|
|
 |
September 1989
Kripalu
A Center for Meditation-in-Motion; Under Yogi Amrit Desai, Largest Ashram In US Fuses Gujarat Yoga, Siva & Health
Twenty-eight years ago Amrit
Desai - painter, yogi and a maverick who often opposed the herd - worked
from four to midnight in a paperbag factory in the industrial dregs of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. To save cash to bring his wife and child from
Gujarat, India, he walked home across a creepy crime zone. At daylight he
was a student, often living on one meal a day.
Today, Yogi Amrit
Desai walks across well-groomed lawns of his US $3,000,000 Kripalu Center
for Yoga and Health, 350-acres of gorgeous countryside in Massachusetts
called Shadowbrook. The trees are changing into their red and yellow tones
of autumn death. Next month Yogi Desai will be 57, his fall years. But
he's still trim and limber, his long ebony hair slightly grayed. He draws
in a slow breath of autumn smells and mountain prana - life-force. In a
voice that wavers like a vina string, he talks to a eager group of
students about prana. To them, he is Gurudev, the real center of the
Center.
Behind Yogi Desai is a multi-wing brick building - as big
as an ocean liner. Maps are helpful to find your way around. Inside are
comfortably lodged up to 230 staff members and nearly 400 guests. Soon
snow will bury Kripalu's lawn and whiten the trees, but the guests will
still come, absorbing Yogi Desai's Kripalu Yoga or Meditation-in-Motion,
refurbishing body and spirit...and skiing or
snow-sledding.
Kripalu, "compassionate one," is a yoga ashram, the
largest in the US. There are 300 staff residents - 60% women to 40% men,
mostly single. As in time-lapse photography, Kripalu is a cyclone of
activity and stillness. Groups of people flow out at dawn for meditation,
hatha yoga and jogging while staffers crank up the kitchen and ready the
health facilities. While at lunch with Yogi Desai during our HINDUISM
TODAY interview he smilingly says, "It take 12 people just to chop all the
vegetables for 1000 meals a day. We are now buying machines."
By
evening - when ashramites wrapped in white Indian dress gather for bhajan
- classes, bodywork, meetings, cleaning, repairing, publishing, and
staying spiritualized bring a warm, worn feeling to the day. Lights out.
Dream in.
Spiritual dynamics is a must here. Desai explains that
brahmachariya celibacy holds much of Kripalu's power. Men and women live
separately, but also eat in different halls and travel in separate cars.
There is good harmony too. Notes Desai, "My life is such. No conflicts." A
senior staffer half-jokingly confides the only thing they haven't figured
out is how to consistently get the staff up for the 5:00 AM mediations.
"Only the most determined attend," she says. Besides a cavernous
meditation hall, the ashram's core is a Siva Lingam shrine
room.
Kripalu is considered one of the best holistic health resorts
in the US. Thousands of people come every year to undergo programs that
range from married couples workshops to controlled fasts and mediation
retreats. Desai says, "The work touches people's hearts. What brings them
back is their life-changing experiences." But they also lose weight,
loosen tensions and learn self-security. Is it a Hindu ashram to Desai? He
clarified that he is "integrating yoga and Hinduism at the deepest level"
but is reluctant to call Kripalu a Hindu ashram or to identify his
students as Hindus because people might feel he was imposing his religion
on them.
This Shadowbrook sanctuary is the north pole of Yogi
Desai's self-made world that includes another older but smaller ashram -
Kripalu Yoga Retreat - in rural Pennsylvania and some 46 home-centers. By
his side are a bright band of long-time sishiyas, twelve of whom he
initiated into a state of renunciation. They wear orange, but are not
swami sannyasins, though Desai likes to call them swamis.
With
quick, genuine deference he states Kripalu is the outcome of his guru's
shakti. Yes, but when Amrit was a teenager he also studied
positive-thinker Dale Carnegie, and when everybody his age was settling
into the usual ruts, he took off to join the Indian Air Force to be a
pilot. The first year he was a whiz kid, but the Air Force slotted him as
a gunner. This was so morally repugnant to Desai he purposely scored low
on tests. The Air Force washed him out.
Coming to America was his
next maverick move. By 1966, he'd won awards for his water-colors, owned a
big Chevrolet car, was raising two of eventually three children and
"started the Yoga Society of Pennsylvania that grew to be the largest one
in America. I had 150 classes every week and trained 70 or 80
teachers."
In 1969 Desai returned to Gujarat, to the ashram of his
guru, Swami Kripalvananda: Gita orator, reclusive yoga master and a
scholar/author. To his inner circle, he was Bapuji, a man of intense
sadhana who had so stimulated the sympathetic nerve system with prana that
his body would automatically dance out a kinetic succession of asanas and
mudras. Desai witnessed this when he was 16-years old, alone with Bapuji
in his sadhana room - a singular privilege. To Babuji, Amrit Desai was
favorite householder disciple, a man yoked to a destiny. At the end of the
'69 stay, he gave Desai the title Yogi.
The following year Yogi
Desai had a personal implosion in his sadhana that led to the creation of
Kripalu Yoga. The experience focused him into his own unfoldment and he
felt a need for personal retreat. He disbanded the Society and bought a
home and property in the Pennsylvania countryside. But he fondly recalls,
"The disciples just followed me there."
The tenacious students
catalyzed him into greater teaching karmas as two major ashrams were
quickly established in Pennsylvania. In 1974, he returned to India and
received kriya yoga mantra initiation from Babuji and was empowered to
initiate his own disciplines. Yogi Desai began giving kundalini shaktipat
seminars, group meditations of "surrender" to whatever psychic energies
were touched off by his presence. The results were energizing, but also
explosive as hidden subconscious states and emotions bubbled up by
stimulation of the pranas into the psychic ida current that controls the
body and emotions. Desai stopped the seminars, reserving shaktipat for
close sishiyas.
Not surprisingly, Desai has evolved a personal
philosophy around prana, perceiving it as being the God-force of the
universe, of being God. He writes: "This energy [prana] is further
explained in Samkhya yoga philosophy as not only the undifferentiated
Cosmic Spirit, God, or Purusha...but also what we recognize manifesting as
the individual spirit, the spark of the divine within us."
While
Desai was exploring prana, Babuji was observing silence - 12 years worth.
Secretly Desai wanted Babuji to come to the US. He built a house for him
in secluded glen on the Kripalu Yoga Retreat property. The invitation went
out. Incredibly, Babuji arrived in 1977. He stayed 4 years, silent except
for 2 public talks a year. Many Hindus from the Gujarat community came for
his darshan and be jewelled insights.
Swami Kripalvananda died in
1981 in India. It became known that he was patriarch of a new branch of
the Pasupatas, a potent Saivite sect. For 1500 years Pasupatas swarmed
over Gujarat. But they died out there centuries ago and are now nearly
extinct elsewhere. In perspective, Swami Kripalvananda's loose linkage to
Pasupata can be called neo-Pasupata as it is not an extension of this
desiccated sect, but a new path that crossed his life in mysterious
ways.
Yogi Desai and three other lay and sannyasin disciples of
Babuji in India are the heirs to this neo-Pasupatism. As Desai explains,
Babuji told them of the Pasupata path, but "nothing that he gave me
directly as an education." Because Babuji left the subject foggy, it hangs
over Kripalu like an invisible mist. It is only visible in the inner
recesses of Kripalu where the residents attend Siva puja and sense a
connection to Bapuji and his guru, Dadaji, a mythic figure tied to the
origins of Pasupata.
After 30 years of teaching yoga, health and
lifestyle, Yogi Desai is anchoring his ashramites into the bedrock of
Hindu customs and culture. "We want to propagate our traditions, to learn
the more orthodox ways of Siva worship and bhakti."
KRIPALU
YOGA
In one memorable afternoon young Amrit Desai was treated to a
display of Babuji's secret sadhana. Desai recounts: "His body began to
move and flow in a very deep state of automatic pranic movement. The
energy became so strong that his body was hurled across the room with
tremendous force, dancing, moving, weaving in and out of complicated
movements as I watched with awe." Desai couldn't comprehend the event even
though Babuji explained it was a process called pranotthana, automatic
awakening of the pranas. But it percolated deep into his
subconscious.
By 1970 Desai was one of America's most successful
yoga teachers, utilizing his knowledge, experience and charisma to coach
students into asanas and a glimmering of mind concentration in raja yoga.
In another extraordinary afternoon - this lime in Philadelphia - Desai
stumbled into pranotthana: "All of a sudden my body began to move of its
own volition, without the direction of my mind, spontaneously and
effortlessly performing a series of flowing movements. Many of these
'postures' I had neither experienced before nor seen in any yoga book.
Paradoxically, during this flowing movement of postures I was also drawn
into the inner stillness of deep meditation and I entered into a unique
combination of meditation and motion. This culminated in an expanded state
of consciousness which filled me with ecstasy."
To Desai it was a
surrender to the kundalini pranas. He called the experience
Meditation-in-Motion and soon formalized it as Kripalu Yoga,
In his
book on Kripalu Yoga he explains: "At the usual level then, prana merely
sustains life, whereas at the evolutionary level, awakened prana
accelerates healing, rejuvenation, and purification of body, mind and
emotions...The power of this secret science of awakening prana lies not
just in accessing it, but in also knowing how to raise it for the
unfolding of the higher consciousness."
BABUJI
By the time
he was 19 Sarasvati Chandra, who would become Swami Kripalvananda
(Babuji), had contemplated suicide three times, frustrated by unrealistic
spiritual ambitions. In Bombay, the youth met the swami he knew as Dadaji.
He was from Bengal. His reputation included many tales of siddhis,
supernormal powers. At their initial meeting, the swami, told Chandra to
forsake his ideas of suicide. This startled Chandra, for he had confided
this to no one.
Chandra spent fifteen months with Dadaji,
culminating in a 40-day period of fasting. His solo sadhana during the
time was a single pranayama and mantra. Then Dadaji disappeared after
telling Chandra he would receive sannyas from another swami and only after
that event would he see Dadaji again. Ten years later Chandra took sannyas
from another swami. He later told how the single pranayama Dadaji taught
empowered a series of kundalini phenomena in him. Much of his secret
personal sadhana was occupied in the unleashing of pranas into his
sympathetic nerve system. The result was an exhaustive daily choreography
of spontaneous mudras, asanas, gesturing and vocalizations. Unguided in
kundalini, he studied yoga texts to gain feedback and direction.
Eventually he assimilated his own sadhana system.
In 1952 Babuji
says he again met Dadaji. It was a brief, surrealistic encounter in
Rishikesh in which Dadaji was not his old swami persona, but a youth
imbued with pranic luminosity. Babuji felt he'd seen Dadaji's perfected
siddha form, an imperishable biological body that is the culmination of
some siddha schools, but not of the Pasupata. After this event, Babuji saw
his own kundalini sadhana as a means to attaining a permanent divine body.
When he was in US from 1977-81, records were kept of his teeth, hair and
skin to track any physiological changes. It is the contention of Yogi
Desai that Babaji did attain God-samadhi and moksha (freedom from rebirth)
but that "He will have to come back to attain the divine body."
In
1955 Babuji visited a temple at Kayavarohan, Gujarat. Inside was a Siva
Lingam with a cherubic yogi known as Dadaji protruding from its surface.
Bapuji recognized this image as his guru's immortal body. To Bapuji, this
meant his guru was Dadaji, a mythic incarnation of Siva associated with
the establishment of the Pasupata sect. Babuji established an ashram and
temple at Kayavarohan.
DADAJI
Long ago the Pasupatas
("herdsman's staff") roamed India like it was a rich pasture for
Siva-Realization. The Pasupatas are one of two oldest known Saiva sects
and recede into remote periods far past historical footnotes.
After
untold centuries of incognito life in wild forests, the Pasupata sect grew
swiftly even though it was a supremely ascetic path. Among the Pasupata
sadhanas was one to emulate the behaviour of an antisocial, flaunting all
rules of decorum so as to invite censure by society. Thus personal ego was
evaporated. Later me Pasupata re-entered society temporarily as a normal
citizen, his Saiva identity and sadhanas practiced in secret. The
Pasupatas were known as Siva's sorcerers.
According to all Pasupata
texts, the sect was founded by a man named Nakulisha and even he was more
legend than flesh. A Siva Purana list of incarnations names Lakulish - or
Dadaji - the 28th incarnation of Siva, as the Pasupata founder. But almost
all Saiva sects, including the Pasupatas, do not follow the avatar
doctrine and the Siva Puranas aren't considered an authoritative text by
the Saiva yoga schools. However, Swami Kripalvananda reports that Dadaji
appeared as his guru. Kripalvananda gained his background of Pasupata from
his library studies and believes that the phenomena of uninhibited pranic
gesturing, dancing and crying he practiced is part of the Pasupata
kundalini awakening process.
Return to the Table of Contents
Return to Hinduism Today Home Page
|