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Book reviews for "Pavitranda,_Swami" sorted by average review score:

Rudrastadhyayi
Published in Paperback by Devi Mandir (10 January, 2002)
Author: Swami Satyananda Saraswati
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Rudrastadhyayi
Swami Satyananda has done an excellent job of translating the Rudrasthadyayi. His rendition captures the passion and emotion of these inspired poems. Swami Satyananda has a knack for making ancient texts understandable and accessible to the western mind. This text can be read or chanted and is an important book for those who want to understand and worship Shiva.


Seeing God Everywhere: A Practical Guide to Spiritual Living
Published in Paperback by Vedanta Press & Bookshop (1996)
Authors: Pravrajika Vrajaprana and Swami Shraddhananda
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An engaging, thought-provoking, spiritual text
This book is an especially enriching, spiritual text. Its message spans all religions and cultures, and offers thought-provoking insights. Extremely easy to read and understand, you'll find it difficult to put down. The spiritual exercises at the end of the book are especially helpful for those seeking to establish a closer relationship to God.


Selected Essays
Published in Paperback by Syda Foundation (01 December, 1995)
Authors: Swami Muktananda and Paul Zweig
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An invaluable guide for the spiritual seeker.
I enjoyed this book immensely. The author, a great yogic master, explains in simple terms and with clarity the many mysteries of the mind, the soul, God, and the state of spiritual liberation. He reveals the secrets of meditation, the mantra and the Kundalini energy. In doing so, he provides the tools and lays out a path towards full spiritual liberation. I have been on the spiritual path for a very long time, and his teachings has given my search a much needed boost. I am deeply indebted to him.


Selections from the Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna: Annotated & Explained
Published in Paperback by Skylight Paths Pub (2002)
Authors: Swami Nikhilananda, Andrew Harvey, and Kendra Crossen Burroughs
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Light on the Light
In my experience Kendra Crossen Burroughs is one of the best editors in the field of Eastern spiritual literature and texts. As well as working freelance, she has been a long term editor on the staff of Shambhala Publications, and I was happy to have her involved in a book that I had published by Shambhala, although not a book in Eastern thought.

Following her publication of the Skylight Paths edition of the Bhagavad Gita, I was most eager to read her next work, which is the one reviewed here.

Besides Burroughs'own brilliant annotations, Skylight has done an innovative and equally brilliant job of format, where the annotations are on one page, and the reference text on the facing page, so that the reader has the annotations right at hand, and does not have to thumb through to the back of the book or chapter to look them up. The only problem that I encountered with this was my own idiosyncratic one of whether to read the text page through and then turn to the annotations alongside it, or read each annotation as it is referred to in the text. I never completely settled this for myself. Other readers may want to read the annotation page first, and then read the facing page of the text on Ramakrishna next.

Sri Ramakrishna was the Indian spiritual master (1836-1886) whom many take to be a Sadguru, a perfect Master, or completely enlightened human being. He was the teacher and inspirer of Swami Vivekananda who, after Ramakrishna's death, came to the U.S. and caused a great stir at the famous Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893. _The Gospel of Shri Ramakrishna_ was the on the scene recorded notes and observations of another disciple of the master, referred to simply as "M," or Mahendranath Gupta. Although not well know at all, this original text is, as Burroughs correctly notes, one of the spiritual classics of the twentieth century (it was first published in English in 1942). In an age of extreme skepticism and rampant materialism, both philosophical and cultural, to have a book like this, which is a modern record of spiritual enlightenment, is of inestimable value.

As Burroughs' annotations and explanations note, at the beginning of Ramakrishna's visions and experiences, there was the opinion that he may have been just a madman. Several scholars and experts were brought in to examine and evaluate him, and they pronounced him to be genuine. One of them said, as Burroughs quotes, "I am fully convinced that you are that Mine of spiritual power, only a small fraction of which descends on earth, from time to time, in the form of an incarnation. ... I feel it in my heart and have the Scriptures on my side. I am ready to prove it to any one who challenges me." Burroughs continues, "Ramakrishna greeted the pronouncement with childlike indifference, saying, 'Well, I am glad to learn that after all it is not a disease.'"

Throughout the text, Ramakrishna says that spiritual aspirants and seekers have to be wary of "women and gold." This looks both sexist and rigid. Burroughs' annotation illuminates the significant and real meaning, which is neither. The English "women and gold" is actually a translation of Ramakrishna's Bengali expression, "kamini-kanchan." Kamini implies a seductress, which does not in general mean women. When Ramakrishna addressed his female devotees, of which there were many, he used the phrase, "man and gold." Kamini-kanchan was his shorthand way of referring to the entire conventional world, and its misguiding allurements. As Burroughs explains, "he actually revered women as sacred representatives of the Goddess and taught that a man should treat every woman with the same reverence with which Hindus traditionally regard their own mothers."

Another of my favorite annotations, which, besides the clarification of meaning, demonstrates the subtle light touch with which Burroughs approaches her annotative work, is the following. In the text, Ramakrishna refers to devotees meditating on "the lotus feet of God," a classic Indian expression. Burroughs explains, "The lotus symbolizes purity and detachment, for the plant has its roots in the mud, while its floating blossoms and leaves remain untouched by water or earth." Then she goes on to say, "Modern science confirms the purity of the lotus leaf, which has a 'self-cleaning' microstructure observed in the 1970s by Botanist Wilhelm Barthlott at the University of Bonn."

Other annotations are not about specifically spiritual terms, but rather explain mundane cultural references or objects, without which we might not clearly understand what Ramakrishna is saying. So, he gives this image, "One can see God only if He turns His light toward His own face. The police sergeant goes his rounds in the dark of night with a lantern in his hand. No one sees his face, but with the help of that light the sergeant sees everybody's face, and others, too, can see one another. If you want to see the sergeant, however, you must pray to him: Sir, please turn the light on your own face. Let me see you." Burroughs provides this annotation for the word "lantern" in Ramakrishna's metaphor: "This type of lantern had dark glass on three sides." Ah, now I see. Thank you Kendra for shedding light on the light.

One of the most important meanings conveyed to me in the text, along with the annotations, relates to a problem that has occupied me of how the "infinite within" can be reached and attained despite the fact that the individual consciousness is so finite. Ramakrishna gives several helpful images. In one of them a person goes to the Ganges river and touches its water. Ramakrishna: "He will then say, 'Yes, I have seen and touched the Ganges. To say this it is not necessary for him to touch the whole length of the river from Hardwar to Gangasagar (laughter)." So, by touching just a drop of the water of infinity, one has it all. I also like M's touch of noting the laughter, which calls our attention to the humor implied in Ramakrishna's explanation, which we might not readily appreciate in the bare translation of his words.

This is an immensely valuable book for the spiritual seeker, of whatever path or persuasion. It brings to the English speaking reader unparalleled access to one of the great living spiritual resources of modern times, and opens up for us the rest of the literature available on this human wonder.


THE SELF IS ALREADY ATTAINED
Published in Paperback by Syda Foundation (01 August, 1993)
Authors: Swami Muktananda and Swami Muktananda
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Gems of wisdom
It is said that "Good things come in small packages," and here is another shining example. This small pocket-sized book is the same beautiful wisdom you find in other larger books by Swami Muktananda. Every page has nuggets of wisdom, beautifully condensed into a few short sentences. This format confers great benefit to the reader, as he/she takes quick dips into the vast ocean of the author's vast knowledge and emerges in a higher place.


Shortened Path: Autobiography of a Western Yogi
Published in Paperback by Crystal Clarity Pub (1981)
Authors: Swami Kriyananda, J. Donald Walters, and Sri Kriyananda
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Paramahansa Yogananda's disciple shares loving memories
Donald Walters (Swami Kriyananda) makes you feel as if you were there during Yogananda's (Autobiography of a Yogi) years in America when he brought Eastern philosophy to Western minds. The story of Walter's spiritual journey is touching and readable. His perspective is more familiar, since he is an American, and his honesty about the obstacles he faced is inspiring. The book has many new pictures not published in SRF material.


Spirit of Himalaya: The Story of a Truth Seeker
Published in Hardcover by Truth Consciousness (1979)
Author: Swami Amar Jyoti
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"SPIRIT OF HIMALAYA" THREE BOOKS IN ONE!
SPIRIT OF HIMALAYA quickened and lifted me in at least three ways. It's really intriguing as a piece of fiction--suspenseful, interesting and beautifully descriptive. Throughout the pages gems of spiritual wisdom abound. What an easy way to receive some of the highest wisdom on the planet! Besides being a book of great fiction which includes wisdom of many planes, reading this book goes beyond normal impressions; it becomes a really personal experience of extraordinary beauty. The lingering memories are now leading me to read it again and experience its beauty and its wisdom and its subtle refinement again. Anyone would be really fortunate to experience "SPIRIT OF HIMALAYA"!


Sri Chaitanya, His Life & Associates
Published in Hardcover by Mandala Publishing Group (2001)
Authors: B. B., Swami Tietha and Maharaja B. B. Tirtha
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A beautiful devotional history
This is a beautifully bound books. It is illustrated throughout. The author is from the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition. The history of each person is explained clearly with numerous references and anectdotes. The text is clear and to the point. The book is a must for all individuals who are on the devotional path.


Srimad-Bhagavad-Gita
Published in Paperback by Vedanta Center (1981)
Authors: Paramananda Swami and Swami Paramananda
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Simple, direct, deep - without ornamentation
this can function as a prayer book - for those familiar with Hinduism or the philosophy of Vedanta -- or a way to study The Gita in an unalloyed manner. The translation was done early this century quite spontaneously while the author traveled in Italy, and the inspiration shows


Srimad-Bhagavad-Gita, 1909
Published in Paperback by Kessinger Publishing Company (1998)
Author: Swami Swarupananda
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Form follows Content
As a translater of classic Sankskrit texts, one of my measures of a good translation is whether or not the translator leaves the grammar and meaning alone in their translation, while remaining easily readable and delivering the feelings of the original. Swarupananda accomplishes this with disarming ease. Of the ten or so Bhagavad Gita's I have studied I would not trade any for this one (including my own translation).

The commentary is certainly not outstanding, but the verses are so well-rendered that it makes this my 'desert island' choice. For further commentary I would reccomend the Jnanaishvari or Shankara's commetnary, or listening to your own heart.


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