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(by Shrila Bhaktivinoda
Thakura)
He was born in Mayapur
in the town of Nadia just after sunset on the evening of the
23rd Phalguna 1407 Sakabda, answering to the 18th of February,
1486, of the Christian Era. The moon was eclipsed at the time
of his birth, and the people of Nadia were then engaged, as
was usual on such occasions, in bathing in the Bhagirathi
with loud cheers of Haribol. His father, Jagannatha Misra,
a poor brahmana of the Vedic order, and his mother, Saci-devi,
a model good woman, both descended from brahmana stock
originally residing in Sylhet.
Mahaprabhu was a beautiful
child, and the ladies of the town came to see him with presents.
His mother's father, Pandita Nilambara Cakravarti, a renowned
astrologer, foretold that the child would be a great personage
in time; and he, therefore, gave him the name Visvambhara.
The ladies of the neighborhood styled him Gaurahari on account
of his golden complexion, and his mother called him Nimai
on account of the nimba tree near which he was born. Beautiful
as the lad was, everyone heartily loved to see him every day.
As he grew up he became a whimsical and frolicsome lad. After
his fifth year, he was admitted into a pathasala where he
picked up Bengali in a very short time.
Most of his contemporary
biographers have mentioned certain anecdotes regarding Caitanya
which are simple records of his early miracles. It is said
that when he was an infant in his mother's arms he wept continually,
and when the neighboring ladies cried Haribol he used to stop.
Thus there was a continuation of the utterance of Haribol
in the house, foreshewing the future mission of the hero.
It has also been stated that when his mother once gave him
sweetmeats to eat, he ate clay instead of the food. His mother
asking for the reason, he stated that as every sweetmeat was
nothing but clay transformed, he could eat clay as well. His
mother, who was also the consort of a pandita, explained that
every article in a special state was adapted to a special
use. Earth, while in the state of a jug, could be used as
a water pot, but in the state of a brick such a use was not
possible. Clay, therefore, in the form of sweetmeats was usable
as food, but clay in its other states was not. The lad was
convinced and admitted his stupidity in eating clay and agreed
to avoid the mistake in the future. Another miraculous act
has been related. It is said that a brahmana on pilgrimage
became a guest in his house, cooked food and read grace with
meditation upon Krsna. In the meantime the lad came and ate
up the cooked rice. The brahmana, astonished at the lad's
act, cooked again at the request of Jagannatha Misra. The
lad again ate up the cooked rice while the brahmana was offering
the rice to Krsna with meditation. The brahmana was persuaded
to cook for the third time. This time all the inmates of the
house had fallen asleep, and the lad shewed himself as Krsna
to the traveller and blessed him. The brahmana was then lost
in ecstasy at the appearance of the object of his worship.
It has also been stated that two thieves stole away the lad
from his father's door with a view to purloin his jewels and
gave him sweetmeats on the way. The lad exercised his illusory
energy and deceived the thieves back towards his own house.
The thieves, for fear of detection, left the boy there and
fled. Another miraculous act that has been described is the
lad's demanding and getting from Hiranya and Jagadisa all
the offerings they had collected for worshiping Krsna on the
day of Ekadasi. When only four years of age he sat on rejected
cooking pots which were considered unholy by his mother. He
explained to his mother that there was no question of holiness
and unholiness as regards earthen pots thrown away after the
cooking was over. These anecdotes relate to his tender age
up to the fifth year. In his eighth year, he was admitted
into the tola of Gangadasa Pandita in Ganganagara close by
the village of Mayapur. In two years he became well read in
Sanskrit grammar and rhetoric. His readings after that were
of the nature of self-study in his own house, where he had
found all-important books belonging to his father, who was
a pandita himself. It appears that he read the smrti in his
own study, and the nyaya also, in competition with his friends,
who were then studying under the celebrated Pandita Raghunatha
Siromani. Now, after the tenth year of his age, Caitanya became
a passable scholar in grammar, rhetoric, the smrti and the
nyaya. It was after this that his elder brother Visvarupa
left his house and accepted the asrama (status) of a sannyasi
(ascetic). Caitanya, though a very young boy, consoled his
parents, saying that he would serve them with a view to please
God. Just after that, his father left this world. His mother
was exceedingly sorry, and Mahaprabhu, with his usual contented
appearance, consoled his widowed mother. It was at the age
of 14 or 15 that Mahaprabhu was married to Laksmidevi, the
daughter of Vallabhacarya, also of Nadia. He was at this age
considered one of the best scholars of Nadia, the renowned
seat of nyaya philosophy and Sanskrit learning. Not to speak
of the smarta panditas, the Naiyayikas were all afraid of
confronting him in literary discussions. Being a married man,
he went to Eastern Bengal on the banks of the Padma for acquirement
of wealth. There he displayed his learning and obtained a
good sum of money. It was at this time that he preached Vaisnavism
at intervals. After teaching him the principles of Vaisnavism,
he ordered Tapana Misra to go to and live in Benares. During
his residence in East Bengal, his wife Laksmidevi left this
world from the effects of snakebite. On returning home, he
found his mother in a mourning state. He consoled her with
a lecture on the uncertainty of human affairs. It was at his
mother's request that he married Visnupriya, the daughter
of Raja Pandita Sanatana Misra. His comrades joined him on
his return from pravasa or sojourn. He was now so renowned
that he was considered to be the best pandita in Nadia. Kesava
Misra of Kashmir, who had called himself the Great Digvijayi,
came to Nadia with a view to discuss with the panditas of
that place. Afraid of the so-called conquering pandita, the
tola professors of Nadia left their town on pretence of Invitation.
Kesava met Mahaprabhu at the Barokona-ghata in Mayapur, and
after a very short discussion with him he was defeated by
the boy, and mortification obliged him to decamp. Nimai Pandita
was now the most important pandita of his times.
It was at the age of
16 or 17 that he travelled to Gaya with a host to sing the
holy name of Hari in the streets and bazaars. This created
a sensation and roused different feelings in different quarters.
The bhaktas were highly pleased. The smarta brahmanas became
jealous of Nimai Pandita's success and complained to Chand
Kazi against the character of Caitanya as un-Hindu. The Kazi
came to Srivasa Pandita's house and broke a mrdanga (khola
drum) there and declared that unless Nimai Pandita ceased
to make noise about his queer religion he would be obliged
to enforce Mohammedanism on him and his followers. This was
brought to Mahaprabhu's notice. He ordered the townspeople
to appear in the evening, each with a torch in his hand. This
groups, and on his arrival in the Kazi's house, he held a
long conversation with the Kazi and in the end communicated
into his heart his Vaisnava influence by touching his body.
The Kazi then wept and admitted that he had felt a keen spiritual
influence which had cleared up his doubts and produced in
him a religious sentiment which gave him the highest ecstasy.
The Kazi then joined the sankirtana party. The world was astonished
at the spiritual power of the Great Lord, and hundreds and
hundreds of heretics converted and joined the banner of Visvambhara
after this affair. It was after this that some of the jealous
and low-minded brahmanas of Kulia picked a quarrel with Mahaprabhu
and collected a party to oppose him. Nimai Pandita was naturally
a soft-hearted person, though strong in his principles. He
declared that party feelings and sectarianism were the two
great enemies of progress and that as long as he should continue
to be an inhabitant of Nadia belonging to a certain family,
his mission would not meet with complete success. He then
resolved to be a citizen of the world by cutting his connection
with his particular family, caste and creed, and with this
resolution he embraced the position of a sannyasi at Katwa,
under the guidance of Kesava Bharati of that town, on the
24th year of his age. His mother and wife wept bitterly for
his separation, but our hero, though soft in heart, was a
strong person in principle. He left his little world in his
house for the unlimited spiritual world of Krsna with man
in general.
After his sannyas, he was induced to visit the house
of Advaita Prabhu in Santipura. Advaita managed to invite
all his friends and admirers from Nadia and brought Sacidevi
to see her son. Both pleasure and pain invaded her heart when
she saw her son in the attire of a sannyasi. As a sannyasi,
Krsna Caitanya put on nothing but a kaupina and a bahirvasa
(outer covering). His head was without hair, and his hands
bore a danda (stick) and a kamandalu (hermit's water pot).
The holy son fell at the feet of his beloved mother and said,
"Mother! This body is yours, and I must obey your orders.
Permit me to go to Vrndavana for my spiritual attainments."
The mother, in consultation with Advaita and others, asked
her son to reside in Puri (the town of Jagannatha) so that
she might obtain his information now and then. Mahaprabhu
agreed to that proposition and in a few days left Santipura
for Orissa. His biographers have described the journey of
Krsna Caitanya (that was the name he got after his sannyasa)
from Santipura to Puri in great detail. He travelled along
the side of the Bhagirathi as far as Chatrabhoga, situated
now in Thana Mathurapura, Diamond Harbour, 24 Parganas. There
he took a boat and went as far as Prayaga-ghata in the Midnapura
District. Thence he walked through Balasore and Cuttack to
Puri, seeing the temple of Bhuvanesvara on his way. Upon his
arrival at Puri he saw Jagannatha in the temple and resided
with Sarvabhauma at the request of the latter. Sarvabhauma
was a gigantic pandita of the day. His readings knew no bounds.
He was the best naiyayika of the times and was known as the
most erudite scholar in the Vedanta philosophy of the school
of Sankaracarya. He was born in Nadia (Vidyanagara) and taught
innumerable pupils in the nyaya philosophy in his tola
there. He had left for Puri some time before the birth of
Nimai Pandita. His brother-in-law Gopinatha Misra introduced
our new sannyasi to Sarvabhauma, who was astonished
at his personal beauty and feared that it would be difficult
for the young man to maintain sannyasa-dharma during the long
run of his life. Gopinatha, who had known Mahaprabhu from
Nadia, had a great reverence for him and declared that the
sannyasi was not a common human being. On this point Gopinatha
and Sarvabhauma had a hot discussion. Sarvabhauma then requested
Mahaprabhu to hear his recitation of the Vedanta-sutras, and
the latter tacitly submitted. Caitanya heard with silence
what the great Sarvabhauma uttered with gravity for seven
days, at the end of which the latter said, "Krsna Caitanya!
I think you do not understand the Vedanta, for you do not
say anything after hearing my recitation and explanations."
The reply of Caitanya was that he understood the sutras very
well, but he could not make out what Sankaracarya meant by
his commentaries. Astonished at this, Sarvabhauma said, "How
is it that you understand the meanings of the sutras and do
not understand the commentaries which explain the sutras?
All well! If you understand the sutras, please let me have
your interpretations." Mahaprabhu thereon explained all
the sutras in his own way without touching the pantheistic
commentary of Sankara. The keen understanding of Sarvabhauma
saw the truth, beauty and harmony of arguments in the explanations
given by Caitanya and obliged him to utter that it was the
first time that he had found one who could explain the Brahma-sutras
in such a simple manner. He admitted also that the commentaries
of Sankara never gave such natural explanations of the
Vedanta-sutras as he had obtained from Mahaprabhu. He
then submitted himself as an advocate and follower. In a few
days Sarvabhauma turned out to be one of the best Vaisnavas
of the time. When reports of this came out, the whole of Orissa
sang the praise of Krsna Caitanya, and hundreds and hundreds
came to him and became his followers. In the meantime Mahaprabhu
thought of visiting Southern India, and he started with one
Krsnadasa Brahmana for the journey.
His biographers have given us a detail of the journey. He
went first to Kurmaksetra, where he performed a miracle by
curing a leper named Vasudeva. He met Ramananda Raya, the
Governor of Vidyanagara, on the banks of the Godavari and
had a philosophical conversation with him on the subject of
prema-bhakti. He worked another miracle by touching (making
them immediately disappear) the seven tala trees through which
Ramacandra, the son of Dasaratha, had shot his arrow and killed
the great Bali Raja. He preached Vaisnavism and nama-sankirtana
throughout the journey. At Rangaksetra he stayed for four
months in the house of one Venkata Bhatta in order to spend
the rainy season. There he converted the whole family of Venkata
from Ramanuja Vaisnavism to Krsna-bhakti, along with the son
of Venkata, a boy of ten years named Gopala, who afterwards
came to Vrndavana and became one of the six Gosvamis or prophets
serving under their leader Sri Krsna Caitanya. Trained up
in Sanskrit by his uncle Prabodhananda Sarasvati, Gopala wrote
several books on Vaisnavism.
Chaitanya visited numerous places in Southern India as far
as Cape Comorin and returned to Puri in two years by Pandepura
on the Bhima. In this latter place he spiritualized one Tukarama,
who became from that time a religious preacher himself. This
fact has been admitted in his abhangas, which have been collected
in a volume by Mr. Satyendra Nath Tagore of the Bombay Civil
Service. During his journey he had discussions with the Buddhists,
the Jains and the Mayavadis in several places and converted
his opponents to Vaisnavism.
Upon his return to Puri,
Raja Prataparudra-deva and several pandit brahmanas
joined the banner of Caitanya Mahaprabhu. He was now twenty-seven
years of age. In his twenty-eighth year he went to Bengal
as far as Gauda in Malda. There he picked up two great personages
named Rupa and Sanatana. Though descended from the lines of
the Karnatic brahmanas, these two brothers turned demi-Moslems
by their continual contact with Hussain Shah, the then Emperor
of Gauda. Their names had been changed by the Emperor into
Dabira Khasa and Sakara Mallika, and their master loved them
heartily since they were both learned in Persian, Arabic and
Sanskrit and were loyal servants of the state. The two gentlemen
had found no way to come back as regular Hindus and had written
to Mahaprabhu for spiritual help while he was at Puri. Mahaprabhu
had written in reply that he would come to them and extricate
them from their spiritual difficulties. Now that he had come
to Gauda, both the brothers appeared before him with their
long-standing prayer. Mahaprabhu ordered them to go to Vrndavana
and meet him there.
Caitanya returned to Puri through Santipura, where he again
met his dear mother. After a short stay at Puri he left for
Vrndavana. This time he was accompanied by one Balabhadra
Bhattacarya. He visited Vrndavana and came down to Prayaga
(Allahabad), converting a large number of Mohammedans to Vaisnavism
by argument from the Koran. The descendants of those converts
are still known as Pathana Vaisnavas. Rupa Gosvami met him
at Allahabad. Caitanya trained him up in spirituality in ten
days and directed him to go to Vrndavana on missions. His
first mission was to write theological works explaining scientifically
pure bhakti and prema. The second mission was to revive the
places where Krsnacandra had in the end of Dvapara-yuga exhibited
His spiritual lila (pastimes) for the benefit of the religious
world. Rupa Gosvami left Allahabad for Vrndavana, and Mahaprabhu
came down to Benares. There he resided in the house of Candrasekhara
and accepted his daily bhiksa (meal) in the house of Tapana
Misra. Here it was that Sanatana Gosvami joined him and took
instruction for two months in spiritual matters.
The biographers, especially Krsnadasa Kaviraja, have given
us details of Caitanya's teachings to Rupa and Sanatana. Krsnadasa
was not a contemporary writer, but he gathered his information
from the Gosvamis themselves, the direct disciples of Mahaprabhu.
Jiva Gosvami, who was nephew of Sanatana and Rupa and who
has left us his invaluable work the Sat-sandarbha, has philosophized
on the precepts of his great leader. We have gathered and
summarized the precepts of Caitanya from the books of those
great writers.
While at Benares, Caitanya had an
interview with the learned sannyasis of that town in the house
of a Maratha brahmana who had invited all the sannyasis for
entertainment. At this interview, Caitanya shewed a miracle
which attracted all the sannyasis to him. Then ensued reciprocal
conversation. The sannyasis were headed by their most learned
leader Prakasananda Sarasvati. After a short controversy,
they submitted to Mahaprabhu and admitted that they had been
misled by the commentaries of Sankaracarya. It was impossible
even for learned scholars to oppose Caitanya for a long time,
for there was some spell in him which touched their hearts
and made them weep for their spiritual improvement. The sannyasis
of Benares soon fell at the feet of Caitanya and asked for
his grace (krpa). Caitanya then preached pure bhakti and instilled
into their hearts spiritual love for Krsna which obliged them
to give up sectarian feelings. The whole population of Benares,
on this wonderful conversion of the sannyasis, turned Vaisnavas,
and they made a master sankirtana with their new Lord. After
sending Sanatana to Vrndavana, Mahaprabhu went to Puri again
through the jungles with his comrade Balabhadra. Balabhadra
reported that Mahaprabhu had shown a good many miracles on
his way to Puri, such as making tigers and elephants dance
on hearing the name of Krsna.
From this time, that
is, from his 31st year, Mahaprabhu continually lived in Puri
in the house of Kasi Misra until his disappearance in his
forty-eighth year at the time of sankirtana in the temple
of Tota-gopinatha. During these 18 years, his life was one
of settled love and piety. He was surrounded by numerous followers,
all of whom were of the highest order of Vaisnavas and who
were distinguished from the common people by their purest
character and learning, firm religious principles and spiritual
love of Radha-Krsna. Svarupa Damodara, who had been known
by the name of Purusottamacarya while Mahaprabhu was in Nadia,
joined him from Benares and accepted service as his secretary.
No production of any poet or philosopher could be laid before
Mahaprabhu unless Svarupa had passed it as pure and useful.
Raya Ramananda was his second mate. Both he and Svarupa would
sing while Mahaprabhu expressed his sentiments on a certain
point of worship. Paramananda Puri was his minister in matters
of religion. There are hundreds of anecdotes described by
his biographers which we do not think it meet here to reproduce.
Mahaprabhu slept short. His sentiments carried him far and
wide in the firmament of spirituality every day and night,
and all his admirers and followers watched him throughout.
He worshiped, communicated with his missionaries at Vrndavana,
and conversed with those religious men who newly came to visit
him. He sang and danced, took no care of himself and oft-times
lost himself in religious beatitude. All who came to him believed
in him as the all-beautiful God appearing in the nether world
for the benefit of mankind. He loved his mother all along
and sent her mahaprasada now and then with those who went
to Nadia. He was most amiable in nature. Humility was personified
in him. His sweet appearance gave cheer to all who came in
contact with him. He appointed Prabhu Nityananda as the missionary
in charge of Bengal. He dispatched six disciples (Gosvamis)
to Vrndavana to preach love in the upcountry. He punished
all of his disciples who deviated from a holy life. This he
markedly did in the case of Junior Haridasa. He never lacked
in giving proper instructions in life to those who solicited
them. This will be seen in his teachings to Raghunatha dasa
Gosvami. His treatment to Haridasa (senior) will show how
he loved spiritual men and how he defied caste distinction
in spiritual brotherhood.
Lord Caitanya's
Mission
Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu instructed His disciples to write
books on the Science of Krsna, a task which those who follow
Him have continued to carry out down to the present day. The
elaborations and expositions on the philosophy taught by Lord
Caitanya are in fact most voluminous, exacting and consistent
due to the system of disciplic succession. Although Lord Caitanya
was widely renowned as a scholar in His youth, He left only
eight verses, called Siksastaka. These eight verses clearly
reveal His mission and precepts. These supremely valuable
prayers are translated herein.
1.
Glory to the Shri Krishna sankirtan, which cleanses
the heart of all the dust accumulated for years and extinguishes
the fire of conditional life, of repeated birth and death.
This
sankirtana movement is the prime benediction for humanity
at large because it spreads
the rays of the benediction moon. It is the life of all transcendental
knowledge. It
increases the ocean of transcendental bliss, and it enables
us to fully taste the
nectar for which we are always anxious.
2.
O my Lord, Your holy name alone can render all benediction
to living beings, and thus You have hundreds and millions
of names like Krsna and Govinda. In these transcendental names
You have invested all Your transcendental energies. There
are not even hard and fast rules for chanting these names.
O my Lord, out of kindness You enable us to easily approach
You by Your holy names, but I am so unfortunate that I have
no attraction for them.
3.
One should chant the holy name of the Lord in a humble state
of mind, thinking oneself lower than the straw in the street;
one should be more tolerant than a tree, devoid of all sense
of false prestige and should be ready to offer all respect
to others. In such a state of mind one can chant the holy
name of the Lord constantly.
4.
O almighty Lord, I have no desire to accumulate wealth, nor
do I desire beautiful
women, nor do I want any number of followers. I only want
Your causeless
devotional service birth after birth.
5.
O son of Maharaja Nanda [Krsna], I am Your eternal servitor,
yet somehow or other I have fallen into the ocean of birth
and death. Please pick me up from this ocean of death
and place me as one of the atoms at Your lotus feet.
6.
O my Lord, when will my eyes be decorated with tears of love
flowing constantly
when I chant Your holy name? When will my voice choke up,
and when will the
hairs of my body stand on end at the recitation of Your name?
7.
O Govinda! Feeling Your separation, I am considering a moment
to be like twelve
years or more. Tears are flowing from my eyes like torrents
of rain, and I am
feeling all vacant in the world in Your absence.
8.
I know no one but Krsna as my Lord, and He shall remain so
even if He handles me
roughly by His embrace or makes me brokenhearted by not being
present
before me. He is completely free to do anything and everything,
for He is
always my worshipful Lord unconditionally.
*
This account originally
appeared in a short work by Shrila Bhaktivinod Thakur entitled
"Shri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu: His Life and Precepts"
(August 20, 1896)
Included in Teachings of Lord Chaitanya by His Divine
Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupad)
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