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[[Category:1976 - Conversations]]
<div class="code">760909r2.vrn</div>
[[Category:1976 - Lectures and Conversations]]
[[Category:1976 - Lectures, Conversations and Letters]]
[[Category:1976-09 - Lectures, Conversations and Letters]]
[[Category:Conversations - India]]
[[Category:Conversations - India, Vrndavana]]
[[Category:Lectures, Conversations and Letters - India]]
[[Category:Lectures, Conversations and Letters - India, Vrndavana]]
[[Category:Audio Files 10.01 to 20.00 Minutes]]
<div style="float:left">[[File:Go-previous.png|link=Category:Conversations - by Date]]'''[[:Category:Conversations - by Date|Conversations by Date]], [[:Category:1976 - Conversations|1976]]'''</div>
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Prabhupāda: The king and the daughter went to a great muni's house, a saintly person. Cyavana Muni, Cyavana Muni. And the daughter, young daughter, out of ignorance, she committed some offense. Took one straw and pierced through one insect. The muni was sitting there as insect. So the result was—because she offended—all the men of the king, means the soldiers, the secretaries, they stopped passing urine and stool.


Hari-śauri: The muni was there in the form of an insect?
<div class="code">760909R1-VRNDAVAN - September 09, 1976 - 11:37 Minutes</div>
 
 
<mp3player>https://s3.amazonaws.com/vanipedia/full/1976/760909R1-VRNDAVAN_mono.mp3</mp3player>
 
 
Prabhupāda: . . . because as soon as the ship stopped, Commonwealth Pier, Boston, the Immigration Department came and took their papers. So I entered America in Boston. There was no checking in New York. The ship stopped in Boston. The official entrance was done there. Then when I came to New York, it is just like one day's travel.
 
Harikeśa: No, that's not very far. And then you went to Pennsylvania.
 
Prabhupāda: Hmm?
 
Harikeśa: And then you went directly to Pennsylvania?  


Prabhupāda: Yes.
Prabhupāda: Yes.


Hari-śauri: And she pierced him. Oh.
Harikeśa: By bus?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes. Then one agent appointed by my host, Gopal Agarwal . . . he was in Butler. So he arranged with some professional, what is called, host.
 
Harikeśa: Travel agent?
 
Prabhupāda: Maybe travel agent. He came to see me that, "I am sent by Gopal Agarwal, so I'll arrange for your dispatch. You come with me."
 
Hari-śauri: Dr. Agarwal was your sponsor?
 
Prabhupāda: Yes, sponsor. His father came to see me sometime in Agra.
 
Hari-śauri: In India.
 
Prabhupāda: Agra. His father, mother came.
 
Hari-śauri: And then they suggested that he be your sponsor.
 
Prabhupāda: It was all by chance. I was for a few days guest at his father's place in Agra. I did not know that his son is in America. So he was talking about his family. He was little sorry that his eldest son went to America to study electric engineering, and he was entrapped by an English girl there, and he married and settled there and did not come back. In this way . . . so I took the opportunity that, "Why don't you ask your son to sponsor me?" I wanted to go to America. So I did not know how seriously he took it. But I simply told him that, "Why don't you ask your son to sponsor me at least for one month? So I am thinking of going to America." Then that was talking, beginning and end, that's all. I did not know that he took it very seriously. Then after two, three months, some documents came. I was receiving my letters in a postbox. So when I left Delhi I used to keep my key of postbox with some nice bookseller, Atmaram, he was manager. So he opened that, he got that documents. That is No-Objection Certificate, sponsor, and everything. I was out of Delhi. Then when I came back I took it. So everything was there, that sheet . . . (indistinct) . . . taken from the Indian Consulate, No-Objection Certificate and everything. Then I applied for a passport. In this way I had to go there. So Gopal was unknown to me, but his father was . . . his father was known to me, mother was known to me. Then his agent got me on the bus. So on the bus went to Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania?
 
Hari-śauri: That's a long drive.
 
Prabhupāda: Yes, nine hours on the bus. And I took a little chipped rice, (laughs) and whatever I had with me. So I got down from the ship about one o'clock. Then I had to wait for the bus till five o'clock. Then at five o'clock the bus started. About two o'clock, three o'clock in the morning, I went to Pennsylvania, and just in front of the bus Gopal was standing with his car, that . . . what is called? Van car?
 
Harikeśa: Stationwagon.
 
Prabhupāda: Stationwagon. So he took my luggage, and from there thirty miles off, the Butler County. So I went there. Then at night he took my bedding and . . . the next day, he had no many rooms in his apartment, he arranged for my stay in the YMCA nearby them.
 
Hari-śauri: You never actually stayed with him, then.
 
Prabhupāda: I was going. I was taking my meals there.
 
Hari-śauri: Oh. And just keeping a room at the YMCA.
 
Prabhupāda: Because he had no room, so I was staying there.
 
Hari-śauri: And then he arranged programs, speaking programs, or . . .?
 
Prabhupāda: His wife, Sally. His wife, Sally, she was arranging. A very intelligent girl. They were of the same age, about thirty. Gopal was more than thirty and she was about thirty . . . (indistinct) . . . I saw that she was feeding her child, one boy, meat powder.
 
Harikeśa: Beef bouillion?
 
Prabhupāda: I do know what is the name. But I asked. She said: "It is meat powder." That is the system?
 
Hari-śauri: Yeah. When they're very young and they can't eat solids.
 
Prabhupāda: With hot water.
 
Hari-śauri: Yes, they have instant meals for children. All different kinds of things.
 
Prabhupāda: So Gopal was very much pleased that he could get some Indian ''cāpāṭis'', like this.


Prabhupāda: So the result was all of them became without passing stool. So the king could understand there is some offense. So... Because formerly the kings were saintly persons. He asked all his men, "What you have done?" Then the girl said, "Father, I have done something." Then he made this plea that, "Kindly excuse this girl... Out of ignorance..." He was very angry, that Cyavana Muni. His attitude was always angry. Then all of them became very much aggrieved. Then he asked, "Whether your girl is married?" King could understand that "He wants to marry my daughter. Otherwise, why he's inquiring." And he was so old... I have got my skin still tight. All loose.
Hari-śauri: So he had you cook for him. You took your cooker with you? Is that the same one?


Hari-śauri: He was all slack.
Prabhupāda: No.  


Prabhupāda: And he was old. So he had to agree. Otherwise, the whole thing was catastrophe. So the king said, "Yes. She's not married. If you like I can offer my daughter to you." Then everything was settled up. But the daughter was young, and he was like her grand, great-grandfather. Match was not at all suitable, but he had to offer. So this girl also took it seriously, and she was serving the old husband very faithfully like honest, chaste wife. Never mind. Then, some days after, the same saintly person was visited by two heavenly physicians, aśvinī-kumāras. The aśvinī-kumāras, they had some difficulty. They were not allowed in the society of the demigods while drinking soma-rasa. They had some defects, something like that. So when the physician came to see Cyavana Muni he said that "If you can give me young age, beautiful, you can make me by your treatment beautiful young man, which is very pleasing to young girls, then I shall give you the facility of drinking soma-rasa in the society of demigods." "Yes." So he made him very nice beautiful-looking young man by taking him to a certain lake, and they dipped down and all of them became fresh young men, beautiful, very beautiful. So his chaste wife, she could not recognize, "Who is my husband?" They look all very beautiful young men.
Hari-śauri: A different one then.


Hari-śauri: Cyavana and his followers?
Prabhupāda: So I lived with him for twenty-one days. Then I came to New York.


Prabhupāda: No, Cyavana became young and the aśvinī-kumāras also became...
Hari-śauri: Yes, that picture in the ''Butler Eagle'', it's in the Vyāsa-Pūjā book this year.


Hari-śauri: Oh, they all went in.
Prabhupāda: Yes, yes. Butler County, it is good county. There were many churches. That pleased me, that people have got so many churches, they're religious. (break) . . . some time, that one piece of wire lying in one place, one piece of bamboo was lying in another place, and one dry shell of a squash was lying there. So one intelligent man collected this. So this dry shell became the tambura's . . . what is called?


Prabhupāda: They dipped down in a certain lake. In this way, he became a very beautiful young man. Then for soma-yajña, his father-in-law, the daughter's father came. He came. So he was surprised, "How is that? My daughter is with another young man?" He became angry. "My dear daughter, what is this? You are defaming your husband's family and my family." He began to chastise like that. And just see. Because he sees that "I got my daughter married with old Cyavana. How is that, with a young man?" Just see. Condemned like anything. And she was laughing. She knew that "I have not changed my husband. A change of body." Then she said, "My dear father, don't be angry. He's your real son-in-law. He has become now young by treatment." Then he was very pleased and embraced his daughter, that "You are so nice." This is Vedic civilization. Even one has got old, going to die husband, she cannot change. This is the chastity.
Hari-śauri: I don't know. Like sound chamber. What do you call it? Like on a tambura.  


Hari-śauri: Once a woman was married, then that was finished. No connection with another man.
Prabhupāda: Sound chamber maybe called. So with that dry squash he made the sound chamber. The bamboo he fixed up, and the wire upon it, and then it became a "''tin-tin-tin-tin'' . . ." (laughs) Our organization is like that. I was loitering in the street. Somebody was over there, somebody was there, not combined together. International Society String Band. Yes. Separately we are all useless. Eh?


Prabhupāda: No, no. That one marriage is sufficient. She must remain very faithful to her husband, chaste. That is wanted. Not that "I do not like this husband. I'll change." That is not wanted.
Hari-śauri: No, we were useless. You were never useless.


Hari-śauri: That's Western mentality.
Prabhupāda: No, your assistance was required. How you can be useless? We're all useless. But combined together, now we have become a stringed instrument. This is very good example. Separately . . . just like the same logic, ''andha-khañja.'' Separately, ''andha'' is useless, and ''khañja'' is useless. Blind and lame. They cannot do anything. But combined together, they become useful. Then?


Prabhupāda: Whatever your father and mother has chosen, that's all. He's your worshipable husband. This is the... This point I wanted to bring. And her father was surprised. "How is that? I got you married with an old man? Somehow or other, circumstances I was obliged. How is that you have picked up one young man?" He chastised her like anything. Then when he came to understand that the same old man has become now young man by medical treatment, then he was satisfied. So you cannot change. I have seen it. One, my father's friend, he was very old man. My father was also... He was at that time not less than sixty-five. But his wife died, and he was married with another young girl. But his sister forced him to marry. That "Unless you marry, who will look after you? You have no children." But I have seen that young woman who was married with that gentleman... In our childhood we used to called her didi . Didi means elder sister. So the relationship was very thick and thin. But that old man, not less than sixty-five, and this young woman, utmost twenty to twenty-five. She was serving the husband like anything. We have seen it. There is no question of changing or being dissatisfied.
Hari-śauri: Would you like to reply? Or is it just recorded?


Hari-śauri: Now they bring them up to be independent.
Prabhupāda: I shall reply. You find them if they are coming.  


Prabhupāda: It is a question of culture. Culture. She was king's daughter, royal, and married her with a muni, old, rotten. Older than me. All the skin has become slackened. But still she was serving him just like worshipable lord. The age difference is great-grandfather and great-granddaughter. You'll find in Bhāgavatam. Lord Śiva, he could not construct even a house. He was living underneath a tree. And his wife, Durgā, sṛṣṭi-sthiti-pralaya-sādhana-śaktir ekā [Bs. 5.44] . She can create a new world, so powerful, Durgā. She's living with her husband underneath a tree. Never claims, "My dear husband, if you cannot, I can make one." There is a story about that. That, "People criticize us. All right, let us have some house." So Lord Śiva, Durgā, both of them capable to do anything. So they constructed a very nice gold house. "Now we shall live." So there is new house entering ceremony. So one Gargamuni was invited as brāhmaṇa. Many other brāhmaṇas. So they began to eat so much... That story I'm now forgetting. Then whatever stock they have finished, when, after eating, when they wanted, "Give us dakṣiṇā. " Because after eating there is... So Lord Śiva, where shall I get everything? I have finished." Then they became puzzled what to do. So Lord Śiva said, "All right, you take this house." Again they became underneath a tree. (laughs) "All right, as dakṣiṇā you take this house. Don't bother." Their house entrance ceremony was there. As a result of that ceremony they became again underneath a tree. (About someone else:) What they're doing? (end)
Hari-śauri: Yeah.


{{CV_Footer|{{PAGENAME}}}}
Harikeśa: There's a . . . it's a very . . . (break) (end)

Revision as of 02:38, 14 June 2020

His Divine Grace
A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada



760909R1-VRNDAVAN - September 09, 1976 - 11:37 Minutes



Prabhupāda: . . . because as soon as the ship stopped, Commonwealth Pier, Boston, the Immigration Department came and took their papers. So I entered America in Boston. There was no checking in New York. The ship stopped in Boston. The official entrance was done there. Then when I came to New York, it is just like one day's travel.

Harikeśa: No, that's not very far. And then you went to Pennsylvania.

Prabhupāda: Hmm?

Harikeśa: And then you went directly to Pennsylvania?

Prabhupāda: Yes.

Harikeśa: By bus?

Prabhupāda: Yes. Then one agent appointed by my host, Gopal Agarwal . . . he was in Butler. So he arranged with some professional, what is called, host.

Harikeśa: Travel agent?

Prabhupāda: Maybe travel agent. He came to see me that, "I am sent by Gopal Agarwal, so I'll arrange for your dispatch. You come with me."

Hari-śauri: Dr. Agarwal was your sponsor?

Prabhupāda: Yes, sponsor. His father came to see me sometime in Agra.

Hari-śauri: In India.

Prabhupāda: Agra. His father, mother came.

Hari-śauri: And then they suggested that he be your sponsor.

Prabhupāda: It was all by chance. I was for a few days guest at his father's place in Agra. I did not know that his son is in America. So he was talking about his family. He was little sorry that his eldest son went to America to study electric engineering, and he was entrapped by an English girl there, and he married and settled there and did not come back. In this way . . . so I took the opportunity that, "Why don't you ask your son to sponsor me?" I wanted to go to America. So I did not know how seriously he took it. But I simply told him that, "Why don't you ask your son to sponsor me at least for one month? So I am thinking of going to America." Then that was talking, beginning and end, that's all. I did not know that he took it very seriously. Then after two, three months, some documents came. I was receiving my letters in a postbox. So when I left Delhi I used to keep my key of postbox with some nice bookseller, Atmaram, he was manager. So he opened that, he got that documents. That is No-Objection Certificate, sponsor, and everything. I was out of Delhi. Then when I came back I took it. So everything was there, that sheet . . . (indistinct) . . . taken from the Indian Consulate, No-Objection Certificate and everything. Then I applied for a passport. In this way I had to go there. So Gopal was unknown to me, but his father was . . . his father was known to me, mother was known to me. Then his agent got me on the bus. So on the bus went to Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania?

Hari-śauri: That's a long drive.

Prabhupāda: Yes, nine hours on the bus. And I took a little chipped rice, (laughs) and whatever I had with me. So I got down from the ship about one o'clock. Then I had to wait for the bus till five o'clock. Then at five o'clock the bus started. About two o'clock, three o'clock in the morning, I went to Pennsylvania, and just in front of the bus Gopal was standing with his car, that . . . what is called? Van car?

Harikeśa: Stationwagon.

Prabhupāda: Stationwagon. So he took my luggage, and from there thirty miles off, the Butler County. So I went there. Then at night he took my bedding and . . . the next day, he had no many rooms in his apartment, he arranged for my stay in the YMCA nearby them.

Hari-śauri: You never actually stayed with him, then.

Prabhupāda: I was going. I was taking my meals there.

Hari-śauri: Oh. And just keeping a room at the YMCA.

Prabhupāda: Because he had no room, so I was staying there.

Hari-śauri: And then he arranged programs, speaking programs, or . . .?

Prabhupāda: His wife, Sally. His wife, Sally, she was arranging. A very intelligent girl. They were of the same age, about thirty. Gopal was more than thirty and she was about thirty . . . (indistinct) . . . I saw that she was feeding her child, one boy, meat powder.

Harikeśa: Beef bouillion?

Prabhupāda: I do know what is the name. But I asked. She said: "It is meat powder." That is the system?

Hari-śauri: Yeah. When they're very young and they can't eat solids.

Prabhupāda: With hot water.

Hari-śauri: Yes, they have instant meals for children. All different kinds of things.

Prabhupāda: So Gopal was very much pleased that he could get some Indian cāpāṭis, like this.

Hari-śauri: So he had you cook for him. You took your cooker with you? Is that the same one?

Prabhupāda: No.

Hari-śauri: A different one then.

Prabhupāda: So I lived with him for twenty-one days. Then I came to New York.

Hari-śauri: Yes, that picture in the Butler Eagle, it's in the Vyāsa-Pūjā book this year.

Prabhupāda: Yes, yes. Butler County, it is good county. There were many churches. That pleased me, that people have got so many churches, they're religious. (break) . . . some time, that one piece of wire lying in one place, one piece of bamboo was lying in another place, and one dry shell of a squash was lying there. So one intelligent man collected this. So this dry shell became the tambura's . . . what is called?

Hari-śauri: I don't know. Like sound chamber. What do you call it? Like on a tambura.

Prabhupāda: Sound chamber maybe called. So with that dry squash he made the sound chamber. The bamboo he fixed up, and the wire upon it, and then it became a "tin-tin-tin-tin . . ." (laughs) Our organization is like that. I was loitering in the street. Somebody was over there, somebody was there, not combined together. International Society String Band. Yes. Separately we are all useless. Eh?

Hari-śauri: No, we were useless. You were never useless.

Prabhupāda: No, your assistance was required. How you can be useless? We're all useless. But combined together, now we have become a stringed instrument. This is very good example. Separately . . . just like the same logic, andha-khañja. Separately, andha is useless, and khañja is useless. Blind and lame. They cannot do anything. But combined together, they become useful. Then?

Hari-śauri: Would you like to reply? Or is it just recorded?

Prabhupāda: I shall reply. You find them if they are coming.

Hari-śauri: Yeah.

Harikeśa: There's a . . . it's a very . . . (break) (end)