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Brother Aelred/Caitanya
Dasa
In this article Brother Aelred (Chaitanya Dasa) offers his observations
on the effectiveness of ISKCON's communication of its key messages. These are
particularly valuable in view of Brother Aelred's close association with ISKCON
over the years and his unusual position of being both a practising Catholic
monk and Vaishnava. He is frank and insightful,with a sincere desire to help
devotees. As the Scottish poet Robbie Burns once said, 'I pray to God the power
to give us, to see ourselves as others see us'.
When I first made contact with ISKCON, Prabhupada was still alive. At that
time ― 1977 ― I was already 'falling in love' with the devotees.
No doubt a percentage of that was romanticism ― being attracted to the
externals of exotic appearances, sounds and lifestyle. After all, the sixties
'hippy' movement was not so far back in time.
Out of this emerges the first serious observation I wish to make. A significant
number of ISKCON devotees are still effectively living in that 'exotic space'
of the past. I have asked ― as have others ― whether some devotees
would survive without this identity, whose elements include at least some of
the Bengali cultural artefacts, the cultivated sense of being 'different' from
mainstream society, the conviction of living in a spiritually superior movement,
and so on.
The objection may immediately be raised that ISKCON does indeed create
and provide a 'spiritually superior society". My response would be that yes,
in a variety of ways it does. This is beyond doubt. This is not the content
to which I am referring: rather it is the uses that are made of ISKCON's high
standards of spiritual discipline. There are occasions when this lifestyle is
used as a 'tribal banner', whose purpose is to enforce separation and distinctiveness.
Where this is happening, spiritual pride may not be far away; a sectarian mood
will certainly be very close. Effective communication with mainstream society
will be seriously weakened in such an artificial and negative environment of
ideas.
Even more seriously, there is the question of the extent to which various
Vaishnava teachings (for example, on reincarnation or specific teachings of
Prabhupada such as 'the association of devotees is our only consolation') are
used to separate devotees ― at least to some degree unnecessarily ―
from citizens in mainstream society.
This 'us and them' mentality interferes with the effective communication
necessary for dynamic and convincing preaching. There are sufficient numbers
of devotees holding this stance to undermine ISKCON's credibility, at least
in the eyes of observant members of the public and government. These tribal
attitudes also distort the perceptions and expectations of young devotees who
have recently entered the movement.
There is another serious outcome of this mentality: many former enthusiastic
Christians have either been blocked in their attempts to reconcile their past
with their Vaishnava present or have developed a great burden of personal guilt
and ambivalence with respect to their ongoing devotional attachment to Jesus
Christ. I am now speaking from personal experience in counselling such devotees.
This crisis of 'Who am I? Where am I? What can I do with my continuing
(secret) devotion to Jesus?' can create very real distress. Sadly, such devotees
usually report that they have gone for years without finding anyone within the
temple with whom they can share their confusion and distress. Obviously, I am
delighted that I can contribute to 'setting the record straight' by sharing
with them the many wonderful things which Prabhupada said about devotion to
Jesus Christ (though not about Christianity as it is so often practised) I can
also share with them the story of one who has successfully 'married' the two
traditions, Vaishnava and Roman Catholic - my own story. This has been a major
reason for publishing my most recent book Prabhupada Speaks on Jesus Christ.
Devotees have told me that they had no idea that Prabhupada said such wonderful
things about Jesus, and about the significance of devotion to Him.
I have gradually come to the conclusion that many of the difficulties in
the area of communication experienced by ISKCON ― both intra and inter
― have arisen from a relative lack of systematic application of Vaishnava
and Bhaktivedanta teachings. In other words, there tends to be a naive view
that it is sufficient to simply quote Srimad Bhagavatam, Caitanya-caritamrta
or Prabhupada's words , for a matter or issue to be resolved. This is what is
happening ― at least sometimes ― when the call goes out in a particular
temple that there should be 'a return to Prabhupada and the basics'.
But this may not be enough in some situations, especially if they are complex
or ambiguous. We might consider, for example, the role of ISKCON women in management
and other forms of leadership. Very often there will need to be in-depth analysis
where although what Prabhupada taught or said is the basic reference point,
there may need to be an application of his instruction (or indeed an adaptation
of it) rather than a simple repeating of it. This application may involve devotees
entering areas of debate which Prabhupada himself did not envisage in his lifetime.
I think that we may expect this to happen with increasing frequency as the Movement
goes into the ternty-first century . and beyond. Social pressures, demands,
developments and technologies are set to change on a massive scale, and I fear
that our 'born-again fundamentalists' will be left behind.
The very nature of our time incurs a need for real ideas. We
live in a rudderless age of transition and ideas are anchors,
Pole Stars, that have always been there and are still, if only
we might know how to recognise them. That recognition is to a
great extent dependent on the language used to convey them. We
need a manner of speaking that addresses our present condition
and is echoed in our personal experience1.
I put it to my readers that 'tribal mentality' is a great enemy of 'real
ideas' and 'manner of speaking that addresses our present condition'. It also
smothers the language of 'personal experience'.
Yet having said all this, I am greatly encouraged to share with you some
of the conclusions emerging from a Ph.D thesis written by an Australian Anglican
priest who is a good friend of ISKCON. Fr. Ian Hunter's thesis is entitled Some
Aspects of the Religious, Social and Personal Lives of Hare Krishna Devotees
Exploring the Social Integration of the International Society for Krishna
Consciousness'. (1993)
I repeat what I said at the beginning, that what I have written is based
on personal observation. My conclusions will be more or less valid according
to which part of the ISKCON 'landscape' is being explored. For this reason it
is enlightening to have access to this piece of sociological research, with
whichwe move beyond the personal and anecdotal (whatever validity these may
have) into conclusions based on disciplined scholarship. In quoting some of
Ian Hunter's conclusions, therefore, I hope that I am providing a reasonable
perspective:
(1) . it is a tempting supposition that conversion to most other
alternative religions would have occurred mainly in moments of
crisis ... My experience, and that of most clergy, leads to that
supposition, and this factor alone accounts for the sometimes
surprised reaction of most conventional religionists when they
actually get to know ISKCON devotees.
It is quite plain that for the most part, their experiences
of family of origin and circumstances of origin, is regarded
as an important spiritual foundation for their lives in Krishna
Consciousness.
... as having close mental and emotional ties with their families
and circumstances of origin (including religion
of origin) and through them, a strong sense of identification
with the general society outside of ISKCON.
(2) . Generally speaking, the ISKCON devotees in Australia present
as mature religionists who welcome and even attempt to initiate
such changes (a process of maturing) ... These changes can do
nothing except forge more sympathetic connections with Australian
Society generally and would certainly be the motive for devotees
presenting themselves as constructive social beings and good citizens.
(3) ... it is possible to make a cautious affirmation that the
interviewees were more closely drawn into normal society as useful
social beings because of the concept (personalist) of God they
had adopted ... like a key which unlocks their ability to make
sense of the world because they can at last make sense o f God.
Without this, there would have been few points of contact for
most of them (the ISKCON devotees) with ordinary social interaction
and certainly no sympathetic interaction with anyone in ordinary
secular society ...
Yet, for those who possess it, the 'personalism' of ISKCON's
view of God, makes personal interaction with society at large
possible for the devotees, where it might well have been problematic
without it.
(4) ... The comments of Balarama and Stoka Krishna illustrate
that existential significance for them meant a definite closing
of the gap between religion and the outside world with which they
wished to relate more fully ...
(5) ... The enthusiasm of the convert is still with all of the
group and yet each seemed determined to respect the world outside
ISKCON, although they regarded it as being enmeshed in dangerous
illusion (maya). So there is a definite sense of belonging
to secular society, even if there is an intense desire to save
that society from its own self-imposed destruction by preaching
to it the tenets of Gaudiya Vaishnavism ...
(6) In many cases, membership of ISKCON seems to have healed
a perceived breach with Australian society experienced by the
interviewees in that ISKCON devotees are certainly better functioning
social entities than members of the 'hippie' culture or disillusioned
social nihilists ...
(7) ... it cannot be denied that alternative religions can and
do encourage a feeling of superiority in their members, and this
can often blend with psychopathology of some converts ...
There would be as many potentially dangerous psychopaths in ISKCON Australia
as there are in any other alternative religion ... (some individual devotees)
are conspicuous by their scarcely-stifled anger at the outside world. It could
be argued that these people would be much more dangerous in a religious system
other than ISKCON which has powerful doctrinal and communal inhibitors which
prevent that anger surfacing in anti-social ways ...
ISKCON is a 'new' old movement ― in the West, that is. When I think
of the history of ancient Christianity ― in particular the first five
centuries ― I consider that ISKCON has done, and is doing, remarkably
well. Vaishnavism in the West stands up well by comparison, but that is certainly
no reason for smugness or complacency. The familiar dangers are always there.
One of the main dangers is the assumption that because ISKCON is Prabhupada's
movement and the modern extension of Lord Caitanya's sankirtana movement,
'ordinary' fundamentals of social communication are 'beneath notice'; that Krishna's
service is 'over and above' such mundane considerations.
1Houseden,
Rodger. Fire in the Heart: Everyday Life as Spiritual Practice,
Element Books, 1990, p .8.
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