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VOLUME FOUR
Diary
of a Traveling Preacher, Volume 4 - Chapter 24
"I'm searching for something, but
I'm not sure what" Kathmandu, Nepal
22nd September to 16th October 2002
While in Kazakhstan, I corresponded
with several devotees about visiting
Nepal before going to Vrindavan, India, for my annual retreat. We
made plans to trek to the Kali Gandaki River in the Himalayas during October to
search for sacred salagram silas. The great Vaisnava saint, Gopala Bhatta
Goswami, walked to the Kali Gandaki 500 years ago, after receiving an order
from Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu to look for salagram silas. I had made the
three-week journey from Kathmandu myself, and found it invigorating and the
exotic nature of Nepal fascinating. We had already purchased our tickets to Kathmandu when I read an
announcement from the American government warning its citizens of
the risk of traveling in Nepal. The notice said that while Maoist insurgents
are losing support for their guerrilla war against the Nepalese
authorities, the situation remains dangerous for Americans.
Public Announcement
U.S. Department of State
September 2002
"This public announcement is being issued to alert American
citizens that
Maoists appear to be initiating a campaign of violence in Nepal in
anticipation of a nationwide strike. There is a possibility of
heightened
risks to American citizens and American interests in Nepal,
especially
outside the Kathmandu Valley, from Maoist insurgency.
"Popular support for the Maoists has been waning and they have
resorted to increasingly brutal acts of intimidation to enforce compliance.
Government vehicles and public conveyances have been attacked with explosive
devices, and as such American citizens are urged to evaluate carefully the
movement of traffic on streets before undertaking travel and in general
maintain a low profile.
"Reports of threats against and robberies of American trekkers,
property
destruction suffered by American businesses, and anti-American
rhetoric by
the Maoist leadership indicate continuing risk to Americans in
Nepal."
After sending the notice to the other devotees, as well as reading
several
newspaper accounts of the conflict, we cancelled our trip. However,
when I
later discovered that the airline would not reimburse me, it
appeared the
return date to Delhi could be changed so I decided to go to
Kathmandu for
two days to visit my godbrother, Bimal Prasad das, who was there to
renew
his Indian visa.
After the departure of Tamal Krsna Goswami six months ago, I
resolved that this year I would attempt to get the association of as many
godbrothers as possible. This seemed to be a good opportunity as well as a safe
choice, considering the U.S. notice said the violence was mainly
outside the Kathmandu Valley. I contacted a reputable travel agency in
Kathmandu,
and they told me that since the notice had been issued things had
quieted down, and some foreigners had even resumed trekking in the mountains. I
left Delhi with a few extra supplies, still entertaining the possibility of
going to the Kali Gandaki with Bimal Prasad.
That prospect faded, however, as I boarded the flight from Delhi to
Kathmandu only to discover the plane half full - and not one Western
tourist. In Kathmandu I went through Immigration and Customs quickly
and met Bimal Prasad outside the terminal. After we had embraced and offered
obeisances, I mentioned the prospect of hiking to the Kali Gandaki.
Bimal
Prasad's face became sober as he said,
"Maharaja, just today I
met an Australian girl who wanted to hike the same route we had planned.
She was looking for a taxi in the remote region to take her to the point of
departure, four hours out of Pokhara, when a car stopped and the
driver asked if she wanted a lift. She refused his offer and he left. Just
30m down the road, a hand-grenade was thrown through the passenger window of
the car. The explosion destroyed the vehicle and the driver was killed."
"Well, that cancels any last hopes of making the trek on this
trip," I
replied.
Bimal said, "Besides, the guerrillas are still robbing any
unsuspecting
trekkers, and still shooting anyone walking in the riverbeds (where
the
salagram silas are found) in case they are government agents."
"OK Bimal, Kathmandu sounds like a great place to spend the
next two days!" I said.
Bimal Prasad and I spent the day reading and chanting together, as
well as
reminiscing about our devotional service in South Africa years ago.
The next
day, before catching my flight back to Delhi, we went to Pasupati, a
Lord
Siva temple on the outskirts of Kathmandu. We also visited the
home of a
Nepalese man we had met on a previous visit to Pasupati. While in
his home, he made my trip to Kathmandu worthwhile by giving me a beautiful
silver necklace with 54 small, round salagram silas. It was a rare gift,
something one treasures for a lifetime.
On the flight back to Delhi, I was pleasantly surprised to be given
a seat
in business class. Next to me sat an elderly lady, who started up a
conversation as soon as the plane took off.
"Are you a yogi?" she said.
"Well, yes, I am," I replied. "I practice bhakti-yoga,
a form of yoga for
awakening our love for God."
"That's very interesting," she said. "Do you live in
Nepal?"
"No, I don't," I said.
"Where do you live?" she inquired further.
I thought for a moment, then with a laugh said , "Actually, I
don't live
anywhere. I have no home."
Surprised, she said, "You have no home! What about your
family?"
Rather than risk drifting into the mundane, I decided to see if she
had any
interest in spiritual life. I quoted the first Sanskrit verse
I ever saw, a
verse written and left in my apartment by Visnujana Maharaja as he
departed from a visit to my former wife and I just before we joined the Krsna
consciousness movement. The verse had a powerful effect on me, and
in many ways directed my life from that day:
naikatra priya samvasah
suhrdam citra karmanam
oghena vyuhyamananam
plavanam srotaso yatha
"Many planks and sticks, unable to stay together, are carried
away by the
force of a river's waves. Similarly, although we are intimately
related with
friends and family members, we are unable to stay together because
of our
varied past deeds and the waves of time."
[Srimad-Bhagavatam 10.5.25]
I waited for her reply, hoping our conversation would go in a
spiritual
direction, then she said, "I understand what you mean. I'm 72
years old, and I'm the only member of my family left."
"Do you live in Nepal?" I asked, restating her
previous question to me.
She surprised me when she said, "No, I'm from Columbia,
but I don't have a
home either. I've spent the past 10 years traveling! I'm searching
for
something." She paused, then looking at me said, "But I'm
not sure what."
That was my cue, and I immediately began explaining the basic
philosophy of Krsna consciousness. In fact, because she was listening so intently,
I spoke for almost the entire hour-and-a-half flight. When the plane touched
down, she put her hand on my arm and said, "May I keep in touch
with you?"
"Yes, of course," I said, "but if neither of us have
a place we call home,
how in the world will we keep in touch?"
She replied, "Through the Internet! I may be old but I'm not
out of touch!"
After exchanging email addresses we parted, but met again in line at
Indian
Immigration.
"Do you travel much?" she asked.
Chuckling a little and wanting to impress her, I showed her my
passport -
full with immigration stamps from all over the world.
She smiled and said, "He who laughs first, laughs last; just
look at this,"
and she showed me her passport, twice as big as mine and full with
immigration stamps.
Joking, I said, "Oh, but it's easy for you - you must
always travel in
business class!"
"Oh no," she replied, "in the past year alone I criss-crossed
America four
times in a Greyhound bus, hitch-hiked the length and breadth
of Australia,
took a train from Moscow to Beijing, drove a car from the north to
the south of India and back, and just finished hiking in the mountains north
of
Kathmandu. I saw plenty of those rebels, too!"
I stood dumbfounded as she cleared Immigration. Turning around, she
left
with a smile and a few words of comfort: "I think I finally
found what I was
searching for. Your words were very inspiring. We'll keep in
touch."
Outside I hailed a taxi and headed for Vrindavan. Speeding through
the
countryside in the early hours of the morning, I held close to my
heart the
two precious things I had obtained in Nepal: the priceless necklace
of
salagram silas; and the opportunity to help a conditioned soul begin
her
path back home, back to the spiritual world.
bhavapavargo bhramato yada bhavej
janasya tarhy acyuta sat samagamah
sat sangamo yarhi tadaiva sad gatau
paravarese tvayi jayate ratih
"O my Lord! O infallible Supreme Person! When a person
wandering throughout the universe becomes eligible for liberation from material
existence, he gets an opportunity to associate with devotees. When he associates
with devotees, his attraction for You is awakened. You are the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, the highest goal of the topmost devotees and
the Lord of the universe."
[Srimad-Bhagavatam, 10.51.53]
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