Archive for the ‘Ashram’ Category
The Beatles in India – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Posted: February 24, 2015 at 11:51 pm
In February 1968, the Beatles travelled to Rishikesh, in northern India, to attend an advanced Transcendental Meditation (TM) training session at the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Amid widespread media attention, their visit was one of the band's most productive periods. Their interest in the Maharishi changed Western attitudes about Indian spirituality and encouraged the study of Transcendental Meditation. They first met the Maharishi in London in August 1967 and then attended a seminar in Bangor, Wales. The Beatles had planned to attend the entire ten-day session, but their stay was cut short by the death of their manager, Brian Epstein. Wanting to learn more, they kept in contact with the Maharishi and made arrangements to spend time with him at his teaching centre located near Rishikesh, in "the Valley of the Saints" in the foothills of the Himalayas.
Along with their wives, girlfriends, assistants and numerous reporters, the Beatles arrived in India in February 1968, and joined the group of 60 people who were training to be TM teachers, including musicians Donovan, Mike Love of the Beach Boys, and flautist Paul Horn. While there, John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison wrote many songs and Ringo Starr finished writing his first. Eighteen of those songs were recorded for The Beatles (the White Album), two songs appeared on the Abbey Road album, and others were used for various solo projects.
Starr and his wife left on 1 March, after a ten-day stay; the McCartneys left after one month due to other commitments; while John Lennon and George Harrison stayed about six weeks and left abruptly following financial disagreements and rumours of inappropriate behaviour by the Maharishi. Harrison later apologised for the way he and Lennon had treated the Maharishi and in 1992 gave a benefit concert for the Maharishi-associated Natural Law Party. In 2009, McCartney and Starr performed at a benefit concert for the David Lynch Foundation, which raises funds for the teaching of Transcendental Meditation to at-risk students.
In the mid-1960s, the Beatles became interested in Indian culture, after using drugs in an effort to expand their consciousness[4] and in 1966 Harrison visited India for six weeks and took sitar lessons from Ravi Shankar.Alexis "Magic Alex" Mardas, a friend of the Beatles and head of Apple Electronics, had heard a lecture by the Maharishi in Athens, Greece and Harrison's wife, Pattie Boyd, attended a lecture by the Maharishi in London and they encouraged the Beatles to hear the Maharishi speak.
At Boyd's suggestion, the Beatles attended the Maharishi's lecture at the London Hilton on Park Lane on 24 August 1967. The Maharishi had announced his intention to retire, so this was expected to be his last public lecture in the West. Some band members had seen him on a Granada TV program years earlier. The Beatles were given front row seats and were invited to meet the Maharishi in his hotel suite after the lecture. During the ninety-minute meeting, he invited them to be his guests at a training retreat in Wales.
Two days later, on 26 August, the Beatles travelled by train to the college campus in Bangor, Wales. It was perhaps the first time the band had travelled without their tour managers and they had not even thought to bring money. The station was mobbed because of a bank holiday and Cynthia Lennon, mistaken for a fan, was held back. She ran after the train but missed it and arrived later by car. The group, along with Mick Jagger, Marianne Faithfull, Cilla Black, Harrison's sister-in-law Jenny Boyd, and around 300 others, learned the basics of Transcendental Meditation,[18] and were given their mantras. The group "hesitated only slightly" when asked to donate the customary week's wages, a large sum for a Beatle, to learn.[20][21] While there, they announced at a press conference that they were giving up drugs (apparently referring to psychedelics, but not marijuana). This was a choice "in keeping with the Maharishi's teachings" but one made prior to meeting the Maharishi. The Maharishi did advise them privately to avoid involvement with the "Ban the Bomb" movement and to support the elected government of the day.[26] Their intention was to attend the entire ten-day seminar but their stay was cut short by the death of their manager, Epstein, in London on 27 August. The Maharishi consoled them by saying that Epstein's spirit was still with them and their good thoughts would help him "to have an easy passage" and journey to his "next evolution". According to McCartney, the Maharishi "was great to us when Brian died" and Cynthia Lennon wrote "it was as though, with Brian gone, the four needed someone new to give them direction and the Maharishi was in the right place at the right time."
Curious to learn more, the Beatles made plans to spend time at the "Maharishi's training center" in India in late October.[26] However, the trip was postponed due to commitments related to the Magical Mystery Tour film and the soundtrack album.[32] Harrison and Lennon appeared twice on David Frost's programme in autumn 1967 to talk about their involvement with TM when, according to Lennon's wife, John was "evangelical in his enthusiasm for Maharishi". Now publicised as "The Beatles' Guru", the Maharishi went on his eighth world tour, giving lectures in Britain, Scandinavia, Germany, Italy, Canada, and California.[34] At that time, Lennon said that, thanks to his meditation, "I'm a better person and I wasn't bad before."[35] When the Maharishi spoke to 3,600 people at Madison Square Garden in New York City, in January 1968, the Beatles sent a large flower arrangement to his suite at the Plaza Hotel.[36]
Harrison flew to Bombay in January 1968 to work on the Wonderwall Music soundtrack, expecting the rest of the group to follow shortly. When they were delayed he flew back to London, where the group spent a week in the studio. Before leaving for India, the band recorded the instrumental tracks for "Across the Universe", whose refrain, "Jai Guru Dev",[38] was a standard greeting within the Maharishi's Spiritual Regeneration Movement. Also in January, the Maharishi, Mia Farrow, Prudence Farrow and their brother, flew from the US to London and on to India.
Lennon, his wife Cynthia, the Harrisons and Jenny Boyd arrived in Delhi on 15 February, where they were met by Mal Evans, their advance man, who had arranged the 150-mile (240km), six-hour taxi drive to Rishikesh. McCartney, his girlfriend Jane Asher, Starr and his wife Maureen arrived four days later. The group arrived three weeks after the session, due to end 25 April, had already begun.[43] They were accompanied by a small retinue of reporters and photographers who were mostly kept out of the fenced and gated compound.[44][45] Entourage members Evans, Brown and Neil Aspinall were there for all or part of the time and Mardas arrived four weeks later.
As soon as Starr arrived in Delhi he asked Evans to take him to a doctor because of a reaction to an inoculation: "When we arrived at the local hospital, I tried to get immediate treatment for him [Starr], to be told curtly by the Indian doctor, 'He is not a special case and will have to wait his turn.' So off we go to pay a private doctor ten rupees for the privilege of hearing him say it will be all right".[47] Also there at the same time were Mia Farrow, her sister Prudence and brother John, Donovan, Gyp "Gypsy Dave" Mills, Mike Love, jazz flautist Paul Horn, journalist Lewis H. Lapham, film-maker Paul Saltzman, socialite Nancy Cooke de Herrera, actors Tom Simcox and Jerry Stovin,[51] and dozens of others, all Europeans or Americans.[43] Despite speculation, Shirley MacLaine did not attend[34] and Lennon, who had thought of bringing Yoko Ono, decided against it.
Read more:
The Beatles in India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Swami offers discussion on meditation at Lebanon Valley College
Posted: at 11:51 pm
People help themselves to food during an Indian lunch held at Lebanon Valley College's Miller Chapel. The college hosted Swami Pratyagboadhananda, a Hindu monk from an ashram in Saylorsburg. (Jeremy Long Lebanon Daily News)
ANNVILLE >> "The purpose of meditation is to have single-pointedness," explained Swami Pratyagbodhananda after a brief opening prayer to his instruction at Lebanon Valley College.
Swami Pratyagbodhananda was one of the four members of the Arsha Vidya Gurukulam to visit LVC Tuesday. The monk and teacher led a talk at 11 a.m. on the practice of meditation, put on in Miller Chapel by the college's Office of Spiritual Life.
The Arsha Vidya Gurukulam is a gurukulam, which is, in the Hindu tradition, a place where a student goes not only to study from but to live with the teacher, therefore immersing themselves in religious study and practice.
The ashram, located in Saylorsburg, was established in 1986 by Swami Dayananda Saraswati and is based on the traditional gurukulams of India. It provides a number of programs year-round, including classes in Sanskrit, meditation, yoga and religious texts, as well as retreats and children's programs.
Additionally, all programs and courses offered by the Arsha Vidya Gurukulam are free and open to the public, with lodging provided for a nominal fee.
Pratyagbodhananda continued his talk by explaining that to achieve single-pointedness, "one does meditation."
"There are three types of actions I can perform: physical action, oral action and mental action," said the teacher.
All three of these actions can be connected through prayer and meditative chant, Pratyagbodhananda explained.
The teacher then went on to discuss meditation and the challenges to meditation brought on by the naturally wandering mind.
See more here:
Swami offers discussion on meditation at Lebanon Valley College
Monkey Mayhem #1 @ Ramana Maharshi Ashram. BABY – Video
Posted: February 23, 2015 at 7:49 am
Monkey Mayhem #1 @ Ramana Maharshi Ashram. BABY
BABY MONKEY RESTLESS. THIS IS SHOT AT SRI RAMANA MAHARSHI ASHRAM IN INDIA. THE MONKEYS ARE A CHAOS AT THIS PLACE. ENJOY AND WATCH CAREFULLY ITS ANTICS.
By:
lukasfilmExcerpt from:
Monkey Mayhem #1 @ Ramana Maharshi Ashram. BABY - Video
Couples from impoverished families tie nuptial knot at mass wedding in Allahabad
Posted: at 7:49 am
Allahabad, Feb 22 (ANI): Twenty-five couples from impoverished families tied nuptial knot at a mass wedding organized by Prerna Parmarth Ashram in Allahabad. Overjoyed couples, who were coming from economically and socially weak families, were happy at the series of events. The couples were married without any restrictions of caste and with the consent of their parents. Social activist Anurag Verma said that the aim of this mass wedding is to marry the children from poor families according to the customs and traditions of the society. Verma added that such mass weddings are funded by the small donations made by the people associated with the ashram. One of the bride said that she was happy to be wedded with all the rituals. The ashram also provided the newly-married couples with appliances required to run the household.
See the article here:
Couples from impoverished families tie nuptial knot at mass wedding in Allahabad
Devotees visit Mothers room
Posted: February 22, 2015 at 2:48 am
Devotees from all over the world queued up at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram on Saturday to have a glimpse of The Mothers room and samadhi on the occasion of The Mothers 137th birth anniversary.
The occasion is among the few days when The Mothers room is open to visitors.
According to ashram sources, the day started with meditation at 6 a.m. and visitors were allowed into the ashram from 6.30 a.m. to 7.30 p.m.
After Sri Aurobindo retired from daily contact with disciples, he saw them on certain days in a year, which came to be known as darshan days.
The tradition is kept alive till date when visitors can get a glimpse of The Mothers and Sri Aurobindos room on these designated dates.
Please Wait while comments are loading...
1. Comments will be moderated by The Hindu editorial team. 2. Comments that are abusive, personal, incendiary or irrelevant cannot be published. 3. Please write complete sentences. Do not type comments in all capital letters, or in all lower case letters, or using abbreviated text. (example: u cannot substitute for you, d is not 'the', n is not 'and'). 4. We may remove hyperlinks within comments. 5. Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name, to avoid rejection.
The rest is here:
Devotees visit Mothers room
Shiva Kirtan – Shivaya Namah Om – Video
Posted: February 21, 2015 at 1:50 pm
Shiva Kirtan - Shivaya Namah Om
Sri Durgamayi Ma is singing Kirtan to Shiva with her chela at Shivaratri in her ashram Brindavon in Ulm, Germany. The Kirtan can also be found on the CD "Jai Shiva Shankara", the pictures have...
By:
Sri Durgamayi Ma Ashram e.V.See the original post here:
Shiva Kirtan - Shivaya Namah Om - Video
Three-day programme to mark decennial celebrations of Ramakrishna Temple
Posted: February 19, 2015 at 3:52 am
The Ramakrishna Vivekananda Ashram will organise programmes for three days at Karnatak Vidyavardhak Sangha auditorium here from Saturday to mark the decennial celebrations of Ramakrisha Temple.
Ashram president Swami Vijayananda Saraswati told presspersons here on Wednesday that Minister for Rural Development and Panchayat Raj H. K. Patil would inaugurate a conference of gram panchayat members and officials on the first day.
It was an effort to sensitise the elected members and officials on their role in the well-being of the people in the grass root level units of administration. The resource persons would focus on Swami Vivekanandas ideas on rural development and how it would help if they were implemented in their letter and spirit. Mangalore Ramakrishna Ashram president Swami Jitakamananda would be present. The former MLA D. R. Patil and founder of Swami Vivekananda Youth Movement, R. Balasubramaniam, would speak on the Role of gram panchayats in development of villages and Swami Vivekanandas thoughts on rural development.
Pralhad Joshi, MP, would inaugurate a youth conference on Sunday.
The participants would be sensitised about Swami Vivekanandas call for the youth. M. Rama Jois, MP, would inaugurate a devotees conference on Monday.
Minister H. K. Patil to inaugurate event for gram panchayat members
Please Wait while comments are loading...
1. Comments will be moderated by The Hindu editorial team. 2. Comments that are abusive, personal, incendiary or irrelevant cannot be published. 3. Please write complete sentences. Do not type comments in all capital letters, or in all lower case letters, or using abbreviated text. (example: u cannot substitute for you, d is not 'the', n is not 'and'). 4. We may remove hyperlinks within comments. 5. Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name, to avoid rejection.
Read this article:
Three-day programme to mark decennial celebrations of Ramakrishna Temple
Indian Paid Media ILL effects on Society YouTube – Video
Posted: February 17, 2015 at 8:49 pm
Indian Paid Media ILL effects on Society YouTube
To Watch FREE LIVE Webcast of Sant Shri Asharamji Bapu on Mangalmay TV Visit : http://www.ashram.org/live For More Information Visit : http://www.ashram.org Join Ashram on Facebook ...
By:
Guru Sewa ChannelGo here to see the original:
Indian Paid Media ILL effects on Society YouTube - Video
“Ascensor del Ashram 2015 Enero” – Video
Posted: at 8:49 pm
"Ascensor del Ashram 2015 Enero"
HARE KRISHNA!
By:
Yadu Gopala DasContinued here:
"Ascensor del Ashram 2015 Enero" - Video
An International Festival #MPPD – Video
Posted: February 16, 2015 at 3:52 am
An International Festival #MPPD
To Watch FREE LIVE Webcast of Sant Shri Asharamji Bapu on Mangalmay TV Visit : http://www.ashram.org/live For More Information Visit : http://www.ashram.org Join Ashram on Facebook ...
By:
Guru Sewa ChannelMore here:
An International Festival #MPPD - Video