World
03/15/98 - 1695
History of Sri Varaha Vana Ashram
India (VNN) - To Gauridas Pandit, from Narasimha das
I moved to South India with my family in 1991. Since then, Ive
spent a few hundred thousand dollars there. Ive been struggling
to start some preaching, particularly a large project in the Sahya
Mountains near the most sacred Varaha Tirtha. The project is also
near Sri Udupi Kshetra, Sri Kshetra Dharmastala, and Mangalore.
I was also working on another smaller project near Sri Subrahmanya
Tirtha, the kshetra of Sri Narasimha Deva and His great devotee
Sri Kumara Guru (Kartikeyas boyhood aspect). Both places are
in lovely secluded valleys surrounded by lush tropical forests
of incredible biodiversity.
At Varaha Vana, the larger place, we built at least 8,000 sq.
ft. of accommodations, and weve done a number of preaching programs
and hosted hundreds of devotees. Weve received thousands of visitors
and laid the foundations for the main temple on a hilltop. Public
response in the area has been excellent. Several devotees have
assisted at various times. Radhanatha Swami and some of his devotees
have also assisted. They conducted a couple of big pandal programs
there, did local hari-namas, and did programs in the Udupi temple.
Once when devotees from Bombay visitied, they brought 25 gurukula
boys and spent 6 weeks. They all loved it. We all felt there could
be no better environment for a gurukula or ashram anywhere in
the world.
The locality may be the best place for Vaishnava culture in the
world today, W. Bengal included. Dakshina Kannada, particularly
our area, is the stronghold of the Gaura-sarasvata Vaishnavas
and Madhva Vaishnava Brahmins. In the mountains nearby, at Sringeri,
near the place of the ancient sage Rishi-shringha, is perhaps
the best of the mathas established by Sripad Shankar Acharya.
They run the best gurukula Ive ever seen--at least externally.
In the months and years ahead, Dakshina Kannada will likely remain
the most safe and stable region in India. In my opinion the Pejwar
Matha, the Pudige Matha, and other Madhva Mathas, such as the
one in Subrahmanya, are the only genuine allies ISKCON has in
India. The preaching potential in the area is untapped. A good
preacher could do wonders in the region in no time. The air, water,
and fruits there would improve ones health.
One of the bhaktas who joined at Varaha Vana was a Madhva sannyasis
initiated by Vishvesvatirtha Swamiji of the Pejwar Matha. He wanted
some sort ofdiksha from me, but I declined. He is a Sanskrit scholar
and lives by begging and conducting simple preaching programs.
Hes a scholar of Srimad-Bhagavatam, Bhagavad-gita, and other
Puranas and Vaishnava shastras and has been trained by the Pejwar
Mutt in puja. Yet he still insisted I train him in Srila Prabhupadas
way of preaching and conducting programs and the ISKCON standard
of puja. Several other interesting devotees joined, almost joined,
or were trying to participate or join when I left. I wish I had
had more time to spend cultivating people, but it was all I could
do to manage the construction, the landscaping, and the agriculture,
which includes harvesting and maintaining produce of coconuts,
betel nuts, bananas, cocoa, rice, dahl, cashew, and vegetables.
I tried doing programs alone, and I repeatedly hosted and invited
many ISKCON sannyasis, but although many showed great interest,
so far no one has come to organize or participate in preaching
programs on a regular basis. Almost any sort of consistent preaching
approach would yield wonderful results in Dakshina Kannada.
Dakshina Kannada has been blessed by the preaching mission of
Srila Madhvacharya and many other great devotees. It has also
been specifically blessed by Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu. Krishnadas
Kaviraja Gosvami mentions that Chaitanya Mahaprabhu exhibited
the full ecstasy of his preaching mission only in South India.
Thus the significance of South India is unimaginable. More than
anything else, this is what has drawn me there so strongly. Unfortunately
much of South India has become eroded by industrial materialism
and imported Western lust and commercialism. Until very recently
Dakshina Kannada was spared of this, so I feel that at least in
DK theres a chance of wide scale enlightenment through Krishna
consciousness. Krishna consciousness is still very much part of
the local culture and environment. The people in general and the
Vaishnavas and brahmins in particular are mostly still pious and
gentle and devoted to Narayana, Vishnu, and especially Krishna.
There is harmony in the region between the various factions of
brahmins and Vaishnavas. No group we have encountered has discouraged
us in any way but rather has offered all types of assistance and
even proposals for affiliation.
Over and above the favorable physical character of the land and
buildings and orchards at Sri Varaha Vana, I would like to say
a few words about the spiritual character of the land and location.
Apparently Varaha Vana used to be an ashram or residence of sages
long ago. Weve discovered evidence that makes us believe Lord
Chaitanya may have camped nearby. Weve made some effort to investigate
the lineage of Srila Rupa and Srila Sanatana Goswamis, whose family
hails from this area very nearby. The locals have their legends
about the place and the area, and experts of vastu-shastra and
other Vedic writings have praised the spiritual ambience of Varaha
Vana. For instance, were on a high western bank of the Swarna
River (tears of Lord Varaha) as she turns to flow north (briefly)
after descending from the high slopes in the east. Another sacred
stream bisects our property and flows east to join the Swarna
at a waterfall on the northeast side of the ashram. The valley
of Varaha Vana opens wide in the northeast, with panoramic views
of the most sacred Varaha Tirtha in the northeast and the renowned
Shringha-Giri (Sringeri) due north. (Several sadhus have commented
with astonishment about the vastu configurations of the location.)
Our valley is closed by hills in the south and southwest. These
are natural auspicious characteristics that we have tried to appreciate
and amplify by sticking to vastu considerations while building
and landscaping. By luck, mostly, we ended up doing almost everything
right, in spite of our somewhat hurried development phase.
Apart from what Ive heard about our location from others, Ive
had my own experiences. For instances, I saw it raining one cloudless
evening at dusk in our betel nut orchard in an area of approximately
40 feet in diameter. This went on for several minutes while I
watched. When it got dark I had to leave. It was still raining.
There was no trace of clouds anywhere in the sky. Myself and others
have seen strange lights in that part of the orchard on other
occasions, and weve heard Krishna bhajanas being sung in the
dark forest late at night. A few visiting devotees saw a 35-foot
King Cobra swallow a 25-foot python at Subrahmanya Tirtha. The
event took 3 hours and was witnessed by 100 people, who applauded
by stomping the ground with their feet. The serpent raised its
hood and nodded before disappearing into the forest. After completing
our noon baths and gayatris one day, Jagat Guru Swami and I found
a huge Hari Hara shalagrama in the river bordering the ashram.
(The local priests were astonished when we showed it to them.
Theres a similar but smaller one installed in the Subrahmanya
Temple.) Ive both seen and heard about wonderful creatures that
still live in The Sahyadri forests. I know a man who saw a dead
230-foot 5-headed Naga that was killed 15 years ago in the high
mountains by the Indian military. It filled up an entire lorry.
(Local devotees said a small report had come in the local paper
saying a big snake had been killed and sent to Switzerland for
study.) Near Varaha Vana on the mountainside is a cave that locals
say goes all the way to Nagaloka. A few brave men have entered
there but none have found the end. They say some explorers never
returned from that cave.
Of course, such tales dont prove the spiritual potency of the
area or our ashram. The best proof are the numerous shastric references
to the area. Regarding are specific location, the best proof are
the many comments from devotees who have had the good fortune
to live at or visit Sri Varaha Vana. Weve hosted large entourages
on many occasions. Tripurari Swami said it was the most beautiful
place hed ever seen. Jagat Guru Swami liked it so much he moved
his whole ashram (devotees, Deities, furnishings, ect.) there
for nearly a year. Radhanath Swami, before getting drafted back
into ISKCON, was considering making Varaha Vana one of his bases
and a gurukula project. Bhaktivikas Swami, Bhaktiraghava Swami,
and several other sannyasis have visited, done programs, and made
plans to preach there.
I feel incapable of developing the ashrams further on my own.
I now reside with my wife and daughter at Prabhupada Village in
North Carolina, and Ive decided to sell one or both our projects
in India. Id be willing to sell for less than half of what Ive
invested so far to an inspired preacher who could make the projects
a great success. Real estate and construction prices have gone
up steeply in the past 4 years. If comparable properties could
be found in the area, which is unlikely, it would cost at least
60 percent more to create the same facilities now.
I and two other devotees spent one year and covered 30,000 kilometers
in a focused, well-planned search for land in The Sahyadri. We
saw dozens of properties and eliminated (by hearing about them)
at least a hundred others. We ended up buying three properties.
Among these three, Varaha Vana is, in almost every way, the best
place. Regarding the development weve done thus far and the advantages
of the area and local community, Varaha Vana is superior in every
way. We are in the heart of the best area of Vaishnava culture
in South India--60 km. from Mangalore and Udupi, 40 km. from Dharmastala,
50 km. from Sringeri, 3 km. from Naravi, where theres a famous
ancient temple of Surya Narayana (one of only three in all of
India), 108 km. from Sri Kshetra Kollur (due north), and 108 km.
from Sri Subrahmanya Tirtha (due south). There are innumerable
Vaishnava temples and shrines in the area, many of which were
personally established by Sripad Madhvacharya or ancient sages
like Agastya and Rishishringa.
In the forests 5 km. from the Subrahmanya Temple, I have built
a small ashram on 9 acres. The land is surrounded by National
Forest. There are no neighbors nearby. The land is fully developed
agriculturally with orchards and paddy fields. It rarely needs
irrigation, but if it does, it has gravity-flow canals from mountain
streams. The ashram sits on the banks of the Marigundi River,
and we drink water straight from the river without filtration.
The water is not only safe to drink but quite medicinal. Sambha,
Krishnas son, and Aditi are among some of the famous people cured
of terrible diseases at Subrahmanya. Often at night we hear wild
elephants trumpeting in the forest. The sound echos through the
valleys and invokes auspicious emotions. The elephants also visit
the ashram sometimes. The forests of Subrahmanya hosts unbelievable
biodiversity. Beautiful tropical birds, butterflies, and fragrant
flowers everywhere.
Srila Madvacharya would often walk to Subrahmanya Tirtha from
Udupi. He established a separate matha here for his brother, Sri
Vishnutirtha, who still lives in the forests doing constant hari-nama
bhajana. Apart from the Sri Subrahmanya Narasimha Swamy Matha,
Madhvacharya also established the temple of Narasimha Deva, where
some of the shalagramas given to him by Srila Vyasadeva are still
worshipped daily at 5 a.m. by Vidyabhushanatirtha Swami. Among
these shalagramas is a big Narasimha shalagrama. Hes the main
one and sits in the middle of the altar on a separate throne.
A Madhva sannyasi joined us at Varaha Vana to preach Krishna consciousness
according to Srila Prabhupadas mission. Many Gaura-sarasvata
devotees in the area are chanting japa now and taking an active
interest in Srila Prabhupadas books and mission.
I feel it is important for devotees to cultivate relations with
the Madhva Mathas, particularly the Pejwar Matha, Puthige Matha,
and others such as the Subrahmanya Matha. These mathas have always
been friendly and helpful. They have supported us, defended us,
and offered practical assistance many times over the years. They
are a powerful institution in South India, and they should never
be slighted or ignored. They are proud of the fact that we are
part of the Madhva-sampradaya. I believe it was Sugendra Tirtha
Swami of the Pudige Matha who told devotees, Remember, after Mayapur,
Udupi is your home.
I could write a book about the auspicious characteristics of Dakshina
Kannada, The Sahyadri, and our ashrams at Varaha Vana and Subrahmanya.
One determined sannyasi and a few brahmacaris traveling on foot
between the two ashrams could start a spiritual revival in the
area unlike anything seen since the days Caitanya Mahaprabhu Himself
preached there. It would cost nothing to maintain and expand this
program unlimitedly. Hundreds of thousands of pious Vaishnavas
in DK and The Sahyadri have become disgusted with the modern social
scene and are eager and ready to join the Krishna consciousness
movement. Id be happy to answer any questions or elaborate on
any of the topics in this letter.
I know Srila Prabhupada would be pleased with the ashrams and
the area.
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