|
VOLUME FIVE
Diary
of a Traveling Preacher Volume 5 - Chapter 25
"Shoot for the Rhinoceros" Poland August 2004
After the Woodstock festival, we returned to the Baltic coast to resume our
summer festivals. But no sooner had we arrived than Maya's forces dealt us
a blow. We had chosen a town near our summer base and had signed the
contract with city hall well in advance. Two days before the festival we
did Harinam and flooded the town with thousands of invitations. Our
colorful posters could be seen everywhere. Tourists were pouring in, and
the whole town was buzzing about the upcoming event.
The second day I took the Harinam party out for another day of advertising.
We chanted on the beach, occasionally stopping to speak to crowds about
our festival the next day. At the end, we were exhausted. I crawled into my
van after the Harinam was over.
"You look tired," said our driver, Radhe Shyama das.
"True," I said, "but it's worth it. Many people said they'll come for the
program."
Then my cell phone rang. It was Nandini dasi.
"Srila Gurudeva," she said, " I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but
the mayor just canceled tomorrow's festival."
I gasped. Such things sometimes happen inland, where people are less
familiar with us, but rarely on the coast where we have been holding
festivals for 15 years.
"How is it possible?" I asked.
"The town secretary told me in confidence that the mayor received a
bribe," Nandini said.
"We have to do something," I said. "We put our hearts and souls into the
preparations for this festival. Last year over 5,000 people came to the
same town with even less advertising."
"I understand, Srila Gurudeva," Nandini replied. "I'll do my best."
I explained the situation to the other devotees in the van. A brahmacari
spoke up. "What does she mean she'll 'do her best'?" he said.
"I haven't got a clue," I replied, "but knowing Nandini, she's already in
action."
Sure enough, an hour later Nandini's husband called me. "Srila Gurudeva,"
he said, "this is Jayatam. Nandini found the man who gave the bribe to the
mayor. She spoke with him for almost an hour. He regrets his action but
says nothing can be done. The mayor already has the money."
"How in the world did she find the man?" I asked.
"After speaking with you, she jumped out of the car with a determined look
on her face," Jayatam said, "and she started walking in the direction of
the area where the festival was to be held. There was a housing complex
nearby and she stood there for ten minutes looking at the houses. Then
she walked straight up to one house and knocked on the door.
"When a man answered, she said point blank to his face, 'Do you know
anything about the Festival of India being canceled?'
"He was so startled that he started shaking. 'Yes,' he said, 'it's me. I
did it. I didn't want to be disturbed by the noise so I paid the mayor.'
"Nandini scolded him and asked him to take the bribe back, but he said it
was too late. She admonished him some more and then stormed off. I saw the
whole thing with my own eyes."
A passage from the scriptures came to my mind: "These women have never
undergone the purificatory rites of the twice-born classes, nor have they
lived as brahmacaris in the asrama of a spiritual master, nor have they
executed austerities, speculated on the nature of the self, followed the
formalities of cleanliness or engaged in pious rituals. Nevertheless, they
have firm devotion for Lord Krsna, whose glories are chanted by the
exalted hymns of the Vedas and who is the supreme master of all masters
of mystic power .... " [Srimad Bhagavatam 10.23.43-44 ]
As we talked, Nandini was already in another town making emergency
preparations for another festival the next day. As I finished speaking to
Jayatam she called.
"We have the central park in the next town for a festival tomorrow," she
said. "The mayor there was sympathetic to our problem."
"That's pretty quick," I said, "but it leaves only one day to advertise."
"It's enough," Nandini said. "Word is out, and people are already talking
about the event."
Early the next day our tired band of kirtaneers made a special effort and
went out on sankirtan in the next town. When I saw some of them fading
after four hours, I announced that we were stopping and going home. I
turned to lead the way and after 20 steps looked behind me to make sure
everyone was following. No one had moved. "Lets go!" I called out.
"We're going home!"
Again, no one moved.
"Srila Gurudeva," said a devotee, "there are 2,000 invitations left."
"Real troopers, these devotees," I said to myself. We went on for another
hour and a half and ended up distributing 7,000 invitations that day.
The efforts of the devotees were rewarded when 4,000 people came that
evening, including many from the town where the festival had been canceled.
Jayatam had arranged for two buses to wait at the site of the canceled
event. The people were disappointed that the mayor there had canceled the
festival, but they didn't mind taking a 15-minute bus ride to the next
town.
For over an hour the buses ferried people back and forth. I couldn't
believe my eyes.
Usually I watch the crowd as it comes into a festival, but that night I
watched the tired faces of the devotees as they looked up from their
various services at the festival and smiled as people walked in. How
proud I was of those devotees! I knew their selfless efforts would be
rewarded by the Lord.
ya idam paramam guhyam
mad-bhaktesv abhidhasyati
bhaktim mayi param krtva
mam evaisyaty asamsayah
"For one who explains this supreme secret to the devotees, pure devotional
service is guaranteed, and at the end he will come back to Me."
[Bhagavad-gita 18.68]
The next morning, as I was taking a little extra rest before the Harinam
party left, my phone rang again. I sensed it was Nandini. I hesitated to
answer, but I rolled over and pushed the receiving button.
"Srila Gurudeva," the voice said, "this is Nandini. I have to tell you
something"
"Here we go again," I muttered, and waited for the next installment of
sankirtan drama.
Nandini laughed. "The Indian ambassador to Poland has expressed an
interest in visiting our festival," she said. "His first secretary
just called me and asked what day they could come."
I sat up straight. This was something I had waited years for. In 1997, we
were invited to participate in a festival honoring Indian culture in
Swidnik, a town in the conservative eastern part of Poland, and the Indian
ambassador at that time was also invited. When a local priest found out
that the Hare Krsna movement was invited to the festival, he challenged the
mayor, who to everyone's amazement called off the entire event. The Indian
ambassador left embarrassed.
Although the media took our side and we received much favorable publicity,
it strained our relations with the Indian embassy in Warsaw, and the people
there became reluctant to be associated with us.
Nandini went on to say that the new ambassador had heard about our festival
from a number of people and was eager to see it. "I hope things go smoothly
this time," the first secretary had said.
"I'll make sure they do," I thought. "Such cooperation might even deal a
death blow to the anti-cult movements in Poland."
Nandini asked what town would be the best to invite the ambassador to. I
immediately thought of Kolobrzeg, the biggest and most important city
along the coast. It was brimming with tourists now, at the height of
the summer season.
"Phone city hall in Kolobrzeg," I told Nandini "and ask for an appointment
with the mayor. If he agrees to give us the main entrance to the beach to
hold our festival, we'll invite the Indian ambassador to open the event.
It will be prestigious for the city."
It was a long shot. Although the area would be a beautiful spot with
plenty of room for our festival, it was rarely, if ever, given to any
group for an event. It was prime territory, on the most prestigious
beach in Poland, where the wealthy, educated, and cultured often went.
If the city officials agreed to give us that spot, they would be seen
as endorsing our event. We had already held a festival in Kolobrzeg
in late June, but in a large grass parking lot half a kilometer from
the beach.
Nandini thought for a minute. "Srila Gurudeva," she said, "it will be a
miracle if they give us that place."
"That's true," I said, "but let's shoot for the rhinoceros."
"What?" asked Nandini. "Shoot a rhinoceros?"
I couldn't help smiling. "It's American slang," I said. "It means try for
the impossible."
"Okay, Gurudeva," said Nandini, "a rhinoceros it is."
That afternoon Nandini telephoned. "I called the mayor's secretary," she
said. "At first he was reluctant, but then he thought about the idea for a
few moments and went to speak to the mayor. He came back to the phone and
said, 'The mayor has agreed to see you in two hours.' He sounded
surprised."
In the evening I was outside with several devotees, waiting for Nandini.
Finally I saw her drive up with a big smile on her face, I slapped one of
the brahmacaris on the back. "Okay!" I said. "The beachfront's ours! Let's
get into action!"
"Aren't you going to speak to Nandini first?" he asked.
"She got the rhino," I said.
"What?" he said. "She got a rhino? What are talking about, Srila Gurudeva?"
I started to laugh. "You'll see soon," I said.
Nandini had convinced the mayor to give us the site for three days, the
three biggest days of the summer vacation. They made plans for the mayor
and the Indian ambassador to open the festival on the first day. I
envisioned thousands of people standing before our stage in the sand,
listening to both dignitaries speak favorably about our movement.
But my dream almost became a nightmare.
As the date for the festival approached, we began preparations for a
bigger and more prestigious festival than we had ever before held on
the coast.
We started setting things up two days before the event. We put our big
stage on the main boardwalk, facing the sea, and set up 20 large tents
that spilled out onto the sand.
Setting up the festival site in the midst of the huge summer crowds was
enough advertising in itself, but I took further advantage of the
opportunity by taking the Harinam party out for five hours each day along
the one-kilometer beach. The devotees were tired from two months of
Harinam and festivals, but they chanted and danced in ecstasy. The weather
was sunny and beautiful, and the beach and the boardwalk were packed all
day and half the night. In just three days we distributed over 35,000
invitations.
"Don't you think we've given out enough invitations?" a devotee asked.
"We're not going out chanting just to distribute invitations," I said.
"The chanting party itself is a festival. In my eyes, it's just as
important as the main event. Big, beautiful and well organized chanting
parties themselves create faith in the hearts of the people."
I thought about something Srila Prabhupada had written: "The Krsna
consciousness movement has started performing sankirtana-yajna in
different places, and it has been experienced that wherever
sankirtana-yajna is performed, many thousands of people gather and
take part in it.
Imperceptible auspiciousness achieved in this connection should be
continued all over the world. The members of the Krsna consciousness
movement should perform sankirtana-yajnas one after another, so much
that all the people of the world will either jokingly or seriously
chant Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama,
Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare, and thus they will derive the
benefit of cleansing the heart. The holy name of the Lord (harer nama)
is so powerful that whether it is chanted jokingly or seriously the
effect of vibrating this transcendental sound will be equally distributed."
Srimad-Bhagavatam 4.24.10, purport)
The Indian ambassador asked us to pick him up at 2 p.m. at the airport in
a town 100 kilometers away and drive him to Kolobrzeg, where he would be
officially greeted by the mayor. We told him that after his address from
our main stage at 6 p.m. we would take him and the mayor on a tour of our
festival grounds and then have a banquet in one of the tents. Afterwards,
there would be a press conference.
I fell asleep that night feeling good. Everything was going our way: the
prestigious site, the dignitaries, the media coverage, the weather ...
Then at 2:00 in the morning I was awakened by a loud "Boom! Boom! Boom!"
It was thunder, shaking the windows in my room. I jumped up from bed and ran
to the window. "Oh no!" I said out loud. "It's not possible!" Then a flash
of bright lightning lit up the dark room and confirmed my worst fears: a
huge storm had descended over Kolobrzeg.
I couldn't fall back asleep. I just sat there chanting as the rain poured
down.
At 5:30 a.m. I woke up Jayatam. "Call the weatherman," I said.
He sat up and rubbed his eyes. "Huh? Wha ...?" he said. "Uh, now?"
"As soon as possible." I said.
Later that morning Jayatam came with the weatherman's forecast: "Three
days of stormy weather. Constant rain and heavy winds with hailstones."
"Hailstones?" I said. "In the middle of summer?"
"That what the weatherman said," Jayatam replied. "He even said it's 100
percent sure."
I was down at the festival site by 10 a.m.. The rain continued to pour and
the offshore winds howled through the festival site. A number of boys from
the set-up crew were struggling to tie down the tents, several of which
seemed about to blow away. Other than our boys, there was not a single
soul in sight, either on the long boardwalk or the beach.
I sat alone on the covered stage and looked out at the dismal scene.
By the afternoon the rain and wind had not abated at all. Ten or fifteen
devotees came down to the festival site and sat with me on the big stage,
looking out with long faces at the pathetic scene. By 3 p.m. some people
appeared along the boardwalk with umbrellas, most likely unable to bear
staying inside all day long.
"Perhaps if we have kirtan and beg for the mercy of the Lord, the festival
will go on," I thought.
"Grab the drums and kartalas," I called out to the boys. "We're going on
Harinam."
They looked at me in amazement. "They probably think I'm crazy," I
thought.
"Let's go!" I yelled.
And so we went onto the wet boardwalk in our raincoats - a few devotees
struggling with umbrellas in the wind.
"Chant louder!" I told the devotees as we danced down the pavement, while
a few boys handed invitations to people, who were astonished to see us
chanting in the rain.
After half an hour a devotee came up to me. "Srila Gurudeva," he said.
"Everyone already has an invitation from the previous days. In fact, some
have four or five. All the devotees are soaking wet. They're going to get
sick."
"You're right," I said. "Let's go back."
At 4:15 p.m. Nandini called me. "The ambassador is in the car with us,"
she said. "We just left city hall and are taking him on a tour of the town
with the mayor. We'll arrive at the festival site exactly on time, at
6 p.m."
"Great," I muttered with no enthusiasm. I looked at the empty festival
site as the rain poured down.
By 4:30 p.m. most of the devotees had arrived and were busy with final
preparations for the festival.
At 5 p.m. I was doing a television interview on the stage when suddenly a
few rays of bright sunshine broke through the dark clouds, lighting up the
entire area. Everyone looked to the skies. Even the cameraman turned his
camera upwards and filmed the sun peering through the clouds.
The camera turned back toward me. "What do you make of it?" asked the
interviewer. She was obviously as surprised as everyone else.
"It can only be the good Lord." I replied. "After all, it's His event."
"His event?" she asked.
"That's all for now," I said. "We've got to get ready for the crowds."
She looked around at the empty festival site. "The crowds?" she said.
"What crowds?"
But sure enough, within 45 minutes, as the sun continued to break through
and dissipate the clouds, people poured out from their homes, apartments,
tourist bungalows, and tents onto the boardwalk and the beach. A huge
crowd began to gather in front of our stage. An equal number began browsing
through our tents. As I marveled at the scene, I looked at my watch. It
was 5:45. The mayor and the ambassador would arrive in 15 minutes.
We quickly swept the rainwater off the stage, turned our big generator on,
and started the lights and sound. Within minutes our Indian dancers were
performing onstage. They drew a crowd of more than a thousand. The sun was
now fully visible, and most of the clouds had disappeared.
Suddenly I looked toward the boardwalk on my left and saw Nandini and
Jayatam 50 meters away, strolling casually toward the festival site with
the Indian ambassador, the mayor, and a number of city officials.
The hot sunshine caused the water on the ground to evaporate quickly and
rise like steam, creating an almost mystical scene, as the dignitaries
walked across the festival grounds and onto the stage.
I stood there dumbfounded. Everything had come together so quickly, and
people were streaming onto the festival site.
The huge crowd was silent as the ambassador came to the microphone. I
studied the audience and saw what appeared to be many wealthy and
influential people. "They will certainly take the ambassador's words to
heart," I thought. It was a historic moment in the spreading of Krsna
consciousness in Poland.
The ambassador's voice boomed out across the boardwalk and the beach:
"Ladies and Gentlemen, "It gives me great pleasure to be amongst you
today to inaugurate the Festival of India in your lovely city.
"Polish interest in India dates back to the 15th century, when a number
of Polish writers, soldiers, and missionaries started visiting India and
fostered the abiding interest of the Polish people in the civilization,
philosophy, art, and culture of India.
"In more recent times, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness
has done tremendous service in the spreading of Indian culture in Poland
and other parts of the world. ISKCON has published several great
Indian epics, including Bhagavad Gita, Srimad Bhagavatam, and Mahabharata
into Polish and made these wonderful books available for our Polish
friends.
"In addition, the hosting of these Festivals of India for so many years
has helped in forming an international network of India-lovers.
As you will see over the next few days, most of the artists and
performers are from Europe and Africa.
"I will not be exaggerating if I say that the people associated with
this festival are the real forces behind the spreading of Indian culture
and civilization across Poland. They are the ambassadors of India here.
And we are proud of this. Seeing such enthusiasm for spreading
Indian culture, without any direct support of the Indian government,
gives a feeling that is not easy to express in words. I can only say
that it is the privilege of being born an Indian that I can find such
great friends of my country here.
"I am really honored for all that they are doing for spreading the culture
of my country.
"Thank you."
During the ambassador's speech many people nodded in agreement with points
he made. When he finished there was a loud, sustained applause.
All I could think was, "All glories to Srila Prabhupada, Krsna's
ambassador from the spiritual world, whose mercy is making all this
possible!"
Then the mayor spoke. Afterwards, he and the ambassador left the stage and
were escorted around the festival site and eventually into one of the
tents for the banquet. At the press conference later that evening, one
doubting reporter spoke to the ambassador. "Does this festival actually
represent your Indian culture?" he asked.
"Oh yes," the ambassador replied, "indeed it does, more than I imagined
before I came here. In fact, these devotees are doing more to spread
Indian's rich spiritual culture than we at the embassy are doing."
When he saw the reporter hesitating to write these favorable words, he
moved his head in such a way as to oblige him to do so.
As the festival came to an end and the ambassador left the tent for his
hotel, I saw him give his card to Nandini. "We'd like to cooperate with
you," he said. "I have a number of proposals. Please come to see me in
Warsaw next week."
Just at that moment I heard the rumbling of clouds in the sky, signaling
the return of the storm.
"Let it rain," I said looking to the skies. "Let it pour."
Sure enough, just as we ourselves left the festival site, the clouds opened
up and it began pouring rain. But to my amazement, by the next morning, it
was clear again and for the next two days, thousands of people enjoyed our
festival on the sands of the most prestigious beach in Poland.
And what happened to the hailstones the weatherman had predicted, 100
percent sure? They must have melted in the sunshine of Lord Caitanya's
mercy, 100 percent sure.
"We should always be enthusiastic to try for shooting the rhinoceros.
That way, if we fail, everyone will say, "Never mind, no one can shoot a
rhinoceros anyway," and if we succeed, then everyone will say, "Just see,
what a wonderful thing they have done." So if you are determined in this
way, then you can try for it by begging for the protection of Krishna."
[Srila Prabhupada, Letter to Balavanta dasa, December 22, 1971]
|