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VOLUME SEVEN
Diary of a
Traveling Preacher Volume 7 - Chapter 4 "My Muslim Brother" India 16/03/06
Each day, before downloading my email,
I mentally prepare myself for dealing with the good, the bad, and
the ugly. With hundreds of disciples and many other devotees
regularly corresponding with me, the laws of nature force me to see
the gamut of situations in this world.
March 16, 2006, was no
exception. There were names to be given for babies, condolences for
the families of departed souls, blessings for disciples (and
chastisements for two), guidelines for a new marriage, and a plea
for a departed student to return.
One name on the list in my
mailbox caught my eye. It was Jahnukanyaka dasi, a devotee from
Sarajevo, Bosnia. I had met her years ago, on my first visit there.
She risked her life to preach throughout the three-year war that
took over 100,000 lives there in the early 1990s. Such a devotee
deserves attention, so I immediately opened her email.
I was
hoping to read of the recent success the Sarajevo devotees had had
in book distribution, but instead I learned with great sadness of
the departure of a good friend of mine, Doctor Abdulah
Nakas.
I first met Dr. Nakas in April, 1996 in the
bloodstained hallways of the partially destroyed central hospital in
Sarajevo just days after the war had ended. Our Harinama party had
been attacked by knife-wielding Muslim soldiers that day, and
several of our devotees had been seriously wounded.
After
taking the other devotees back to the temple, I went to the hospital
to check on the injured. When Dr. Nakas heard that a leader of our
movement was there, he came out to meet me. "Your people's wounds
are serious," he said, "but not critical. They will live."
He
raised his arms in the air. "I am a devout Muslim," he said, "but I
am ashamed of what my people have done. The war is over, but now we
are spilling the blood of foreigners in our town. Please forgive
us."
He put out his hand. "We are brothers," he said, in a
gesture of humility I will never forget.
I took his hand, red
with the blood of the devotees and still holding a scalpel.
"Doctor," I said, "you are not to blame, and neither is your
religion. This is the act of a fringe element."
He once again
turned his attention to the injured devotees.
While I was
waiting, some of the soldiers who had attacked us came to the
hospital to finish the job. They surrounded me and spit in my face.
Dr. Nakas heard the commotion. He rushed out of the operating room
and screamed at the soldiers to leave. Although he was defenseless
and had no weapons, they backed down and went
away.
Jahnukanyaka told me that day that everyone in Sarajevo
respected him because of his selfless service during the war. For
three years he operated continuously, day in and day out, and often
throughout the night on the endless casualties. He performed surgery
under the worst of circumstances, often with no water or electricity
and few medical supplies. During the last two years of the war the
hospital had no anesthesia. He barely ate or slept. And several
times the hospital itself was attacked and severely damaged by
rocket fire.
"How was it possible?" I asked her. "Where did
he get the strength?"
She smiled. "During the war," she said,
"several devotees and I would regularly visit the hospital, bringing
prasadam and sometimes having programs for the patients and medical
staff. During those days it was dangerous just to walk outside
because the Serbian Army had encircled the city and would
indiscriminately fire rockets and shoot citizens daily."
"It
was there at the hospital that I met Dr. Nakas," she continued.
"Somehow or other, he had acquired a Bhagavad-gita and would
read it to his colleagues before the surgeries. He said it helped
him realize the immortality of the soul and gave him strength as he
watched people die before his eyes.
"I was amazed that a
staunch Muslim, who visited his mosque daily, was not only reading
Bhagavad-gita, but sharing it with others. When I was doing
sankirtan at that time, most of the Muslim doctors I approached
bought Bhagavad-gita because they knew it was Dr. Nakas's reading
material."
"That makes everything clear," I said.
Now,
years later, I was sitting in front of my computer, remembering our
conversation and feeling overwhelmed by that morning's email. I
found Jahnukanyaka's phone number in Sarajevo and called
her.
"I received your email about Dr. Nakas," I said. "I'm
sorry to hear of his departure. He was an amazing person, able to
bridge gaps that often separate men because of nationality, race,
and religion."
"Here in Sarajevo," she said, "he is being
mourned by everyone, Muslims, Christians, and Jews."
"Did he
remain connected to us and maintain an interest in Bhagavad-gita
after the war?" I said.
"Yes, he did," she replied. "After
the war I visited London, and when I came back to Sarajevo, I
brought prasadam to Dr. Nakas. During our discussion he offered to
help us find a building for a new temple in Sarajevo. I was amazed
because I knew it would not be an easy thing. Bosnia is primarily a
Muslim country.
"During the war I developed a hernia from
carrying so many books, and when I told Dr. Nakas he offered to
operate on it for free. He told me I was his Godsister. The nurses
told me that while performing the operation he recited many verses
by memory from Bhagavad-gita.
"He never took a vacation in
his entire career. After the war he just continued doing his
service, operating every day. Recently he had a heart attack. He was
operated on but lapsed into a coma. He was in intensive care and
only the medical staff were allowed entry. I called his brother, the
director of the hospital, and begged him to let me go to his
brother's side.
"To my surprise he let me go, after making
sure I was properly dressed in a surgical mask and gown. There were
many doctors and nurses present when I entered Dr. Nakas' room. He
was such a famous, much-loved, and respected man. They were trying
everything to save him.
"Initially, I was shocked seeing all
the tubes and machines keeping him alive. Despite the fact that most
of the medical staff there were Muslim, I began reading out loud
from his favorite chapter of Bhagavad-gita, chapter 9. All the
doctors and nurses bowed their heads respectfully and remained
silent as I read the entire chapter.
"Several days later they
contacted me and asked me to come back a second time. I saw it as a
special arrangement of Krsna for Dr. Nakas. On that visit I sang the
Damodar-astakam prayers and the Hare Krsna mantra, and read the
seventh chapter of Bhagavad-gita. Again the entire staff listened
respectfully. They knew it was what Dr. Nakas would have wanted.
"Two days later he died. I went to his funeral with some
devotees. There were more than 10,000 people attending. He was a
national hero. The people of Sarajevo loved him so much. He was
buried according to the Muslim tradition. But you can imagine -
there we were, dressed in our traditional Vaisnava attire. No one
complained. They all knew how much he loved us, and we
him."
As she spoke I couldn't hold back my tears, and they
were not only for the fact that Dr. Nakas had so much appreciation
for the immortal wisdom of Bhagavad-gita and had helped devotees at
the end of the war and after, but because of my own encounters with
him. I could still envision him apologizing for the wrong his Muslim
brothers had inflicted upon us and his screaming at the soldiers who
had come to kill me. They were some of the most intense moments I
have ever experienced, and he had played an integral part in saving
my life and those of our wounded devotees.
When I finished my
call with Jahnukanyaka I went before my Deities, bowed down, and
prayed that the Lord would honor the devotional service Dr. Nakas
had performed as a devout Muslim and as a follower of the sacred
wisdom of Bhagavad-gita. The world has much to learn from Dr. Nakas:
how to live peacefully together with respect and appreciation for
other cultures and religions.
*****************
"In
India, even in the interior villages, all the Hindu and Muslim
communities used to live very peacefully by establishing a
relationship between them. The young men called the elderly members
of the village by the name caca or kaka, uncle, and men of the same
age called each other dada, brother. The relationship was very
friendly. There were even invitations from Muslim houses to Hindu
houses and from Hindu houses to Muslim houses.
Both the
Hindus and the Muslims accepted the invitations to go to one
another's houses to attend ceremonial functions. Even until 50 or 60
years ago, the relationship between Hindus and Muslims was very
friendly, and there were no disturbances. We do not find any
Hindu-Muslim riots in the history of India, even during the days of
the Muslims' rule over the country. Conflict between Hindus and
Muslims was created by polluted politicians, especially foreign
rulers, and thus the situation gradually became so degraded that
India was divided into Hindustan and Pakistan. Fortunately, the
remedy to unite not only the Hindus and Muslims but all communities
and all nations can still be implemented by the Hare Krsna movement
on the strong basic platform of love of
Godhead."
[Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi-lila 17.149,
purport]
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