Vol. 4, No. 2
Reflections on Spiritual Leadership:
The Legacy of Srila Prabhupada : Larry D. Shinn ,President of Berea College in Berea, Kentucky(not Hare Krishna TV)
As this is the centenary year of Srila Prabhupada's birth (ISKCON's founder
and acarya), we have decided to print a number of articles about Srila
Prabhupada's work. The following article by Larry Shinn provides us with an
examination of Shrila Prabhupada as a mahatma, his faith in the Lord, his
sadhana, his erudition and his role in the tradition. Significantly, it also
explains the value of his profound teaching by his personal example and how
it cannot be imitated by his followers. Shinn argues, consistent with everything
Shila Prabhupada stood for, that the standards of personal devotion and
sädhana set by ISKCON's founder-acärya must be met by any member who
wants to inherit the kind of spiritual authority he possessed; the position of
guru is not befitting those unable to follow in the footsteps of the previous
acäryas as acärya means one who teaches by example.
In India, the term mahatma, or "great-souled one", is reserved for the
exceptional person whose integrity as a religious, or even political, leader
stems from an inner purity or spirituality that is expressed in all of their
actions. When a person exhibits an extraordinary piety reflecting a basic
fidelity between their daily actions and their religious claims, they are
considered "great-souled". Such was the case with Mohandas K. Gandhi,
who was often called simply "The Mahatma". Allowing for the obvious
idiosyncrasies and failings of all humans, Gandhi was an exceptional
proponent of non-violence who remained a public leader in South Africa
and India for more than fifty years because of his personal and spiritual
integrity in living a non-violent life. When a person with such spiritual
power and personal integrity exercises influence over a large number of
people, they are popularly called "charismatic". Such also was the case
with Gandhi.
However, not all such persons gain the wide renown of Gandhi, even when
they exhibit such consistency of spiritual intentions and actions. Such a
person was Abhay Charan De, who became better known as A. C.
Bhaktivedanta Prabhupada, the spiritual founder of the International Society
for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON). Though virtually all of those who
met Prabhupada attest to his spiritual fidelity and integrity, few outside of
ISKCON have claimed for him the title of mahatma or the personal
attribute of "charisma". In these brief reflections, I will suggest that
Prabhupada was "great-souled" and "charismatic". I will then suggest that it
was the failure of his eleven early successors to understand fully the issues
surrounding fidelity of spirit and action that led many of them astray. It
seems to me that a brighter future for leaders in ISKCON in America and
elsewhere lies in an understanding of Prabhupäda's personal spiritual
legacy.
Whether one is born in a humble home with few religious pretensions or as
the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama, spiritual maturity is a hard-won
attainment. No person is born with the depth of spirituality of a mahätma.
Such clearly was the case with Abhay Charan De. His early childhood
hardly prefigured the powerful religious person he was to become. His
embrace of his family's Krishna faith was tepid at best in his early years;
indeed, he tells us that he was very reluctant even to meet with
Bhaktisiddhanta, his eventual spiritual master. When Abhay began to
express interest in his childhood Krishna faith, his wife did not share his
enthusiasm. The story of his own growing faith and his wife's rejection of
that faith reminds us that developing religious teachers are not universally
attractive nor always materially successful. However, several influential
persons, from his childhood friend Naren Mullik to the members of the
League of Devotees in Jhansi, formed a cadre of supporters that Abhay
needed to develop his own deeper faith in Krishna.
There is no doubt that the depth of Prabhupada's faith and spiritual power
was forged in the long hours of chanting, reflection, and writing over eleven
years of near-solitude in the temples and retreat rooms of Vrindaban and
New Delhi just prior to his coming to America. But one cannot discount
Prabhupada's own depiction of his spiritual journey as one of gradual
awakening and deepening certainty throughout his whole life, including the
period of his American and world ministry. His Back to Godhead articles,
written between 1944 and his death in 1977 reveal the balance of spiritual
practice and theological conceptualisation that Prabhupada brought to his
life's work. His piety was grounded in both his intellect and his heart, and
the two were mutually sustaining. Therefore, Prabhupada's spiritual journey
included not only scriptural study and theological argumentation, but also
daily chanting and worship of Krishna; he thus engaged his heart as fully as
his head. I realise that this very way of separating a faith of head and heart
would be uncomfortable to Prabhupada, but it is just such a split that I think
led some of his appointed successors down roads of self-deception and ruin
- a theme to be discussed later in this essay.
While on his voyage to America on the Indian ship Jaladuta in the Autumn
of 1965, Prabhupada wrote a prayer that said, in part, "Although my Guru
Maharaja [Bhaktisiddhanta] ordered me to accomplish this mission, I am
not worthy or fit to do it... Therefore, O Lord [Krishna], now I am begging
for Your mercy so that I may become worthy." Even at the age of sixty-nine,
Prabhupada felt a deep-seated need for the guidance of Krishna to lead him
in his daily work. This is the perspective of a humble, faith-filled man.
These are the words of one who believed that the knowledge gained from
the Krishna scriptures, and his years of study and translation of them were
not sufficient without continual nourishment of his faith by the practice of
chanting and praising of Lord Krishna. It was this balance of scriptural
erudition and deep personal faith to which his early followers were
attracted - not to a flashy self-presentation or spellbinding sermons. One of
Prabhupada's first devotees said simply, "I didn't have any emotional
experiences. Prabhupada was very much an ordinary person until you
developed a relationship [with him]."
In my interviews with more than 130 devotees between 1980 and 1990,
devotee after devotee revealed that they were strongly attracted to
Prabhupada because of his scriptural erudition and sincere devotion - that
is, his piety. One early devotee said, "He was chanting, and just by the
sound of his voice I could see that this person loves God." Another devotee
who was sceptical of flashy Indian gurus said, "When he walked in, I
thought, 'He is different...' He had that bearing, that gravity, that clear
seriousness that you associate with a military leader, a commander... The
kirtana began and Prabhupada became immediately ecstatic... [He]
shattered all my previous conceptions about a spiritual master." Even
academic scholars like Stillson Judah were "struck by his humility". As yet
another devotee said, "he never put on a show." The composite picture one
gets of Prabhupada is of a religious seeker who never forgot his finitude
before God, even when he achieved a high level of spiritual development
and served as the channel for the devotee's love to God. Prabhupada was
impressive to devotee and outsider alike because of his personal piety. In
this sense, he was a mahatma.
However, Prabhupada's spiritual authority was also rooted in traditional
Vaishnava theological claims about the guru as a direct channel to Lord
Krishna. The Gaudiya Vaishnava notion of disciplic succession, or
paramparä (literally "uninterrupted series"), says that an initiating guru
stands in an unbroken chain of disciples from Chaitanya and other notable
teachers back to Krishna himself. The guru is understood to be an external
representation of God, and as such, receives devotion intended for Krishna
and serves as a conduit for that devotion. Prabhupada says this succinctly:
"A disciple has to accept the spiritual master not only as spiritual master,
but also as the representative of the Supreme Personality of Godhead and
the Supersoul. In other words, the disciple should accept the spiritual
master as God because he is the external manifestation of Krishna."
Prabhupada spoke with just such traditional authority. He instructed his
disciples to surrender completely to the guru in order to attain their fullest
spiritual maturation. In making such assertions, Prabhupada was conveying
age-old teachings of the medieval Vaishnava scripture that says, "It is the
duty of every human being to surrender to a bona fide spiritual master.
Giving him everything - body, mind, and intelligence - one must take a
Vaishnava initiation from him." In this sense, Prabhupada had "traditional
charisma" in Max Weber's terms.
When I was asked to offer this brief reflection on Prabhupada, I was
reminded of images of a special, holy man who, by his erudition and
personal piety as well as by his traditional role, touched the lives of
thousands of devotees in India, America and around the world. I was also
struck by the realisation that for all of his extraordinary attributes,
Prabhupada could not pass on his own personal faith to his appointed
successors even as he did pass on the mantle of leadership (that is,
traditional roles) for ISKCON. As I reminisced about my interactions with
Krishna gurus and devotees, which began in 1974 and intensified through
the 1980s, I was struck by this realisation that the traditional roles and
scriptural erudition could be transmitted by teaching, but that the personal
piety and deep faith that attracted devotees to Prabhupada could not.
As I reviewed my interviews with devotees from the years just following
the death of Prabhupada, I came to realise that many devotees, and certainly
all of the newly appointed initiating gurus, spoke with a confidence and
enthusiasm about their maturing Krishna faith that was almost always
grounded in scriptural authority (that is, in reciting a Krishna text), or in
Prabhupada's interpretations of those texts. It is true that some of the new
gurus were noted for their ecstatic chanting or personal piety, but their
claim to authority was grounded primarily in scriptural passages like those
cited above. Most "new gurus" exhibited a confidence, even a cockiness,
that if the scriptures said a guru was "as good as God", then it was so -
forgetting that such claims must be grounded in the kind of personal humility
that Prabhupada exhibited. In the early and mid-1980s, I talked with some
new gurus who were exceptionally bright and erudite in scriptural
argumentation but who had stopped doing sankirtan themselves even as they
taught the importance of such "preaching" to new devotees. I met other new
gurus who were talented organisational managers but who had stopped
chanting their morning rounds of japa, and ultimately fell from their lofty
positions because of immoral behaviour. I met only a few new gurus who
were impressive because of their humbleness and piety, and they have
continued to provide leadership for ISKCON - even in the dark days of the
early and mid-1980s.
What is the legacy that Prabhupada has left for ISKCON? It is the legacy of
traditional authority (parampara), scriptural erudition and personal piety as
necessary corollaries to a healthy and vibrant Krishna faith. Even as the
reformers in ISKCON attempted in the mid-1980s to reduce ISKCON'S
reliance on relatively few gurus (by appointing many new ones) and to
separate some managerial and organisational functions from the spiritual
role of the guru, Prabhupada's legacy of personal piety and moral purity
seldom was offered as the key to a new guru's success. Prabhupada's legacy
is a faith marked by a blend of head and heart - both focused upon God's
divine mercy and compassion-that separates the true spiritual master from
the impostor.
Too many of the early gurus relied upon their traditional scriptural authority
alone or upon artificial affectations of spirituality to maintain their
positions - until they "fell". Those who have engaged in arduous spiritual
practise balanced with disciplined scriptural study over the past thirty years
have acquired the status and piety of the acharya that the scriptures
describe.
Nori Muster, in her forthcoming book Betrayal of the Spirit, offers a
perspective on the gap between religious proclamations and practise in
ISKCON during her years in the movement throughout the 1980s that I
encourage all of those in leadership positions in ISKCON today to take
seriously. Though Muster's book may emphasise primarily the negative
attitudes and events associated with ISKCON in America, it also reveals
her longing for models of piety and integrity that gurus and ISKCON leaders
purportedly represent. Her story reveals the deleterious effects of shallow
religiosity, unethical conduct and self-deceptive proclamations by some of
ISKCON'S gurus and leaders on the average devotee who simply looks to
see how wide the gap is between what a person asserts about his or her
authority as a spiritual leader and what he or she actually does. For
Prabhupada that gap was quite narrow. That is his legacy, from which
contemporary gurus can learn much.
The good news is that there are many signs in America, Europe and
elsewhere in the world that gurus and other leaders in ISKCON recognise
that they must live and act in ways that are more consistent with their
teachings. Conferences held in Europe during the past half dozen years
reveal a more contrite and apologetic tone in public self-presentations by
devotees. However, Prabhupada's legacy is richer still in the lesson it
would teach to contemporary devotees: that the quality of one's spiritual
practice and growth must undergird one's theological and scriptural
erudition and public and private actions. His lesson is for the developing
spiritual seeker-not for one seeking a religious role in ISKCON as an
institution.
In the final analysis, Prabhupada's life suggests that only the guru who truly
is linked to Krishna by his or her own private and public devotion can
serve as a conduit for disciples who rely upon the Vaishnava's disciplic
succession. Over the years, many Krishna devotees have quoted to me
numerous scriptural passages that confirm this view of their disciplic
authority - but seldom have they cited the faith-development of Prabhupäda
as a model for their own development. With Prabhupada, the recitation of
scriptural authorities was not necessary to confirm his role as acarya.
Images of the love-filled and ecstatic Prabhupada softly singing praises to
Krishna is his legacy of God-centered love-images which can serve
ISKCON and its leaders well in his absence. It is this legacy of a guru's
devotion and humility before God - his piety - that Prabhupada asks his
successors to emulate. What better legacy could a spiritual teacher leave to
those who would follow him?
1.For an early thought-piece on the guru-disciple relationship, see my essay
"Conflicting Network: Guru and Friend in ISKCON", in Religious Movements,
Genesis, Exodus, and Numbers, edited by Rodney Start (New York: Paragon
House, 1985). For a fuller description of my understanding of the role and place
of Prabhupada as guru and the difficulties of transmitting prophetic charisma to
one's successors, see "Chapter 2 Godmen and Gurus" and "Chapter 3 The
Transmission of Charisma" in The Dark Lord: Cult Images and the Hare
Krishnas in America (Philadelphia: Westminister, 1987). The reader will see
how my reflections have moved from an earlier formal and scholarly analysis of
religious and institutional roles and categories, to one currently more reliant on
the intangible synthesis of thought and religious practise in what I can only
imprecisely call "piety" or "spiritual integrity".
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