the way of action), the BHAKTI Yoga (the way of devotion), the RAJA Yoga (the way of meditation), and the JHANA Yoga (the way of knowledge, which educates the mind to free it from all illusions).
Sri Chinmoy’s path, he disclosed, is the path of love, compassion and, complete surrender. ''There are many roads that lead to Rome and my path is a shortcut,” he said.
Sincerity is the quality that he values most among his disciples. He admitted that he was “very strict” in his teaching and it is only after a four-month trial period that prospective disciples are given a personal interview. He is not interested in mere numbers and “I do not take hippies or alcoholics among my students,” he explained.
Chinmoy Ghose was on his Far Eastern tour when he passed by the Philippines on his way to Singapore. He has given lectures in leading American universities like Princeton, Cambridge, Yale, Harvard, and Radcliffe. He has a spiritual center in New York as well as in Puerto Rico, Jamaica, and Japan. He said that more centers are soon to be established.
The Guru’s disciples belong to various religions as he looks at every religion “as a branch of the mighty tree which is the Truth.” Such is the attitude of the spiritual leader who came here to speak of Yoga which, he said, is neither philosophy nor religion. It transcends religion and philosophy; at the same time, it houses both.
— Marlinda Roa Angbetic
* The lecture referred to here is later published under the title, ‘Self-Knowledge’.
Published in the UNIVERSITY BULLETIN, Vol. 14 No. 16, November 7, 1969, Pages 1 & 3
Weekly Publication of the University of San Carlos, Cebu, Philippines
Examiner: Do you have any disciples in India?
Sri Chinmoy: Here in America I have four or five Indian disciples. But I do not have any spiritual centre in India. I have quite a few admirers and followers in India, but I do not consider them to be my actual disciples.
Examiner: A few weeks ago I interviewed Baba Ram Das, and he contended that the spiritual teachers Americans get come here for a different reason than the spiritual teachers the Indians get. In this country we get the people who are still attached to power or wealth or the idea of doing a lot of good for a lot of people, which is still an attachment, he claimed. What is your comment on that?
Sri Chinmoy: What he thinks, he will say. I will say what I know. I am not trying to contradict his philosophy, but I know much better than anybody else does, what I am and what I stand for. But I have no idea why other spiritual Masters have come to the West. It is up to the individuals to answer this statement. In my case, I definitely listened to the dictates of my Inner Pilot. He wanted me to be of service to Him in the sincere seekers in the Western world, who are my spiritual brothers and sisters. He is like a father. A father has every right to have many homes, and if the father wants a particular son of his to go to some other house, and help or serve him inside the aspiration of his other children, then he is perfectly entitled to do so. And the son who is devoted to the father must listen to him. So America is one home of our Father Supreme; India is one home; Russia is one home; Japan is one home. All the countries are the homes of our Eternal Father. And being the Father, He has every right to ask His children to move from one home to another to help His other children.
Examiner: How did you get involved with the United Nations?
Sri Chinmoy: I had a student who worked at the United Nations. She spoke to the authorities and got permission for me to be of service to the United Nations by conducting meditations there. There are now over eighty seekers who attend these meetings. They are delegates, diplomats and U.N. staff. Twice a week we pray and meditate there. Sometimes I give talks and answer spiritual questions.
Examiner: I understand you recently met with Mrs. Lillian Carter. What was the reason for your visit?
Sri Chinmoy: The reason was very simple. She was in India for two years, and she is extremely sympathetic towards India. The suffering India, the poverty-stricken India, has received considerable compassion and assistance from her. Therefore, I wished to offer her my personal gratitude for what she has done for India.
Examiner: I understand that you don’t accept everyone who wants to be your disciple. But you do want to get the word out to those who might want to be. Is that it?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, certainly. This world belongs to the Supreme, and He has many spiritual children who are in a position to be of help to sincere seekers. Now, there are some seekers who will be able to go much faster if they take help from somebody else, rather than from me. If I just accumulate them and keep them in my family for the sake of numbers, their progress will not be satisfactory, so I would be doing an act of injustice to their souls. But the ones who are meant for our path should be encouraged and accepted, for they will make the fastest progress on this path. I will never say that if somebody cannot follow our path, he is not spiritual, or he is not a sincere seeker. Far from it. But they are also my spiritual brothers, and if I know that by following some other path, they will go much faster, then I should advise them to follow that path. I want everybody to reach the Goal as soon as possible.
Examiner: Are you familiar with some of the more popular spiritual paths from the East that people are following in this country?
Sri Chinmoy: Familiar in the sense that I have read about them and heard a little about them from some seekers. But I am not in direct contact with other Masters, either inwardly or outwardly. Only I have a close connection with Pir Vilayat Khan, the head of the Sufi order. We are good friends.
Examiner: He was here recently.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I think he was. But I have regards for all the sincere spiritual Masters.
Examiner: Do you think there are a lot of people who will claim to be Masters, but who aren’t?
Sri Chinmoy: In this world there are good people and bad people. In God’s creation there is day and there is night. But I am not in a position to say who are good teachers and who are bad teachers. Only I wish that the sincere seekers will get the good teachers. If they are really sincere, they will not remain with false teachers.
Examiner: How is someone to know who’s good and who isn’t?
Sri Chinmoy: Well, there are a few easy ways to recognise a false Master. If somebody says that he will be able to grant you God-realisation overnight, in the twinkling of an eye, then you have to discard that Master. Nobody can realise God overnight or in a matter of days or weeks. And if somebody says that he will be able to grant you God-realisation if you give him a large sum of money, this is absurd. Like that, a few people claim that they will be able to teach you realisation or spiritual powers for a sum of money. If they make it sound like instant tea or coffee, then it is absurd. Those teachers are undoubtedly not real ones.
Examiner: I’ve often heard lineage mentioned as an important characteristic for a teacher — that a teacher has to have had a teacher.
Sri Chinmoy: He who was the first to realise God, whom did he get as his teacher? It is good to have a teacher, but it is not absolutely indispensable. I always advocate having a teacher. A spiritual Master is like a private tutor. He teaches the student privately so that he will pass the ignorance-test, not fail it. So it is good to have a spiritual Master, but it is not obligatory. There are many who have realised God without having spiritual Masters. But if you get a good one, it is very good; you are lucky.
Examiner: How do you find time to accomplish so much in the way of artistic creation — all the paintings, all the writings, all the compositions?
Sri Chinmoy: It is all through unconditional divine Grace. My mind will not believe it. I will be the first one to doubt it and suspect it. But it is the unconditional Grace that acts in and through me. I am not the doer. Had I been the doer, I would not have accomplished so many things. But I constantly try to be a simple, devoted instrument of His. On the strength of my receptivity, My Beloved Supreme acts in and through me.
Examiner: How many hours sleep do you get each night?
Sri Chinmoy: Sometimes two and a half hours, sometimes three, sometimes more, sometimes less. Sometimes for days and weeks I don’t actually sleep.
Examiner: What about food?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a strict vegetarian. Of course, some people will say that if you take eggs, then you are not a strict vegetarian. I do take eggs and milk, but I do not eat any meat, fish or fowl.
Examiner: Do you do any kind of physical practise of Hatha Yoga, or is that not part of your path?
Sri Chinmoy: No, Hatha Yoga is not part of my path. But I do advise my students to take exercise. Physical fitness considerably helps us in our spiritual journey, so I ask them to run. Recently, about 30 of my disciples ran in the marathon in New York City. I do advise them to run.
Examiner: Your background is athletic too, as I recall?
Sri Chinmoy: I was a champion sprinter and decathlon champion in the community where I lived. According to Indian standards, I was quite good, but according to the world standard I was nowhere.
Examiner: So you’ve always had this interest in athletics?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. It helps us. If we are physically fit, then early in the morning we will be able to get up and meditate. But if we constantly suffer from headache, stomach upset and other physical ailments, then we will not be inclined to get up early in the morning and pray and meditate. We will tend to be lazy and lethargic, whereas spiritual progress requires dynamism. So in this way physical fitness helps us considerably in our spiritual life.
Examiner: Is it possible to be artistically creative without being spiritual?
Sri Chinmoy: Certainly. Some creative people have free access to the inner world of creativity, but if they are not spiritually aspiring, they are not aware of it. But the spiritual people are bound to be aware of whatever they are doing in their everyday life. Whether they are painting or singing or writing, they will be aware of the depths and the heights of their existence-reality-life. Those who are creative without being spiritual will often find that their creativity is not at their command. That is to say, they cannot create at their sweet will. But those who are consciously aspiring will find that their creative inspiration is tremendously increased, and also that they can invoke the inspiration-bird to come to them whenever they need it.
Examiner: On your path, do you expect that after a certain amount of time the disciple will achieve enlightenment? I think traditionally a disciple is taught for twelve years, and then he graduates or something.
Sri Chinmoy: Our Indian spiritual institutes have four orders of life; four different stages we call it. After childhood the first 12 years is student life. Then they enter another phase. They accept earthly life and become householders. Then after 12 years they go into the forest to lead spiritual life most seriously, and after 12 years of that they become renunciates. First student life, then householder’s life, then proper spiritual life, then renunciation life. But I feel that everything can be done in one life. There is no need to separate them in this way. If you can pray and meditate soulfully, you don’t have to go through these traditional four stages of life.
Examiner: Do you expect that you will be able to produce enlightened disciples?
Sri Chinmoy: I do expect it. If we can’t produce enlightened disciples, then how can we succeed? This is not my mission; this is not my vision. I am merely an instrument of my Beloved Lord Supreme. Similarly, He will make others instruments also, who are right now my students. He will grant them illumination, liberation and realisation, which He has already given to me out of His infinite Bounty. I prayed, I cried, so He granted me this boon. Similarly, if my students are sincerely trying, then at God’s choice Hour, He will grant them the same boon.
Examiner: Is there anything you’d like to tell me that we haven’t gone into?
Sri Chinmoy: I think we have covered everything. This has been a fruitful interview. I am extremely grateful to you for your kind questions, and I am sure many, many people will derive spiritual benefit from our interview.
Examiner: Thank you very much.
Published in AUM – Vol. 5, No. 5,6, May-June 27, 1978
The first feature article about Sri Chinmoy, published in mainland USA, appears in the National Edition of the Sunday News, which has the largest circulation of any New York newspaper.
Beaming the Mind Toward God
by ED WALLACE
THE YOGI AND the mystic are an inevitable part of life in India — and — while the average Indian is not drawn toward the spiritual idea of yoga — people of the rich, materialistic West are flocking to the Indian teachers in a frantic scramble to overtake and possess peace of mind.
Riding the first flight to yoga were the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and other successful young Englishmen who married models, bought nice homes for mums and pop, had their suits handtailored and their boots custom made, only to discover that sudden money and adulation are not quite everything.
Yoga is a system of spiritual and physical reclamation and salvage.
It has been around for thousands of years, both honored and scoffed at through the ages, but today yoga is that powerful, indisputable force, an idea whose time has come.
For an expert and detailed explanation of meditation, the higher state of yoga sought by the followers of the bearded Indian savant Maharishi Mahesh, we turned to Chinmoy Ghose who conducts meetings for meditation in New York and in Puerto Rico.
Aware that there are fakes and highbinders among yoga teachers, as with everything else, we asked Chinmoy the cost of taking instructions from him. In New York there are spiritual yogis who will promise “God realization in 15 days for $125,” and if you are short of pocket they will give you a cram course for $75.
Many of these are said to be living in splendor today, having returned to India where a person can make out comfortably on $20 a month. After making $1,000 a month in New York for years, they must be in good shape.
“My fee is aspiration, the desire to know God; it is not money,” Chinmoy explained. “After each meeting, here in my apartment, the student may leave a love offering according to his capacity. All offerings are voluntary. Some people have come here twice a week for six months without leaving a dollar, but their financial difficulty is my financial difficulty. God has made one rich and He has made one poor, and since I am here to serve the Supreme in each seeker, I give them all the same energy and attention.”
True meditation, when eventually achieved, is said to be the most sublime experience man can aspire to and success depends upon the ability to free the mind of thought and reach a state of tranquillity where a divine intelligence takes over.
“First I teach concentration,” Chinmoy explained, “the ability to beam the mind upon a single object or idea. We clear the path to meditation through concentration.”
Chinmoy is an extremely mild young man with a handclasp like the touch of a baby bird’s wing, and a voice that is a clear, audible whisper. He appears little interested in money, or else he has the softest sell in town.
His living quarters at 504 E. 84th St. are modest, given over entirely to his work and the fragrance of pleasing incense rises from a burner in the corner. On the walls are the familiar religious pictures relating to the life of Christ and others depicting figures and scenes from the Hindu religion.
“I believe that Americans today are seeking the inner spiritual life of yoga because it simplifies their outer lives which are so filled with complexities and emergencies. They come to me, not because they are drunkards, or because they are having family troubles, but because they hunger for self-discovery.
“They seek a reason for their existence and I teach them to find it through meditation. I meditate with them.”
There are five kinds of yoga, he explained:
Hatha yoga, the physical exercises, and ranging through studies of breathing and breath control, the pursuit of knowledge, the development of love and devotion, and finally, Karma Yoga, the striving for selfless action.
As with all unfamiliar ideas, each is difficult to explain, although Chinmoy was able to define for us one aspect of his particular field of yoga, the striving for selfless action, and how it is pursued.
Selfless action means that a person will do his work with devotion, but having done that he will not concern himself with the results. The object of his work will no longer be to make more money, or gain greater fame.
“The person who has achieved selfless action will know that the fruit of his labor comes from God and the results should be offered to God. A person learns to work diligently, but not worry about the outcome.
“And when we come to realize that with our failures we please God, and with our successes we please Him, then we have achieved Selfless Action.”
Since such a philosophy is at the very opposite of attitudes that rule the earth today, I asked Chinmoy to explain what he does when he teaches his disciples to meditate, and through meditation to achieve such yogic concepts as Self-Realization, God-Realization and Selfless Action.
“One method is the use of a word, some aspect of the divine, and it could be such a word as PEACE, JOY, LOVE or BLISS,” he said.
“Now think of an endless train rushing past you, a train racing forever and ever into infinity, and as you concentrate on this passing train you repeat the word over and over until you can stop repeating it, yet you will continue to hear the word inside your being.
“At this point you begin to have a realization of God and no longer think of him as a multimillionaire who could easily give you all the money you want to buy all the things you imagine you need.
“A few minutes of meditation can make the mind calm and when a person has learned meditation he can enter into a new existence here on earth, a condition where all is tranquillity.
“But meditation must always be an alert experience, and we must be vigilant never to mistake drowsiness for meditation. For that reason it is best not to meditate in bed for you may fall asleep and, later, assume that you meditated half the night.
“When man has achieved the divine quality of meditation he can change his own fate. And when he can remain joyous in the face of both success and failure, then he is truly God’s child.”
Some of which manages to sound at least a little like good old-fashioned horse sense, dished out in a more easy-going and productive era.
An attitude of calm settles over group as Chinmoy meditates.
Published in the DAILY NEWS, New York, Sunday, November 5, 1967
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed by Joe Franklin, TV talk-show host, aired on WWOR-TV in Secaucus, New Jersey.
Sri Chinmoy, the Indian yogi who heads the UN Meditation Group*, surpassed his own unofficial world’s record for poetry-writing in a 24-hour period by writing 843 spiritual poems between midnight Saturday and midnight Sunday. The 44-year-guru, whose disciples include jazz-rock guitarists John McLaughlin and Carlos Santana, h.ad previously written 360 poems in one day on April 28. He said he used powers of concentration developed through meditation to keep himself going.
Published in NEW YORK POST, November 1st, 1975
* Later renamed, Sri Chinmoy: The Peace Meditation at the United Nations
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed by News 12 New Jersey TV after lifting a 685 Aero Commander Aircraft plus six passengers (total weight: 10,527 lbs.) at Roger J. Miller Air Park, Berkeley, New Jersey.
Interviewer: Why do you lift?
Sri Chinmoy: Everybody wants to do something to make himself happy. This is one of the ways I can make myself happy, and I find there are others who are also inspired by what I am doing. From inspiration we get joy. So by doing this, I am inspiring quite a few people and from this inspiration they are deriving joy.
Interviewer: What training did you go through to do this?
Sri Chinmoy: About twelve years ago I lifted a seaplane and a helicopter. Since then I have not lifted any plane. Last month I started lifting up heavy objects once again. This will be the eighth plane I have lifted this month.
Interviewer: What next?
Sri Chinmoy: Our philosophy is the philosophy of progress. I will be trying to lift up a heavier plane weighing 13,000 lbs. This is my wish. If God permits me, I would like to try.
Interviewer: Well, it looks like the way you lifted up this one today, it will be no problem.
Sri Chinmoy: Oh, no. This one was quite heavy. Similarly, the ones that I lifted last week were no match for this one — and also I added six individuals, which increased the heavy weight considerably. By God’s Grace, I have done it. I am grateful to God and I am also grateful to those like you who came here today to inspire the occasion.
Published in A Mystic Journey in the Weightlifting World, part 1
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed by Reuters TV after lifting several elephants at the Big Apple Circus at Lincoln Center in New York City.
Interviewer: Tell us the purpose of bringing out elephants and lifting them with this machine.
Sri Chinmoy: I am a man of prayer and meditation. I feel inspiration is of paramount importance. If I can inspire someone, and if that person also can inspire me, then we can do many good things for the betterment of this world. Here I am inspiring quite a few people, and they also are inspiring me. If I am inspired, you are inspired and he is inspired, then we shall be able to work together. When we are not inspired, we find fault with other human beings; we quarrel, fight and do many deplorable things. But if we are inspired, then we do many good things for the improvement of this world.
I am a student of peace. I would like the entire humanity to be in the same boat and sail towards the Golden Shore. Together we are trying to bring about world peace, and for that we need inspiration. An elephant symbolises strength, solid strength. Inspiration itself is strength. Therefore, I try to lift elephants because elephants are so heavy and so strong. If I can be of some service to mankind by lifting an elephant, then I feel my prayer-life and my meditation-life are fulfilling a special purpose in inspiring my fellow brothers and sisters to be better citizens of the world.
Published in A Mystic Journey in the Weightlifting World, part 1
Cebu City, Philippines
“Oh, Philippines! India offered you the fulfilling message of the heart’s universal oneness. Spain offered you the glowing message of the Christian faith. America offered you the convincing message of the loftiest democracy. Your soul is now offering the all-convincing, all-glowing and all-fulfilling message of self-acceptance, self-illumination and self-manifestation founded on the most fertile soil of your inner faith. Unmistakably are you walking along the path of your inner faith supremely triumphant will be at the end of your journey’s close.”
Thus says Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose of Bengal, India, yoga master, about the Philippines after his fourth day of sojourn in the Philippines. C. K. Ghose, a spiritual leader and teacher of the movement called A UM, was in Cebu City in connection with his Far Eastern tour for a series of lectures on yoga. Unable to arrange engagements in Manila, he proceeded to Cebu to speak at the University of San Carlos and Southwestern University. Prior to his visit to the Philippines, he went to Japan for the same purpose but was able to give only two lectures due to the widespread student strikes in the different colleges and universities in Japan. His next stop is Silliman University, Dumaguete City.
“People are not using Love properly,” he declared. “They are using Love to possess and be possessed. Real love is something that expands and liberates and gives us the feeling of true oneness of the entire world.
“We need a new world, and for that we need a new consciousness. When we give to God what we have and what we are, we immediately grow into a new and divine consciousness."
In his two lectures and in an interview, he clarified many misconceptions about the yoga movement.
In the Yoga movement, three attitudes are emphasized in relation to God — Love, Devotion and Surrender. Yoga is not a religion, he says, it is a spiritual movement. On the contrary, it accepts all religions; it even transcends all of them. In fact, he has disciples coming from different religions and denominations. For the movement the field is the entire world.
Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose, as a lecturer, has lectured at Harvard (on “The Vedanta Philosophy”), Princeton, Yale, and other leading American universities. On his way to Japan he spoke at Berkeley.
Published in The Republic News, Cebu City, Philippines, November 12, 1969
Bergen, New Jersey
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed after he lifts a Piper Arrow III plane plus eight men (total weight: 4,748 lbs.) at the Sparta Aviation School, Teterboro, New Jersey.
Interviewer: Why do you do this?
Sri Chinmoy: I am trying, according to my humble capacity, to be of dedicated service to the world. I have been going to the United Nations to offer meditations since 1970. In addition, I have composed many songs and poems, plus I have done thousands and thousands of paintings. All this I am doing to inspire others. Similarly, others also do many, many things to inspire me. If I am inspiring people and people are inspiring me, then we become good human beings. When we are inspired, we try to do many, many good things for mankind. When we are not inspired, we do many, many bad things. Inspiration is a divine element inside our life. When we are inspired, we try to climb up the Himalayas. When we are inspired, we try to swim the English Channel. When we are inspired, we go from one country to another country to inspire people and to be inspired by them. I feel that when we inspire humanity, we automatically become good citizens of the world. This is my philosophy. My weightlifting feats I have done solely to inspire humanity.
What humanity wants is joy, and inside joy is peace. If we are happy, we will not go and strike others; we will only go and shake hands with them or embrace them. But if we are miserable, we may go and strike others to get rid of our misery. People who are happy will never do bad things. Only unhappy people are fighting, dropping bombs and killing one another. If I am happy, will I go and find fault with my neighbours? Is there any human being who is happy who has done bad things? Only unhappy people do bad things. Here, with my weightlifting, I am inspired and you are inspired. We are only thinking of making each other happy. And when we are happy, we get peace.
Interviewer: What is the 'oneness-heart' that you talk about?
Sri Chinmoy: What 'oneness-heart' means is that your good qualities you are giving me and my good qualities I am giving you. Your divine qualities you are offering to me gladly and my divine qualities I am offering to you gladly. When you have oneness and good feelings, you give me what is best in you and I give you what is best in me. We exchange our good qualities. That is called a 'oneness-heart'.
Published in A Mystic Journey in the Weightlifting World, part 1
‘Hessischer Rundfunk’ in Frankfurt, Germany
Excerpts from the interview:
Interviewer: Could you introduce yourself?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a student of peace. I pray to God and meditate on God for world peace.
Interviewer: How did you become a student of peace?
Sri Chinmoy: By praying and meditating. Everybody on earth can do whatever he or she wants to do. In my case, I prayed to God for peace, so He has given me ample opportunity to offer my service to mankind.
Interviewer: How can one learn meditation?
Sri Chinmoy: Either one goes to a teacher or one prays to God and cries like a child for God to teach him how to pray and meditate. The first person who began to pray and meditate, thousands of years ago, definitely received this teaching from within. In the outer world we find that there are many people who have not gone to school who are quite learned. Our Rabindranath Tagore, India’s greatest poet, and the great dramatist and philosopher George Bernard Shaw did not go to school, but they were both men of knowledge and wisdom. Again, there are many, many people who went to universities in order to learn and become endowed with knowledge. In the same way, to learn meditation, either one has to go to a teacher to learn or one has to learn it by himself.
Interviewer: You are not only meditating. You are also doing sports, writing songs and poems and painting. Where do you find the time to do all this?
Sri Chinmoy: When I use my mind, it is impossible even to imagine doing all these things. But when I use my heart, I feel that everything is possible because I know I am a mere instrument of God's Compassion and, according to my receptivity, God does everything in and through me. It entirely depends on my own receptivity. God's Grace is like the sun. If I keep all the doors and windows open, naturally the sunlight will enter into the room in abundant measure, whereas if I leave only one tiny window open, then very little light will be able to enter. In exactly the same way, if we can open our heart-door completely, then God's Grace enters into us.
Interviewer: Could you sum up your philosophy?
Sri Chinmoy: My philosophy is very simple: love and serve. We love God the Creator and serve God the creation. God is at once the Creator and the creation. When I pray and meditate, I love God the Creator, and when I serve mankind, at that time I am serving God the creation.
Interviewer: How do your concerts bring peace to the world?
Sri Chinmoy: Everybody has a way to give what he has. Suppose you have love and you want to offer this love to mankind, or you have joy and you want to offer your joy to mankind. Then you need to find a special way to give what you have and what you are. In my case, I feel that when I play soulful music and when I sing my spiritual songs, I can offer whatever peace I have to humanity. So this is my way of offering. There are many others who are also offering peace to mankind. Their ways are different, but they are equally effective.
Interviewer: You conduct meditations twice a week at the United Nations in New York. Do you think you can change the world in this way? Do you want to change the world?
Sri Chinmoy: I have not come into this world to change it. I have come only to love the world in such a way that you and I and everyone else can work together. I pray to God to give me the capacity to be of service to Him. One individual can never, never change the world, but collectively everybody has to work together. Jointly, with a oneness-heart, we hope to bring about world peace.
Interviewer: Do you get stage fright when you give a concert?
Sri Chinmoy: Not in the least! I have established my oneness with the people in the audience. When you play in front of the members of your family, you do not become frightened. They are your parents, your brothers, your sisters, your cousins, so why should you be afraid? Even if you play wrong notes, they are not going to say anything. So I have established that kind of oneness with the hearts of my listeners. I do not claim to be a great musician who has to play everything perfectly. I only call myself a student of peace. As a student of peace, I feel this is the most effective way, in my case, to offer peace. I say to my listeners, "I love you and I wish to offer you peace. This is the way that I can do this. If you feel like seeing what I do, and if you feel you can derive some benefit from it, then please come."
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 30
One of the United Kingdom’s most famous bridges, the Forth Railway Bridge, was dedicated as a Sri Chinmoy Peace-Bridge on Oct. 27.
This bridge across Scotland’s Forth River stood as an engineering marvel when it was built over a century ago, and at the time was the largest bridge in the world.
Today, when something seems to go on endlessly, people in the U.K. say it is “like painting the Forth Bridge.”
Speaking at the dedication ceremony, L. M. Singhvi, India’s High Commissioner to the U.K., said Sri Chinmoy “lifts this bridge a little higher because he implants into it the soul of peace.”
In his own remarks, Sri Chinmoy said: “Forth Bridge ... you are Scotland’s transcendental pride. You are Scotland’s universal dedication.”
Also attending the dedication ceremony were officials of Railtrack, which owns the bridge.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 25 August-November 1996
“In you — Japan — I see the dynamic body of Asia, and the glowing breath of Asia. You do not belong to the past. You are constantly moving towards a higher light. This is indeed a great blessing. You give birth to the ever-new. The ever-new is yours.”
A spiritual leader and teacher who has dedicated himself “to serve God and humanity,” Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose of Bengal, India, is making his first visit to Japan, a country in which he has been interested since childhood.
After being in a spiritual community in India, for 20 years, he went to the United States and has resided there during the past five years. Today he has a spiritual centre in New York where several hundred disciples “from 18 to 82 come twice a week and meditate on God.”
There are four other spiritual centres in Connecticut, Miami, Puerto Rico and Jamaica.
Countless numbers of people are burdened with anxieties in the complex world of today, but those who come to the spiritual centres are taught “concentration, meditation and contemplation.”
Through this they are helped “to gain inner peace — to overcome worries, fears, doubts.”
“They come to me for guidance and I give them inspiration,” Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose said. “I kindle the flame of aspiration in them.”
His spiritual path is called AUM, a Sanskrit term from the Vedas representing the “Name of God” in three aspects — “A” for God the Creator, “U” for God the Preserver, and “M” for God the Transformer.
In his form of Yoga, the Indian teacher places emphasis on three attitudes in relation to God — Love, Devotion, and Surrender.
“People are not using Love properly,” he declared. “They are using Love to possess and be possessed. Real Love is something that expands and liberates and gives us the feeling of true oneness of the entire world.”
"We need a new world," he continued.
“And for that we need a new consciousness. When we give to God what we have and what we are, we immediately grow into a new and divine consciousness.”
Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose is not only a teacher and scholar. He is also a writer, singer (two of his spiritual albums have been recorded, one in English and one in Bengali), and lecturer.
He has lectured at Harvard (on “The Vedanta Philosophy”), Princeton, Yale, and other leading American universities. On his way to Japan, he spoke at Berkeley.
Sincerity is the quality that he values most among his disciples. He admitted that he was “very strict” in his teachings and it is only after a four-month trial period that prospective disciples are given a personal interview. He is not interested in mere numbers and “I do not take hippies or alcoholics among my students,” he explained.
On Sunday, October 26, he is to speak before the Ramakrishna Vedanta Society of Tokyo on “Illumination.”
From here he plans to go on to speaking engagements in Manila and Singapore, followed by a brief visit to India before he returns to his New York headquarters. Since coming here earlier this month, he has been writing down many “Observations” about Japan. One of them has been given at the beginning of this article. Another of his “Observations” is:
“China offered to you — Japan — what she had: the mind’s height. India offered to you what she had: the heart’s depth. Europe offered to you what she had: the arm’s strength.
“You offered to yourself what you had: the message of self-awakening. And now you offer to yourself and to the world at large what you have: the flowering of a creative spirit.”
Published in the MAINICHI DAILY NEWS, Tokyo, Japan, October 26, 1969
On Wednesday, 26 October 1977, Sri Chinmoy visits with poet Francisco Matos Paoli, Puerto Rico's Nobel Prize nominee for literature in 1977. The meeting takes place at the poet's home in Rio Piedras. Following is a transcript of the conversation:
Francisco Matos Paoli: I cannot speak English very well, but I can make an effort to communicate my personal feelings. I am extremely grateful to be meeting with you. You are a poet, and also you are a mystic. That is very special, because we are both living with God as the Guide of our mutual lives. There is perhaps some difference between Occidental mysticism and Oriental mysticism, but we can all realise that in human endeavours there is an identification between the body and the spirit. What is your belief?
Sri Chinmoy: My belief is also the same. You call it 'spirit', and we use the term 'soul', because there are two kinds of spirit. One spirit is the Transcendental Reality — that is Spirit with a capital 'S'. The other is a vital spirit, an unsatisfied or dissatisfied being that exists after the death of some human beings. When people deal with these dissatisfied spirits, that is called spiritism. There is a great difference between spirituality and spiritism. Spiritism deals with entities in the vital world-spirits — whereas spirituality deals with the Transcendental Spirit. So we use the terms 'body' and 'soul'. The body is the temple in which the soul resides.
Francisco Matos Paoli: The temple, yes.
Sri Chinmoy: And the soul is the deity that is housed in the temple. If there is no temple, then the deity will have no place of abode. The body is the manifestation, and inside the body what we have (we can call it 'soul' or we can call it 'spirit') is the essence. We need the body to manifest what we have within. If there is no body, then we cannot house anything, we cannot embody anything. This is your house. This house is protecting you but, at the same time, if you do not give life to the house with your achievements, with your poetical capacities, with your wisdom-light, with your inner spiritual development, then this house, which is like the body, is of no avail. Both the inner and the outer are complementary realities. We need the body in order to house the divinity within us. Again, the divinity needs the body to manifest its reality. So the body and the soul go together.
Francisco Matos Paoli: And there is also, after death, a spiritual body.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. There are three bodies.
Francisco Matos Paoli: What you call the astral body — semi-material?
Sri Chinmoy: It is not actually material. The three bodies are called physical, subtle and causal. This is our physical body. Inside the physical there is our subtle body. It has the same form as the physical body, and we may sense it, but we can't touch or feel it with our hands. With our inner vision, with our third eye, we can see it. Then there is the causal body, which keeps the quintessence of our life here on earth. Here we do many things, we get many experiences. The essence, the quintessence, of all the things that we do and grow into forms our causal body. We call it a body, but it is not like our physical body. It is very tiny.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Yes, there is a physical and a spiritual interrelation — what you call the cosmic apprehension of life and the spiritual apprehension of life — and you can't divide that realm, because sometimes existence transforms into essence and vice versa, essence transforms into existence.
Sri Chinmoy: It is like water and ice. Water becomes ice; again, ice becomes water. At one moment it is essence, and at another moment it is substance. Reality is also like that. We always say that Reality is both with attributes and without attributes, like God with form and God without form. Here also, essence and substance are inseparable.
Francisco Matos Paoli: My contention is that I believe in this real life, although it is not an absolute life; it has finality. I don't believe there is a contradiction between religious mysticism and political struggle for liberty. You know, in my life I have been in jail for five years for the struggle for our political independence here in Puerto Rico. But I think of politics as a sort of transubstantiation of life in God, a mystical comprehension of all matter, and that matter in transfiguration in God.
Sri Chinmoy: Mysticism and politics are two different realities, although they may aim at the same goal. Mysticism wants liberation for humanity, and politics also wants people to be liberated. But the foundation of politics is not the same foundation as you see in mysticism. The foundation of mysticism is not in the mind, whereas politics is in the mind, in the vital and in the physical reality. Mysticism has a deeper source. A pure mystic gets messages or revelations not from his mind, not even from his heart, but from something beyond this physical reality. A politician may be deeply inspired, but his inspiration is from either the heart, or the mind, or the vital, or the physical. But the true mystic will get his inspiration — actually we do not call it inspiration, we use another term, 'intuition' — from his third eye or from the Reality beyond. Politics deals with earth-bound reality, but mysticism deals with Heaven-free Reality. A mystic gets the messages from worlds beyond this physical earth-planet. His aim is spiritual liberation, absolute liberation. The politician's liberation is on the physical, vital or mental plane. The ultimate desire, the ultimate aspiration, is the same: liberation. But they operate from two different planes.
Francisco Matos Paoli: But are they interrelated?
Sri Chinmoy: They are interconnected in the sense that their objective is the same. But one does not necessarily add to the other. A politician does not necessarily have to become a mystic, and a mystic does not have to become a politician. But the goal of both is liberation; let us say, to march into infinite freedom.
Francisco Matos Paoli: But not the liberation of this everyday life?
Sri Chinmoy: No, it is not the goal of freedom from political constraints in daily life. It is the liberation from the bondage of the finite consciousness. A mystic sees the Reality of the Beyond and then, like a magnet, he pulls it into him. A politician wants to go forward; he does not want to allow any obstruction. But the mystic looks beyond this world to the furthest point, and from there he brings divine light and delight into the earth-life. The politician says, "I will not allow any obstruction on my way. I want freedom. I am going straight forward." But the mystic says, "Let me bring the message of light, delight and peace from the Beyond to transform this world."
Francisco Matos Paoli: But do you not think that this spiritual peace that reaches the mystic is a sort of negation of life?
Sri Chinmoy: Not at all. Real spirituality is not the negation of life; it is the acceptance of life and the transformation of life. The old theory was that you have to retreat into the Himalayan caves, you have to seclude yourself, you have to hide, you have to renounce the world, which is full of suffering, darkness, impurity and temptation. But that is not the right approach anymore. The right approach to spirituality is to accept life as such, then transform the world with divine peace, light and delight.
Francisco Matos Paoli: And this endeavour of the mystic will result in a sort of inward communication?
Sri Chinmoy: The real mystic is one who has a free access to the Absolute Supreme, from Whom he gets direct commands. He is in tune with something very high, deep and profound. He tries to manifest in the outer world what he has found within himself, which is God. But false mysticism separates everything. False mysticism will say that earth-life is useless, that here you cannot do anything divine, so the best thing is to remain always aloof, not to mix with earthly people, not to have any connection with the realities of ordinary life. False spirituality says, "Give up everything." But what should we actually give up? If I give up my body, if I give up my vital, if I give up my mind, then I will have nothing left to reveal God, to manifest God, or even to realise God. So what should we do? We should accept life and transform it.
Francisco Matos Paoli: And what is the relation between personal self and Nirvana?
Sri Chinmoy: When we deal with the personal self, we want to enjoy freedom in our own limited way. Nirvana is the extinction of the human way. In Nirvana, on the strength of our deepest aspiration we enter into a very high state of consciousness. Then we decide that we do not want to mix with the world and its sufferings and problems anymore. Nirvana is the extinction of the earthly game. Here you are playing a game, I am playing a game, all people are playing a game, either consciously or unconsciously. It is God's Cosmic Game that we are participating in. But when we achieve Nirvana, we put an end to our part in the Cosmic Game. We don't want to play anymore. We choose to enjoy the static bliss, not the dynamic bliss.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Does it negate the individuality?
Sri Chinmoy: It does negate the individuality. In fact, it negates the full manifestation of one's own reality. We can say that to some extent it is a narrow approach to the Reality. Some people play the game for a while and then they say, "I don't want to play anymore." But others say, "No, we shall play as long as our Captain commands." Those who accept Nirvana do not care for the transformation of the world. They have suffered, and they have tried to give light to the world as much as possible. But when they see that earth is not receiving light from them in abundant measure, then they want to give up the battle.
Francisco Matos Paoli: This Nirvana is a sort of collective self?
Sri Chinmoy: No, Nirvana is a state of consciousness where you cut off your connection with the earth-realities. We have bound earth like a tight knot, and earth has bound us. It is a mutual attraction, a mutual bond. I pull somebody, and he pulls me. But when one enters into Nirvana one cuts that bond. One wants to remain all alone, immersed in a sea of bliss. But this sea of bliss is static bliss, not dynamic bliss. Just the other day a teacher from the World University asked me this same question about Nirvana.
Francisco Matos Paoli: I believe in individuality after life. And this is not what you call egotism, but a reaffirmation of the personal life in God.
Sri Chinmoy: Absolutely true. God Himself is one and many at the same time. As you are saying, individuality need not be egocentric. God, in His Vision, wanted to become many, so He created this creation. Before, God was One in the Silence-Life. Then He wanted to become the sound-life. When He wanted to become the sound-life, He projected Himself into many forms.
Francisco Matos Paoli: But if we transform into God, is there a negation of human life in that?
Sri Chinmoy: No, there is no negation. On the contrary, the human in us becomes divine and perfect. The individuality that a tiny drop of water has is very little — negligible. But when that tiny drop of water enters into the ocean, it becomes part and parcel of the vast ocean. Then the individuality that the tiny drop had becomes vast and powerful. So, when human beings merge into the Absolute, into God, we don't lose our individuality. Only our finite human individuality at that time becomes transformed. It becomes vast, infinite. While the drop remains aloof, away from the ocean, it has only a very tiny individuality. But when the same drop enters the ocean, it becomes the ocean. At that time we can't see the individuality of that tiny drop anymore.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Then, we do transform into God?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, we transform into God. When the finite enters into the Infinite, it becomes the Infinite. The individual is now finite, although he is carrying the message of the Infinite. But when the finite consciously, soulfully and devotedly enters into the Infinite, it becomes the Infinite Itself.
Francisco Matos Paoli: And what do you think about this Christian belief that our Lord Jesus Christ lived a human life and suffered death?
Sri Chinmoy: He lived, suffered and died because whoever comes into the world to fulfil the message of the Heavenly Father has to accept the suffering of the world. If you want to save someone who is drowning in the sea, where do you stay? You don't stay on the top of a tree. You come near him; you jump into the sea and stretch out your arms to help him. So, the Christ endured the suffering of the world, because in order to save the world, he had to live here like any other human being.
Francisco Matos Paoli: There is the contention of Catholicism, you know, that Our Lord Jesus Christ has two natures, human and divine.
Sri Chinmoy: Each individual has two natures. The moment I have a good thought, I am divine. The moment I have a bad thought, I am undivine. The moment I become jealous of you, I am undivine. The moment I love you, I am divine. This moment I am divine; the next moment I am undivine. We have millions of thoughts; constantly we are assailed by thoughts. This moment we are in Heaven; the next moment we are in hell. Why? Our thought-world creates Heaven and hell inside us. When we make sacrifices, when we love humanity, when we do something for humanity or for God, then we are divine. But if we are only for ourselves, then we are undivine.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Our Lord Jesus Christ is an incarnation of God, is He not?
Sri Chinmoy: It is true. For God, Heaven and earth are like upstairs and downstairs in His House. When He is upstairs, we call Him 'God'. When He goes downstairs, He becomes 'man'. But it is still the same God who has gone downstairs. When He comes upstairs again, He is again called 'God'.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Yes, but there is a connection between immanence and transcendence.
Sri Chinmoy: Absolutely. They are two manifestations of the same reality. When the bird spreads its wings and flies everywhere, it is immanent. But when it soars up high, higher, highest, into the Beyond, then it is transcendent.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Do you think there is a final termination of our human life in Nirvana?
Sri Chinmoy: Nirvana is the final termination of the human in us, but not of the divine in us. There are two aspects of the divine in us: the dynamic aspect and the static aspect. The dynamic aspect enters into Nirvana and passes beyond Nirvana. Only the static aspect remains in Nirvana. Our human consciousness will not reach Nirvana. The divine consciousness has the capacity to reach it. Nirvana can be attained by the human soul only after many lifetimes of spiritual aspiration. Each human incarnation is in the process of flowing from the eternal life of the soul. This is not your first life or my first life. It is a continuous process.
Francisco Matos Paoli: And the eternal life is the negation of time?
Sri Chinmoy: Eternal life is not the negation of time. Eternal life and time are intimate friends, most intimate friends. The only thing is that in order to appreciate time here on earth, we divide it into various parts. It is one o'clock, two o'clock, three o'clock, one year, two years, three years. When we have stayed on earth for fifty, sixty, or seventy years, we feel that we have completed the reality which we call life. At the highest level of Reality, time is continuous and life is continuous; the eternal life flows in eternal time.
Francisco Matos Paoli: There is no moral irresponsibility in the spiritual life, in this sort of transcendence of earthly life?
Sri Chinmoy: No, no, there is responsibility. When we speak of transcendence of life, we have to know what we mean. Now we have many undivine qualities. We quarrel, we fight, we strangle, we kill each other. This is very bad. We have to transcend this level of consciousness. If we have a pure consciousness, then we love humanity; we do not quarrel, we do not kill. Is not this kind of transcendence our real responsibility? Why do we pray? Why do we meditate? Why do we aspire? Just because we want to transcend our shortcomings, our weaknesses. We have countless weaknesses which we must conquer. And how do we do it? By virtue of our prayer and meditation. It is our first responsibility, our soul's responsibility, our life's most important responsibility, to become divine. Human life is still half animal. This half animal is trying to see something and grow into something divine. It is the transcendence of the animal-human life that we are aiming at through our prayers and meditations.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Then the mystic is the real human?
Sri Chinmoy: The mystic is the illumined and purified human in us. The mystic has received the message of the Beyond. He sees farther than we see. When we see with our human eyes, it is a very limited distance. But the mystic does not see with the human eyes. He sees with the Third Eye, the eye of inner vision. With this eye he sees the past, the present and the future. But he is not satisfied just by seeing something. He wants to bring it into his system to illumine it. The mystic is the illumined human in us, and this illumined human in us is trying to illumine others who want to be illumined.
Francisco Matos Paoli: I am convinced about that — reincarnation — and that there is a final point to reincarnation in Nirvana.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, this is not your first life, and this is not your last life. Through each incarnation the soul is receiving more light, abundant light, infinite Light. At the same time, it is revealing and manifesting this light that it is receiving from above. We believe in reincarnation, because in one incarnation we cannot achieve everything.
Francisco Matos Paoli: No, no, it is impossible!
Sri Chinmoy: At the age of four perhaps we had a desire, and at the age of fifty we have not yet fulfilled it. We may have fulfilled only a few desires out of countless desires which we have had in our lifetime, so we must incarnate again in order to fulfil our unfulfilled desires, and also to do something for God. Eventually we do not want to go through the desire process anymore; we want to go through the aspiration process. In aspiration we pray to God to make us good, to make us divine, to make us perfect. Now, it is very easy, it takes only a few seconds, to say, "Oh Lord, make us good, divine and perfect." But in order to actually become good, divine and perfect, God knows how many incarnations it takes. So, we feel that the road of aspiration is the road that can lead us to real happiness.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Can we reach a state of eternal Bliss where there is no reincarnation at all?
Sri Chinmoy: If you enter into Nirvana, or when God says to you, "My son, you have worked so hard for Me. Now you can enjoy a rest. I have many other children. Let them now work for me." Before the Christ, Lord Krishna was also a great spiritual Master; the Buddha was also a great spiritual Master. The Absolute Supreme sent Krishna, sent Buddha, sent Christ and a few other Masters to help the earth-consciousness. They are no longer in the physical body, but their consciousness is alive. They are spirit, as you said at the very beginning of our talk.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Absolute Spirit.
Sri Chinmoy: And in that form they are still on earth guiding us, moulding us, shaping us, transforming us, liberating us. In spirit they are guiding us, but not in the physical body.
Francisco Matos Paoli: When we have that illumination and we have entered into the eternal life, can we come back again?
Sri Chinmoy: Certainly. It is like a game that we are playing with God. After he has played for a long time, the son says, "I'm tired. I don't want to play anymore." The Father says, "All right." Then tomorrow the son says, "I want to play again." So the Father allows him to play. The Cosmic Game is like that. If you don't want to play, you don't play. You are not forced. But if you want to play, you can. There is full liberty. If you play and enjoy yourself, wonderful. If you suffer and you say, "No, I am tired of this game. I want to watch from above," that also you can do. The Supreme wants only happiness from you. By playing, if you are happy, it is wonderful. Just by watching, if you want to become happy, it is all right, too.
Francisco Matos Paoli: And what do you believe of evil?
Sri Chinmoy: In our philosophy we don't see it as evil. We see it as limited reality. Anything that is limited creates problems for us. But if we see something as evil, then our minds become polluted, the mind becomes dark.
Francisco Matos Paoli: There is no existence of evil?
Sri Chinmoy: No, there is only limited light. One person will have tremendous light and wisdom, while another will have less. But if we say that the one who has less light is evil, then we are making a mistake. A child does not have the knowledge of a university graduate, but he has the capacity to gain that knowledge. Just because the child does not have the knowledge and cannot read college books, can you call him an uneducated illiterate fool? No, you have to allow him to grow up and get the same opportunity. Gradually, gradually, over the years he will go to school, high school, college and university and get the same knowledge. Anything that has very limited light we tend to see as evil, but it is only at the beginning of the gradual process of evolution of our reality.
Francisco Matos Paoli: And what is the relationship of the mystic with the world of limitation?
Sri Chinmoy: He can live on earth very firmly and well-established, like a boat in the water. The boat is in the water, but it is not affected by the water. You live inside this house, but you are not bound by this house. You can neglect it or you can make it better. You are the lord of this house. In this way the true mystic lives with humanity. The mystic has the capacity to illumine the consciousness of mankind, to change the world, illumine the world, to make it more divine and more perfect. Or, if he wants, he can just ignore the world, neglect the world.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Sri Chinmoy, I would like to give you my latest books. Paramesh can translate for you. You don't know Spanish?
Sri Chinmoy: No, I do not know.
Francisco Matos Paoli: These are my latest books. Ya se Oye el Cenit.
Paramesh: We can Now Hear the Zenith.
Francisco Matos Paoli: This one is called In Praise of Space.
Sri Chinmoy: I am accepting these two creations of yours with my heart's deepest gratitude. And I also wish to present to you some of my books.
Francisco Matos Paoli: I have already read some books of yours. Your disciples have given some to me.
Sri Chinmoy: Which are the books?
Francisco Matos Paoli: Yoga and the Spiritual Life.
Sri Chinmoy: I will send some of my poetry books to you. This has been a most meaningful and fruitful meeting. I wish to offer you my soulful love and my most soulful gratitude.
Francisco Matos Paoli: You know, here in Puerto Rico, some people have nominated my poetry for the Nobel Prize. But I think that my poetry is sort of mystic poetry, you know, and there is a sort of obstacle in that.
Sri Chinmoy: [Laughter]
Francisco Matos Paoli: [Laughter] Yes, for winning the prize, I think it is so.
Sri Chinmoy: I am also in the same difficulty. My books also have been sent for the Nobel Prize.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Yes.
Sri Chinmoy: This time a Spaniard got it.
Francisco Matos Paoli: A Spaniard, yes, Vicente Alexaindre.
Sri Chinmoy: Do you send the original, or translate it into English? I believe the Committee asks for it in English.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Yes. There is a friend of mine, a poetess, who is translating my books into English. And also I have received a communication from France, from Les Editeurs Fran^ais Unis. Como se dice eso en ingles?
Paramesh: United French Editors.
Francisco Matos Paoli: They are going to publish an anthology of my poetry translated into French.
Sri Chinmoy: Marvelous! Excellent! May I offer this to you? I understand that you are a great admirer of this person. [Sri Chinmoy presents Senor Paoli with a plaque embossed with the face of Pedro Albizu Campos.]
Francisco Matos Paoli: Oh! I am very grateful! This is our apostle Albizu Campos.
Sri Chinmoy: A patriot.
Francisco Matos Paoli: And I was a companion of his in jail in 1950. I was in jail from 1950 to 1955. I lost my reason in jail, you know, because I could not resist jail. I am very grateful. Well, this is your home.
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you.
Francisco Matos Paoli: And you can come whenever you wish. Well, Paramesh.
Paramesh: Muchas gracias.
Dhananjaya: Don Paco, ha sido un placer.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Dile que yo me arrastro por la tierra. Diganselo a el, que yo me arrastro por la tierra ante el. Si, je, je, je.
Paramesh: Guru, he says that he throws himself at your feet, completely before you.
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you.
Francisco Matos Paoli: I feel humbled, because you are in the eternal Peace of God. I am a human that is fighting against evil and the limited life, but I endeavour also for that eternal Peace.
Sri Chinmoy: It is your humility that is speaking. We are in the same boat, sailing toward the same destination. I am your inner brother. We are both trying to be of some service to mankind.
Francisco Matos Paoli: I am only a follower of your inner light, that is a sort of beauty transcendental. I create beauty with my poetry, but the kind of beauty that I create is bound to earth sometimes. But even in that physical boundary I endeavour for this peace, this inner peace in God.
Sri Chinmoy: You are an extremely high soul. This I am telling you from the very depths of my consciousness, from the inmost recesses of my heart. You are a very, very highly developed soul, a mature soul, a fulfilling soul. I do not have to read any book of yours. I have, by God's infinite Bounty, some inner capacities, and one of them is called intuitive faculties. On the strength of my intuitive faculties I can see, feel and have easy communication with your soul. While I was talking to you, answering some of your questions, my soul was in constant communication with your soul. They were mutually offering their good wishes, love and feeling of oneness.
Francisco Matos Paoli: I am very grateful for this dedication. You know, that is the motto of Pedro Albizu Campos: "La Patria es Valor y Sacri-ficio." We believe in that political credo, and we are fighting for constituting our people a free people, without any colonial relations to the United States.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I understand.
Francisco Matos Paoli: That is the same as Gandhi.
Sri Chinmoy: Non-violence.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Our apostle Pedro Albizu Campos was a great admirer of Gandhi.
Sri Chinmoy: Gandhi and Martin Luther King both worked in the same way, through non-violence. Through their soul's light from within they wanted to work for human freedom.
Francisco Matos Paoli: He was also a sort of mystic, Don Pedro. Catholic, but a political mystic.
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you.
Francisco Matos Paoli: Well, good-bye.
Sri Chinmoy: Good-bye.
Published in AUM – Vol. 4, No.11, November 27, 1977
l keep looking at the pictures and newspaper clippings in front of me and still can’t believe.
“On Sunday, September 21, Sri Chinmoy lifted 400 pounds overhead with one arm,” says the press release accompanying the pictures and the clips. “Two days later, on September 23, Sri Chinmoy lifted a 1220 pound baby elephant 6 (six) inches off the ground with his calves and upper legs,” continues the description of another incredible feat done by Sri Chinmoy.
The lady who sent me the stuff calls and says that more recently the guru lifted a plane from the ground.
Articles from Daily News (New York), Chicago Defender, New Life (Britain’s biggest Asian weekly), Iron Man and Ultrasport Magazine, and quotes of famous weight lifters and bodybuilders (Mr. America, Mr. Olympia, Mr. Universe, etc.) all praise Sri Chinmoy’s unbelievable achievements.
There are also statements by legendary sports champions like Muhammad Ali and Carl Lewis. “Sri Chinmoy is doing the impossible. He is truly an inspiration,” said the former heavyweight champ. “It’s unreal. I am going to use all his inspiration to help me beat the world record in the long jump,” said Lewis.
So who is Sri Chinmoy?
The man who is an inspiration for such inspiring sports champions is a 54-year, 159-pound Indian born philosopher-spiritual leader (known for his special peace meditations at the United Nations and in the U.S. Congress)-musician-composer-painter-author, who took up weight lifting 15 months ago only to shatter our convictions in physical limits, physiological and biomechanical laws.
“You have to realize that the physical world is not the only world. You can enter into the inner world and meditate. On the mental plane first, you imagine that you are lifting weights beyond your physical capacity. Then you can bring that mental capacity to the physical plane and turn your imagination into reality.”
Sri Chinmoy performs his lifts by taking the dumbbell from a stand at shoulder height. He calls it “Body, Heart and Soul One-Arm Lift.” His weight lifting accomplishments came in this succession: 40 pounds in June, 1985; 155 pounds in November, 1985; 200 pounds in March, 1986; 300 pounds in August, 1986; and 400 pounds on September 21.
Chinmoy’s philosophy of self-transcendence says: “If you control thoughts, it brings down peace and power. Ninety per cent is in the mind. If you can discipline the mind, what is not possible?”
Will this philosophy of meditation and spiritual concentration sweep the sporting world?
I still doubt that Carl Lewis will break Bob Beamon's 29' 2½" long jump world record...
To be able to support 400 pounds with one arm is impossible, superhuman, say weight lifting experts. Not for 54-year-old modern Hercules Sri Chinmoy...
Published in News-Herald and Journal, No 85, Saturday, October 25, 1986
The Oldest Community Newspaper in Los Angeles
On Long Island Cable Television
Video by Vasudeva Server
Joel Martin: Let me introduce to you now a man whom I've grown extremely fond of over the years and whom I love a great deal. His achievements and his accomplishments are amazing. They have been reported worldwide. We will talk about those achievements with a Guru, a genuine Guru — really genuine — Sri Chinmoy. And Sri Chinmoy, of course, is an international figure.
Sri Chinmoy, I’m so glad you’re here again. As a matter of fact, you were with me about a year ago. Now you’ve been weightlifting, and it’s gotten a lot of attention in the newspapers. That’s why I thought we could talk a little bit about your achievements — physical achievements — which are considerable. And we’ll see some videos of it because a little while ago, Guru, when I was showing some of the material to the people here, a couple of them said, “Ah, I don’t believe it; you can’t lift 4,000 pounds with your legs or 500 pounds with one arm.” But that’s what you’ve been doing!
Sri Chinmoy: I am extremely happy to be here, and I am extremely grateful to you for your encouragement. As you know, I am a truth-seeker and a God-lover, not a bodybuilder or a weightlifter. But my Inner Pilot wants me to be of inspiration in the physical world, so I am now in the weightlifting world.
Joel Martin: We have to expound. I have learned what the term 'Inner Pilot' means. But for the people that don't know, it's so important. When we first met many years ago, you explained to me all about the Inner Pilot. Could you do it again?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, my Inner Pilot is the God who is within me, and all the time I listen to His Dictates. When we pray and meditate, we get inner guidance. He who guides us is our Inner Pilot.
Joel Martin: So it's that inner voice, inner sense, or inner guidance that we sometimes ignore, unfortunately. You are wearing, I think, the emblem of the United Nations, if I see correctly.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, this morning I was at the United Nations. I prayed and meditated there for about 45 minutes with delegates, diplomats and staff members.
Joel Martin: You do that regularly?
Sri Chinmoy: Twice a week — every Tuesday and Friday.
Joel Martin: You wear the most beautiful robes. Different colours have different meanings, yes? The last time we were together here you were wearing a red robe. This time you are wearing a sky blue, light blue, robe. Could you tell us the significance of that colour?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. Sky blue has a very special significance in my life, for the predominant colour of my aura is sky blue. Sky blue signifies infinity in the occult world. So in the outer world, sky blue is my favourite colour, since in the inner world I embody this colour more than any other.
Joel Martin: People who watch me know that I've done many programmes about the occult and about psychic phenomena over the years. You don't have any quarrel with the spirit world or those things that we call psychic?
Sri Chinmoy: They are all my friends. I do not quarrel with them and they do not quarrel with me because everything that I am doing is for oneness, oneness, oneness. When I pray and meditate, I invoke God’s Compassion so that I can be one with the world all the time. My message to the world at large is the message of peace and oneness. It is the same message that I try to offer with my weightlifting.
Joel Martin: Since you mentioned lifting, I understand you recently lifted an eight-year-old elephant. What we can do now is see the videotape of some of your lifts so people will know that this is real.
There you are with a private plane. That was done out here in Suffolk County in East Moriches. The Newsday story where I read about it showed pictures as well. I think that’s better than 3,600 pounds.
Sri Chinmoy: This is a regular plane. The next one is a seaplane. It is heavier.
Joel Martin: But this weighed more than a ballpoint pen. I mean, this was heavy also. Wow! Did it hurt? I've got so many questions. What do you think about when you do that — is it total concentration?
Sri Chinmoy: Total concentration! I do not think of anything; I do not think of anyone. Only I concentrate most powerfully on my inner resources.
Joel Martin: You're not pushing for people to all lift elephants, are you?
Sri Chinmoy: I want everybody to be physically fit.
Joel Martin: Guru, what if somebody were to say to you: "All right, it's remarkable. You have lifted an elephant, you have lifted a seaplane, a boat, various weights. How does that further the cause of world peace, which is so elusive?"
Sri Chinmoy: You have just seen me lift the seaplane, the elephant, all that. People know that it is on the strength of my prayer-life and my meditation-life that I am able to do this. There is no other way. As you can see, I do not have big muscles and my physique is not that of a bodybuilder or a weightlifter. So I entirely depend on my inner strength, which comes from God’s Compassion and God’s Grace.
When I feel inner strength, at that time I have peace of mind and I do not want to quarrel or fight. We quarrel and fight precisely because inwardly we feel that we are weak. One nation declares war on another nation, not because that nation is far superior, but because that nation feels in the depths of its heart that it is weak. I know I am weaker than you, but I want to show you that I am stronger. Perhaps you have also the same experience; you may think that you are weaker than I am, but you quarrel with me to show your superiority.
The other day with my calf muscles I lifted up an elephant which weighed 3,600 pounds. In terms of strength, a human being is no match for an elephant. Just because the elephant knew we could do nothing to it, it behaved well. So he who is really strong will not fight. For a human being, the only way to become really strong is to pray and meditate. When we pray and meditate, we develop inner strength, and this inner strength is nothing other than peace.
The reason I have entered into bodybuilding and weightlifting is to inspire everybody to pray and meditate so they can bring to the fore their own inner strength. If everybody brings to the fore his own inner strength, the world will eventually be inundated with peace. Peace is oneness, oneness is peace. If I am strong and you are strong, then definitely we have established our oneness, and this oneness is nothing other than peace.
Joel Martin: It's not that long ago that you began weightlifting, and you are 55 now. Before that, you had been running for a long time?
Sri Chinmoy: I’ve been running for a long time, but owing to a knee injury I had to give up running. Then, last year, on the 26th of June, I embarked on this weightlifting project with a 40-pound weight. Our philosophy is progress. Recently I lifted up 503 pounds. I started with 40 pounds with one arm, but only a few weeks ago I lifted up 503 pounds.
Joel Martin: With one arm?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, and I weigh about 160 pounds.
Joel Martin: So that's better than three times your body weight.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes. Again, it is all due to Grace from Above. This is my offering to the world at large. I want to show that if we pray and meditate, we shall acquire inner strength, and this inner strength is bound to give us peace of mind. If we have inner strength, we are not going to fight.
Joel Martin: But somebody can also say that if I lift weights and get stronger physically, then why do I have to be concerned with peace? I can use that strength to be aggressive.
Sri Chinmoy: If you get strength from your prayer-life, you are not going to quarrel. If I get strength only from the physical — by taking exercises and so on — I may become aggressive. Boxers and wrestlers are only trying to destroy one another. But if I get strength from my prayer-life and my meditation-life, I will not use it for destruction. If I have a knife, I can use it to stab you or to cut a piece of fruit to share with you. If I am wise, I will use it to offer you a piece of fruit. A knife has strength, but what matters is how you use it. Similarly, an individual can use his strength for the right cause — to offer peace to the world at large.
Joel Martin: We have a short intermission here, and then we will have some photographs and visuals of what Sri Chinmoy has done in terms of weightlifting. Sri Chinmoy, internationally-known Guru. We will talk more about his weightlifting and his work for world peace through physical strength and meditation...
Back with you on the Joel Martin Show. Speaking to you, Guru, makes me feel genuinely uplifted — really! I don’t lie and I don’t fake. I’m sincere, and Guru Sri Chinmoy is a man I’ve followed for a very long time. We met back in the mid-1970s. He’s very sincere, completely genuine and fascinating. And his work for world peace has been through music, it’s been through writing, it’s been through art, it’s been through sports and now, in the past year and a half, it’s been through weightlifting. He’s trained his body to lift incredible amounts of weight — elephants, boats, planes, all kinds of things to show what the mind can do. And he does it for world peace. Can we look at some of the visuals now? You’re going to see some of his recent achievements, some done here out on Long Island, some in other parts of the country. He’s been all over the world.
Here, Guru, we’re looking at you lifting I think about three times your body weight. This is 450 pounds. Where is this wonderful gym?
Sri Chinmoy: It is in my house.
Joel Martin: You've turned it into a gymnasium! How many hours a day do you spend on weightlifting?
Sri Chinmoy: Between three and three and a half hours every day — morning, afternoon and evening.
Joel Martin: Okay. I want you to see the next one. This is the calf-lift, is it? And you are lifting some of your students.
Sri Chinmoy: Most of them weigh over 200 pounds. There were five individuals.
Joel Martin: Those numbers — 1,384 pounds — represent a lot of weight. That doesn't affect the old leg injury?
Sri Chinmoy: No, fortunately.
Joel Martin: Fortunately is right. I think also we're going to see the sailboat. This weighed how much?
Sri Chinmoy: This was 4,000 pounds.
Joel Martin: Unbelievable! And when you document these lifts, obviously the reason is to show people that it really happened.
Sri Chinmoy: There were many people there to observe and prove to the world that this is something authentic. We want to inspire people. We would like to be of service to people, and we would like this service to be genuine.
Joel Martin: This was the seaplane that you lifted at East Moriches last Sunday. You see the numbers 3,632 there, folks? That's the weight of the plane, not its license plate!
Sri Chinmoy: There were five passengers inside, including the pilot.
Joel Martin: I can't even get myself out of bed in the morning. Are you saying that the average person — people like me and people who are watching — can do this?
Sri Chinmoy: Certainly! If I can lift, then what is wrong with you? It is all because of prayer and meditation.
Joel Martin: I pray and I meditate.
Sri Chinmoy: You pray, and that’s why you have peace of mind and your health is getting better. The last time I came here, you were not well physically. This time you are better, and I am so happy.
Joel Martin: I had a back injury last time.
Sri Chinmoy: Prayer-life solves all our problems. Only we have to have implicit faith in our own prayers.
Joel Martin: That's true. I'm going to come back to that. I think we have one more visual. This is where you bettered the one-arm press of 450 pounds and lifted 503 pounds. You don't lift that much every day, do you?
Sri Chinmoy: Every day I try. Now I’m practising to lift 604 pounds. I have failed 40 times. When I was trying to lift 300 pounds, I failed 212 times. God was teaching me patience. So, 212 times I failed, but I continued, and on the 213th time I succeeded.
Joel Martin: You said something before about faith in our own prayers. Let's come back to that point because it's so important.
Sri Chinmoy: Many people pray, but they do not have faith in their prayers. Doubt interferes. People say, “Perhaps God is not pleased with me. This morning I told a lie. Yesterday I quarrelled with my friend, so why should God listen to my prayers?” Because of this kind of thing, people do not have faith in their prayers.
Joel Martin: Guru, excuse me, but why should God listen to our prayers? Doesn't He have better things to do than listen to me?
Sri Chinmoy: Who created us? Since God created us, will He not take care of us? If you have a dog, it is your bounden responsibility to take care of the dog. So, like that, God is the Creator and we are His creation. We are helpless. If the Creator does not take care of His creation, then how can we live on earth, how can we survive?
Joel Martin: We are going through a terrible problem everywhere in this country, with young people using increasing amounts of drugs. What has gone wrong that so many people are turning to that path, which is obviously a destructive one, rather than following your advice, which is obviously the best advice?
Sri Chinmoy: People want something that can be achieved in the twinkling of an eye. They do not believe in discipline or patience. If we lead a disciplined life and have patience, then we are bound to get all good things from our life.
Joel Martin: Well said. I've got to ask you, before we conclude, Guru, where does this go? Do you have an ultimate goal with all of this?
Sri Chinmoy: I do not have any set goal; my goal is self-transcendence. I always try to transcend myself. I do not compete with the rest of the world. I compete only with myself, and I try to become a better human being. This is my ultimate goal. Every day I pray to become a better human being so that I can be of better service to mankind.
Joel Martin: Most of us, I guess, at one time or another are so much more concerned with the things that are around us than with the things that are within us. Maybe that's where most of the confusion is.
Sri Chinmoy: Unfortunately, we look around most of the time instead of looking deep within. If we can dive deep within, then we will get the answers. The world around us is full of temptation. The world within us is full of illumination. If we can bring to the fore our inner illumination, then the outer world of temptation will be transformed into the world of illumination.
Joel Martin: You've done thousands of paintings, poems and musical compositions. Are you still doing these things?
Sri Chinmoy: I am doing everything. This morning I composed quite a few songs. We only increase our capacities. If I do something new, that does not mean that I will give up the old things. My poetry, my music, my art are all my friends. Weightlifting is like a new friend. I will not give up my old friends because I have a new friend. No, only I shall have more friends.
Joel Martin: And you're not here to say you're better, but to encourage us to do the best we can.
Sri Chinmoy: I am not competing with anybody. Only I have come here to offer my inspiration and my aspiration.
Joel Martin: We're out of time. Thank you so much. It's been terrific to see you again. I didn't even get to ask you what the white flower means. It's for peace?
Sri Chinmoy: Absolutely! A flower signifies purity, and white means divinity. When we have purity and divinity, then we have peace within us all the time.
Joel Martin: Guru Sri Chinmoy, I thank you very much. Sri Chinmoy — of India, living now in New York and frequently on Long Island, an international figure — has been with us for this half hour. It has been a very interesting half hour, and I thank you very much for being with us. Until next time, thank you, Guru.
Published in Aspiration-Body, Illumination-Soul, part 2
at Aspiration-Ground in Jamaica, Queens, New York
Bill McCreary is an Emmy Award-winning News Broadcaster, and Host and Executive Producer of ‘The McCreary Report’, Channel 5, WNYW TV, New York.
Bill McCreary: How are you, sir?
Sri Chinmoy: I am fine, thank you.
Bill McCreary: It has been a long time since I saw you last.
Sri Chinmoy: It is a matter of the right hour, the right moment. We try and try, but when the right hour will come we do not know. We call it God’s Hour.
Bill McCreary: What is the procedure for your lifting?
Sri Chinmoy: If you could kindly be on the stand, we shall sing a song called “Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart.” Then I shall lift you with one hand. You have inspired millions and millions of people over the years, so I would like to honour you. I feel we all belong to a oneness-family. Since you are my brother, I feel that it is an obligation on my part to express my loving joy and gratitude to you for inspiring the world.
Bill McCreary: The first thing is, I have to be weighed in. Oh, oh, I have shoes and a heavy wallet!
Sri Chinmoy: Also, the apparatus weighs 13 pounds.
Bill McCreary: So now it is 223 pounds? 223 — that’s my old address on the Lower East Side! Are you ready? What is this for again? Oneness of heart?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, oneness of heart. You have inspired countless, countless people over the years and today I am trying to honour you with my heart’s loving joy and gratitude. I feel that this is one way I can express my inner love and gratitude to you for what you have done for countless people. I am lifting you with my oneness-heart. In the oneness-heart there is peace, abiding peace. If we can bring to the fore our oneness-heart, we shall not quarrel, we shall not fight, there will be no third world war. You and I and all of us are trying to create this peaceful family with our oneness-heart.
[Sri Chinmoy lifts Bill McCreary.]
Bill McCreary: That was quite a lift!
Sri Chinmoy: Would you like to be lifted with the other hand?
Bill McCreary: No, one lift is fine, thank you. Can I come down? So that was a lift for peace?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, oneness-peace and world-harmony. With your aspiration and inspiration, you lift me up. With my aspiration and inspiration, I lift you up. Together we lift up the consciousness of humanity.
Bill McCreary: I really appreciate it.
Sri Chinmoy: I am so happy and honoured that I was able to lift you. This is my dedicated service to your own most exemplary service to mankind.
Bill McCreary: Thank you. Now I would like to talk about some of the things you do. You hold meditations at the U.N. You have been doing that for the last seventeen years. And now you are also doing it for the Congress down in Washington. Would you say that so far your efforts have been effective or ineffective? After such a long period of time, have you started to see some change?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a believer, I am a God-lover. And I feel that prayer — not only my prayer, but the joint prayer of humanity — is helping mankind considerably. We are progressing. But this progress is not so visible in the outer life. In the inner life, the progress is definitely tangible.
Bill McCreary: So you see a link between the outer world and the inner world?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, there is a great link. The inner life and the outer life must go together. If I pray early in the morning, then I will have good thoughts towards others, I will have love for them. If everyone does the same, then there will be no quarrel, no fight. Everything has to come from within. From within, it comes without. If we have peace of mind, a moment of joy deep inside us, then this joy we express outwardly. Whatever we have within, we manifest in our outer life. If we have anxiety, worry, insecurity and other undivine qualities, then this is what we will manifest outwardly. But if we pray and meditate early in the morning, inwardly we become good citizens of the world. Then in our outer activities we will try to express our inner good feelings. This is how we can establish a oneness-family.
Bill McCreary: Has this philosophy been accepted by other people? Some critics would say, “He is Indian and they have ways of doing these phenomenal things.” So are you saying that a person should become a meditator and then he will be able to lift weights and such?
Sri Chinmoy: I am not telling people to meditate in order to lift up weights, far from it! Only I am asking people, I am begging people, to pray and meditate so that we can all have peace of mind. If we have peace of mind, then we will develop inner strength. And if we have inner strength, then we shall not quarrel, we shall not fight. So my prayer-life is not meant for weightlifting. My prayer-life is to become inseparably one with the rest of the world.
Inner strength helps us at every moment to become good human beings. I pray and meditate in order to become a good person and not to become a bodybuilder or a weightlifter. If someone can become a good person from his prayer-life, then he can inspire somebody else to become a good person and that person, in turn, will inspire somebody else. Our philosophy is self-transcendence. If we have just a small fraction of peace, then we have to try to develop more peace, abundant peace, boundless peace. This is our way of thinking and our way of becoming.
Bill McCreary: You have lifted many people.
Sri Chinmoy: Today, with you, I completed 549. My goal is 700 and, in a few weeks, I do hope to complete 700. Recently I lifted some great Olympians — Carl Lewis, Calvin Smith, Roger Kingdom and others. They are immortals in athletics. I was there at the Olympics. How much joy these athletes gave us all! I wanted to do something to add to their joy and this is the only way I could do it. They have given joy to countless people and I feel that if I can offer a little bit of my dedication through their joy, then I am blessed.
Bill McCreary: Thank you so much, Sri Chinmoy.
Published in Aspiration-Body, Illumination-Soul, part 3
In Kosovo, the Albanians are fighting the Serbs. In the West Bank, the Jews and the Palestinians constantly wrangle over land. In Kashmir, the Muslims and the Hindus are struggling over land sovereignty.
Events such as these are the driving force behind Seven Minutes of World Peace, an event scheduled for Saturday that is sponsored by a group of the same name.
In 1984, under the guidance of guru Sri Chinmoy, the group initiated a worldwide seven-minute observation of meditation and silent prayer as a means of spreading the spirit of peace on earth.
The mission statement of Seven Minutes of World Peace aims to focus global attention on the need for international peace and the inter-faith spirit of the United Nations.
USF senior Thucdoan Nguyen, a disciple of Chinmoy, said through worldwide participation she is optimistic that her dreams of world peace can become a reality. Nguyen said the seven-minute meditation affects each individual differently, but typically the reaction is joy and delight.
According to Tilvila Hurwit, an organizer for the Seven Minutes of World Peace in the Tampa Bay area, the cultivation of peace may have far-reaching effects.
“World peace starts in everyone’s heart,” Hurwit said. “Peace starts with one person at a time?”
Seven Minutes of World Peace believes that inner peace may lead to outer peace and consequently to worldwide peace.
In Tampa, this global observance will be held at Martin Luther King Plaza beginning at 1 p.m.
■ Linda Man
Published in THE ORACLE, University of South Florida, Vol. 36, No. 43, Friday, October 23, 1998
by SRI CHINMOY
(The following lecture was delivered at Princeton University on October 22, 1971, by Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose. Born in Bengal in1931, he joined at the age of twelve a spiritual community — Ashram — in South India where he remained for twenty years. There, his practice of intense inner disciplines led to his early attainment of the fullest spiritual enlightenment, the Realisation of God.
From earliest youth, he wrote poems in his native Bengali language, winning his first prize at the age of thirteen in nationwide competition with poets of mature years. His literary production soon expanded to include poetry in English, as well as plays and philosophical essays which were widely published and deeply appreciated throughout India where he was, in addition, recognized as a spiritual teacher of rare eminence.
Sri Chinmoy came to the West in 1964 and has made his home here since that time More than a dozen Sri Chinmoy Centres, dedicated to the Master’s teachings and ideals have been established in the United States, Canada, the Caribbean, Europe and the Far East.
Two years ago, Sri Chinmoy was invited to conduct regular weekly meditation for United Nations delegates and staff. His Tuesday noon hour meditation services at the United Nations Church Centre in New York are now widely recognized and have been the subject of several articles in The New York Times, New York Daily News, and other publications.
In the course of spreading his message, the Master has lectured at the world’s great universities, including Princeton, Harvard, Yale, Oxford, Cambridge, and Tokyo. He delivers the monthly Dag Hammarskjold Lecture Series, at the United Nations, and he has been a guest on a number of television and radio shows here and abroad.
A great teacher and philosopher, Sri Chinmoy has written extensively on Yoga, meditation and Eastern spirituality. Five publishing houses including Harper & Row have published his writings eleven — books in all.)
Sri Chinmoy’s entire lecture — The Upanishads: India’s Soul-Offering — is published in this issue of The Princeton Seminary Bulletin. And, is also published in his own book The Upanishads: the Crown of India’s Soul
with Sri Chinmoy
Andre Bernard: At this time we are privileged to have on the morning’s programme, Sri Chinmoy, who I have already told you is a painter, a composer, a musician, a writer and a spiritual leader. Sri Chinmoy is going to be giving a concert on Saturday, October 30 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Thomas Church on 5th Avenue and 53rd Street. It’s a free concert and we’re going to be talking with Sri Chinmoy about this concert and, as I said, about other things also. He’s going to give us a short preview of this concert, but before he does that I want to tell you just a little bit about Sri Chinmoy.
He was born in Bengal, India in 1931. Sri Chinmoy entered an ashram or spiritual community at about the age of 12 and spent the next 20 years practicing intense spiritual disciplines. During this period he achieved a rare state of knowledge which later formed the basis for his various creative achievements. Sri Chinmoy has expressed his inner realisations not only through painting, but also through literature and music. Since coming to the West in 1964 he has written nearly 300 books of spiritual poems and essays, short stories, plays, aphorisms and questions and answers. He also serves as Director of the United Nations Meditation Group, conducting meditations twice a week for UN delegates and staff.
I’m going to welcome Sri Chinmoy to our microphones by asking him to play a little of the music that he composes and plays, and then we will be talking with him.
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you. (Sri Chinmoy plays the esraj for a few minutes.)
Andre Bernard: That was Sri Chinmoy, who is going to be in concert playing music for meditation on Saturday, October 30. Sri Chinmoy, will you come closer to the microphone?
Sri Chinmoy: I am extremely happy to be here with you.
Andre Bernard: Thank you. I wanted to ask you about the instrument upon which you were playing. What is that called?
Sri Chinmoy: It is an Indian instrument called an ‘esraj’.
Andre Bernard: And is that a traditional instrument, or modern? It looks almost like a combination of a violin and guitar.
Sri Chinmoy: This is a traditional instrument, and it is played mostly in Bengal, West Bengal.
Andre Bernard: I couldn’t help but think, as I heard the lovely, restful music that you were making, of the difference in taste in music among at least the older generation in this country and in the East. It seems that we are very noisy people and our music reflects that. It is very noisy, loud, boisterous. Do you have any idea why this is? Is this a difference in temperament or in the people’s needs? Have you thought about that at all?
Sri Chinmoy: According to me it is a matter of personal preference. Whether it is actually a need is another question. When I prefer something, I try to do it. Whether I actually need it is a different matter. There are many things in life which we do just because we like them. But when it is a matter of need, the story may be totally different.
Andre Bernard: So we couldn’t say it was necessarily a need, but just a preference. That clarifies it, certainly. A man with your background, who is learned in all the arts practically, and who brings spirituality to the United Nations, (I mentioned that you conduct meditations there also, and I know you have been to many universities) have you noted any differences between the people you see in England, for instance, and in this country or in other countries, or do you see people as basically all the same?
Sri Chinmoy: People are basically all the same no matter where they are, for we are all children of God. We may say that God has many, many houses, countless houses and countless children. But just because we are all God’s children, we are all basically the same.
Andre Bernard: You were born in India and you’ve been all over the world. Now it seems that you spend most of your time in the West. Why have you chosen to do your work in the West in general and in New York in particular?
Sri Chinmoy: It was not left up to me. It was not my decision. My inner guide, whom I call the Supreme, commanded me to come to the West and to serve Him in the aspiring seekers here. It was not my personal choice.
Andre Bernard: We have a poet and writer — I’m sure you must be familiar with the English poet Rudyard Kipling — and he once said that, “East is East and West is West and never the twain shall meet.” Yet it seems that East and West are meeting now. I would like to get your opinion on that.
Sri Chinmoy: Well, I have read that poem many many times. As a child I learned it by heart. But this is also an individual experience. According to my own inner experience the West and the East have already met, precisely because both the East and the West are inside the Heart of the Supreme. We notice two significant qualities in the East and in the West. The East has inner poise, and the West has dynamism, illumining dynamism. These two divine qualities are already spreading and combining; therefore, I feel that in the outer world also, both the East and the West are already becoming one. The inner poise of the East and the illumining dynamism of the West are combining and synthesising in a proper manner.
Andre Bernard: And you are suggesting then, if I infer correctly from your comments, that each complements the other.
Sri Chinmoy: Absolutely true. They are like two complementary souls. What we have to offer, we are offering to you. What you have to offer, you are offering to us.
Andre Bernard: Let’s talk for just a moment, before we have to conclude our conversation, about the concert that you will be giving on Saturday, 30 October at St. Thomas Church. It is listed as ‘Sri Chinmoy in concert playing music for meditation.’ Would you like to say what is going to happen at that time? What do you do? Do you simply play and people meditate, or do you lead a meditation group?
Sri Chinmoy: I shall play, and at the same time I shall be in a meditative, contemplative mood. I expect the audience to be seekers, and these seekers will be supporting me with their own aspiration and meditation. When I play, when I meditate, I have only one objective in mind and that is to be of inner service to the aspirants. So when I play, I shall do it with the spirit of dedication and in the consciousness of soulful meditation which I always offer to the aspiring seekers.
Andre Bernard: Does your meditation technique have any special procedure or quality which differs from the meditation we are generally exposed to now? There are many people in our audience who are into meditation techniques. Does yours differ from the others, or does it have any special quality that you would like to mention?
Sri Chinmoy: I have no idea as regards other methods or procedures, but our method I can tell you briefly. Our path is the path of the heart. We meditate on the heart and try to offer divine love, divine devotion and divine surrender to the Supreme. Human love is all possession, human devotion is nothing short of attachment, and human surrender is either compromise or compulsion. When a slave surrenders to his master out of fear, he gets no joy. But when a seeker surrenders his whole existence to the Supreme, he does it cheerfully and unconditionally; therefore, he derives abundant joy. So it is divine love, divine devotion and divine surrender which we are trying to attain through our soulful meditation.
Andre Bernard: One final question. Not only have you traveled throughout the world but, as I have said, you lead a meditation group at the United Nations here in New York, so you come into contact with people who control the nations and guide the destinies of our various nations. We are living in a very exciting time, a time of change, a time of tremendous technological development. But it is also, at the same time, a very dangerous period. For the first time in the history of mankind we possess the technology to destroy ourselves. What do you see? Are you optimistic about the future? Do you think man will destroy himself, or will he achieve the true brotherhood which you espouse and which would eliminate that catastrophe?
Sri Chinmoy: It is my inner conviction that man will have a better future. Man will not be so destructive. The power that man has discovered will eventually be used for constructive purposes, not to destroy. God has created the world for satisfaction and not for destruction, so eventually there must be brotherhood. Brotherhood will reign supreme on earth. It is only a matter of time. As more people begin to pray and meditate sincerely, the life of faith and the life of love will come to the fore. Then a divine harmony, peace and light will flow throughout the length and breadth of the world.
Andre Bernard: Thank you, Sri Chinmoy. We have been speaking to Sri Chinmoy, who is a composer, painter, writer and spiritual leader. He leads meditation groups at the United Nations and all over the world, and he is going to be in concert on Saturday, 30 October, that’s a week from tomorrow, at St. Thomas Church at 5th Avenue and 53rd Street. The public is invited to attend and the concert is free. Thank you again, Sri Chinmoy, for being here.
Sri Chinmoy: Thank you.
Published in AUM – Vol. 4, No. 2, 27 February 1977
NEW YORK — Spiritual Master Sri Chinmoy led a team of 150 disciples in the New York City Marathon October 21.
Wearing dark purple shirts and pale blue shorts, the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team was the largest team entry in the 26-mile race.
Dozens of other disciples, who didn’t run, assisted the race organisers before and during the run.
A group of disciples also added a touch of musical dynamism to the scene by singing several of Sri Chinmoy’s running songs over the loudspeaker just before the race began.
Prior to the start, Sri Chinmoy chatted with ultramarathoner Don Ritchie and Olympic triple gold medalist Emil Zatopek, who served as Grand Marshall of the New York Marathon.
Sri Chinmoy had met Ritchie this past June when the runner visited his spiritual Centre after setting a new world record in a 100-mile run in Flushing Meadow Park.
For Zatopek, the only athlete ever to win three gold medals for the 5,000-metre run, 10,000-metre run and marathon in a single Olympics (1952), it was his first introduction to Sri Chinmoy, whom he had heard a lot about.
“This is the best blessing I ever had,” he told the Master.
Sri Chinmoy, who regards running as a physical complement to the inner life, normally trains about 80 miles a week.
The New York marathon was his sixth this year. Only two weeks earlier, he had run the historic Marathon to Athens marathon in Greece.
Captions:
Emil Zatopek, Olympic triple gold medalist, greets Sri Chinmoy before the start of the New York Marathon, above.
Below, the Master chats with ultramarathon champion Don Ritchie.
And, pictures from a Marathon scrapbook, right.
Publsihed in Anahata Nada,Volume 5, Nos. 9-10-11, Sept.-Oct.-Nov. 1979
Randwick resident, Vidagdha Bennett, who recently returned from holidaying in New York, reports that she participated in what must be one of the more unusual feats of strength we have heard.
Her meditation teacher, Sri Chinmoy, lifted up a Buick sedan containing 5 people and Vidagdha was one of them.
The combined weight of the car and its human cargo totalled more than 4,400 pounds.
Vidagdha says the experience was like going for a short ride in a very swift elevator.
“Actually being inside the car as it went up brought home to me just how awesome the lift really was,” she said.
Sri Chinmoy, who is well-known for his peace meditations at the United Nations and his many peace concerts around the world, took up weightlifting 15 months ago while resting a running injury.
Since then, he has worked with heavier and heavier weights — both conventional and unconventional. Not only cars, but elephants, grand pianos, horses and barbers’ chairs are among his latest adventures!
Vidagdha, who runs the Sri Chinmoy meditation centre in Marcel Avenue, says that Sri Chinmoy undertakes these feats of self-transcendence “to inspire other people to bring forward their highest potential through prayer and meditation.”
For more information, kindly contact the Sri Chinmoy Centre.
Fifty-five-year-old meditation teacher Sri Chinmoy lifting a 220-pound dumbbell with one hand at his home in New York.
Published in the Randwick Reporter, Issue 63, October 20, 1986
Sri Chinmoy’s interview with radio personality Berit Berling is broadcast on Swedish National Radio in Stockholm, Sweden. The interview was recorded during his visit to Stockholm from 14-16 October 1990.
INDIAN PHILOSOPHER DUE IN TOKYO SUNDAY
Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghose, Indian poet, philosopher and spiritual leader of AUM centres in the United States and Jamaica, is scheduled to arrive in Tokyo Sunday evening by PAA for a 15-day visit.
Born in Bengal, he went to the U.S. five years ago and established centres for the study of spiritual philosophy and yoga in New York, Kingston, Jamaica, Miami and San Juan.
This is his first visit to Japan.
Published in ASAHI EVENING NEWS, Tokyo, Japan, October 18, 1969
NEW YORK — Sri Chinmoy is well-known at the United Nations, but not exactly for what he probably does best.
Better recognized for his tireless work for world peace, Chinmoy startled his colleagues recently by hoisting an automobile loaded with five of his students altogether weighing 4,422 pounds using only his calf muscles.
It was his way of celebrating another weight-lifting feat he had accomplished earlier that morning: lifting 400 pounds with one arm.
The 55-year-old muscle man who weighs in at a slender 160 pounds has until recently been better known as a writer, composer, painter and marathon runner in addition to his leading peace meditations for the delegates and staff at the United Nations.
He took up weight lifting to demonstrate how meditation and spiritual practice can be effectively applied to virtually any field.
When he began 15 months ago, he could barely lift 40 pounds. He began calf-lift training in June of this year with 400 pounds weights, and quickly moved up to 1000 pounds and then 1500 pounds. His recent car lift was held for seven seconds and done in a park in Queens, New York.
Chinmoy’s rapid progress has astonished the weightlifting world. Bill Pearl, five times “Mr. Universe”, for example calls him, “truly unique and special.”
Earlier this summer, Pearl and several power lifting celebrities visited Sri Chinmoy in New York for a two-day celebration honoring his first year of weight lifting.
Published in The Afro-American, BALTIMORE, MD, OCTOBER 18, 1986
After addressing the United Nations on world peace October 3, Foreign Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao ducked out of the General Assembly for a few minutes to find some real peace at a meditation session being held a few floors away by spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy.
“I feel transformed,” the Foreign Minister told Sri Chinmoy. “The difference between this and what is going on just a few floors away is so real that I feel overwhelmed.”
He said he “had not realized that somewhere tucked away in this very large building of the U.N. there is a small corner where real peace dwells.
Clasping the spiritual leader’s hand Rao called him the UN’s “cultural and spiritual ambassador.”
Sri Chinmoy, who has been conducting meditations at the UN for delegates and staff for more than a decade, presented Rao with a trophy.
Foreign Minister Rao with Sri Chinmoy: A peaceful break from international affairs.
Published in News India, Page 4, October 17, 1980
Sri Chinmoy’s life stands as a living embodiment of the peerless ideal set forth in the Gita of combining action without attachment to the fruits thereof with surrender to God’s Will. He is revered in the West as a great spiritual teacher; the prestigious reference work Current Biography calls him “probably the most respected exponent in the West of Bhakti Yoga.”
He is also a highly respected humanitarian and spokesman for world peace at the United Nations, where he has been holding peace meditations for the past 17 years. In addition, Sri Chinmoy is much admired as the author of more than 700 books, the composer of some 6,000 devotional songs and a prolific artist whose mystical paintings have been exhibited around the world.
He seeks neither wealth nor fame, avoiding commercialism of any kind and the temptations of worldly luxury; his sole aspiration is to awaken in humanity a deeper love for the highest truths.
Sri Chinmoy’s illumining commentaries on the Bhagavad-Gita, the Upanishads and the Vedas, and his sketches of the luminaries who awakened the national spirit in the century before Independence, have offered Westerners a deep insight into the Indian soul. Moreover, in hundreds of stories and plays about the spiritual Masters, Avatars and heroes of the past, he has vividly demonstrated the unique significance of Indian tradition to the modern world.
Many of his essays and collected talks, describing the loving intimacy between the individual soul and the Supreme Lord, go beyond the perspective of our culture, however, and are truly universal. They have been translated into many languages and are appreciated by God-lovers and Truth-seekers throughout the world. His ideas are not intellectual, for Sri Chinmoy is not a scholar but a Seer. His works rise up from the wellspring of intuition itself and are aglow with the profound simplicity of their source. Especially noteworthy is his Ten Thousand Flower-Flames, a 100-volume opus completed in 1983. These 10,000 poems, like candelabras of light, possess rare mantric qualities that illumine the mind and elevate the soul. They shine before the world as a luminous vision of a 20th Century knower of Brahman.
Sri Chinmoy seeks to convey his spiritual vision not only through literature but also through music. He has set tune to thousands of his own poems, especially his more lyrical Bengali ones. The poems themselves evoke subtle spiritual moods, which the music carries to their most sublime expression. His songs do not dazzle the mind, but uplift the soul. Whereas so much of today’s music is a means of forgetting God instead of realizing Him, Sri Chinmoy’s songs bring music back to its original high purpose.
In recent years his works have become an important vehicle for transmitting India’s music-light into the mainstream of contemporary Western music. Hundreds of his songs have been performed by Western choirs and instrumental groups at major concert halls throughout North America and Europe. and recorded in record albums. Well-known American and French musicians have improvised his melodies into the more Western folk and classical modes, thereby claiming India’s musical heights as their very own. In addition, a number of U.S. high schools have adopted his music into their educational repertoires, sponsoring Sri Chinmoy Sangits which have given thousands of youngsters their first appreciation of India’s musical heritage. indeed, it is no exaggeration to say that the haunting spirituality of Indian music and the genius of Bengali verse are finding their rightful place in world culture. to a large extent, through the vehicle of Sri Chinmoy’s songs.
This message of the spirit Sri Chinmoy also expresses through art. He has completed more than 150,000 paintings and drawings, a vast body of work that he aptly calls Jharna-Kala (Fountain-Art). In the highest tradition of Indian aesthetics, Jharna-Kala portrays God the Creation, visible and invisible, aspiring and illumining, the known and the unknown. The artist is in a high meditative state when he paints and his paintings portray spiritual realities that he is experiencing.
Sri Chinmoy’s paintings have received numerous awards and honours. His “Journey’s Battle-Victory,” a mural depicting the spiritual pilgrim’s triumphant battle against the undivine forces during his journey to God, was selected by The Eyes and Ears Foundation of San Francisco to be featured in a unique billboard display. The work created a great stir, and the Mayor of San Francisco proclaimed a city-wide Jharna-Kala Day in 1978. The following year India’s Ambassador to the United Nations presented one of the artist’s paintings to United Nations officials for inclusion in a travelling exhibit promoting the International Year of the Child.
In the spirit of Karma Yoga, Sri Chinmoy will not allow his art to be sold; he regards it as a divine gift that is meant to be transmitted freely. Through the auspices of the non-profit Jharna-Kala Foundation, his works have been exhibited in various museums, galleries and private showings throughout North America, Europe and Australia. At one New York showing, more than 7,000 of his works were put on display in what was believed to be the largest exhibit in history.
THE PEACE CONCERT
with Sri Chinmoy
Saturday, November 7, 8:00 p.m.
METRO TORONTO
CONVENTION CENTRE
Following are reflections on the worldwide service of Sri Chinmoy by some of the many distinguished leaders with whom he has met or exchanged correspondence. The titles are those in effect at the time of the exchange.
Zubin Mehta, Music Director of the New York Philharmonic (following a meeting with Sri Chinmoy and his students): “I hope you can all come tomorrow (to one of my concerts). Maybe that would be something I could give you.... Just to say ‘thank you’ and ‘I’m touched’ is not really enough. Maybe I can meditate to say thank you. I was very moved.”
Leonard Bernstein, Conductor and Composer: “You are a miraculous model of the abundance in the creative life that we lesser mortals seek, and I can only hope that I may someday ... participate in that cosmic fountain of stillness and profound energy which you inhabit.”
P.A. Nazareth. Consul General of India, New York: “The world should be made aware that here, right within the United Nations building, there is a group that is trying to find peace in a truly more meaningful way .... This is what Sri Chinmoy is doing ... and I honestly believe that this is as important as anything that is being done in the conference halls of this great and august building.”
Muhammad Ali, Three-Time World Heavy-weight Boxing Champion (on a weightlifting feat) “This man has done the impossible because of faith, wisdom and love of God. Through God we can do anything, and He allows us to reach beyond human endeavours. We may feel we can’t go on, but because we find inner faith, we do. The body says ‘stop,’ but the spirit cries ‘never.’ In the warrior’s code there is no stopping.”
Javier Perez de Cuellar, Secretary-General of the United Nations: “You concentrate on the truths and ideals which unite all mankind: the longing for peace, the need for compassion, the search for tolerance and understanding among men and women of all nations.”
Pope John Paul II: “Special blessings to you. Special greetings to your members. We shall continue together.”
Giani Zail Singh, President of India: “Your words will help me live up to your expectations of me... I thank you and your people for coming and praying for me. I see such purity inside all of you. Your prayers have definitely reached God.”
Brian Mulroney, Prime Minister of Canada (on a weightlifting feat): “Your accomplishments show us that the only limitations to the body and the spirit are the limitations which we place upon ourselves. May the love that you hold for mankind extend from the soul through the body into a real and lasting peace.”
Hussain Muhammad Ershad, President of Bangladesh (on a weightlifting feat): “Peace is indivisible and any pursuit towards its promotion deserves commendation. Viewed in this backdrop Mr. Chinmoy’s feat is indeed a noble venture. It will no doubt inspire others to transcend their limitations and cultivate the power of meditation, prayer and faith in global peace. I extend my heartiest felicitations to Mr. Chinmoy and wish him all success in his mission.”
Bernard Weatherill, Speaker of the House of Commons, Great Britain: “How genuinely grateful I am for your guidance for your advice and for the most helpful meditation which we shared.”
Published in Canadian Times of India, Page 3, Oct. 15-Oct. 31, 1987
Spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy brings Peace Concert to town
by Martha Sawyer Allen
Star Tribune Staff Writer
Internationally known spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy is coming to the Twin Cities with his Peace Concert, which combines poetry, music and Eastern mysticism in an effort to create a sense of peace in the world.
More than 12,000 reservations have been taken for the free concert Oct. 21 at St. Paul’s Xcel Energy Center. However, there are seats remaining. Described as an “experience of tangible peace,” the concerts promote not just peaceful relations among people but inner peace as well.
Chinmoy has written several books, including “The Wings of Joy,” a collection of inspirational meditations, anecdotes and messages. He agreed to an e-mail interview.
Q What do you try to accomplish with your concerts?
A With my concerts I try to be of devoted service to mankind and to be a good citizen of the world. It is my wish that we all cultivate the inner hunger to become good citizens to inspire the whole world and to work together for the betterment of the world.
Q Do you find Westerners open to your Eastern concepts, or does it take extra training?
A I feel that Westerners have always been open to Eastern concepts. They readily, soulfully and self-givingly have accepted our Eastern concepts.
Q Does it take extra training?
A No, it does not. Their hearts are completely ready. Therefore, it does not take extra training for them to accept the spiritual way of India.
Q How does one truly reach one’s own pure heart?
A One can reach one's own pure heart in two ways: either by soulfully repeating the word ‘purity, purity, purity’ or by cultivating sincere tears in one’s heart. In these two ways, one can automatically be blessed or inundated with most genuine purity. Again, to have a pure heart we have to bring devotion, sincere, genuine devotion, to the fore in our life.
Q Say a little more about your statement that, for the beginner, meditation seems to be the highest reality, but when one becomes an advanced seeker one knows that meditation only leads to the highest reality.
A Meditation is both the way and the goal. In the beginning, meditation plays the role of a staircase. We need a staircase to climb up to a certain height. Then there comes a time when we see that this meditation not only leads to the highest but actually embodies the highest. We say that God is the Boat, God is the Boatman, God is the Way and God is the Goal. In exactly the same way we can describe meditation. With meditation, we go up, up and up until finally we become meditation itself. And this meditation embodies the universal Light, the universal Delight, God the Creator and God the creation at the same time.
Q You work with people of many faiths. Do you accept that all faiths are valid?
A I do accept that all faiths are valid. They are all equally important.
Q Do you have some standard for what is a valid faith?
A No. All the religions embody divinity in infinite measure. I take them all as one. But in my case, I say there is only one faith, one religion, and that is love of God. I love God according to my capacity. You love God according to your capacity. Someone else loves God according to his capacity. All religions, all faiths, are equally true and equally divine. Again, the universal truth is that there is only one religion and that religion is our love of God.
Q What is your ultimate desire?
A My ultimate desire is to see a world inundated with peace and bliss. And I would like to take part in that divine project. If the world becomes one with my hope, then there will be no misunderstandings, no disputes, no conflicts and no fights, no wars. Only harmony will reign supreme. Harmony will cover the length and breadth of the world.
Q Don’t you ever get discouraged at the state of the world, with all the fighting, violence and unhappiness?
A Yes, for like everyone, I have both the divine in me and the human in me. The human in me does get discouraged. But the divine in me is never discouraged because the divine in me embodies infinite poise and peace. The divine in me accepts the world as it is. It is the bounden duty of the divine in me to be of service to mankind and to pray to the Absolute Supreme to elevate the consciousness of mankind. Therefore, the divine in me is never discouraged.
Each individual can become discouraged when his desire is not fulfilled, when his aspiration is not fulfilled, when his sincere and devoted service is not accepted by the world. But again, if he sees that the Supreme Pilot within him is guiding him and piloting him to the destined shore, to what we call the Golden Shore of the ever-transcending Beyond, then his discouragement does not last more than five seconds or five minutes, or a maximum of an hour. In my case, it does not last more than 35 minutes, no matter how discouraged I am. After 5 seconds or 35 minutes the human in me becomes inseparably one with the divine in me and then there is no such thing as discouragement or sadness. At that time, I am dealing with Infinity’s Joy, Light and Bliss. Infinity’s Joy, Light and Bliss are blessing me and showering their wealth upon my devoted head and surrendered life.
Sri Chinmoy, spiritual leader is bringing his Peace Concert to the Twin Cities; he played an esraj during a concert in Jamaica in 1997.
Published in Star Tribune, Metro/State, Saturday, OCTOBER 14, 2000
NEW YORK — Indian Foreign Minister S. N. Mishra took time out from his busy round of political talks Oct. 11 to meditate and discuss spirituality with America’s foremost spiritual Master, Sri Chinmoy.
The visit took place toward the end of Mishra’s 12-day visit to New York, which included an address before the United Nations General Assembly.
During the meeting, some members of the Meditation Group at the U.N. sang two songs the spiritual teacher had composed.
Indian Foreign Minister S.N. Mishra meets with Sri Chinmoy.
Published in Anahata Nada, Vol. 5, Now. 9-10-11, Sept.-Oct.-Nov. 1979
NEW YORK:
While the rest of Queens watered their lawns, and puttered around their garden, spiritual Master, Sri Chinmoy, was lifting 400 lbs. with one arm and later that day hoisting a car off the ground with just his legs.Sri Chinmoy, better known for his work at the United Nations in New York City, for world peace, hoisted off the ground recently a car loaded with five of his students altogether weighing 4,422 lbs. using only his calf muscles. It was his way of celebrating another weight-lifting feat he had accomplished earlier that morning: lifting 400 lbs with one arm.
The 55 year old muscle man who weighs in at a slender 160 lbs. has until recently been better known as a writer, composer, painter and marathon runner in addition to his leading peace meditations for the delegates and staff at the United Nations.
He took up weight lifting to demonstrate how meditation and spiritual practice can be effectively applied to virtually any field.
When he began 15 months ago, he could barely lift 40 lbs. with one arm. He began calf-lifting training in June of this year with 400 lb. weights, and quickly moved up to 1000 lbs. and then 1500 lbs. His recent car lift was held for seven seconds and done in a park in Queens, New York.
Sri Chinmoy’s rapid progress in weight lifting has astonished the weight lifting world. Bill Pearl, five times “Mr. Universe,” for example calls him, “truly unique and special.” Earlier this summer, Pearl and several power lifting celebrities visited Sri Chinmoy in New York for a two day celebration honoring his 1st year of weight lifting.
Published on page 2 of Carksburg Telegram, Community News, October 13 1986
Guru’s way is through meditation not drugs
By Audrey Aslin
Citizen special correspondent
Yogi Sri Chinmoy, in Ottawa during a cross-Canada lecture tour, says today’s hippies are “disappointing”
“You cannot give peace by shouting and slogans. You cannot help society by leaving society.”
The guru, lapsing into periods of meditation during an interview, said thousands of people had come to him seeking spiritual fulfilment through Yoga. Young people who had experimented with drugs have come to him and told him of their “marvellous experiences” with drugs. Sri Chinmoy’s way is through meditation, not drugs.
He cited two types of life, one of desire and the other of aspiration. Aspiration is an inner cry, he said, and is the type of life that fulfils.
“The ordinary person cries for name, fame, material wealth.”
This is the life of desire the Yogi says is a part of the problem with the contemporary.Through meditation, he said, people can learn to control their desires for material things and transcend the barriers of prejudice.
Divine fulfilment is the goal in Yoga practice, reached by a union of the soul with God. It is not a replacement for religion.“Yoga” he emphasised. “is only one path.”
“Everyone has the right to realize God in his own way. Yoga will never interfere. Yoga transcends the barriers of all religions.
No superior religion He said each religion criticizes the others, but he sees the different religions as paths to fulfilment. One is not superior to another, but each fulfil the needs of various people, he said.
Sri Chinmoy does not follow any one specific religion. “I have a path of my own — of love, devotion and surrender.” “I feel God is dearest to me not because He is omnipotent, omnipresent ... but I am attracted to His love aspect.”
He said he had achieved peace of mind by offering himself to God through meditation.
Like drop of water
He compared his surrender to God to a drop of water being assimilated by the ocean. As the drop of water loses its individuality, so the finite becomes infinite.
“Man cannot remain imperfect forever. When man listens to God his imperfections turn to perfections,” he said.
Sri Chinmoy said the only way to reach fulfilment is to meditate.
When he began following Yoga at the age of 12 in India, he meditated eight to 10 hours a day. Now, he said, his meditation is constant and spontaneous. “In order to realize God, man has to meditate. Meditation is the divine language. When I speak to God, I don’t use English — I use the common language of meditation.”
Daily meditation
He asks that his disciples meditate at least every morning and every night.
Centres for Spiritual philosophy and meditation have been established in several cities in North America. The first Canadian Centre was established in Ottawa, at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth Lok.
Mrs. Lok, has been given the Indian name of Mukti, meaning liberation.
He said he feels each of his disciples should have an Indian name to express the way their souls can realize truth.
Sri Chinmoy’s centres are opened by people whom he believes are sincere in their quest for the ultimate in Yoga philosophy.
When he is convinced a person is a “sincere seeker”, he will grant him an interview after the aspirant has spent four months meditating at one of the Centres. He asks that his disciples be vegetarians. This helps keep the body and mind pure he said.
“When you eat meat, the animal consciousness enters into your body. Animals are restless,” he said. “You can’t meditate when destructive qualities such as doubt, fear, and anxiety are within the body.”
Being a vegetarian speeds up the progression towards the ultimate realization of God, he said.
Sessions at UN
Sri Chinmoy, who leads meditations in the Peace Room of the United Nations every Tuesday, said U Thant is doing a remarkable job. He expressed fear of what might happen after U Thant is gone. “All governments are talking peace, but look at the outer thing — all wars. There is a difference between what we speak and what we do. Truth and peace have to be felt first from within. Then we can offer it without.”
Yogi of Sri Chinmoy
Divine fulfilment the goal
Published in The Ottawa Citizen, Sat., Oct. 10, 1970, Page 47
The following question Is asked by Mr. Zehn Eckhardt of the U.N. Bureau of the German Press Agency, during an interview at the United Nations.
Question: I have read and seen on television that you have achieved quite a number of astonishing feats. What is the connection between your search for peace and what you are doing with weightlifting?
Sri Chinmoy: There is an important link between what I am doing at the United Nations and what I am doing when I lift up weights, elephants and so forth. In my weightlifting I am trying to show that if you pray and meditate, you can bring to the fore your inner strength. Now, if somebody is really inwardly strong, he is always at peace. When you have confidence and strength within you, then you do not go outside to quarrel or fight with others. If you are secure at home, then you do not leave your house and start quarrelling and finding fault with your neighbours. It is only because you are insecure that you try to fight with others, because you are always afraid that they are going to surpass you.
Because countries inwardly feel insecure, they go out and fight with other countries. But the country that is inwardly secure will not come forward to fight; such a thing is beneath its dignity. An elephant is not going to approach a dog and attack it. The dog will bark and bark at the elephant, making the world feel that it is so strong, but the elephant will just ignore the dog.
So when I lift up some heavy weight, I am hoping to inspire others to also bring forward their own inner strength. Inner strength is not my monopoly. Far from it. Everybody has it. Only it has to be brought forward. If everybody can bring forward his inner strength, then everybody will be secure and nobody will try to attack anybody else.
When we are inwardly strong, not only do we not attack the world but we feel our oneness with the world. And it is out of the feeling of oneness that solid peace comes. Because the different parts of your body have established oneness with each other, they do not feel jealous of one another. When your arm lifts a weight, your eyes or your ears are not jealous, because all the parts of your body have established their oneness. Every part of your body feels joy in the body’s achievements.
Similarly, when you and I feel our heart’s oneness, whatever you achieve I also claim as my own achievement. If I claim your achievement as my own, then how can I be afraid that you will surpass me? There is no fear or competition; there is only self-giving. I will give you what I have, and you will give me what you have. So oneness, based on inner security, is the only foundation for world peace.
Published in Aspiration-Body, Illumination-Soul, part 1
by VIDAGDHA BENNETT
On October 8th, a sunny Sunday morning in Prague, 2000 spectators and athletes attended the Sri Chinmoy Cup, a masters competition for athletes aged 40 years and over.
The event was organized by current Olympic decathlon champion, Robert Zmelik, in honor of Sri Chinmoy’s visit to Prague. The meet was also graced by the presence of Olympic immortal Emil Zatopek.
The thunderous applause that greeted Zatopek when he stepped onto the field brought back stirring memories of the days when his name rang through stadia around the world during his 5000, 10,000, and marathon victories.
In recalling the great achievements of these two Czech heroes, Sri Chinmoy said, “We shall never give up our dreams. Today’s dream tomorrow will blossom into reality.”
A special feature of the day was a 100m dash in which Robert Zmelik and Sri Chinmoy ran together. The official start was given by Zatopek.
Another highlight of the meet was the participation of more than 250 athletes from the former Soviet Union who had travelled to Prague to attend Sri Chinmoy’s Peace Concert that evening.
Some had made the journey by train from as far away as Siberia. The Peace Concert was held at a vast indoor sporting arena in Prague and attended by a capacity crowd of 15,000 people. It was also broadcast live on national radio.
Sri Chinmoy (age 64) center, poses with current Olympic decathlon champion Robert Zmelik (age 26) and Olympic immortal Emil Zatopek (age 74) at the Sri Chinmoy Cup in Prague, Czech Republic, Oct. 8. Photo by: Projjwal
Published in National Masters News, 207th Issue, November 1995
by Martha Sawyert Allen
who writes a column called ‘Faith and Body’ for the Star Tribune, the largest newspaper in Minnesota. The telephone conversation takes place at 9:30 a.m. on 8 October and the article is published on Saturday, 14 October 2000.
Question: What do you try to accomplish with your concerts?
Sri Chinmoy: With my concerts I try to be of devoted service to mankind and to be a good citizen of the world. It is my wish that we all cultivate the inner hunger to become good citizens to inspire the whole world and to work together for the betterment of the world.
Question: Do you find Westerners open to your Eastern concepts, or does it take extra training?
Sri Chinmoy: I feel that Westerners have always been open to our Eastern concepts. They readily, lovingly, soulfully and self-givingly have accepted our Eastern concepts.
Question: Does it take extra training?
Sri Chinmoy: No, it does not. Their hearts are completely ready. Therefore, it does not take extra training for them to accept the spiritual way of India.
Question: Please talk a little more about some of your teachings that we are not familiar with — for instance, how jealousy can ruin our lives.
Sri Chinmoy: Jealousy means division. Anything that divides us will eventually ruin us. When we are jealous, we see only our little self as our own, our very own. The larger self, which is the world-self or universal self, we forget entirely. Jealousy is one of the things that divide us, and these things will eventually destroy us unless we conquer them.
Question: How does one truly reach one's own pure heart?
Sri Chinmoy: One can reach one's own pure heart in two ways: either by soulfully repeating the word "purity, purity, purity" or by cultivating sincere tears in one's heart. In these two ways, one can automatically be blessed or inundated with most genuine purity. Again, to have a pure heart we have to bring devotion, sincere, genuine devotion, to the fore in our life.
Question: Please say a little more about your statement that, for the beginner, meditation seems to be the highest reality, but when one becomes an advanced seeker one knows that meditation only leads to the highest reality.
Sri Chinmoy: Meditation is both the way and the goal. In the beginning, meditation plays the role of a staircase. We need a staircase to climb up to a certain height. Then there comes a time when we see that this meditation not only leads to the highest but actually embodies the highest. We say that God is the Boat, God is the Boatman, God is the Way and God is the Goal. In exactly the same way we can describe meditation. With meditation we go up, up, and up until finally we become the meditation itself. And this meditation embodies the universal Light, the universal Delight, God the Creator and God the creation at the same time.
Question: You work with people of many faiths. Do you accept that all faiths are valid?
Sri Chinmoy: I do accept that all faiths are valid. They are all equally important.
Question: Do you have some standard for what is a valid faith?
Sri Chinmoy: No. All the religions embody divinity in infinite measure. I take them all as one. But in my case, I say there is only one faith, one religion, and that is love of God. I love God according to my capacity. You love God according to your capacity. Someone else loves God according to his capacity. All religions, all faiths, are equally true and equally divine. Again, the universal truth is that there is only one religion, and that religion is our love of God.
Question: What is your ultimate desire?
Sri Chinmoy: My ultimate desire is to see a world inundated with peace and bliss. And I would like to take part, soulfully and self-givingly, in that divine project.
Question: How would the world be if it followed your hope for it?
Sri Chinmoy: If the world becomes one with my hope, then there will be no misunderstandings, no disputes, no conflicts and no fights, no wars. Only harmony will reign supreme. Harmony will cover the length and breadth of the world.
Question: Of all the people you have met, who has the closest understanding of what you teach?
Sri Chinmoy: Over the years, I have met with many world figures. I must say, Mother Teresa proved to me that she was at once my mother and my sister. This moment she was all affection for me, like a sister; the next moment she was all compassion for me, like a mother. She was the one who was closest to my real spiritual life. She understood me, I feel, more than anybody else, because she herself was the most devoted child — the darling, you can say — of the Saviour Jesus Christ.
Question: Don't you ever get discouraged at the state of the world, with all the fighting, violence and unhappiness?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, for like everyone, I have both the divine in me and the human in me. The human in me does get discouraged. But the divine in me is never discouraged, because the divine in me embodies infinite poise and peace. The divine in me accepts the world as it is. It is the bounden duty of the divine in me to be of service to mankind and to pray to the Absolute Supreme to elevate the consciousness of mankind. Therefore, the divine in me is never discouraged. The human in me at times is definitely discouraged. But again, this discouragement does not last long. The divine in me illumines the human in me so that it does not suffer for a long time from discouragement.
Each individual can become discouraged when his desire is not fulfilled, when his aspiration is not fulfilled, when his sincere and devoted service is not accepted by the world. But again, if he sees that the Supreme Pilot within him is guiding him and piloting him to the destined goal, to what we call the Golden Shore of the ever-transcending Beyond, then his discouragement does not last more than five seconds or five minutes, or a maximum of an hour. In my case it does not last more than 35 minutes, no matter how discouraged I am. After five seconds or 35 minutes, the human in me becomes inseparably one with the divine in me, and then there is no such thing as discouragement or sadness. At that time, I am dealing with Infinity's Joy, Light and Bliss. Infinity's Joy, Light and Bliss are blessing me and showering their wealth upon my devoted head and surrendered life.
Published in Conversations with Sri Chinmoy
The 68-year old peace philosopher and heavy [weightlifting] athlete Sri Chinmoy, who resides in New York City, set two new world records. He lifted 907 kg (the weight of a middle-class car) using a standard standing calf raise machine and 453.6 kg (the weight of a heavy motorcycle) on a seated calf rise machine. After an interval of 12-years he has returned to the art of lifting heavy weights using the power gained from meditation. Also he writes poetry, books and speeches and he is the founder of the worldwide Peace Run, which will be in Slovenia from 1st to 4th of November.
Published in the Time Out section of the daily newspaper DNEVNIK Ljubljana, Slovenia, Wednesday, 6th October 1999, no. 272, page 24
Elaborate ceremonies will take place October 19, 2003 to celebrate the beatification of Mother Teresa. Nobel Peace Prize winner Mother Teresa is seen here meeting with peace activist Sri Chinmoy following a ceremony where he awarded her the “U Thant Peace Award” October 2, 1994. (UPI/Stf)
Published in UPI online
By Tim Miejan
“The word ‘peace’ is not simply a grouping of letters, but a living entity which must be nurtured if it is to flourish .... With every blossom that Sri Chinmoy helps to foster, the dream of world peace becomes a more viable reality." — Sen. John Kerry, Massachusetts
Sri Chinmoy, an inspired artist, author, composer and musician, has been an advocate of peace throughout his lifetime. A student of the world's great religions, he has embraced the wisdom and light of each one, and Sri Chinmoy’s efforts to instill peace on Earth has been acknowledged by spiritual and secular leaders from around the world.
He returns to the Twin Cities Oct. 21 to present the Twin Cities Peace Concert, an event that will take place in the new Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul. His free peace concerts are an experience of music, heart-openings and joy. Admission is free but tickets are required.
Born in Bengal, India, in 1931, Sri Chinmoy was raised in a deeply spiritual and loving family atmosphere. He spent his later youth, until the age of 33, in a progressive spiritual community in southern India. His early training included a Western-style education and much involvement in athletics.
He arrived in America in 1964, devoted to the cause of peace. He seeks to inspire people to seek the deepest fulfillment in life and to offer their highest capacities to the world family. As an inspiration of what can be created, he has composed more than 15,000 songs, authored more than 1,300 books, has painted more than 150,000 works of art and has created more than 11 million peace-bird drawings representing the flight and freedom of the soul. He is an advocate of physical fitness, himself a tennis player, marathon runner and weightlifter.
Sri Chinmoy spoke with The EDGE from his office in Queens, New York.
Why are you returning to Minnesota?
Sri Chinmoy: I love Minneapolis. I love the people and I love to serve mankind, so I would again like to be of service there.
Is there a special inner quality that you associate with Minneapolis?
Sri Chinmoy: I came to Minneapolis for the first time in 1965, I believe. I have a very dear friend in Minneapolis named Mrs. Ida Patterson and she invited me to visit. She is very, very kind and compassionate to me. Since then I have gone back three or four times. In Minneapolis, people were extremely kind to me and they showed tremendous love and concern for my spiritual service to mankind. Even during my first visit, they had so many interesting questions to ask me. I was very pleased to be of service to them.
What is the purpose of your Peace Concert?
Sri Chinmoy: There is only one purpose: I try to be of service to mankind. When thousands of people gather together, I feel that we are working together. I am not the only one who serves. The people who come to listen to my music or to join me in praying are also doing something most significant. We are all trying to bring about world peace. It is teamwork.
So, everybody resonates peace together?
Sri Chinmoy: We are all working together. It is not that I am going to give peace to others — far from it! We shall work together. We are all in a boat sailing together towards the destination, which we call the Golden Shore.
What can somebody who comes to the concert expect to experience?
Sri Chinmoy: It is my prayer that they will get inspiration in abundant measure. Then, the following morning, they will be inspired to do something better in their life. My sole purpose in giving these Peace Concerts is to be of inspiration to others.
The same is true of my heavy weightlifting. When people see me doing this heavy lifting, they say, “Look what a 69-year-old can do!” I do it only to be of service to mankind. Again, I have written many books and I have drawn millions of birds. Everything I do only with the hope that I can be of service to mankind in the form of inspiration. In this world, people give up hope, and that is what I do not like. There is always hope, as long as we are alive. Until we breathe our last, we must have hope and promise.
There are many people who are sad and fearful. What first step can they take to find peace and happiness?
Sri Chinmoy: We are sad and fearful because we are not trying to identify ourselves with the rest of mankind. We are afraid that others will hurt us. We are afraid that they will speak ill of us. We cannot take them as members of our own family. But if we pray and meditate to establish our oneness with the rest of the world, our fear goes away, because we identify ourselves with something vast.
The finite is always afraid of the Infinite. It is like a tiny drop and the vast ocean. I am a tiny drop, and if I throw myself into the ocean, I feel that I will lose my very existence. But what actually happens is that I become the ocean itself. In exactly the same way, we are fearful because we take somebody else as separate from our own existence. But if we take others as members of our own family, naturally there will be little ones and grown-ups in the family. In a family, the smallest is not afraid of the father. The father is so tall, stout and strong, but the little one knows that it is his father, and so he is not afraid. His father is all affection for him, and he is all affection for his father.
In exactly the same way, if we can feel that our friends, relatives, and neighbors are our own, very own, then there can be no fear. And when there is no fear, there can be no sadness.
How do you define peace?
Sri Chinmoy: Peace is something that has to be experienced by each individual. Each one has to feel peace the way God wants him or her to feel peace. In my case, peace is the fullness of human existence on earth. Without peace, we are not complete.
Without peace, no matter what we achieve, we will not have satisfaction. There is no abiding satisfaction in anything that we achieve without peace. Peace is the completion of our journey. We can have name, fame and everything else, but in these things there is no abiding peace. But even if we do not have anything to show to the world at large, we are the most fortunate human beings if we have peace of mind. Peace of mind is of paramount importance. If we do not have peace of mind, no matter what we achieve in this lifetime, we will not have happiness. Peace gives us happiness, peace gives us satisfaction, and peace gives us fullness.
Is peace just part of the journey, or is there something beyond peace?
Sri Chinmoy: Our philosophy is self-transcendence. For us, there is no end, for we sing the song of self-transcendence. At every moment we are transcending, we are going beyond our previous capacities. So, peace is something that can be increased. Today we know that we are supposed to have an iota of peace. Tomorrow, on the strength of our prayers and meditations, we can try to increase the amount of peace that we have. We cannot say that if we have peace today, that is enough. No! We have to see how much peace we actually have.
Do we already have peace in abundant measure or boundless measure?
Sri Chinmoy: We are all following the path of self-transcendence, so whatever we achieve today is not the final end. We have to go beyond and beyond and beyond.
When did you first experience peace?
Sri Chinmoy: I first experienced peace many years ago, when I was 11 or 12 years old, in India. My parents happened to be religious and spiritual. My brothers and sisters, who were older than I, went to live in a spiritual community, and I followed them.
So they showed you the way?
Sri Chinmoy: They showed me the way. My oldest brother went to that spiritual community in India in 1933, and I joined him in 1944.
Why have you chosen in this lifetime to be a teacher and leader of peace?
Sri Chinmoy: I have not chosen to be a leader and I never declare myself a teacher of peace. I am a student of peace. I have been telling the whole world that I am a student of peace. I go everywhere to learn, and while I am learning, people feel that I am giving something. In the process of learning, we feel that the teacher and student give something to each other. While the student is learning, the teacher also learns something from the student.
As a student of peace, I have been to many places over the years to pray and meditate. It is not something that I have chosen. My Inner Pilot has commanded me to be of service to Him. God is the Creator and God is the creation. My Inner Pilot, God, has asked me to be of service to God the creation. That is why I go here and there to be of service to mankind.
And there are many places around the world that are dedicated to peace in your name [Minneapolis is dedicated as a Sri Chinmoy Peace City, St. Paul is a Sri Chinmoy Peace Capitol and the Lake Street/Marshall Avenue Bridge uniting the two cities is a Sri Chinmoy Peace Blossom].
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, but that is also a source of mutual inspiration. We are all working together. People are so kind to me. They are becoming part and parcel of our peace movement. We feel that if we get inspiration, then we can eventually become better citizens of the world.
Do you feel that there is a growing peace on the planet?
Sri Chinmoy: Definitely, definitely! Over the years, I have observed that peace is growing. I have been here in the Western world for 36 years. Previously I saw dozens of times that peace was only talk. We were only talking and talking about peace. Now people are praying to have peace in the depths of their heart. Talking has now given way to experience. In many parts of the world, people are experiencing peace. So the world has made tremendous improvement! Of course, we cannot say that in today’s world there is no conflict, there is no fight, there is no confusion. There is conflict, but in comparison, it is less.
Previously we were afraid that there would be a Third World War. Now, we do not foresee that possibility. The First World War destroyed us and the Second World war destroyed us, but we do not see any possibility of a Third World War. There is mutual compromise, and this is a sign that people want peace. Otherwise there could have been a Third World War by this time.
And peace eventually begins in each person’s heart, right?
Sri Chinmoy: Definitely! It starts in the heart, and then only it will come into the mind. Now we have peace in the soul and peace in the heart, and this peace has to be brought into the mind.
And how do we do that?
Sri Chinmoy: There is only one way: by virtue of our prayers and meditations. We have to pray to do something good, to become something good. If we really want to become good citizens of the world, then we have to pray, we have to meditate. There is no other way.
How can the quality of music convey peace?
Sri Chinmoy: Music is the universal language. We do not have to learn any particular language to communicate with others if we can play soulful music. Soulful music is next to meditation, and it carries the beauty and fragrance of silence, the message of the inner worlds and higher worlds. When we play spiritual music, people enter into the world of inspiration and aspiration. When we aspire through music, at that time we do not need any earthly language, whether English or French or German. The heart itself becomes the universal language. The heart is receiving the beauty and light of the higher worlds.
You perform on the flute. Why?
Sri Chinmoy: The flute gives me joy. I play many instruments, because each instrument is like a flower in a garden. If you have only one rose, everyone may not appreciate it. But if there are many flowers, then people enter into the garden to appreciate them. They see such a beautiful garden where there are so many types of flowers. That is why I play Western flute, Indian flute and so many other Eastern and Western instruments.
They are like many, many beautiful flowers of different types. In a garden, we appreciate the beauty and fragrance of all the flowers, and then again we choose whichever flower we like best. In the supermarket, also, there are millions of things. You will choose whatever you need and I will choose whatever I need. When I play many instruments, there are some people who appreciate my flute while others appreciate my piano or some other instrument. So, it is a matter of individual choice whether people prefer the flute, the cello, the esraj, the viola or the piano. It is entirely up to the seekers who are coming to receive inspiration and give inspiration. Again, I also try to become an instrument of God. As I said before, we are all working together. If people get inspiration from my western flute, then it will help them in their own inner search.
And to experience peace in your outer life, you must find peace within first?
Sri Chinmoy: Definitely! If you sow a seed under the ground, eventually it germinates. Then it becomes a plant, and finally it becomes a huge banyan tree. Similarly, peace has to be established in the depths of our heart first. Then only it will come to the fore.
What would you like everyone to know about himself or herself?
Sri Chinmoy: That they embody God, they embody Truth, they embody Light. Each individual should feel that he or she embodies God: God’s Divinity, God’s Eternity, God’s Immortality.
Published in The EDGE, October 1, 2000
Left: Muhammad Ali wearing garland given to him by Sri Chinmoy, left, director of the United Nations Meditation Group, after they spent an hour in meditation yesterday morning at apartment in Manhattan.
Right: Shavers and Ali exchanging long rights In the second round of their fight last night.
Published in The New York Times, Vol. CXXVII, No.43,714, New York, Friday, September 30, 1977
A photograph of Sri Chinmoy meditating with Muhammad Ali, taken the previous day, appears in the New York Times. Sri Chinmoy speaks about the photograph of Muhammad Ali, at the United Nations in New York.
For decades Muhammad Ali and spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy established a close friendship based on their shared love of God and dedication to fitness and sports.
During their meeting on the morning of Ali’s title defense fight with Earnie Shavers, September 29th, 1977, they spent an hour together in shared silent prayer. A photo of the two men serenely meditating was placed side by side a photo of Ali powerfully vanquishing Shavers on the front page of The New York Times the following morning.
Sri Chinmoy, who led the twice-weekly peace meditation at the United Nations for 37 years, told the world’s most beloved athlete Ali, “You are changing the face and fate of mankind. Your very name encourages and inspires. As soon as people hear ‘Muhammad Ali,’ they are inspired. They get tremendous joy. They get such dynamism to be brave and face ignorance…Your heart of oneness with all humanity makes you the greatest.”
Ali replied to Sri Chinmoy, “My goal is to be like you one day—to be peaceful and out of this sport working for humanity and for God…I want to do something to bring people together, to work for God and to help people.”
This week members of the Sri Chinmoy Centers worldwide and friends are paying tribute to the memory of Muhammad Ali by performing three songs composed by their teacher about the immortal boxer. The songs were first performed during meetings of Sri Chinmoy with Muhammad Ali and are entitled Greater than the Greatest, Muhammad Ali – Champion Ali, and Indomitable Hero Supreme. They speak of the physical and spiritual greatness of one of the most universally loved figures of our age.
* Many years later, on June 12th, 2003, Sri Chinmoy met again with Muhammad Ali and also his wife, Lonnie, at The Oneness-Family School in Washington, DC. There Sri Chinmoy honored both husband and wife by lifting them together overhead in his signature Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart program. The spiritual luminary said to the beloved boxer, Brother, you were the greatest. You are the greatest. You forever will remain the greatest!”
Delighted by the honor, Muhammad Ali embraced Sri Chinmoy and sweetly exclaimed, “Brother, you are a great man! Brother, you are a very strong man!”
* This article published on 10 June, 2016, in The Indian Panorama online, references Sri Chinmoy’s meeting with Muhammad Ali on 29 September 1977. Later references from 2013 are also included.
Chūgoku Shinbun, ‘Midland News’ is a Japanese local daily newspaper based in Hiroshima
Reporter: What were you meditating on when you stood in front of the Peace Memorial?
Sri Chinmoy: I was meditating on peace and offering my prayers to God for those people who were killed during World War II. Hiroshima is now a place full of purity and inner beauty.
Reporter: From now on, what kind of activities will you do for peace?
Sri Chinmoy: If you want peace, you must pray and meditate every day. Hiroshima is the city where unimaginable destruction took place. The old was destroyed, and now the new has been built. This experience of building the new should continue and continue forever here in Hiroshima.
Published in Japan: Soul-Beauty’s Heart-Garden
with Sri Chinmoy
in the Studio of Satellite Channel: SEDAT 00 New York
Interviewer: Our next guest is a prolific author, a poet, an artist, a musician, an athlete, a spiritual guide. He has spent time with world leaders such as Pope Paul VI, Pope John Paul II, Mikhail Gorbachev, Nelson Mandela, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mother Teresa, just before she passed on. Sri Chinmoy is with us this morning.
Sir, how were you able to obtain access to world leaders like the ones I just mentioned, and of course Mother Teresa, too?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a student of peace, and I wanted to meet with them. They were extremely kind to me and they complied with my request. Afterwards, I became very close friends with some of them.
Interviewer: I know you had been acquainted with Mother Teresa for quite a bit. What struck you about Mother Teresa the first time you ever met her?
Sri Chinmoy: When I met with her for the first time, I prayerfully offered her a rose, and she blessingfully accepted the rose from me. I saw in her humility, simplicity, affection and compassion in boundless measure. This meeting took place on 24 October 1975, at the United Nations.
Interviewer: Why did you write a book about her?
Sri Chinmoy: I wrote a book entitled: Mother Teresa: Humanity's Flower-Heart, Divinity's Fragrance-Soul. I had met with her four times, each time for 45 minutes or an hour or so. I was also blessed with quite a few letters from her, and I had the greatest opportunity to speak with her on the telephone a number of times. All these I wanted to be recorded. Mother Teresa: Humanity's Flower-Heart, Divinity's Fragrance-Soul contains all these things.
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy, a very interesting book on Mother Teresa. Nice having you on the programme this morning, and good luck to you!
Published in Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soul, part 3
about Mother Teresa after her passing (5 September 1997)
Interviewer: Our next guest is a prolific author, a poet, an artist, a musician, an athlete, a spiritual guide. He has spent time with world leaders such as Pope Paul VI, Pope John Paul II, Mikhail Gorbachev, Nelson Mandela, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mother Teresa, just before she passed on. Sri Chinmoy is with us this morning.
Sir, how were you able to obtain access to world leaders like the ones I just mentioned, and of course Mother Teresa, too?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a student of peace, and I wanted to meet with them. They were extremely kind to me and they complied with my request. Afterwards, I became very close friends with some of them.
Interviewer: I know you had been acquainted with Mother Teresa for quite a bit. What struck you about Mother Teresa the first time you ever met her?
Sri Chinmoy: When I met with her for the first time, I prayerfully offered her a rose, and she blessingfully accepted the rose from me. I saw in her humility, simplicity, affection and compassion in boundless measure. This meeting took place on 24 October 1975, at the United Nations.
Interviewer: Why did you write a book about her?
Sri Chinmoy: I wrote a book entitled: Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soul. I had met with her four times, each time for 45 minutes or an hour or so. I was also blessed with quite a few letters from her, and I had the greatest opportunity to speak with her on the telephone a number of times. All these I wanted to be recorded. Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soulcontains all these things.
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy, a very interesting book on Mother Teresa. Nice having you on the programme this morning, and good luck to you!
Interviewer: Let me begin by saying the book that you wrote is a beautiful tribute for Mother Teresa. I understand that you have met her on several occasions, and in fact that you share a birthday. Can you tell me a little bit about the last time you spoke with her?
Sri Chinmoy: My last conversation with her has been recorded. She was extremely kind to me as usual. She was both a sister and a mother to me. As a sister, she inundated me with affection. As a mother, she inundated me with compassion. Her affectionate demand was, “You must pray for me, as I pray for you every day.”
Then she had something else to say: “You must come with me to China. China needs light.” Five or six times over the years she has asked me to accompany her to China. When I met with her on the 3rd of June this year and on the 17th of June at the Missionaries of Charity in the Bronx, she said the same thing: “You must come with me to China. China needs light. China needs light.” So I promised her, “Yes, Mother, when the time comes, when you go to China, I shall definitely accompany you.”
Interviewer: Obviously that trip never took place. Will you carry on her request to bring peace, love and compassion and her work to China?
Sri Chinmoy: I shall pray and meditate, and if I get a command from within, if it is the Will of God, then definitely I shall go. But otherwise, I am not entitled to act on her behalf. I am a man of prayer. I was very, very closely connected to Mother Teresa, but it is for Sister Nirmala, who is Mother Teresa’s successor and representative, to carry on her work. It is she who has to go to China and do the needful. I am a great admirer, a sincere admirer, of Mother Teresa. I promised her that I shall help the Missionaries of Charity according to my very limited capacity. I have students who are in the medical field, and they are able to offer the Missionaries of Charity medical supplies which have been donated by large companies. Also, in various other capacities whenever the Sisters need any help from me, I shall gladly do it.
Interviewer: What do you see for the Missionaries of Charity now that Mother Teresa has passed away? Is there anyone who is with us now in the world who can even compare with her?
Sri Chinmoy: Nobody can be compared with her. She is matchless; she is unique. But her successor, Sister Nirmala, will be receiving blessings and guidance from Above — from Mother Teresa’s soul in Heaven. Mother Teresa will be able to guide Sister Nirmala at every step. I know both of them well, so I know the daughter will always get inner guidance and special blessings from Mother, and she will be able to carry on Mother’s mission. I have implicit faith in Mother’s capacity and also I have implicit faith in Sister Nirmala’s receptivity. Nirmala cannot be compared with Mother Teresa, true, but Mother Teresa will successfully be able to fulfil her mission in and through Sister Nirmala.
Interviewer: You’ve met some very spiritual people in your life, obviously Mother Teresa being one of them. You’ve also met Pope John Paul. Can you compare the levels of spirituality in these great people and their works?
Sri Chinmoy: Each one has a special role to play on earth. They cannot be compared. Each human being is unique in his own way. Let us take the Holy Father. I have met with him on five occasions. Each time, he has blessed me most affectionately and most compassionately. To me, the Holy Father is our universal grandfather. No matter what we do, he is ready to shower his choicest compassion, protection and forgiveness upon us. In a family, children may do quite a few wrong things. Their parents may be annoyed, but their grandparents are always ready to forgive them. The Holy Father is like that; he is all compassion and forgiveness. No matter what we do, he is ready to forgive us. Through his affection and compassion, he tries to improve our lives. Not through justice-power but through forgiveness-power he wants to make us good citizens of the world. That is why the Holy Father is so unique.
Interviewer: As I look around the rest of the world, I see more spirituality in other countries, especially in third world countries, than in America. I think there is more praying, more compassion, more of a desire to believe in something greater than physical being, whereas here in America I sense a lack of spirituality. What would you say to that?
Sri Chinmoy: I beg to be excused, but I cannot see eye to eye with you. You are an American, so you may say that Americans are not spiritual. But I feel that Americans are definitely spiritual. I happen to be a seeker of truth and a lover of God. I have been here in your country, America, for 33 years. During these 33 years, God has given me ample opportunity to be of service to the soul, to the heart and to the life of America. I have been to all the states, given talks at universities, answered questions and offered Peace Concerts, and I have found America to be quite receptive.
Everybody has his own way of thinking about spirituality. Some people are of the opinion that one is spiritual only if one enters into the Himalayan caves and gives up the worldly life. Again, others are of the opinion that we do not have to enter into the Himalayan caves; only we have to give up our desire-life and enter into the aspiration-life.
It is our desire-life that binds us. If we have one car, then we want to have two cars, three cars, four cars. One house is not enough; we want a second house and a third house. And each time we increase our desire-life, we bind ourselves tighter. But when we enter into the aspiration-life, we pray to God to give us peace of mind, light and bliss. Rather than try to exercise our supremacy over others, as we do in the desire-life, in the aspiration-life we try to become one, inseparably one, with the rest of the world. It is our oneness with others that gives us peace of mind and real satisfaction. And to achieve this we do not have to enter into the Himalayan caves or lead an isolated life. On the contrary, first we have to accept life as such and then we have to transform it. We have to transform our mind; we have to transform our life. We have to look forward or upward or dive deep within to bring to the fore our inner light. Only then — only when we see, feel and grow into our inner light — can we become perfect citizens of the world. For this, America is an excellent place, just like any other country is, for an individual to practise spirituality.
Interviewer: Well said! Absolutely! Thank you very much. That was beautiful.
Interviewer: Our first guest is a gentleman who has written a book on Mother Teresa entitled, Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity's Fragrance-Soul. He was on the telephone with Mother Teresa on his birthday just nine days before her passing. He is a prolific author, poet, artist, musician, athlete, etc. Sri Chinmoy joins us on WJR.
Sri Chinmoy, you mourn the loss of Mother Teresa, but you celebrate the work that she did and you carry on her memory in your book. I know it is important to you that we all remember her and her work and pick up where she left off.
Sri Chinmoy: It is absolutely true. We must try to follow in her footsteps.
Interviewer: You held a special programme yesterday at the United Nations. Can you tell us about it?
Sri Chinmoy: At the United Nations, in the Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium, we offered our prayers to her soul. The Ambassador of Bangladesh sponsored the occasion, and we prayed and sang. Also, some of the guests spoke very prayerfully about her. It was a prayerful service right from the beginning to the end. In 1975, at the same Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium, I had the golden opportunity to be in her blessingful presence. I offered her a rose and she blessingfully accepted it.
Interviewer: It is wonderful that you carry on her memory, and I am sure that it was exactly the kind of celebration Mother Teresa would have liked — with music and prayer. It is nice of you to share with us your book, Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soul, taken from your time with her and your message of global peace, which is the same as hers.
Sri Chinmoy: We are all sailing in the same boat. Those who believe in peace, those who believe in world harmony, are all sailing in the same boat.
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy is on the line. Sir, first of all tell me, what was your relationship with Mother Teresa?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a great admirer of Mother Teresa. Her boundless affection and compassion I cherish and I shall forever cherish.
Interviewer: In your book you have written several poems about her and several tributes. Do you think she had any idea while she was living how many people were aware of her work?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, she was fully aware of the world’s affection and admiration for her, but she did not care for it. She cared only for her prayerful service to her beloved Lord Jesus Christ in humanity. She did not care for name and fame. She cared only for one thing: her sleepless and breathless service to the poor and the needy.
Interviewer: We had a priest on a week or two ago who had a chance to meet Mother Teresa in Calcutta. He said he was amazed at how nice this woman was. She was truly that way to everybody.
Sri Chinmoy: She was for all with her affection, compassion, simplicity and humility. To stand before her was to feel one’s own divine virtues — such as humility, patience and self-giving — coming to the fore.
Interviewer: The world reels at the loss of a frail little woman in her eighties who spent her entire life helping people that the rest of the world tried to turn its back on — Mother Teresa. And one of the people who knew this remarkable woman best is our guest this morning. Please welcome Sri Chinmoy.
Sir, we all know what a wonderful woman Mother Teresa was and how dedicated she was to helping the poor. But what would surprise us about Mother Teresa? Did she have a weakness for candy? Did she enjoy soccer? Tell us the personal things about her.
Sri Chinmoy: I can only tell you about my personal experience of Mother Teresa. For me she was the Mother of compassion and the Sister of affection. Quite a few times she said to me, “I pray for you every day. You must pray for me. I want you to come with me to China. China needs light.” It was her affectionate and emotional demands and commands that she exercised upon me, and I shall always cherish her affection and her compassion.
Interviewer: Sri Chinmoy is our guest this morning, author of the book, Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soul, and a friend of Mother Teresa. Now let’s talk about you for just a minute. I know you grew up in India under British rule. What was that like, being a young man in India when it was the jewel in the crown of England?
Sri Chinmoy: I was brought up in a spiritual community, and I prayed for our independence. In 1947, on the 15th of August, God listened to the prayers of millions and millions of Indians. Recently, our present Prime Minister Gujral offered a momentous utterance. He said, “We are proud to say that Indian independence was won, not given.” Many people are under the mistaken opinion that the British Government gave us our freedom.
Interviewer: Oh, not at all. It was Mahatma Gandhi’s campaign of peaceful resistance.
Sri Chinmoy: That is absolutely correct. Freedom was won, not given. Some think that the British showed a magnanimous heart. But it was not that. It was the sacrifices made by millions of people — the stupendous sacrifices, the sleepless and breathless sacrifices — that made independence possible.
Interviewer: Did Gandhi’s campaign of peaceful resistance influence your life at all? I ask because you are a Guru, a Teacher, and you’ve taught millions how to discover inner peace and fulfilment.
Sri Chinmoy: I was brought up in the Sri Aurobindo Ashram. There I prayed and meditated. So my life was influenced totally by prayer and meditation. I have the deepest admiration for Mahatma Gandhi. But his influence on our national life was mainly in the moral sphere. He practised and he advocated a moral code of life. In my case, from my prayer-life and meditation-life I try to get messages from within. I solely depend on my prayer-life and meditation-life.
Published in Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soul, part 3
Celebrates 69th birthday by setting a new world record
As many people may be aware of, Sri Chinmoy has not at all given up though advancing in age. On the contrary, he is growing more powerful and wants to show that our potential to transcend limitations is without limits and age is by no means a barrier! This international peace leader found it proper therefore to celebrate his 69th birthday by setting a new world record. He lifted simultaneously two 123 kg dumbbells, 8cm overhead with each arm from a sitting position, 246kg in total. This “modern-day Hercules” therefore improved his own world record by an astounding 136kg, but that older record was established 9 months ago, November last year, where he lifted 110kg (55kg with each arm).
In the spirit of the past
The MC at that weightlifting exhibition was Bill Pearl who has won the title Mr. Universe five times and has also been voted Best Built Man of the Century.
Pearl was totally dumbfounded when he saw that lift and said: “In the last lifts he has supported more weight overhead than any man in the world. This is what a short man with a big heart can do.”
Another big name in the weightlifting and bodybuilding world, Frank Zane, who is three times Mr. Olympia and Mr. Universe, explains Sri Chinmoy’s lifts in his magazine Building the Body: “The fact that he is lifting from a seated position makes this lift even more incredible because the hips and the lower back, the main power centres of the body, are not involved in the lift.” Zane also describes the tradition from where these lifts come from: “Powerlifters in the past used to lift extreme weights just high enough to clear a piece of paper, or sometimes they didn’t lift at all but supported gigantic weights with the body.”
A world record every week
A week ago Sri Chinmoy established yet another world record by lifting 800 pounds or 363kg in the bench press. This lift is different from the traditional bench press in that the weight is in two dumbbells, but it is less than a year that Sri Chinmoy started to try this out.
Last Sunday he bettered his record from the week before by 100 pounds and now it is 900 pounds or 409kg.
On his way to Iceland
Sri Chinmoy is also known in other fields, for example as an artist, author and composer. He loves Iceland and soon Icelanders can listen to him because he will be giving a Peace Concert in University Cinema. He has given such concerts around the world and the concert in Iceland will be his six-hundredth Peace Concert.
Photo caption: Sri Chinmoy is strong in both body and soul.
Author: Snatak Matthiasson
Sri Chinmoy is a spiritual leader who promotes sports and physical fitness, combined with contemplative practices. Sri Chinmoy is with us for the celebration of the Fifth World Masters Games in Athletics: today will be the opening session of the competition at Sixto Escobar Parke and tomorrow will be the official opening by the mayor of San Juan, Hernan Padilla, at the Bithorn. “I have always taken part in sports because I consider them a basis for all human activities, said Sri Chinmoy during a talk we had with him at the Sri Chinmoy Centre in Isla Verde.
“We have again been invited to Puerto Rico and on this occasion, we will be offering a meditation, tomorrow, at the official opening ceremony of the Masters at the Hiram Bithorn Park. With us will be a group of members from the United Nations who will sing a song we have composed honouring the Fifth Masters Games, and which was accepted as the official song of the Fifth Games.”
At first glance, you can see humility and simplicity reflected in the words of this spiritual master who has been at other times in Puerto Rico, where he has hundreds of followers.
Among the other ceremonies conducted by Sri Chinmoy are ones at the half marathon in San Blas in 1981; the Track and Field Masters Championship celebrated in San Juan In 1980; the Pan-American Games in 1979; the New York City Marathon in 1978; and the ceremony at the United Nations for Olympic and world-class runners In 1977, just to mention some of them.
Next Monday, Sri Chinmoy will conduct a concert for the athletes participating in the Masters, which is one of many to which they have been invited.
“We consider that the benefits derived from athletic activity include better health, a release of tension, a sense of dynamic enthusiasm towards life and the experience of self-transcendence that happens when we are able to improve a personal record or surpass a limitation,” explains with extraordinary depth, this great contemporary man.
We would need many sheets of paper to write about Sri Chinmoy, but in this opportunity, we have to concentrate on the Masters and we can tell you that in this Master’s own words he said: “I participate to enjoy, that is my only goal.” So we will see him in the 100, 200, 400 metres, javelin and the 5K, in the 50 to 54 category. Sri Chinmoy is now 52 years old.
“I always ask my students to run a few miles every day and I set the example by doing it myself.”
While searching for a background of this contemporary world personality known for the diversity of his knowledge and religious practices, I came across a phrase where he said, “concentration, meditation and contemplation are three members of the same family.” Through international running clubs and the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team, he and his students sponsor a great variety of public events for runners, including marathons, ultra-marathons and many short races — a total of 300 races a year in the USA, Canada, Japan, Europe and Australia.
The Sri Chinmoy Marathon is the official marathon of the city of San Juan. The Sri Chinmoy Triathlon is the official triathlon of Rhode Island and the Sri Chinmoy Marathon in San Mateo is the official marathon for the state of California’s Road Runners Club of America.
Published in the Sports section of El Nuevo Dia, San Juan, Puerto Rico’s largest circulation newspaper, Friday, 23 September 1983
JAMAICA, NY — Albanian President Alfred Moisiu came to Aspiration-Ground Sept. 22 to be lifted by Sri Chinmoy and receive the U Thant Peace Award from him.
Albania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and the country’s UN Ambassador also attended the event.
President Moisiu told Sri Chinmoy, “I deeply appreciate your work and your deeds to sow the seed of peace and understanding among peoples.”
Albanian President Moisiu says good-bye to Sri Chinmoy after visiting Aspiration-Ground.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 42, Mid-August – Early November 2006
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Sri Chinmoy offered a concert Sept. 19 in the Lensovet House of Culture here, which he dedicated the late Raisa Maximovna Gorbachev.
“She is the mother of all children, especially the helpless children who suffer from leukemia,” the spiritual teacher declared. “Her heart of infinite compassion accepted the same disease, and she left her body being fully identified with the helpless children’s suffering.”
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 44, August-October 10, 2007
A place for contemplation, tranquillity and inner peace in the heart of Grand Central Terminal.
Well, for the rest of this month, anyway, or at least that is what the Indian mystic and yogi Sri Chinmoy hopes to offer with an art gallery showing 200 of his paintings on a lower concourse of the hectic terminal.
The gallery is the result of a happy trade-off between the guru and his spiritual followers, on the one hand, and Conrail, the Government-assisted rail corporation, and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority on the other.
The storefront in the Vanderbilt Arcade, running below Vanderbilt Avenue toward the Times Square-Grand Central subway shuttle terminus on the south-west side of the building, once housed a Savarin Restaurant, but for two and a half years it has stood empty, its whitewashed windows collecting grime.
Now a clear sweep of windows gives strollers a view of colorful abstract designs, in what is called the Jharna-Kala gallery. The words are Bangladeshi for “fountain art,” meaning that it “stems from the fount of creation,” according to the guru’s literature.
Sri Chinmoy’s disciples offered to clean up the eyesore in exchange for free use of the space to show his works. A spokesman for Conrail, on hand for a press reception yesterday, said the corporation was happy to be performing a public service. Its officials hope that the bright new looks of the place will help them attract a permanent, paying tenant. The agreement is good for the rest of this month.
“The Chinmoy people came looking for a place, and we thought it was better than having it just sitting here, collecting dust,” said Robert J, Tracy, real-estate manager for the rail corporation. A check of the group's references, including a letter from President Carter, proved quite impressive, he said.
After Sept. 30, Conrail will be looking for another tenant for the total 6,500 square feet of space — anybody who can pay the "negotiable" price, he said.
Sri Chinmoy, reposed in a blue reclining chair to receive the press, reflected, on request, on the contrast created by situating an intended oasis of spiritual reflection in a setting as bustling as Grand Central Terminal.
"I hope the daily travelers will have a moment of inspiration, to feel something new, illumining," he said, his hands folded in his lap.
"We embody two realities," he said." The outer and the inner. The outer reality is the hustle and bustle of life. The inner is poise, like the depths of the Pacific Ocean. The outer world must plunge, as a stone into the ocean, in order to bring to the fore the capacities of the inner world for peace, for serenity and tranquillity.”
The spiritual leader, who has reportedly written 300 books and who heads an organization with centers in 60 cities worldwide, serves as director of the United Nations Meditation Group.
A trickle of visitors and passers-by yesterday indicated that they thoroughly appreciated the temporary gallery, but they were mostly getting in out of the rain.
Published in The New York Times, Sunday, September 18, 1977
by Premananda
What does Oslo have in common with Ottawa, Edinburgh, Reykjavik, Canberra or Wellington? They have all been appointed Peace Capitals.
On Tuesday Oslo was ceremoniously inaugurated as a Peace Capital. The founder of the Peace Run and leader of the Peace Meditation Group at the UN in New York, Sri Chinmoy, deputy mayor Svenn Kristiansen, representatives from the parliament, ski-Norge, and 60 invited guests from inland and abroad gathered in the Ski Museum in Holmenkollen, where a plaque marking Oslo as a Peace Capital was unveiled.
Chinmoy, who is most well-known for the initiative of a global peace run, said that Oslo with its peace-work will inspire millions of people around the world.
– The movement is concerned with good relations – not just between countries – but also between peoples. Especially children are taught that peace and reconciliation between people is important, says Ole-Johnny Johnsen, initiator in Norway who was involved in launching the Peace Run in Oslo in 1987. The Peace Run has been organised every other year in Oslo, most recently this summer when children from 57 primary schools participated.
Published in Norway’s largest printed newspaper, Aftenposten, Thursday, 18 September 1997
September 13, 1981
Plainsboro, N.J.
A two-year search by the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team for a perfect “flat and fast” marathon course was realized when the first annual Sri Chinmoy Marathon was held in Plainsboro, N.J.
Plainsboro, a bucolic community located next to Princeton and near Trenton and New Brunswick, offered to the duly appreciative runners well-paved, well-shaded country roads winding past fields of ripened corn. The marathon route — certified and sanctioned by the RRCA — consisted of two loops through this setting, the second loop slightly longer than the first.
The 144 participating runners were generous with their praise of the race, many having taken as much as twenty minutes off their usual time!
“Never have I been to a race that was organized and executed in such a professional manner,” stated overall winner Larry Friedman of the Sneaker Factory. “Course management, traffic control, mile markers, split times, aid stations all surpassed a marathoner’s dreams. You have spoiled me.” Larry was clocked in at 2:31:41.
Women’s winner Diana Berner of Scarsdale, N.Y., who has been training hard for a full year, was also well-pleased with her performance, taking more than twenty-five minutes off her previous marathon best and coming in at 3:06:26.
Among the large number of ultramarathoners participating in the event was New Jersey’s great Bill Lawder, who ran 2:39:52.
Helping the runners were Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team members from around the world, who had been at the Team’s New York headquarters since a summer get-together. Japanese, German, French, Italian and Spanish helpers used their best English while serving the thirsty runners along the route.
Left: Sri Chinmoy with Cahit Yeter (4th) and daughter. Lloyd Hart Photo
Top right: Larry Friedman. Lloyd Hart Photo
Published in RUNNING NEW JERSEY, Dec. 1981
Photos by Pranavananda Hixon
Scenes from the feature-length film, ‘A Day in the Life of Sri Chinmoy’, shot by Pranavananda Hixon in the picturesque countryside of South Salem in Westchester County, New York State, about 2-hours-drive north of New York City. Instrumental music and choral arrangements are by Mahavishnu John McLaughlin.
This article appears later in the official United Nations newsletter, Secretariat News, on October 16, 1975.
To celebrate the opening of the General Assembly's 30th session, delegates and UN personnel joined leaders of the world's major faiths in a programme on 12 September at Headquarters. The Secretary-General wrote a message for the occasion, which stressed the immense potential of the UN and the requirement for a renewal of our common faith and determination that the advances of the past thirty years will be maintained.
The programme began with silent meditation led by Sri Chinmoy, Director of the UN Meditation Group, who then sang one of his own compositions. Prayers were offered by: Norma Levitt, Co-Chairperson, World Union for Progressive Judaism; the Reverend Dan Potter, Executive Director, Council of Churches, City of New York, Reverend Jih Tsang, Assistant Abbot, Temple of Enlightenment; and Muddassir Ali Shamsee, Leader, UN Muslim Prayer Group.
One of two guest speakers was Mr. David S. Burgess, Senior Officer, UNICEF, who noted the ever more apparent need for individuals and nations to "recognize our human interdependence". Mr. Donald Keys, UN Representative of the World Association of World Federalists, maintained that "mankind is on the verge of taking its next big step a step in awareness, a step in consciousness, a step in perspective, a step in relationships. … we are in the throes of a new Copernican revolution in which man will come to see, naturally and normally, that the planet is the basis of social organization and inter-relationship."
A highlight of the event was the premiere performance of "O United Nations", a song composed by Sri Chinmoy.
The programme, co-sponsored by the International Co-operation for Peace Committee and the UN Meditation Group, ended with choral readings from the writings of the UN's four Secretaries-General and a silent rededication to the UN's highest goals.
Published in AUM – Vol. 2, No.10, October 27, 1975
Interview with Sri Chinmoy
on Cablevision 12, New Jersey
Interviewer: Ms. Page Hopkins
Interviewer: Tonight on our show we’ll meet one of Mother Teresa’s friends. He’ll talk to us about her life, her memory and his mission for peace.
Our guest is Sri Chinmoy. He was a friend of Mother Teresa’s for over 20 years, and he spoke with her just nine days before her death. He’s also the author of a book about the late nun, and he’s here now to share his memories of her with us. Welcome!
This was such a tremendous loss to the world. Were you surprised by her death?
Sri Chinmoy: I was shocked beyond my imagination. When I asked her about her health only nine days before her final departure, she said to me, “Sri Chinmoy, I am much better, much better. Pray for me as I pray for you every day.”
I met with her five times. The first time was in 1975 at the United Nations during an interfaith programme sponsored by the Temple of Understanding. They wanted me to offer a meditation at the beginning of the programme and then offer roses to all the religious leaders.
Interviewer: What was your impression when you met her? Did she just radiate?
Sri Chinmoy: Simplicity, purity, humility: these three virtues are of paramount importance, and these are what I noticed and felt the moment I prayerfully stood in front of her with my rose.
Interviewer: There’s been such a rush in the last week to canonise her, and there’s been a lot of talk of the Vatican waiving the preliminary five years. Do you think that was so important to her?
Sri Chinmoy: Nothing is important to her, but it is important for humanity. Sometimes it happens that when we honour someone, the person who is being honoured does not need it or care for it. But while we are honouring that person we increase our own inspiration and aspiration to become better citizens of the world. While appreciating, admiring and adoring the other person, we increase our own capacities and bring to the fore our own divine potential.
Interviewer: The timing of her death is also interesting — coming in the wake of the very public death of Princess Diana, which the world really has been so obsessed with. In terms of media coverage, maybe Mother Teresa’s death would have even been a bigger deal had it not been eclipsed by Princess Diana’s. Do you think that’s the way she would have wanted it?
Sri Chinmoy: Princess Diana at times wanted media and at times she did not. When she was doing something for the betterment of the world, when she was doing charity work and meeting with the sick and poor, she wanted media attention in order to uplift the consciousness of the world. But sometimes the media exposed her frailties and weaknesses, which we all have, and at that time she did not welcome the media attention. She said that this kind of thing does not help humanity in any way. She wanted only to inspire the rest of the world, but unfortunately the media always tries to find the negative side of things. That is a very painful experience. Everything has its darker side and its brighter side. But if you weigh the pros and cons of her life, her good qualities and virtues will far surpass her so-called human weaknesses.
Interviewer: Unfortunately, the media tend to accentuate the more frivolous aspects of her life. What was your impression of Princess Diana as a person when you met her?
Sri Chinmoy: Very kind, very compassionate and, at the same time, very self-giving! I was the instrument in helping Princess Diana to meet with Mother Teresa in June this year in New York. I told her how she could be in touch with Mother Teresa. I am so happy and grateful that I was able to serve both luminaries at the same time.
Interviewer: Did these two women, as the press has said, have a lot in common?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes! When I told Princess Diana that she and Mother Teresa were sailing in the same boat, she immediately said, “I am a very, very small Mother Teresa.” That was Princess Diana’s immediate remark.
Interviewer: Very generous! Mother Teresa has left an amazing legacy with the Missionaries of Charity throughout the world. Do you think that without her at the helm they will continue to thrive and be as strong as they have been?
Sri Chinmoy: I strongly feel so, because from Heaven Mother Teresa will shower her choicest blessings upon her followers. I met Sister Nirmala, who is now the Superior General, when I visited Mother Teresa two months ago in the Bronx.
Interviewer: I don’t know if people at home can see this, but there is a photograph of Sister Nirmala watching while Sri Chinmoy is being blessed by Mother Teresa.
Sri Chinmoy: She came and introduced herself to me. With your kind permission I would like to read out this message today. It is my eulogy for Mother Teresa. All over India it will be read out:
Mother Teresa:
Calcutta’s Soaring Bird
India’s Sailing Moon
The World’s Weeping Sky
Earth’s Tearing Loss
Heaven’s Dancing Gain
The Christ’s Blossoming Promise
The Mother Mary’s Harvesting Pride.
Interviewer: Those were the powerful and beautiful words of Sri Chinmoy in a tribute to Mother Teresa.
It is almost impossible to articulate Mother Teresa’s affect on the world.
Sri Chinmoy: It is unfathomable.
Interviewer: It really is. You were talking a little bit before about Sister Nirmala, who is her successor. You have confidence that she will be able to continue on?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, because Mother Teresa will shower her choicest blessings upon her most devoted student-follower, Sister Nirmala. Sister Nirmala has implicit faith in Mother Teresa, and Mother will inundate Sister Nirmala with inspiration, aspiration and dedication.
Interviewer: You have dedicated your life to peace. You have really made that your mission. When were you inspired, or were you even as a child filled with this quest?
Sri Chinmoy: It was right from my childhood. At the age of four I started praying, and when I was seven years old I started praying and meditating consciously and seriously. At the age of 32 I was invited by some American seekers to come to the West and be of service to America. Since then, I have been offering prayers and meditations at the United Nations and I have offered over 500 prayerful Peace Concerts in various countries. I have also written many, many books.
I feel that world peace can come into being on the strength of our prayer and meditation. This is my way. Many roads lead to Rome, but I prefer this particular road. It is my personal opinion and inmost conviction that it is through prayer and meditation that we shall be able to bring about world peace.
Interviewer: Do you believe the world is becoming a more peaceful place?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I feel so. There was a time when people did not believe in a peaceful existence. There was the First World War and the Second World War. A Third World War was threatening, but fortunately it did not take place. Then the politicians started talking about peace. For most of this century it was not so widely practised. Now talking has surrendered to acting. I feel that there are quite a few politicians in the world today who believe in peace, and who most sincerely try to bring about world peace. Peace is no longer just a dictionary word; it is becoming a living reality. It may take time, but we are walking along the right road.
Interviewer: Many people working in news feel powerless when they read stories about religious wars in Bosnia or Ireland. And peace is virtually hanging in the balance in the Middle East. It makes you wonder what you can possibly do to make a difference.
Sri Chinmoy: Pray! There is no other way. We cannot change the minds of others by exercising our mental power or military power or any other kind of power. We can only change their minds through prayer. The greatest, most effective prayer is: “Let Thy Will be done.” This prayer we have received from the Saviour Christ. If we can consciously identify ourself with the Will of God, then there is bound to come a time when this world of ours will be inundated with peace. We have tried and will continue to try many other processes, but I feel it is by virtue of prayer that one day our world will have true, genuine peace.
Interviewer: And Thy Will be done — invoking God’s Will. Well, this has been very inspirational. Thank you so much for coming by and sharing your memories of Mother Teresa and Princess Diana with us — two women who really touched this world in a way that will reverberate for many centuries to come.
Sri Chinmoy: Definitely!
Published in Mother Teresa: Humanity’s Flower-Heart, Divinity’s Fragrance-Soul, part 3
LATIN SLANT
Former Puerto Rican Gov. Hernandez Colon enjoyed a welcome respite from his diplomatic battles Tuesday night when he attended a reception in his honor at the New York art gallery of Indian spiritual Master Sri Chinmoy.
“You don’t know how much gladness is in my heart to be here with you,” Colon told the Guru. “Or perhaps you do, because you are able to read our hearts.”
Sri Chinmoy, whom Colon had proclaimed an “honorary resident of Puerto Rico” during his governorship, replied: “Every day you are in my prayer. Every day you are in my consciousness. Every day you are in my soulful meditation.”
As 200 of the Guru’s followers applauded, Sri Chinmoy presented Colon with a cake and personally escorted him around the gallery in New York’s Grand Central Station, where several hundred of his paintings are on display.
Colon told the assemblage: “I feel united with all of you and with Guru in our aspiration. I feel oneness in our souls. I feel that your hearts touch mine and that we are all together travelling on the same path.”
To the Guru, whose first spiritual Centre in the Western world was established in San Juan 12 years ago, Colon said: “This opportunity to see you comes at a time when I am very much in need of help because I am engaged in a very serious matter for Puerto Rico.” He is in the city on a diplomatic mission to the United Nations concerning Puerto Rico’s relationship with the U.S.
While he was governor, Colon invited Sri Chinmoy to his home on several occasions in Puerto Rico, but hasn’t seen him since 1976. “I have thought about you very much during the past two years... always with the deepest respect, admiration and love,” Colon said. “I had a great desire to see you and this desire has been fulfilled tonight.”
Sri Chinmoy told the former governor: “We are one. We are sailing in the same boat, and together we shall fight against ignorance. Ours is the ultimate victory.”
Sri Chinmoy is head of a worldwide spiritual organization headquartered in New York. He is also author of 350 spiritual books, a prolific artist and composer of some 3,000 devotional songs.
Some of his 130,000 paintings had previously been exhibited at the Museo de Arte in Ponce, Puerto Rico.
Sri Chinmoy has also been conducting twice-weekly meditations for delegates and staff at the United Nations since 1970.
Left: Warm Greetings are exchanged by Ex-Governor of Puerto Rico Hernandez Colon, and Sri Chinmoy, when they met in N.Y. for a moment of respite and conversation. Hernandez Colon in the City for diplomatic mission on Puerto Rico’s status, hadn’t seen the religious Master since 1976 in Puerto Rico.
Right: Former Governor Rafael Hernandez Colon of Puerto Rico is escorted by Master Sri Chinmoy to the private meditation room at the N.Y. Art Gallery.
Published in EL DIARIO-LA PRENSA, Viernes, 8 de Septiembre de 1978
Several hundred meditation students of Sri Chinmoy took part in a 50-mile club run at Rockland Lake, in an event that began at 9 p.m. last week and concluded in the early morning of August 27th — Sri Chinmoy’s 50th birthday. Among the participants in the birthday race was Sri Chinmoy himself.
SRI CHINMOY, a spiritual teacher, sports philosopher, athlete and UN meditation leader, has lived and taught in New York for more than 11 years. From his headquarters in Jamaica, Queens, he oversees the international work of the Sri Chinmoy Centre — a non-denominational meditation organization — and the subsidiary Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team.
Acting as the starting gun for the race was the first rocket of a 265 piece fireworks display that burst forth over Rockland Lake. The display, arranged by the Zambelli family of New Castle, Pa., included a grand finale in which over 115 rockets burst in sequence in a 60-second time span.
Both events were private club celebrations organized by the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team, an International running group that sponsors races around the world. Upcoming public Rockland Lake State Park events sponsored by the Team include the Sri Chinmoy 7-Mile Run, to be held on Sunday, September 20, and the Sri Chinmoy 70-mile run, scheduled for November 1st.
Sri Chinmoy advises his meditation students to participate in athletics, particularly running, to help them achieve positive, balanced lifestyles. While many of the teacher’s students are distance runners, the annual birthday ultramarathon is usually their longest run of the year, reserved for the hardier members of the group.
Following the race, Sri Chinmoy’s students continued the 50th birthday celebration by traveling to Stamford, Ct., for an afternoon and evening of plays and musical performances.
Anyone wishing to register for the September 20th run at Rockland Lake must register by September 6th, and may contact Mr. Lodini at the Manager’s office at Rockland Lake South between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
OVERLAPPING THE race was a 50-mile stilt walk, which created a new Guinness world record category, completed in 18 hours by a team member from Norwalk, Ct.
The run and stilt walk were the finales of a marathon series of events in Sri Chinmoy’s honor that included a 700 mile solo run a 50-hour walk, a 50-kilometer swim and the breaking of five Guinness world records.
Published in The Rockland County Times, Thursday, September 3, 1981
Sri Chinmoy, an Indian guru who teaches meditation to delegates and staff at the United Nations, celebrated his 48th birthday this week by leading his disciples in a 47-mile run around a New York high school track. He is trying to persuade about 200 of them to run 90 miles a week to get ready for the New York City marathon.
Sri Chinmoy ... celebrating his 48th
Published in The Sun, Lowell, Mass., Friday. August 31, 1979
by JUDI FREEMAN
The August Celebrations have come to Queens. Two weeks of plays and art displays, track & field competitions, parades and music began on August 15 in locations around the Big Apple. Over 400 students of spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy are expected to attend, arriving from as far as Japan and Australia.
Playing host to the festival is the Queens chapter of the Sri Chinmoy center. Sri Chinmoy's followers have shaped a community in North Jamaica where its members live and work. Those who study under him make up an international clan. They hail from the West Coast and Canada, Scandinavia, Britain and parts of Asia. During these two weeks, visitors are staying at the Queens homes of Sri Chinmoy’s followers.
Within each household is a place set aside for the daily practice of meditation. Those who do not hold jobs at the United Nations and other places in Manhattan help run the “Divine Enterprises” shops near Hillside Avenue on Parsons Blvd. Their shops are easily recognized by their colorful names, such as the “Smile of the Beyond Ice Cream Parlor,” “Guru Health Foods,” and “Divine Robe Supreme Boutique.” Further up the block Sri Chinmoy himself beams down from over the Agni Press Shop.
Serving as the hub of community life is the Annam Brahma restaurant featuring Indian style vegetarian dishes. It is a showplace of eastern art fashioned from stained glass and metal by Sri Chinmoy craftsmen. While regularly opened to the public the restaurant closes during the August Celebrations to host banquets in honor of the guru's 49th birthday.
As part of their daily routine most of the Queens center members use the athletic field at nearby Jamaica High. Two days track & field events are being held as part of the festival. Using physical disciplines as part of their spiritual development, many followers are long-distance runners and cyclists. 250 students finished in last October’s New York marathon. Scheduled to be held at Jamaica High’s track, the events will be capped off by the third running of the moonlit ultramarathon. On Wednesday at midnight, 100 runners set off on the 47 mile race. The race was first run two years ago when Sri Chinmoy celebrated his 47th birthday.
Throughout the festival exhibition of Fountain Art will be on public display at 170 Thompson Street, Greenwich Village. The paintings are representative of a body of 140,000 works ranging in size from postage stamp art to 8' murals.
To commemorate his achievements, Sri Chinmoy students led the noontime Jharna-Kala parade down Hillside Avenue on August 23. As an award winning author, painter and musician Sri Chinmoy encourages creative expression among the students. An 18 hour marathon of plays, recitals and musical performances to showcase their talents began at three P.M. on August 27.
Among those to appear was Carlos Santana, chosen number one rock guitarist by ‘Guitar Player’. At the Cathedral of St. John the Divine he took part in a program entitled ‘Sri Chinmoy in Concert’ on August 21. Joined by the Rainbow band which he helped form at the Sri Chinmoy center they performed inspirational pieces composed by their leader.
Published in Queens Tribune, August 28, 1980
by an independent filmmaker in Chicago in connection with his participation in the World Parliament of Religions.
Question: What do you feel is the significance of this Chicago Parliament of Religions, which may be the largest gathering of the world's religions ever to be held?
Sri Chinmoy: The spiritual significance of this Parliament, according to my aspiring heart, is interdependence. The one and the many have to realise their interdependence. Just as the tree and its branches, leaves, flowers and fruits are interdependent, so we are all interdependent. Here many religions are meeting together to sing the oneness-heart-song.
Question: This centenary of the Parliament of Religions is, for many, associated with the name of Swami Vivekananda, one of the major figures of the Parliament that was held one hundred years ago. You have spent much of the past year giving concerts in his honour. Who was Swami Vivekananda, and what did he offer to the world?
Sri Chinmoy: I strongly feel that today’s centenary of the Parliament of Religions is taking place precisely because of Vivekananda. He was the dreamer, the lover and the possessor of a truly universal spirit. People came to the original Parliament of Religions from various religions and various cultures. In most cases they came to preach or speak about their respective religious beliefs. But Vivekananda came as a lover of humanity to sing the song of a oneness-world-home. He did not come here to propagate the views of his Hindu religion. He came to propagate the one religion that is known as Man. He spoke of the individual man who is evolving into the universal man and consciously accepting the world as his own, very own. Vivekananda was at once an ancient silence-heart and a modern dynamism-life.
Question: What does Swami Vivekananda mean to you personally?
Sri Chinmoy: Swami Vivekananda is the indomitable spirit who tells us how to love and worship God the creation. Without loving God the creation, who can ever fulfil the Message of God the Creator?
Question: There is a growing sense that spiritual values are necessary if we want to achieve peace or even survive in the future.
Sri Chinmoy: Spiritual values are of paramount importance if we want to achieve peace, for it is spirituality that consciously embodies peace. Without peace there can be no future.
Question: Which spiritual values in particular do you feel are most important in the world today?
Sri Chinmoy: Not only in the world today, but also in the world of the hoary past and in the world of the future, there are only two things that we sleeplessly need: prayer and meditation.
Question: How do you believe world peace can be achieved?
Sri Chinmoy: World peace can be achieved only through prayer and meditation. It is from our prayer and meditation that we can establish the feeling of a oneness-world-home.
Question: How, in practical terms, can spirituality actually be effective for change? This seems to be the most difficult challenge.
Sri Chinmoy: According to my inner conviction, spirituality is not something theoretical; it is something practical. Who can be more practical than God Himself? He created the world to give Himself joy and fulfilment. Spirituality is definitely practical; likewise, prayer and meditation are definitely practical. For prayer and meditation to be effective, we need only one thing: the indomitable, heroic spirit that can conquer the pride of impossibility.
Question: The average person may feel that you are exceptional and that all your achievements have nothing to do with him or her.
Sri Chinmoy: This is not true. We are all God’s children. What God wants and needs from us is receptivity. If we can be receptive or if He can make us receptive, then He will be able to accomplish in and through us whatever He wants to.
Question: What is the spiritual significance of music, which is something that every culture on earth has and cherishes?
Sri Chinmoy: There is an outer existence and an inner existence. Music touches immediately the inner existence, the existence that aspires to become happy and, at the same time, tries to share its happiness with the rest of the world. Music touches the depths of our being and brings to the fore what it discovers there. The melody and the harmony of music are not only giving joy to mankind but are also helping mankind to reach the highest state of consciousness, which is filled with peace, love, joy and fulfilment.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 6
The Liberty Torch, a group combining religion and running, ended their 8,800-mile cross-country trek yesterday at Federal Memorial Hall at 26 Wall Street.
The members of the group — 31 men averaging 27 years of age — are followers of Sri Chinmoy, director of the United Nations Meditation group — carried, a lighted silver torch through all 50 states to symbolize their faith in America. They left New York on June 26.
“Look at them coming down the street, aren’t they wonderful?” said a deeply tanned Mayor Beame, who proclaimed yesterday “Liberty Torch Day.
About 200 spectators, half of them disciples of Sri Chinmoy, gathered outside the national shrine to greet the runners, who were escorted by the police.
“I can’t begin to tell you how touched we all are seeing this sort of reception,” David I. Gershon, 29 years old, the team captain, told the crowd after placing the torch in a red-white-and-blue stand in front of the statue of George Washington.
The runners, according to Mr. Gershon, took time off from their jobs and invested $1,000 each toward the purchase of the two mobile homes and the torch that was used. Mr. Gershon, a New York City elementary-school teacher, led the runners through cities and towns ranging from Boston to Slapout, Okla.(population: nine).
“That’s where we had one of the nicest turnouts,” said Sam W. Mills, 24, from Norwalk, Conn. “Not only did the entire town come out to see us, but ·there were about 250 people from other towns who made us a big reception.”
The runners did on the average 10 miles a day and slept for five hours in one of two mobile homes that was driven by a teammate.
“We also meditated twice a day, once at noon and at 6 P.M.,” Mr. Mills said. “This kept everyone in harmony.”As for the future of the Liberty Torch, they plan to continue running and meditating together and entering marathon tournaments.
“We even feel we can run around the world for peace,” Mr. Mills said as a band played “America the Beautiful” in the background.
Published in The New York Times, August 17, 1976
SOME 275 UN staff and delegates from 80 countries joined in the second Peace Walk for United Nations Charter Day, which was held on 25 and 26 June in the North Garden. By walking through a marked area of the Garden with their countrymen, in silence and re-dedication, they commemorated the 39th anniversary of the signing of the Charter. At the end of each lap, each participant, also signed a copy of the Preamble to the Charter as a symbol of renewed support.
Following the final lap through the Garden — during which nationals from all countries walked together — a closing ceremony was held on the Visitors Plaza.
Here, Sri Chinmoy led a silent meditation for peace, and representatives of India, Samoa and Zambia took turns in reading from the Charter's Preamble, To conclude the ceremony, a message from General Assembly President, Jorge Illueca, was read, a portion of which follows:
“I assure you of my wholehearted support in this effort to renew our dedication to the spirit of the Charter, and I would urge that we avail ourselves of every opportunity of this kind, both as individuals and as representatives of our respective countries, to re-dedicate ourselves to the ideals which we are striving to realize in our devotion to 'the principles and purposes of the United Nations.
“Peace is not a passive state; it is not merely the absence of conflict. It is the effective expression by all nations of a determination to create and continuously support a world of progress and development, governed by justice and understanding.
“We see the United Nations as a church of mankind, dedicated to worshipping the aspirations of men, women and children of all races, nationalities and political and religious beliefs for a better life ...”
Left: Some 275 UN staff and delegates from 80 countries in the Peace Walk.
Right: Mr. W. Almoslechner, Austria, receives a copy of the Charter of the United Nations from Ambassador Jacobs, Antigua and Barbuda.
Published in the Secretariat News, United Nations Headquarters, New York, 16 August 1984
CULTURAL
Jharna-Kala Art Gallery: Exhibit of Sri Chinmoy’s Fountain Art. Through month of August. 10 am to 7 pm 7 days a week. 170 Thompson St, Greenwich Village.
Sri Chinmoy Centre: Jharna-Kala Parade through Jamaica, Queens. Sat Aug 23, 12 noon. Begins at 230th St and Hillside Ave.
MUSIC
Cathedral of St. John: Sri Chinmoy in Concert. Thurs Aug 21, 7.30 pm. 112th St & Amsterdam Ave.
Published in New India, August 15, 1980
The 16th annual August Celebrations of the Sri Chinmoy Center will begin tomorrow, with hundreds of the international spiritual leader’s students scheduled to take part in two weeks of festivities.
The celebrations will include free public art exhibits and concerts and will culminate on Chinmoy’s birthday Aug. 27 with a 47-mile ultramarathon.
Published in Daily News, New York, News Briefs
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed by Uzbekistan Television at Aspiration-Ground in Jamaica, New York. For the occasion, he dons traditional Samarkand robes in honour of his great-grandfather who came from this ancient Central-Asian city. Samarkand was known as a crucible of cultures and religions and was one of the most important trading regions on the Silk Road.
in Los Angeles
Sri Chinmoy made the following remarks concerning Sudhahota Carl Lewis
Interviewer: Do you believe that if a few would pray and meditate regularly in a community, they could alter — through subtle changes — the actual community itself?
Sri Chinmoy: Definitely. If regularly we can pray and meditate in a soulful way in a society, the face and fate of that society is bound to change. Right now you, my students and I are in a spiritual consciousness. We are feeling love inside us, peace inside us, joy inside us. Who has created this atmosphere? We have created this atmosphere, this spiritual vibration. So if we have one common goal, peace, easily we can achieve it through meditation. While we are meditating, energy from Above — which you can call peace or light or bliss — is descending and percolating through our entire body and also spreading through the atmosphere.
We believe in vibration. If somebody sits at the foot of a tree praying and meditating for half an hour, then an ordinary man — if he is sensitive — all of a sudden may get such a good and sacred feeling when he passes by the tree, whereas in other places he will not get the same feeling. If somebody is sensitive, when he passes by that tree he will feel something because somebody has created peace and joy there.
Suppose we are with Carl Lewis, who is the fastest man on earth. Immediately we get a vibration of speed. If we stand in front of him, immediately we feel speed, speed. I am very old and cannot run 100 metres in 20 seconds even, whereas he does it in nine point something. But as soon as I go near him, speed enters into my mind. This is not my imagination. True, on the outer plane, you and I will not be able to run at his speed. But in the inner plane, just by being near him, we actually have created speed. Speed has entered into our system. Then, when we go home, we will try to do something faster than usual. This is what being around Carl Lewis has done.
Similarly, if we go to a spiritual person and see him praying and meditating, then even if we ourselves do not pray and meditate, still we get such a peaceful vibration. This is because a spiritual person lives this peace — in the same way that Carl Lewis is living the fastest speed. Since a spiritual person is living a life of peace, joy and light, this is the kind of vibration that people will get from him. Then, when those people go home, automatically they will transmit this vibration of peace to the members of their families. This is how divine qualities such as peace, love, light and speed are always spreading.
Interviewer: So you are a friend of Carl Lewis and admire his quest?
Sri Chinmoy: We are very, very good friends. He is not only super-excellent in his outer speed but also in his inner speed, which is inspiration and aspiration. His inner speed and his outer speed are both most extraordinary. Inner speed is inner hunger for God's Love and God's Compassion. Some people have outer speed and are wanting in inner speed. In his case, he has both outer speed and inner speed in unprecedented measure.
Published in The Inner Meaning of Sport
An exhibit of peace-bird drawings by Sri Chinmoy recently opened at the United Nations Secretarial Lobby. The drawings are an expression of gratitude to “the most illumining soul and most compassionate heart of the United Nations. To me, the United Nations is the heart-home of the entire world,” says Sri Chinmoy.
The drawings range in size from a full sheet to microscopic with groups of several birds to “bird-scapes” which are composite drawings that can suggest larger birds.
Published in The New York Beacon, August 9, 2000
in Queens, New York
Question: Why, at this point, are you having this press conference?
Sri Chinmoy: My students wanted me to have this conference so that we can serve more people with our inspiration and our dedication. Our philosophy is to aspire and inspire. A few reporters are here; they too can be of great service to humanity. We are all trying to do the same thing in our own way. I am lifting weights and you are writing articles, but all of us are trying to serve and inspire humanity according to our capacity and in our own career.
Question: When did you start weightlifting?
Sri Chinmoy: Last year, on 26 June, I started seriously. With difficulty I lifted 40 pounds with one arm at that time. Only by practising regularly and faithfully is one able to make progress. About four years ago a few of my students and I tried to lift a 50-pound weight with one arm. Some of my students did it seven or 10 times, but I could not do it even three times properly. Fifty pounds was such a struggle for me! And yesterday when my students and I were practising informally, I lifted a 50-pound dumbbell 40 times. So this is progress.
Yesterday when I lifted 50 pounds 40 times, I offered the result to my Inner Pilot. Again, the time I lifted 50 pounds only three times with such difficulty, that result also I offered to my Inner Pilot. In no way was I less happy four years ago than I was yesterday. I got the same joy then as I did yesterday. To be able to lift the weight three times was the capacity that God gave me at that time, and this is the capacity He gave me yesterday. So yesterday's capacity I offered to Him cheerfully, just as I offered my previous capacity to Him. We should always offer our capacity cheerfully to God. What we have, we will give. If we have one flower, we will give it, and if we have 10 flowers, we will give them with the same joy.
Question: Weightlifting seems a most appropriate athletic sport to express our concentration. Is this why you started it?
Sri Chinmoy: I did not choose to start lifting weights. If one prays and meditates sincerely, somebody within him talks to him and tells him what to do and what not to do. You use the term 'God'; I say my 'Inner Pilot'. Last year, when I was praying and meditating, that somebody within me — you can call it an inner voice or a source of inspiration — asked me to start weightlifting. That is why I am doing it.
Now, about concentration, let us say somebody can lift 60 pounds with only his muscle-power. If the same person prays and meditates for a few minutes before he lifts, then he will have the strength not only of his body but also of his mind and his vital. Now he is getting help only from his physical. He is not getting inner determination from the vital or the tremendous will-power that is inside the mind. He is not even aware of these things. But if he prays and meditates, immediately he feels that his mind has tremendous will-power, tremendous concentration-power. If he thinks of his vital, he sees that it is full of determination. And his body is full of energy. All these good qualities he can feel when he prays and meditates. He feels that his vital, mind, heart and soul are all the friends of his body, and he takes help from them. If somebody has friends, then those friends come to help him when he needs them, and naturally his weightlifting becomes easier.
I am trying to inspire people who are not praying and meditating. I am telling them that everybody has a vital, everybody has a mind, everybody has a heart, everybody has a soul. But they are not utilising these members of their inner family the way I do. Otherwise, if I had to depend entirely on the physical, I could do next to nothing. My biceps are not even 14 inches, whereas the biceps of other weightlifters are 21 or 22 inches. My calves are not even 13 1/2 inches, and theirs are 20 inches. Their muscles are gigantic compared to mine. I can lift as much as I do because I am taking help from the strength within me. My friends the vital, mind, heart and soul are helping me from within. They are my inner friends. So I am telling those people who are not now aware of the inner life that inner strength is something real. They will be able to increase their capacity tremendously if they also take help from their inner friends.
Question: I am familiar with the weightlifting that you have done. Maybe you can give us a little better idea how you prepare for lifting the heavy weights, because I'm sure you don't just work out with heavy weights all the time.
Sri Chinmoy: It is mainly a question of my mental preparation, my mental attitude, towards the weights. To start with, I do stretching exercises for 40 or 50 minutes. Sometimes I may take up to an hour. Then I do repetitions with a 10-pound dumbbell and then with 20 pounds. From 20 immediately I go to 300, 310 and 320 — like that. So it is not a gradual progression. I just use my prayer, my meditation and my surrender-life to God's Will. I pray and meditate and, at the same time, I surrender the results to God's Will. This is what I do.
Question: Do you have a regular physical training schedule that you go through?
Sri Chinmoy: I take exercise for each part of the body: arms, legs, back and whatever muscles are required to keep the body fit. I do at least 20 different exercises daily for my upper and lower body. Then I come here every morning to do calf raises and play tennis. If there is time in the afternoon, I play tennis again. At least three hours I spend on weightlifting and bodybuilding. Running is now out of the question because of my knee, but if I am able to jog some days, then I feel really happy.
Question: Could you compare running to weightlifting? Does one give you more pleasure than the other?
Sri Chinmoy: In my life running is unparalleled; it has no second. Weightlifting was never my forte. Right from my early years I disliked bodybuilding and weightlifting. I was a sprinter and decathlete, and I did not care for weightlifting at all. It was something foreign to me. But last year I started weightlifting because of an inner command. I always listen to the dictates of my Inner Pilot, and my Inner Pilot asked me to enter into weightlifting. That is the main reason, the inner reason, why I took up weightlifting.
The outer reason, one can say, was severe knee pain, which prevented me from running. So I have to do something to keep my body fit. But the inner reason is because my Inner Pilot, my God, has commanded me to lift. For that reason I do it cheerfully. But if I am asked to make a comparison between running and weightlifting, running will always remain my most favourite sport.
Question: Did your feeling about weightlifting change as you started to do it? Do you now like it?
Sri Chinmoy: Unfortunately, even now I do not really enjoy it. Only my surrender to my Inner Pilot compels me to do it. But I do it obediently and even cheerfully, and definitely I do it devotedly. As I said, I pray and meditate. As soon as I pray and meditate, I become a devoted instrument of God, and then automatically I become cheerful.
Question: Do you feel that your weightlifting will be an inspiration for others?
Sri Chinmoy: I do feel there are countless people on earth who do not believe in the inner power, the inner life. They feel that the outer strength and the outer life are everything. I do not agree with them. There is an inner life; there is spirit, and my ability to lift these heavy weights proves that it can work in matter as well.
We have to bring to the fore our inner capacities and inner power with our prayer and meditation. Standing against us is ignorance. But if our outer determination and our inner aspiration can go together, that means that two friends of ours are fighting against one enemy in our life's tug-of-war, so we are bound to win. There are professional bodybuilders and weightlifters who have also come to the conclusion that there is something called the spirit, inner power, and it helps them considerably in their bodybuilding and weightlifting. These things are like friends. If I have an extra friend, I will take help from that friend.
Question: How does your weightlifting relate to your many other aspects of working for world peace?
Sri Chinmoy: Weightlifting goes side by side with this work. Everything that inspires a human being to be a better citizen of the world is good and divine. As a poet, if I can write inspirational poems, then definitely they will serve humanity's aspiration. As an artist, if I can draw something beautiful and soulful, then again it serves and inspires mankind. As a singer and composer, it is the same. No matter what I do, if there is aspiration behind it, then that aspiration enters into mankind as inspiration. When I am composing or performing or doing anything else, the capacity of my aspiration will eventually enter into human beings as inspiration, and they will derive much benefit from it.
The things that I am doing are not my sole monopoly. Everybody can try them and everybody, if they are sincere and dedicated, will reach their goal. When I do weightlifting, I pray and meditate. When I compose songs, I pray and meditate. It is the prayer and meditation in each and every activity of mine that is helping me and others. But this aspiration-life is for all. Everybody wants to succeed. Everybody wants to achieve personal goals in his inner life or his outer life. Everybody wants to be a better person, to make progress, to go beyond. And the best and fastest way to do these things is to use prayer and meditation along with the outer things that are required to achieve the goal.
Question: When you were practising to lift 303 pounds, how did you maintain your enthusiasm in spite of failing so many times?
Sri Chinmoy: I failed 213 times. So many times I failed and failed. But now I am trying to do 320 pounds. God knows how many days it will take. What I did yesterday was a personal record. But all the time I am competing with myself. This also is what I teach my students to do. Always compete with yourself; do not compete with anybody else. It is stupidity on our part to compete with others. If I think that I am the best boxer, immediately I will turn around and see a Muhammad Ali there. In any field, if anybody claims to be the best, I tell you, he is a fool, because sooner than at once somebody else will come up out of the blue and defeat him. But if we compete only with ourselves, we will remain not only the present but also the future champion.
Today I have lifted 300 pounds. Tomorrow if I can do 310, then who is defeating me? I am defeating myself. So here there is no defeat; there is only progress, and progress is what we want. Success we cannot depend on, because somebody will always come along and make our success pale into insignificance. When we live in the success-world, sooner than at once we are doomed to frustration. But when we live in the progress-world, always there is tremendous joy. This joy comes not only from transcending one's capacities but from the effort itself. Say I have set my goal at 300 pounds, and I cannot do it. The very fact that I have been devotedly practising and practising gives me joy, and the tenacity or perseverance that I am showing is itself progress. Anything that we do devotedly and soulfully helps us make progress.
So always we have to compete with ourselves in every field. If I have teeming doubts, then I will pray and meditate to minimise and decrease my doubts, and that will be my progress. If I have 10 desires — I want a Cadillac, three houses and so forth — then I will reduce my desires to nine, then eight and like that, finally, to one or no desires. This is how we can have peace of mind. If we have wisdom, we will try to minimise our earthly necessities and increase our Heavenly necessities. With our prayer-life and meditation-life we will try to become a better person by minimising our uncomely qualities like jealousy, insecurity and impurity. But if we have an iota of purity or an iota of love, then we will try to increase it. Positive qualities we shall try to increase and negative qualities we shall decrease and diminish. This is our philosophy.
In order to do that, we have to accept the world and live in the world. Here on earth each of us has to become a good person. If we can become a good person on earth and leave behind us our good qualities, then the whole world will make progress as we go farther and deeper and higher. In this way, each individual has the capacity to offer something for the betterment of the world.
Question: Do you feel that the races you sponsor also help and inspire people?
Sri Chinmoy: Running is helping and inspiring people considerably, and in our races we have been inspiring thousands of people all over the world.
Question: It seems that everything which you are involved in is for mankind. Do you ever do anything for your own personal satisfaction?
Sri Chinmoy: Everything I do is meant to please God, my Inner Pilot. While pleasing Him, I am being satisfied. I do not have a sense of separativity. If I can consciously and soulfully please Him in His own Way, then I feel that I am more than rewarded. If I establish my oneness totally with you, then on the strength of my oneness, whatever gives you joy definitely gives me joy. My Inner Pilot is my highest reality-existence, and I am part and parcel of Him. So when I please Him in His own Way, I am more than pleased.
Question: If you want to use your weightlifting as an inspiration, why not use a more conventional type of lift that is more recognizable to the general public?
Sri Chinmoy: What you are asking is an excellent question. Why do I not do something conventional so that everybody can accept or reject it? There are two reasons. The outer reason is this: we have to go forward with new ideas. Why should I only follow the old system? Every day science is making new discoveries. If we go on reading the same old book, although it may be a good book, an excellent book, it becomes boring. So if somebody finds a new book, written in a different style, with different ideas, then everybody is delighted.
In a garden there are many beautiful roses, and you have been seeing these roses all your life in that particular garden. Now if you add some totally new flowers, will they in any way take away the beauty of the garden? It may no longer be a conventional rose garden, but the new flowers will only add to the beauty of the garden. Roses are extremely beautiful, and we appreciate their beauty and fragrance. But if other flowers also can be added, then we appreciate them also.
If a tree has many branches instead of only one or two, and if these branches are of different sizes and shapes, then each one will offer new interest and new beauty. So this is the outer reason why I do the lifts that I do.
The inner reason is that if I want to please somebody in my life more than anything else, if I want to please that person at every moment consciously, soulfully and unconditionally, then I will do it. The person that I want to please is my Inner Pilot, my Beloved Supreme. My Inner Pilot wants me to do it this way, so I am doing it happily, cheerfully and unconditionally. But if He changes His Mind, if He wants me to do it in the conventional way, then I will do that. The inner reason is the main reason why I do these kinds of lifts. But if you are looking for outer justification, it is because if you have more than just roses in a garden, it only adds to the beauty of the garden and in no way diminishes the beauty and fragrance of the roses. Something new is always interesting and charming.
Question: Do you get discouraged that there are no signs of the world accepting peace?
Sri Chinmoy: I am not discouraged because anything that is great, anything that is enduring, anything that is going to last forever, takes time to come about. We sow the seed and gradually it germinates. After some time it becomes a tiny plant, then a sapling and finally a huge banyan tree. It takes such a long time for a seed to grow into a giant banyan tree, but that tree is something really remarkable, and it lasts for a long time. If just yesterday I sowed the seed, and today I look for the plant, then I will be doomed to disappointment. Everything takes time. I am in kindergarten, but my goal is to get a Master's Degree or Ph.D. Why should I be discouraged if I cannot achieve my goal overnight?
The peace movement has been going on for a long time. But in terms of its success or progress, it is nowhere near the goal. Humanity's search for peace has been going on for millennia, whereas our own peace movement has just begun. As long as we know that we are walking along the road and have not given up, then we know that eventually we are bound to reach our destination. So I am not discouraged. I will be discouraged the day I give up offering my peace concerts or peace prayers and meditations at the United Nations and elsewhere. If I give up, only then do I really fail. But while walking along the road, although the destination is far, far, far away, the very fact that I am trying and struggling gives me satisfaction.
As long as I am still on the road, even though I am only walking or crawling, one day I will be inspired to jog, the next day I will be inspired to run faster and the third day I will be inspired to sprint. If I do not have the capacity to run or sprint, then I will crawl. But if I give up and turn around and say, "This road is not meant for me; the world is never going to be peaceful," then real disappointment will come into my life. If I stop my prayer-life or service-life, that is when I will be truly disappointed.
The success of our peace movement is up to the world. Today the world is not receptive, but perhaps tomorrow it will be. Every day we are not in a cheerful consciousness; every day we do not see the sun. But we cannot say that there is no sun. The sun eventually does appear.
Question: How can an athlete establish peace inside himself to give him strength?
Sri Chinmoy: An athlete can have the same kind of peace as a seeker who is consciously praying and meditating for world peace. An athlete can have peace on the strength of his oneness. Before he starts his competition, he can just take a fleeting second to feel: "No matter who is first, I will be equally happy, for whoever wins is my brother or sister. If I did not run or jump, there would be no competition, so that person could not be a winner. Again, if I win, it is only because others have also run and jumped."
Now, if I have won the race, then naturally I will be happy. But when I look around and see that my friend or my brother, who has not done well, is unhappy, at that time do I get real happiness? I am being extolled to the skies because I have won, but my brother who has lost is doomed to disappointment. I sincerely love my brother, so how can I be happy? How can I have peace?
I will only have happiness if I can identify myself with his failure-life, if I can enter into his heart and feel the same sadness, suffering and shock that he is experiencing. I have already identified myself with my success-life, and I am very proud and happy. Now, if I can immediately enter into my friend's sadness and be implicitly one with his suffering, then I will be really happy. At that time my victory will give me joy and my sincere identification with the other person's defeat will also give me joy. This joy and happiness, you can say, is peace. Because of my victory I am getting happiness, which is peace, and also on the strength of my oneness with my friend's loss I am getting peace.
Then I will offer my achievement to the Source, who has given me the capacity to win, and I will offer my friend's sadness and failure-life equally to the One who alone can give victory and defeat. If an athlete can offer up the results to God, then no matter whether he is first or last he will be cheerful. This cheerfulness, along with his oneness with the winner's or loser's life, will definitely give him peace of mind.
This applies not only to athletics but to everything that we do on earth. Oneness, oneness, oneness! If we think of oneness before we do something, if we can maintain this feeling of oneness while we are acting and also at the end of our action, then there will always be peace. From the beginning to the end, we have to sing the song of oneness.
Let us say we are running in a marathon. There are thousands of other people going to the same destination. Bill Rodgers will run; I will also run. Bill Rodgers will be first and I will be last. But if I have established oneness with the other runners, then I will be equally happy because they are all part and parcel of my life. Then again, if Bill Rodgers has established his oneness with me and I come first, then he will get the greatest joy. He will not feel miserable that one part of him has reached the goal before another part. No!
Without oneness, no matter what we do, we are unhappy. Even when we are successful, the joy we get does not last. Immediately somebody will bring the news that another person has done better, or doubt will enter into our mind and we will feel that tomorrow somebody will defeat us. At that time imaginary unhappiness we bring into our lives. How can one have peace when he is all the time thinking that his achievement is not the best, or that somebody else will do better? But if we have established our oneness not only with the past and the present but also with the future, then we are bound to have peace all the time. If somebody does something better than we do, we feel that that person is only an extension of our own lives. Yesterday I did something with one name and form, and tomorrow, under the name of somebody else, I will do the same or better.
Krishna, Buddha, Christ and others are spiritual Masters. They came into the world at different times, yet they are all one. Only they have different names and forms. With ordinary people also, when somebody does something great, he doesn't have to worry that tomorrow his capacity will be eclipsed. No, tomorrow again it will be he, with a new name and form, who will accomplish something better than what he did today. In oneness there is always peace.
Yesterday I could lift 40 pounds, today I am lifting 60 and tomorrow I will do 70. I know that I am the same person who is doing the lifting, so I am not unhappy each time my previous record is surpassed. But if division starts, then I will be in trouble. There is always so much division even in our own being — especially between the mind and the heart and between the body and the vital. When I lift something, if there is division, immediately my mind will try to take the credit. Then the vital will say, "No, it was my determination," and try to take the credit. The body will say, "Who lifted it up?" The heart will say, "It was I, part of my existence." And the soul will say, "You know, if I don't remain inside the body, all the rest of you are dead — heart, vital, mind and body." So every part of me will want to take the credit for my success.
But because there is oneness, the soul is not telling the mind, vital and body, "Because of me you have won." The body is not telling the other members of my life, "No, because of me you have won." The body knows that if the vital does not offer determination, I cannot succeed. Again, the vital knows that if the mind is not properly controlled, I will not be able to lift. My soul, heart, mind, vital and body could have revolted, but they did not, because I have already established my oneness with them. Each one separately could have fought against each other, but they are not fighting because we have established oneness. So we have to always feel oneness the way the body, vital, mind, heart and soul of an individual feel oneness with one another and work together to reach the goal. In this way we are bound to have peace.
Question: Would you have any message for coaches who are training athletes?
Sri Chinmoy: My simple message that I can offer to coaches is to have a childlike heart, a oneness-heart with their students. They should try to feel constant oneness not only with their students' outer needs but also with their inner needs. Most coaches help their students outwardly, but inwardly they are unable to help. But if they pray and meditate along with their students while the students are performing, they can help their students considerably. Coaches should practise the prayer-life and meditation-life and also encourage their students to do the same. On the outer plane they have wisdom; they know much more than their students. But if they do not take help from their own inner resources and also help their students on the inner plane, then their students may not or cannot develop to their greatest potential. Coaches should dive deep within and bring to the fore their own inspiration, aspiration, dedication, determination and will-power and offer these capacities to their students. In that way the students and the coaches will work together in their inner lives of aspiration and their outer lives of dedication, and the success they have will be tremendous and will last forever.
Question: Is there any kind of relationship that you feel you have with the weights when you step up to them?
Sri Chinmoy: On the strength of my prayer and meditation I try to enter into the material consciousness and become part and parcel of the weights that I lift. When I deal with matter, I try to become inseparably one with it. So when I lift up the weights, I feel that my life-breath has entered into the metal plates and that from the metal this life-breath has entered back into me. This is how I try to establish my oneness with the weights. In this way I feel life in the weights and the weights feel life in me. Otherwise, if I just touch them, they do not reciprocate, and we do not offer our life-breath to each other.
Question: Now that you have achieved a certain standard in the one-arm lift and calf raise, do you have other goals?
Sri Chinmoy: Ours is the philosophy of self-transcendence. Based on this philosophy, every day I am trying to become a better instrument of God. So in my case there is no such thing as an ultimate goal. As soon as I reach a goal, I know that my Inner Pilot will not allow me to stop. He will always want me to continue. As long as He grants me inspiration, aspiration and dedication, I will continue most faithfully attaining new goals.
Question: If I am compelled to adopt a sport which gives me less joy, can my inner progress be as great?
Sri Chinmoy: Your inner progress will always remain the same if you have a good attitude and the right approach to the goal. Because of some injuries or owing to circumstances, let us say that you cannot do the particular thing you want and you have to do something else. At this time you have to know whether you are doing this new thing to please yourself or to please God. If you are doing it to please yourself, then you may feel miserable, for you may feel that the old world which you were compelled to give up has given you so much joy, whereas you will not be able to derive the same kind of joy from your present life.
In my case, for instance, I have been running all my life and have derived tremendous joy from my running life. This new life — bodybuilding — is something totally new to me. I have had to say good-bye to my old, long-established friend and to make somebody else my close and intimate friend. Now, if I approach weightlifting thinking that I have discarded an old friend and am now trying to make a new friend, then naturally I will feel miserable. But there is another approach. I can feel that my old friend has played his role in my outer life, and now I have a new friend who is encouraging me and whom I am encouraging. That does not mean I will have nothing to do with my old friend. No! Still he is deep inside my heart, and whatever joy I got from him or gave to him I still have with me. I am full of love for my old friend and I am full of gratitude to him. But in the outer life, my old friend is unable to help me in any way, and I am unable to help him at the present moment.
With my new friend, which is weightlifting, I now have to establish the same kind of friendship. If I can have the same goodwill towards my new friend, and if my new friend can have the same goodwill towards me, then I will make the same progress. Inside the new friend also, I have to feel my inner Guide. Twenty years ago my Inner Pilot asked me to run, and I did it. Now, some unhappy injury is preventing me from running, but these are only outer circumstances. Even while I was in the prime of my running career, if my Inner Pilot had asked me to give up running and do weightlifting, if I had done it cheerfully, then as a seeker I would have made the same progress by doing weightlifting as I made through running. If He wants me to change my career or to change my way of life and to enter into a new field, then I can make the best progress by doing so cheerfully. A seeker can get lasting joy and make the fastest progress no matter what he does if he is doing it because he wants to please God, his Inner Pilot.
If a seeker wants to make progress, he has to identify himself cheerfully with the thing that he is practising, and he has to remember all the time that it is not personal success or personal glory but oneness-joy and oneness-peace that he is aiming at. Since his goal is certain, his approach to the goal should be sincere and direct, and he should throw himself into each activity soulfully, enthusiastically and unconditionally.
Question: Have you been working with a teacher, or do you set your own training?
Sri Chinmoy: Originally I didn't have any outer teacher, but right now I do have a teacher. Bill Pearl, champion of champions, five times Mr. Universe, is kind enough to teach me. Mr. Pearl has given me a set of exercises. I am a bad student, but he forgives me. The other day I had a talk with him. I told him that I am unable to do all the exercises that he has given me; it is too much for me. But he is very kind. He said, do your own exercises first, and then try to adapt yourself to my schedule." I am not totally fit for all the exercises that he has given me, but I will definitely start doing them very devotedly and faithfully. So Bill Pearl is now my Himalayan bodybuilding Guru, and my inner Guru is God the Supreme.
Question: Do you ever have doubts that you will achieve your goals?
Sri Chinmoy: If I had the doubtful consciousness, after several attempts I would give up. Doubt I gave up long, long ago. We doubt only when we are afraid of failure. But in my philosophy, defeat and victory we accept with equal cheerfulness. Whether my Inner Pilot wants to give me the experience of failure or the experience of success, I will be equally happy because mine is the way of surrender. If God gets joy by granting me defeat, and I have oneness with Him, then on the strength of my oneness I myself will have joy in my defeat.
It is the same with success. When I defeat my spiritual children in tennis, in no way do I get malicious pleasure. As an individual, if I have victory I am happy. But on the strength of my inseparable oneness with my students, if they are suffering, if they are sad that they have lost to me, I try to take their sadness into myself like a magnet, and then I get tremendous joy. So their defeat I take as my defeat, which is only an experience, and my victory I take also as just another experience.
If I take both defeat and victory as an experience, then doubt cannot enter. If I am unable to do something, it is an experience, and if I am able to do it, this is another experience. So how can doubt come? I see the experience that I get from victory and the experience that I get from defeat as equally good experiences; therefore, doubt cannot torture me. Doubt tortures me only when I say, "What will happen to me if I don't do something, if I can't do something?" If I don't do something, the world is not going to dissolve. And if I do it, the world is not going to be saved. If I lose, the experience I am getting is coming from Above; and if I win, the experience is also coming from Above.
When we can see victory and defeat as equal, then there can be no doubt whatsoever. If I cannot do something, I am happy, and if I can do that thing, I am equally happy — because both are, after all, only experiences that I am getting, and these experiences my Inner Pilot is Himself having in and through me.
Question: How does one transfer your regimen and dedication for something like weightlifting toward something like running or something that is intangible, like art?
Sri Chinmoy: First one has to develop inspiration. Right now I am getting inspiration, and I am using it for weightlifting. I can also use it for tennis; I can use it for art; I can use it for composing songs.
Question: You have used the term 'new era' when talking about your achievements. Could you explain what this means?
Sri Chinmoy: Anything that has been done in the past is recorded and is well appreciated. If a new idea or a new goal enters into a human being, then he becomes the pioneer in that particular field. When people normally speak about an era, they are talking about a period of time when an individual or a group of individuals has achieved certain things. An era depends entirely on the individual achievement or collective achievement that occurred during a number of years. But I see an era in terms of vision. I take an era as the vision of human beings for a certain period in life or in history. If somebody comes with new inspiration and new aspiration, he opens a new door for mankind to look forward and upward and offers a new vision. So 'new era' to me means the opening of a new door in our consciousness that allows us to go forward rather than stay with the past. Again, if there is something helpful in the past, we shall not discard it. The old way or traditional way or, let us say, the conventional way, we are not discarding. Because it is helpful and beneficial, we shall accept it. But if somebody discovers something new — a new method, a new approach to reality — then definitely he is embarking on a new discovery. And this new discovery itself brings in a new era.
Question: What would you like our readers to get from the example of your weightlifting?
Sri Chinmoy: It is very simple. It is said that Indian teachers do not accept society as such. It is said that they do not care for the world but they care only for their spiritual life, that they like to be in the Himalayan caves and practise austerity and so forth. As long as they can get their own realisation, it is more than enough for them. But the philosophy that I have been taught from deep within is different. My philosophy says that we have to be in the world and we have to be for the world. We have to be like a boat. The boat is in the water, but the water does not enter into the boat. This is the boat that is taking us from ignorance to knowledge-shore.
Also I would like to tell the world not to neglect the body-consciousness. God has given us the body. The body is the temple, and the heart is the shrine where the deity within resides. If we do not pay the necessary attention to the body, then the temple will be weak or defective. Without a fit temple, how can you help the presiding deity inside? So I feel that the body must be kept fit. But I will never say that one must have larger-than-the-largest muscles. No, only I say that physical fitness is of paramount importance, and by taking exercise, one can keep the body fit. Again, through my weightlifting I wish to tell the outer world that the world of spirit does exist. People see that my physique is nothing in comparison to the physiques of the professional bodybuilders. Their biceps will be 22 inches whereas mine are not even 14, and their calves will be 18 to 20 inches while mine are 13 1/2 . Yet I can lift weights that many of them cannot lift So what does it prove? It proves that the inner spirit, or the mental and psychic power, can be of great assistance to the body when it is brought to the fore. Otherwise my physical body would never be able to lift this kind of weight. It is my prayer-life and meditation-life that, through God's Grace, are enabling me to do this. I am also trying to show that the inner world has to be a source of inspiration to the outer world. They should not be like opposite poles — North Pole and South Pole. No, they have to be united. The body and the soul must go together.
Question: Quite a few people in the past and even in the present have divided the physical and spiritual development.
Sri Chinmoy: People are clever. But cleverness and wisdom are two different things. Seekers in the hoary past wanted their own salvation, their own liberation, their own realisation. The spiritual seekers had problems of their own, but they were able to overcome these problems on the strength of their aspiration. But as soon as they dealt with the world, the problems they encountered were enormous, and they could not cope with them. As soon as they started mixing with human beings who had not reached the highest, they met tremendous problems. So they withdrew. They said, "I will remain at the top of the mango tree. I climbed up the mango tree and now I will eat mangoes to my heart's content. I am not going to come down to share with you. Your ignorance is like a hungry wolf. If I come down to share with you, then you may devour me instead of taking the mango from me." So they did not accept the world. Instead, they became clever.
But if a seeker is wise, then he will develop his oneness with the world. The same God who created me also created you. He who gave me the capacity to have illumination is infinitely higher than I am. But out of His infinite Bounty, He gave me the little capacity I have. If He could give me a little capacity out of His boundless Compassion, then will I not share it with you? If I have got something nice from somebody, if I am a good person, then definitely I will share it with others.
If one is a seeker, at every moment the world will ridicule him. But if the seeker feels the necessity, the command from within, to help the world, then he sees that the world is only one step behind him. If he has wisdom-light, on the strength of his oneness he will say to the world, "I know a little more than you; I am a little more aware than you because of my spiritual practice. But we are still brothers." He takes the outer world as his younger brother and feels that he has a little more knowledge and wisdom. So he tells his brother, "I am not the Father, but I will take you to Him. I am not taking you to myself but to the One from whom I have received my own illumination. I know where our Father is. I will take you to Him, and He will give you Joy. Just come with me." The spiritual figures must say, "I am not the Goal, but I know the Goal. I am the guide."
When the mother feeds her child, sometimes the child does not want to eat. But the mother feels it is obligatory on her part to feed her child. Otherwise, the child will not be able to live on earth. Sometimes the child is very bad and will resist the mother in every possible way. But the mother keeps trying because she knows that the child has to eat. Similarly, people who are fully awakened feel it is their bounded duty to be of service to the world, which is their little brother Even though the little brother is not listening to them, they keep trying because they know that they have something really good, which will be of tremendous help to their little brother. This is the attitude of the modern-day spiritual Masters. It is like the mother and the child. You may not accept me, you may kick me countless times, but still I keep coming to you because of my oneness with you.
God gave me my oneness with Him; then He gave me His oneness with His creation. So God the Creator and God the creation are one in my life. God the Creator and God the creation I have to accept together. If society and the outer world are God the creation, then how can we separate them from God the Creator? They are inseparably one, like water and ice.
Published in Aspiration-Body, Illumination-Soul, part 1
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed by Mark Teich from Omni magazine at Aspiration-Ground in Jamaica, New York.
Question: Lifting up human beings looks very easy for you.
Sri Chinmoy: Tomorrow I shall complete 1,300. It will be my last day of lifting.
Question: Why do you want it to be your last?
Sri Chinmoy: Somewhere I have to stop! I have been to six continents and I will have lifted 1,300 human beings. It is enough for me.
Question: You have not puffed up exactly. You do not have a huge frame. What are the principles you use? What has made you this strong without looking huge?
Sri Chinmoy: Prayer and meditation. I pray and meditate and I entirely depend on God's Grace, God's Compassion.
Question: Before you used to run and then I understand that you hurt yourself?
Sri Chinmoy: I ran beyond my capacity and hurt my right knee. I should not have run 22 marathons and a few ultra-marathons. It was not meant for me. In India, I was a sprinter.
Question: You are built more like a sprinter.
Sri Chinmoy: I was brought up in a spiritual community. There I practised sports — running, jumping, throwing and so forth.
Question: The prayer and meditation you do, are they more or less helpful according to what type of training you do?
Sri Chinmoy: It is prayer and meditation that bring to me the things that are necessary, essential. Prayer and meditation determine beforehand what is needed. To give you an example: here in America, I needed some special weightlifting equipment. God envisioned the fulfilment of His Dream in and through me, and God chose an Australian student of mine as the instrument to build my exercise machines. I sincerely feel it is a great blessing and God's boundless Grace. He has helped me tremendously, far, far beyond my imagination, in my weightlifting world for the last four years.
Question: But God wanted you to work to achieve it.
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, physically and spiritually. Matter and spirit must go together. Spirit is within, matter is without. We have to sow the seed under the ground. Then only it germinates and becomes a tiny plant, and then a huge tree, a banyan tree. But the seed was sown under the ground. Similarly, our inner life comes first. When the inner life comes to the fore, it accepts, assimilates and transforms the outer life in order to make us perfect.
Question: Right before you lifted, I saw you focussing. In sports now the big thing is visualisation. Were you doing anything of that or was it just prayer?
Sri Chinmoy: At that time, I was only silencing my mind. When I do anything, to start with I silence my mind. When I silence my mind, tremendous energy flows in and through me; I draw cosmic energy. As soon as I silence my mind, cosmic energy enters into my entire being.
Question: Are you thinking anything?
Sri Chinmoy: Just the opposite; my mind is absolutely blank. Once you silence the mind, it becomes as vast as the sky, as vast as the ocean. When we think, we limit ourselves. Thoughts enter into our mind in a fleeting second. It is like a tug-of-war or a zoo. But if we silence the mind, then we feel that we are flying in the sky like a bird. The sky is not affected by the bird flying and the bird is enjoying itself and getting energy and inspiration from the sky itself.
Question: It is very similar, really, to what they talk of as the white zone in sports. The athlete gets to the purely instinctive level where there is no thought. When you are first learning, you analyse what you are doing. At a certain point, you stop.
Sri Chinmoy: When you reach a certain level, it becomes automatic. A singer takes lessons for years, but once he develops a haunting voice, he does not have to go through all the preliminary exercises. When he is actually performing, he does not have to worry. A dancer learns all the steps while practising, but at the time of the actual performance, his movements will be spontaneous. Something reveals itself from within.
Question: The irony of it is that it is trained instinct.
Sri Chinmoy: There is no time to think, you just do it. There is a spontaneous joy. When we practise, we develop confidence. If we do not practise, we have no idea what we can do, how much can be brought to the fore.
Question: What is the nature of your training? p
Sri Chinmoy: Every day I do not lift people, but weight training I do every day. I use free weights up to 120 pounds and then I use about twenty different types of machines to strengthen my muscles and different parts of my body. I do this for at least three hours early in the morning. Around eight o'clock I come here to Aspiration-Ground and take some more exercise.
[Sri Chinmoy lifts Mark Teich]
Question: Thank you very much. That is a very strange sensation. Am I one of the numbers now?
Sri Chinmoy: You are number 1,299!
Published in Conversations with Sri Chinmoy
NEW YORK — James P. Grant, executive director of UNICEF, received the U Thant Peace Award Sept. 20 at an interfaith prayer breakfast at UNICEF House.
The award, presented by Sri Chinmoy: The Peace Meditation at the United Nations, cited Grant’s lifetime of exceptional world service, calling him an “inspirational example” of “compassion, concern and tireless energy in service to the world family.”
When Sri Chinmoy, leader of the Meditation Group, made the presentation, Grant said it was a privilege to receive the award “from such treasured hands and from such a treasured group.”
The prayer breakfast, organized by The Peace Meditation at the U.N., included brief prayers and remarks by members of six religions. Sri Chinmoy opened the event with a silent meditation.
The breakfast is held annually in conjunction with an early morning “Peace Walk” through the streets of Manhattan by U.N. delegates and staff carrying their national flags. The Peace Walk is one of more than 70 similar events held worldwide, coordinated by the Meditation Croup, to commemorate the opening of the U.N. General Assembly.
James P. Grant, executive director of UNICEF greets Sri Chinmoy at the prayer breakfast at UNICEF House Sept. 20.
Published in Anahata Nada, VOLUME 24, AUGUST – MID-NOVEMBER 1994
Students of Sri Chinmoy embarked Aug. 3 on a 700-mile non-stop relay walk through scenic and historic sites in New York as an expression of gratitude to the state which has been their spiritual teacher's home since 1964.
A series of three-member teams walked day and night along a course that meandered through the Hudson Valley up to Lake George and Ticonderoga, and then back down through the Catskill and Adirondack Mountains. The route began and ended at the Sri Chinmoy Church in Bayside, Queens.
Local officials came out to greet walkers at more than 40 towns and historic sites, and several offered official letters of appreciation.
In connection with the walk, Sri Chinmoy wrote eight spiritual walking songs, which were sung at various locations, and gave a concert Aug. 5 in Albany.
Throughout the walk, which Sri Chinmoy named "Aspiration-Plants and Gratitude-Leaves of New York," the participants attempted to maintain a meditative consciousness, and at each mile marker they paused to meditate and leave a flower of gratitude. By the time the walkers returned home 10 days later, a "necklace" of gratitude-light had been traced around the Empire State.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 5, Numbers 6-7, July-August 1979
Sri Chinmoy is interviewed by a journalist from Art Speaks magazine at his exhibition of 70,000 Dream-Freedom-Peace-Birds at 66 Crosby St, Soho, New York.
Interviewer: Does the work of pop art have any relevance to your art — in other words, to very directly spiritual art?
Sri Chinmoy: You have to forgive me. It is not that I do not appreciate pop art. It is only that I have not been to a museum for a long, long time. In 1964, when I first came to New York, I went to the Asia Society, where they had the works of a few Eastern artists. Then I visited a few other museums, but I could not understand what I saw. Of course, art is not something to be understood; it is something to be felt. Only I am saying that it was so foreign to me that I could not appreciate it; I am in no way criticising or judging it.
I never thought that God would make me an artist. In my life I have done quite a few things through the Grace of God. I play a number of musical instruments, but there is nobody who teaches me. Again, although I did not complete high school, my philosophy is taught at some universities and many people read my books. I studied a little art in school, around 1944, but I never had real instruction.
Everything I do is entirely the result of God's Grace. Out of His infinite Compassion, He blesses me with inspiration. His inspiration is all the time helping and guiding me in my painting and in everything else. Therefore, it has not been necessary for me to see the work of other artists in order to paint. It is not because I do not appreciate them; far from it. The reason is that I get all my inspiration from God.
Interviewer: That is wonderful! I don't think you need it, obviously.
Sri Chinmoy: When I look at a painting, I try to feel its inner existence, which we call the soul. If a painting gives me an immediate inner thrill or a feeling of joy, if it touches my aspiring heart and makes me want to become a better person, then I feel that painting is meaningful for me. But if a particular work of art does not give my aspiring heart immediate inspiration, then I find it very difficult to appreciate. When I get a magnetic pull from a painting, then I become one with it. But if I see there is a yawning gulf between the painting and my own inspiration or aspiration, then I am unable to identify and become inseparably one with the artist and his painting. In no way am I judging these artists or their paintings; it is a question of my incapacity or my capacity. There are millions of people who do appreciate these paintings.
Interviewer: It makes absolute sense to me. You said what I was hoping you would say, because I perceive your work as very unique and apart from other artwork — and I like that.
Sri Chinmoy: Everything that I do comes from my life of prayer and meditation. I do not use the mind; I use the heart. I try to make my heart a receptive instrument so that God, the Supreme Artist, can paint in and through me. I am like a ballpoint pen. Somebody is using me to write something. Somebody is acting in and through me. Through my prayer and meditation, I try only to be receptive to God's Grace, which is descending from Above. If somebody gives us a gift, we receive it with tremendous gratitude. Similarly, God is supplying me with inspiration and aspiration, and I am extremely, extremely grateful to Him. I know that without Him I can do nothing and I am nothing.
Interviewer: I can't imagine any better reason to create art. I am very happy with that answer. I marvel at your work! Thank you very much.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 3
ALBANY — Musician, artist and spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy will present a concert of music for meditation at 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Place Theater.
Chinmoy, who plays the flute and the esraj (a Bengali stringed instrument, has performed in several New York City concert halls. He is spiritual leader of meditation centers in 65 cities including Albany. He conducts twice-weekly meditation sessions for United Nations diplomats and their staff.
The free concert is being held in conjunction with a 700-mile relay walk which will pass through Albany at 9· 30 on Monday morning on State and Swan streets. The Sri Chinmoy Center is sponsoring the walking tribute to the state.
Published in the Schenectady Gazette, page 2, Saturday Morning, August 4, 1979
Pondicherry, the home of Sri Aurobindo's Ashram, where Sri Chinmoy lived for much of his youth and young adulthood, was named a Sri Chinmoy Peace-City on Aug. 8.
Several other spiritual locations in India were also recently declared Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossoms. The sacred Ganges River and the Jamuna River, associated with Sri Krishna (he grew up on its banks), became Peace-Blossoms this August.
Other recent Indian Peace-Blossoms include the cities of Haridwar and Rishikesh at the foot of the Himalayas, where pilgrims have been gathering for thousands of years ... Rameshwaram, where Lord Rama established his famous Shiva Temple ... Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha ... and Tiruvannamalai and Arunachala, the city and nearby mountain where spiritual Master Ramana Maharshi built his Ashram.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 30, Mid-July 2000–Mid-November 2000
Seven Sri Chinmoy swimmers carried out a 123-mile relay swim through the rivers, lakes and other waterways of the Rideau Waterway System to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Rideau Canal.
The swimmers, covering about 18 miles a day in half-hour shifts during daylight hours, began on Lake Ontario at Kingston on 27 July and ended in the Rideau Canal in Ottawa on 2 August.
In connection with the event, Canada's Minister of Amateur Sports and Fitness, Gerald Regan, presented Sri Chinmoy with a certificate for his contribution to recreation and sports in Canada.
Published in Anahata Nada, Volume 9, Nos. 5-8, May-August 1982
at an exhibition of 70,000 Dream-Freedom-Peace-Birds, Soho, New York
Interviewer: Is there one thing that inspired you to do all these small drawings of birds?
Sri Chinmoy: I am a truth-seeker and God-lover. I pray and meditate. From my prayer and meditation I receive inner messages and inner inspiration to compose songs, write poems, draw and do various other things. This inspiration carries me. I try to receive inspiration and aspiration from within, and with this inspiration and aspiration I try to be of service to mankind in various ways.
Interviewer: So as part of this inspiration, did you feel that birds were something that you should draw?
Sri Chinmoy: For me, birds have a very special significance; they embody freedom. We see a bird flying in the sky, and it reminds us of our own inner freedom. As I said before, I am a truth-seeker and a God-lover. I feel that inside each of us there is an inner existence that we call the soul. The soul, like a bird, flies in the sky of God’s Infinity. When we think of birds flying in the sky, we are reminded of our own soul-bird flying in the sky of Infinity.
If we buy a cage and put a bird inside it, the bird is limited. But if we release the bird, it will fly high, higher, highest. When the bird is flying in the boundless sky, there is no limit to its flight. Similarly, when we live inside the mind, we are encaged by limited, earth-bound thoughts — undivine, impure, destructive thoughts. But when we live in the soul, we are able to fly in the sky of divine freedom. Through prayer and meditation we become simple, sincere, humble and pure. We feel that we can go beyond our ordinary, silly earth-bound thoughts and fly in the sky of divine illumination and perfection.
Interviewer: By sharing these birds with the public, are you trying to inspire people with that message?
Sri Chinmoy: It is exactly so. Let us say you have gone to the market and bought a mango. Now you feel that if you can share it with the members of your family, you will get more joy than if you eat it all by yourself. Similarly, I have received some inspiration from my Inner Pilot. I feel that He is the one who is drawing these birds in and through me, according to my receptivity. I am only His instrument. Since He has given me the inspiration to draw, I feel it is my bounden duty to share this inspiration with others, for I take the whole world as one family.
We are trying to see the Divine inside each human being. If I see something beautiful and divine in you, then I will be filled with the inspiration and aspiration to be of service to you. And if you see something beautiful and divine in me, then you will be filled with the inspiration and aspiration to be of service to me. In this way we are inspired to become good citizens of the world and to serve one another. Otherwise, we exist only for ourselves. As individuals, no matter how many things we get or how many of our desires we fulfil, we will never have lasting happiness unless and until we see that others are also happy. We can never be satisfied with our own happiness because true happiness has to be all-encompassing. If everyone does not have it, I cannot have it either. Even if God fulfils all my desires, still I cannot be happy. For I will look around and see that somebody else is unhappy. And how can I be happy when I see that my brothers and sisters are not?
These birds remind me of a happiness that is all-pervading. I look to this side and see birds, and I look to that side and see birds. No matter in which direction I look, I see birds, and this gives me a childlike happiness. Think of a child inside a beautiful garden. The child does not stay at one place. He looks at one flower and appreciates its beauty and fragrance. Then he runs to look at another flower. He gets tremendous joy in moving from place to place and seeing the beauty, fragrance, light and delight inside so many flowers. Everywhere he goes inside the garden he is happy, happy, happy. But if he remains confined to one place, he will not be happy.
In exactly the same way, we human beings move from one place to another appreciating the different flowers in God’s life-garden. One flower is called America; another is called India or France. But these are just names and forms. Beyond the name and form comes the reality, which is all oneness. We all belong to one family, and we get tremendous joy when we share our heart’s love and delight with the other members of our family. So that is what I am trying to do with my drawings.
Interviewer: Does it make you happy to see people looking at your exhibit and walking through it?
Sri Chinmoy: It is my own inner feeling that when people look at the drawings, they get a certain sense of peace. I have observed a few visitors and have heard quite a few of the comments that they have made. When they look at these birds, they feel a sense of peace. What more can I offer to humanity? As a human being, the greatest reward that I can have is the opportunity to be of service to mankind. If I see that somebody is getting an iota of peace from my service to mankind — from my drawings, from my paintings, from my songs, from my poems or from anything else that I do — then I feel that I have accomplished something. I feel that I have been able to share my inspiration and my aspiration with others.
Interviewer: It is very peaceful, despite the fact that it is in the middle of New York City.
Sri Chinmoy: It is quite peaceful. There is only one thing that we need here on earth and that is peace. Everything else is meaningless and useless. We can get name, fame, prosperity and everything on the outer plane. But if we do not find peace in the inmost recesses of our heart, then we will never be satisfied. Only peace can give us satisfaction. To find this peace we have to dive deep within and pray and meditate. I feel that when people look at my drawings and find peace, this helps to bring forward their own soul’s qualities and thus increase their own wisdom and joy. When they look at these birds and see them flying in the inner freedom-sky, this increases their own heart’s joy.
Interviewer: When I approached you earlier, you were sitting and drawing. Is this how most of these were done, just sitting?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, just sitting. Usually when I draw, I try to be in a contemplative mood — in a prayerful, soulful consciousness — and I do not talk. Usually I draw early in the morning when I am all by myself, or when I am inside the car. But sometimes I also draw when people are moving around and I am in the middle of the hustle and bustle of life.
Interviewer: Do you have a bird in mind when you draw?
Sri Chinmoy: I have nothing in mind. I try to keep my mind as empty, vacant and tranquil as possible. The outer mind is like the surface of the sea. On the surface, the sea is full of waves and surges; it is all restlessness. But when we dive deep below, the same sea is all peace, calmness and quiet. It is there that we find the source of creativity.
I do not use the mind when I draw because the process of thinking binds us. When I use the mind, I become bound and limited. As soon as we think of something, we are binding ourselves. The mind is binding us precisely because it has not yet learned the art of self-giving, which is all expansion. It is the inner heart, the aspiring heart, that has learned the art of self-giving. As soon as we enter into anybody’s heart, even if that particular person is our so-called enemy, we will immediately feel that he is also trying to become a better person. But when we enter into somebody’s mind, O God, we see that he is trying to destroy us. And if we enter into our own mind, we see that we also have the same destructive thoughts. That is why our minds are always clashing. I want to lord it over you; you want to lord it over me. When we live in the mind, we only want to exercise our supremacy. But when we are inside our hearts, we only love one another; and at that time the question of supremacy does not arise at all. We can solve our problems by always trying to remain inside our heart and feel our oneness with one another.
These birds reflect the heart’s oneness. They represent unity in multiplicity. Each bird is different, but when you look at them, you feel unity. A tree has so many leaves and flowers, but they are all part of the same oneness-tree. Here there are 70,000 birds, but as soon as we think of the bird-consciousness, it becomes one bird. The bird-consciousness represents the consciousness of our soul’s inner freedom.
Interviewer: Will you continue to add to this number?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I have been drawing more birds every day. Today I have completed 76,000. It is my wish on the 19th of November to exhibit 100,000 birds in Ottawa. About 19 years ago I entered into the art-world in a hotel room in Ottawa. There I did my first drawing in the West. I have students in Canada and every year they observe the anniversary of that first drawing which was a rose. This November it is our plan to have a huge gallery that will house 100,000 bird drawings. I do hope that by the end of October I will be able to complete them.
Interviewer: Will you also exhibit your acrylic paintings?
Sri Chinmoy: Only a few selected paintings will be on display.
Interviewer: Do you have any sense of what your next project will be when this is over?
Sri Chinmoy: I do not know what is going to happen unless and until my Inner Pilot tells me what He wants me to do. On my own I do not know because He is the Doer in me. According to the capacity of my receptivity, through my prayer and meditation, I try to receive His Messages. He knows everything infinitely, infinitely better than I do, and at His choice Hour He will tell me to do this or to do that. I know that when the time comes — we call it God’s Hour — it is He who will direct me.
Interviewer: Did you call Him your Inner Father?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, I call him my Father or my Inner Pilot, the Pilot of my life-boat. I take life as a boat and I feel that He is steering it towards the supreme destination — the Golden Shore. He is the Supreme Pilot and He is steering our life-boats to the Golden Shore.
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 3
Radio Station WLUZ, Bayamon, Puerto Rico
The programme is broadcast from 5:00 to 5:20 p.m and the interviewer is the well-known Puerto Rican radio personality Senor Jose Miguel Agrelot. He later invites Sri Chinmoy to be a guest on his programme whenever the Guru visits the Island.
Senor Agrelot: What is actually meant by Yoga?
Sri Chinmoy: Yoga means union. This union is between man and God. Yoga tells us that we have a divine quality called Aspiration within us and that God has a divine quality called Compassion. Yoga is the common link between our Aspiration and God’s Compassion.
Question: Can anybody practise Yoga?
Sri Chinmoy: Yes, anybody can practise Yoga and it can be practised irrespective of age. But we must understand what Yoga really involves. Unfortunately in the West, there are many people who think that Yoga means physical postures and breathing exercises. This is a deplorable mistake. These postures and exercises are preliminary and preparatory states, leading towards concentration and meditation which alone can take us to a deeper, higher and fuller life.
Yoga is not something unnatural, abnormal or unearthly. It is something practical, natural and spontaneous. Right now, we do not know where God is and what God looks like. But by practising Yoga, we see Him at first hand. As in the material world, we achieve success in our chosen activity by constant practice, so also in the spiritual world, by practising Yoga, we achieve the goal of Goals — God-Realisation.
Question: Can Yoga help us in our everyday life?
Sri Chinmoy: Certainly. Yoga helps us in our everyday life. As a matter of fact, it is Yoga that can serve as the Supreme Help in our daily lives. Our human life is full of doubt, fear and frustration. Yoga helps us to replace fear with indomitable courage, doubt with absolute certainty and frustration with golden achievements.
Question: Can a person remain in his own religion and at the same time practise Yoga?
Sri Chinmoy: It is quite possible. It is always easier and safer, in fact, for one to practise Yoga at the beginning while remaining in his own religion. But once one has reached God by practising Yoga, he transcends all barriers of religion. God-Realisation reveals to him that each religion is nothing but a river that ultimately has to merge into the boundless Ocean. The ultimate aim of each religion is God-Realisation. And here also, Yoga comes as an inevitable aid, to transport the finite human being into the Infinite Divine Self.
Religion is Inspiration. Yoga is Aspiration. Divinity is Perfection. Inspiration, Aspiration and Divinity can easily and fruitfully blossom here on earth in transcendental harmony.
Published in AUM – Vol. 3, No. 1, 2, 27 Aug. – Sep. 1967
Spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy held a special prayer session at the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday, June 18, for the American hostages held in Beirut.
Representative Joseph P. Addabbo, one of the participants, called it “fitting and proper that you’ve come here on this day when we are beset by terrorists holding hostages.”
Sri Chinmoy has been leading meditations for peace at the United Nations since 1970.
Sri Chinmoy greeting Congressman Addabbo (seated).
The great Indian conductor Zubin Mehta, now musical director of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, met with Sri Chinmoy on May 9.
The two spoke and meditated together in New York’s Lincoln Center.
Sri Chinmoy, who is also a poet and author, then presented Mr. Mehta with several of his books, a trophy and a cake with Mehta’s face sketched in icing.
Sri Chinmoy meditated with Zubin Mehta who declared to Sri Chinmoy, (the meeting) ... “It’s very touching. I have never had anything like that.”
Published in INDIA NEWS, July 15, 1985
A two-credit course on the philosophy of Indian spiritual master Sri Chinmoy is being offered by the University of Connecticut at its Storrs campus.
The course, believed to be the first at any American university focusing on the teachings of a living yoga master, is being taught by Dr. Peter Pitzele, on loan from Harvard University.
Classes began in the third week in February.
Sri Chinmoy, who came to the United States in 1964 from Bengal, India, conducts bi-weekly meditation session for United Nations delegates and staff at the U.N. Church Center and U.N. headquarters in New York City.
He is the spiritual leader of some 40 Sri Chinmoy spiritual centers in the United States, Canada and western Europe. There is a center in Norwalk.
He has written 15 books on eastern spirituality and has lectured at Harvard, Yale, Oxford, Cambridge and Tokyo universities. He also delivers a daily meditation on WNEW-FM in New York City and, beginning this month will conduct regular short meditations on WNEW-TV in New York and Channel 30, the NBC affiliate in Connecticut.
Students in the class will study Sri Chinmoy’s philosophy, which is one based on love, devotion and surrender to God.
Published in The Hartford Courant, Saturday, March 10, 1973
An interview with Sri Chinmoy
Sri Chinmoy: Good morning! Now I wish to be of dedicated service to you. You are serving your country in a very special way. You bring messages from far abroad and you bring forward messages from your own country. The press serves a very special purpose: to bring home the outer world, the world abroad. Again, it carries the message of home to the outer and wider world. This is the most significant thing that you do. For that I am extremely, extremely grateful to you and I am extremely happy to be here with you all.
Question: It turns out that on the calendar today is the anniversary of the massive bombing of Tokyo during World War II. How do you feel about the coincidence of your Peace Concert being held on this particular day?
Sri Chinmoy: My students set the date and I gladly accepted it. Now, life has two realities: creation and destruction. When destruction takes place, either intentionally or unintentionally, we feel very sad, very miserable. Then, from the destruction itself, we try to benefit. That is to say, we try not to repeat the same experience. We feel that it is our bounden duty to have a new creation. The past is dust. The mistakes that I made in my past existence — forty, fifty or sixty years ago — I must not repeat. I must do something constructive, for I know that if I do something constructive, then I will be happy and also I will be one of those who will bring about a new creation.
On the one hand, destruction is a most deplorable experience. On the other hand, we should feel that this experience must not be repeated. Let it only remind us to have a better way of life, a better way of understanding, a better way of fulfilling our divine task on earth — that is to say, a better way of ushering in a world of harmony, a world of peace, a world of joy.
Question: What is the main message that you would like to give to the people of Japan through your concert here?
Sri Chinmoy: Each time I perform, I dedicate my Peace Concert to someone who I feel is responsible for world peace. This time I have chosen President Gorbachev. Today’s Peace Concert I am offering to him.
This is the message that I will be giving this evening to the audience: “Today’s Peace Concert I am most lovingly and most gratefully dedicating to President Gorbachev, whose Perestroika-Vision-Light ended the Cold War and sowed peace-seeds inside the heart-garden of the world-home for the transformation of the human mind and the perfection of human life.
“About a year ago — to be precise, ten months and twenty-three days ago — President Gorbachev came to visit Japan, Beauty’s Land and Duty’s Hand. At a dinner in the Emperor’s Palace his oneness-heart voiced forth, ‘Our countries and peoples are neighbours. Our ties are many centuries old. There are many historical documents testifying to the mutual attraction between the Russians and the Japanese.’
“At the same dinner, the unparalleled peace-lover in him also proclaimed, ‘Allow me also to express the wish that the presciently chosen name of the era of Your Majesty’s rule — Heisei, which means “achievement of universal peace” — may also come true in relations between the Soviet Union and Japan.’
“May the morning light of Japan and the serving heart of President Gorbachev together grow and glow to accelerate the perfection-promise of humanity.” * This is the message I shall offer this evening.
Question: I understand that Mr. Gorbachev is now in a time of trial. Circumstances around him are not favourable. At this crucial time for him, do you have any advice for him?
Sri Chinmoy: I do not dare to give him any advice, for he does not need any advice, from me or from anybody else. What he has within himself is more than sufficient to prove to the world that he is by far the best political leader plus peace-lover on earth. What he has is confidence. This confidence is coming from the very, very depths of his heart. Because of this confidence, his is not the statement of monarchs who say, “I came and I conquered.” No, his statement is, “I came and I loved.” His confidence is totally different. His confidence tells us that he loves the world and he wants to become part and parcel of the world.
Many great kings, emperors and monarchs of the past used to express their confidence by saying, “I came and I conquered.” That kind of theory they had. But President Gorbachev says, “I have come into the world to love you and to become one with you, and together we shall bring about a better world.” The vision of his perestroika is to think in a new way, to feel in a new way and to see the world with new eyes, to feel the world with a new heart, and to become inseparably one with the success and progress of the new world.
I am happy to tell you that I have already written three books about President Gorbachev, and one more book that is in now in preparation will come out shortly. This is my soulful appreciation and prayerful admiration for what he has done for the world at large. How many East European countries, how many people on earth — countless people — he has made happy! Perhaps he could not make all his countrymen happy, but he has made countless people in Eastern Europe happy.
Today there is only one Germany. There is no more East Germany and West Germany; it is all one. Similarly, President Gorbachev liberated Poland, Hungary and Czechoslovakia. I have students all over the world. I know that to make even one student happy is a Herculean task. In spite of my best intentions, I find it so difficult to make them happy. But in Germany, for example, how many families which were doomed to destruction, doomed to disappointment, he has brought together! Family members are now together, whereas before they were completely separated. The Berlin Wall is no more; there is only one heart.
What President Gorbachev has done for humanity is far beyond our imagination. It far exceeds anybody else’s achievement. Over the centuries, people have achieved many, many things; but history will bear witness to the fact that there was one person on earth who ended the Cold War, who gave us a new hope: that we could depend on each other, we could trust each other, we could walk and run together. That was President Gorbachev. He made us feel that there should be no fear, no doubt in our lives; we belong to a oneness-world-family.
One year ago President Gorbachev came to Japan and he said many, many nice things about Japan. What he said came from the very depths of his heart. It was not just because he happened to be in Japan. If you come to a new country, you express appreciation, whether you feel it or not; but in his case, he definitely felt it. And it was his most sincere feeling that he expressed in words and offered to the Japanese people. I am happy that he will soon be visiting Japan again. I am sure that he and Japan will be of mutual help to each other.
Question: How many times have you visited Japan in the past?
Sri Chinmoy: Since 1969 I have visited Japan many times. Each time I come, my appreciation, my admiration and my love for Japan only increase. People say if you see something twice, you may not appreciate it the second time the way you appreciated it the first time. In my case, Japan gives me a totally different experience each time I visit.
Being a seeker, when I come to Japan, I see Japan as the most beautiful flower. For me, Japan is nothing other than a most beautiful flower. And what does a flower have? A flower has fragrance as well as beauty. This beauty and fragrance Japan offers to the four corners of the globe.
As soon as we see a flower, our own good qualities come forward to appreciate the beauty and fragrance of the flower. Before we see the flower, we feel that our heart is not so pure. When we think of our mind, we feel that it is full of fear, doubt, anxiety and many, many other undivine qualities. But the moment we see a flower, we feel purity inside our heart, and clarity and luminosity inside our mind.
When I come to Japan, I see the beauty of Japan and the purity of Japan. And Japan gives me another experience which is so significant in my life. Japan is a small country composed of a few islands. There are many countries which are infinitely vaster than Japan. But what does Japan do? Japan embodies the message of the Infinite. Inside these tiny islands, we see the achievements of the Infinite. Look at Japan and the achievements of Japan! How many things Japan has created! That is why I say that Japan gives us the message of the Infinite.
Inside a drop, we can see the ocean. Inside a flame, we can see the morning sun. This is the unique message that Japan offers to the world: that inside the finite we can see the Infinite, and the Infinite can sing in and through the finite. This is something that Japan is offering to the world at large, something that no other country can claim. It is Japan’s unparalleled, unique contribution to mankind.
Question: The prosperity of our economy has been noticed throughout the world. But the profound spirituality that Japan has may not be so prominent at this stage.
Sri Chinmoy: This material prosperity has come from sleepless efforts. We do not become prosperous unless we make efforts most sincerely. Japan has made sleepless efforts to further its material progress and success. Who asked other countries to remain idle, to talk foolishly or proudly, and not to act?
Japan does not talk; Japan acts. Sleeplessly Japan has been working for material success, material prosperity. If we do not have inner awakening, we cannot make progress in any field, whether it is the material field or the spiritual field. Now the question arises whether Japan is spiritually as well as materially awakened. I wish to say that the answer is definitely yes. Japan’s spirituality and Japan’s material success are going side by side.
A few minutes ago, I said that when I think of Japan, when I look at Japan, I see a flower. What does a flower signify? A flower signifies aspiration. When I look at a flower, immediately my good qualities come to the fore and I try to become a good person. Similarly, as soon as I see Japan, my own aspiration increases.
Now, where does this aspiration come from? It comes from the heart, where there is an inner hunger. This is not only the mind’s hunger to become prosperous, but also the heart’s hunger to love the world and offer to the world the good qualities of the heart. I can sincerely tell you that the spiritual aspect of Japan is also most encouraging and most inspiring.
Yesterday I visited the Lord Buddha’s statue at Kamakura. Except for a few regions, I have visited most of the countries of the world. I have visited many countries that love and adore the Lord Buddha. I come from India and the Lord Buddha came from India, but his message has been spread infinitely more in foreign lands than in his own land of India.
Again, there is no such thing as India or Japan or France or Russia; there is only one home, one world-family. The world is like a house with many rooms. If in one room Lord Buddha is not appreciated, as he rightly deserves to be, but people in other rooms appreciate him, admire him, adore him and love him, then it is quite sufficient.
Now let me come back to my answer. I have been to many parts of the world where the message of Lord Buddha is being followed, adored and fulfilled. But when I stand in front of the statue of Lord Buddha in Kamakura and offer him my soulful obeisance, my prayerful love and adoration, I feel that my life has seen something and achieved something most, most valuable. What Japan is, I am saying from my heart’s inmost conviction. If an individual feels that Japan is spiritual, and if that particular person stands in front of the statue of Lord Buddha at Kamakura, then the entire spirituality of Japan that person has to feel inside the Lord Buddha, the son of Asia, the beloved son of Asia.
It is very easy for human beings to discredit other nations. It is very difficult to appreciate others. One needs a very powerful heart to appreciate the good qualities of others. Just this morning I wrote something on this subject which I would like to read out:
“It is, indeed, a difficult task for some people — including, perhaps, world figures — to appreciate the lofty achievements of other people and other nations. But, to our extreme joy, President Gorbachev has not studied at the same school. Therefore, on April 19th, 1991, while addressing the Japanese Public Committee, his heart most beautifully and hauntingly sang for the soul, for the heart and for the life of Japan. This is his message: ‘Beautiful nature, sakuras in blossom, the combination of the past and the present to the visible breakthrough into the future, friendly people with a strong feeling of self-esteem and respect for others, curiosity and interest in life, the desire to make talents and ambitions a reality — in a word, the Japanese people are a wonderful product of nature and culture. All this is very fascinating and arouses feelings of fond affection. I am glad to have been able to feel the living pulse of the country and to see with my own eyes its achievements, which have rightfully given Japan a place among the leaders in world progress.’”
This kind of appreciation Japan has received from President Gorbachev. In his own way, he is also saying that Japan’s spirituality is being expressed through material success. The inner beauty is being expressed through the outer prosperity. A visitor does not have to go to various places in Japan to see and feel the spirituality of Japan.
If one goes to Kamakura alone, it is enough for him to find the tremendous spirituality of Japan. The vibration that Kamakura gives — not only the statue, but the entire town — embodies spirituality in abundant measure. Kamakura alone can feed the aspiration of any human being with boundless spirituality.
Something else I wish to say on a different subject. We all know that Japan has been making faster than the fastest progress in the material world, in material prosperity.
Now, since last year, Japan can claim the faster than the fastest human dynamo: Carl Lewis. Here, in Japan, he broke the world record in the 100-metre race. He became the fastest human dynamo. And I am sure he received tremendous blessings from the soul and from the heart of Japan. He became the fastest human being here in the country that runs the fastest in achieving material success and prosperity. So this is a very, very happy experience both for Carl Lewis and for the soul and heart of Japan. I am deeply honoured that he gave me the shoes that he wore in that race.
Published in You Belong to God
A short anecdote by Sri Chinmoy
When I take exercise in my main room, I put the tape recorder in another room so that I do not become totally absorbed in the music. Usually I take exercise for about 40 minutes. Every day I take a new tape and listen to it. I specially like the tapes of some famous Bengali singers singing songs by Rabindranath Tagore. Indian tapes are so unique! Sometimes there is talking during the singing, sometimes they cough. Everything is there, and then they sell these tapes!
Published in My Weightlifting Tears and Smiles, part 3
Sri Chinmoy offers a Peace Concert, the third of 39 Peace Concerts dedicated to Swami Vivekananda’s 39 years on earth, in David A. Stein Junior High School, Bronx, New York.
Sri Chinmoy’s Peace Concert dedication:
Today's Peace Concert I am devotedly dedicating to the indomitable lion-hearted soul, Swami Vivekananda, who challenged the pride of ignorance-night for the manifestation of divine Light here on earth.
Published in Vivekananda: Divinity's Soul-Rainbow and Humanity’s Heart-Blossom
Sri Chinmoy offers a Peace Concert, performing on 50 instruments from various nations around the world, for the United Nation’s 50th Anniversary, at the UN General Assembly Lobby in New York.
by Sri Chinmoy
at the UN General Assembly Lobby in New York
Prayerfully and soulfully I am offering today's Peace Concert to the world-illumining soul of the United Nations.
Sri Chinmoy offering his Peace Concert dedication...
Excerpt from a special message sent on 23 May 1995 by His Excellency Mr. Mikhail Gorbachev, former President of the Soviet Union and 1990 Nobel Peace Laureate:
It is not by chance that the United Nations has been giving increasing attention in its activities to the spiritual improvement of the human being, and Sri Chinmoy plays an enormous role in that noble work.
I wish to express the hope that the music you are going to hear today will strengthen your confidence that life and the world in which we are living are still beautiful, and that we are duty-bound to do all we can to make them even better.
Excerpt from welcoming remarks given at the Peace Concert by His Excellency Mr. Karel Kovanda, Permanent Representative of the Czech Republic to the United Nations:
In this hectic life that we are all living here, and for some of us even more hectic than for others — those of us who have little babies and those of us who serve on the Security Council — Sri Chinmoy manages to bring a little slowness into life, manages to help us appreciate the minutes rather than just the days, and for this we are very grateful.
Excerpt from a statement on the occasion of the Peace Concert at the United Nations by His Excellency Dr. Jorge E. Illueca, Permanent Representative of Panama to the United Nations:
Sri Chinmoy has been a cherished friend for almost twenty years. During this time I have been privileged to participate in a number of activities of the Peace Meditation at the United Nations, and I have observed with growing satisfaction the growing impact of his message of universal harmony and understanding…. Sri Chinmoy has a pure vision of what the United Nations means inwardly and what it can become outwardly. The efforts of the United Nations for peace, justice and development need a solid spiritual foundation, and Sri Chinmoy has been working tirelessly for twenty-five years to strengthen that foundation.
Published in My Prayerful Salutations to the United Nations
Sri Chinmoy lifts a white horse and its Mongolian rider with an eagle perched on his arm. It is one of forty-one white horses Sri Chinmoy lifts at Tiara Resort in Terelj National Park, Mongolia.
At a previous lift, four days earlier, one of the nomadic riders presented Sri Chinmoy with a white racing stallion as well as a white mare. The horses remain in the country as a legacy to Sri Chinmoy’s indomitable spirit.
by Sri Chinmoy
while in residence at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Pondicherry, India
Playground. Nolini-da said: "Last time I took you from Manik Tola garden to the jail. Today I will tell you about the life we led there for a year. A certain court officer said to Sri Aurobindo: 'Aurobindo, so at last you are caught; you are caught. Sri Aurobindo said to him immediately: 'And yet I will escape; I will escape!'"
Nolini-da's account of this significant incident produced a most thrilling and illumining effect in my heart.
"To continue, I have divided my jail life into two parts. This time I shall tell you about our stay in the cell. I hope next time I shall be able to tell you about our court life.
Published in A Service-Flame and a Service-Sun
by Sri Chinmoy
Sri Chinmoy begins writing daily rhyming poems — meditations for each day of the year — in Jamaica, New York.
Silence-blossoms have awakened my mind.
My tears and God's Smiles clasped I find.
My orphan tears begin my day.
My princely smiles blaze the Way.
I keep my heart's streaming tears
Sleeplessly alive,
So that my Lord's beaming Smiles
In me can thrive.
Energised by my self-improvement task,
In my Lord's Transcendent Sun-Flames I bask.
Obedience longs to feed the Lord
Infinitely more.
Self-deleted, fastest it runs, arrives
And touches the Shore.
I shall climb up
My soul's dream-flooded staircase.
Endless obstacles
Dauntless my heart shall face.
Fastest runs to the Goal Supreme
My Lord's Love-Train.
Singing and dancing, therein my breath —
No bondage-chain.
Published in My Silence Heart-Blossoms, part 1
A talk by Sri Chinmoy
I scold you people from time to time, but I know that that method is only for temporary use. It is like going to an emergency room. In an emergency room, how many people are cured? So many people die while the doctors are operating. How much failure we experience in an emergency room! Again, sometimes we get results. The normal way is to take medicine, get injections and so forth; that is the real way to become cured. With that way you have got a solid base. But in an emergency room, how many people go to God while being treated!
In the spiritual life, if you really want to make your Master happy, you must not be afraid of your Master — no, no, no! The Master has not come into the world to strike people. That was for Julius Caesar, Alexander and all those military people. But sometimes I scold you as a last resort. In the Bhagavad Gita, before the Kurukshetra battle, how Sri Krishna begged and begged the Kauravas only to give five villages to the Pandavas! The Kauravas had the kingdom, but they would not give up those five villages. Three or four times Sri Krishna went to the Kauravas’ palace, but they would not listen to him. They said, “Without a fight, we shall not give to the Pandavas even the quantity of sand or mud that will fit through the eye of a needle.” A needle is long but the eye is tiny. How much can pass through that tiny hole? Then Sri Krishna felt that the situation was hopeless and said, “War is needed.” The war was a last resort.
Here also, as a last resort, I scold you people. Otherwise, I plead with you, with your heart, with your mind, with your vital, with your physical. So to all my disciples I am saying, do not be afraid of me, but be identified with my sufferings. To be afraid of me is a stupid, useless approach. To be identified with my sadness, with my tears, is absolutely the right approach.
Let us not take the fear approach. Let us take the love approach. When we have fear, then we will hide all our diseases. When some people have diseases, they are afraid, as if they have committed a robbery. They feel that they have done something wrong, so they have to hide. Is it not the height of their stupidity? If something is physically wrong with them, then let them go to a doctor. Fear they are cherishing, but again, they are not even praying. Fear is dominating their whole day and night. They have no time to pray to the Supreme. In them we only see fear, fear, fear. They feel they will be exposed. What stupidity! They can pray to God to cure them if they do not want to go to a doctor. It is God who gave those individuals the little capacity they needed to become doctors. They can pray to God, to the real Doctor. But they have no time to pray; only fear is killing them. Here the Supreme has sent a representative in the form of a spiritual Master. The disciples should say, “Let us go to him. He will be able to cure us.”
Published in Sri Chinmoy Answers, part 12