A
Brief Life Sketch of
Sri Srimad Gour Govinda Swami
Sri
Srimad Gour Govinda Swami was born as Braja Bandhu Manik on the second
of September 1929 in Jagannathpur, a small village near to Jagannath
Puri, Orissa. In his youth he mostly lived with his maternal family the
Giris in the village of Gadeigiri. The Giris were Gaudiya Vaishnavas and
well known for their expertise in kirtana. Braja
Bandhu’s maternal grandfather, Bauri Giri, was famous in the local
area as a paramahamsa vaisnava. He was constantly chanting the hare
krsna maha-mantra and worshiping the family deity of Gopal
Jiu.
As
a boy Braja Bandhu was very quiet and serious. Whatever free time he had from
his studies he spent rendering services to Gopal and accompanying his
grandfather and uncles in going from village to village, chanting hari-nama
and singing songs of the vaisnava acaryas. He was very attached
to Srimad Bhagavatam. As a young boy his mother found that whenever he
would cry she need only place the Bhagavatam in his hands and he would
stop. At night Braja Bandhu would go to sleep with the book clutched to his
chest.
In
1952 his mother arranged for him to marry, and in 1955, when his father passed
away, the financial responsibility to maintain the family fell on his
shoulders. After obtaining B.A. and B.Ed. degrees from Utkal University, he
took up government service as a school teacher.
Although
busy with his family and teaching responsibilities, he maintained a strict
daily sadhana of rising before 4:00 AM, chanting hare krsna, worshipping
tulasi and speaking on Bhagavad-gita. Throughout his life Braja
Bandhu made entries in his diary in the form of prayers to Gopal. His 1973
entries frequently mention his desire to renounce family life. From 10
October:
O
Prabhu Gopal, please make me a yogi sannyasi! I don’t need
anything, Prabhu. I’m not asking You for material opulence, respect, glory
or anything else. You may give those things to my younger brother Kripa-sindhu.
Let him maintain Your [my] family. Make me a samsara-vairagi-yogi, a
renunciate of family life. Let me beg that prema-dhana, that wealth of
love of Godhead! Let me distribute prema and ananda! Let me
serve You! Please shower this mercy on me, Prabhu! Please bless me with prema-bhakti,
ecstatic love for You!
In
April of 1974, he left his family life, taking only a Bhagavad-gita,
two gamuchas, and a notebook with him. At that time he adopted the name
“Gour Gopal” — Gour for Gauranga Mahaprabhu and Gopal after his beloved
childhood deity. Taking up the lifestyle of a mendicant sadhu, Gour
Gopal set out to find a spiritual master who could teach him about the hare
krsna maha-mantra, Srimad Bhagavatam and Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu. His
search took him all over India, from Kanya Kumari in the South to the
Himalayas in the North. Finally in September of the same year, he resolved to
go to Vrindavan the land of Krishna, thinking that surely his desire would be
fulfilled there. Obtaining free passage from a train conductor, he arrived in
Mathura. He stayed in a few different temples, and finally he made his way to
Vrindavan where he saw a sign, “International Society for Krishna
Consciousness.” Arriving there, a devotee gave him a copy of the society’s
magazine, Back To Godhead. Seeing the articles in the magazine on
Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Srimad Bhagavatam and the maha-mantra, Gour
Gopal knew he had found what he was looking for. He requested to meet
the founder of the society, and at midday was brought to the quarters of His
Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. After speaking with him for
a little while, Srila Prabhupada asked, “Have you taken sannyasa?”
Gour
Gopal replied, “No.”
Srila
Prabhupada said, “Then I will give you sannyasa.”
Gour
Govinda Swami later commented:
I could then understand, ‘He is a genuine guru because he knows my heart. He is caitya-guru.’ I was in search of such a person under whom I could take shelter. I took shelter of him. My heart was naturally attracted towards him. I had full faith in Krishna and Chaitanya Mahaprabhu and They helped me.
Hearing
of his scholastic abilities, Srila Prabhupada immediately engaged Gour Gopal
in translating his small book Perfection of Yoga into Hindi. A
few weeks later Srila Prabhupada gave him initiation and the name Gour Govinda
Das. Then, on 20 April 1975, Gour Govinda Das received sannyasa
from Srila Prabhupada at the opening ceremony of the ISKCON Sri Sri Krishna
Balaram temple in Vrindavan.
On
Srila Prabhupada’s order, Gour Govinda Swami went to open a center in
Bhubaneswar, the capital city of Orissa. Arriving there with no money and no
resources, he stayed alone on the newly donated property, which at that time
was nothing more than a jungle full of snakes, scorpions and ant hills.
In
late January 1977 Srila Prabhupada arrived in Bhubaneswar and stayed for
seventeen days on the property in a small hut that Gour Govinda Swami had
arranged for him. On Lord Nityananda’s appearance day Srila Prabhupada laid
the foundation stone for the upcoming temple. This was his last founded
project. Prabhupada predicted that one day the temple on the isolated property
would be one of the best ISKCON centers in the world and would be situated in
the heart of the city. Prabhupada also instructed Gour Govinda Maharaja to
translate his books into the Orissan language and to travel and preach to
devotees around the world.
In
early 1985 Gour Govinda Maharaja began accepting disciples. Two years later,
on the request of senior devotees, he agreed to become a member of the ISKCON
Governing Body Commission, and was given joint charge of the society’s
projects in Orissa.
In
the summer of 1985, pursuing Srila Prabhupada’s order, Gour Govinda Maharaja
went overseas to preach. For the next eleven years he traveled all over the
world speaking krsna-katha to interested devotees. His lectures
inspired thousands of devotees and these lectures are now being compiled into
books by his followers. During this time, despite his busy schedule, he
strictly maintained a daily quota of translating Srila Prabhupada’s books
into Oriya.
In
1991, after sixteen years of endeavor, Gour Govinda Swami opened the
magnificent Sri Sri Krishna-Balaram temple in Bhubaneswar on the auspicious
occasion of Lord Ramachandra’s appearance day. Today, the Sri Sri Krishna
Balaram Mandir is the second most popular temple in Orissa, after the
Jagannath Mandir in Puri, and the area around the temple is the fastest
growing section of Bhubaneswar.
In
July 1994, in New York City, Gour Govinda Maharaja spoke to the devotees about
his mission:
There are three things that are very important to me. One is that I want to preach to the preachers. It causes me so much pain to see the devotees falling down and going away. The second thing is that I want to show how everything is in Prabhupada’s books. Those persons who are saying that Srila Prabhupada only gave ABC, it causes me so much pain in my heart. I want to make them silent. And the third thing is that I want to show how everything is in ISKCON and that devotees do not have to go elsewhere for higher teachings.
In
late January of 1996, Gour Govinda Swami mentioned, “Srila Bhaktisiddhanta
Saraswati said that this material world is not a fit place for any gentleman.
Therefore, because he was disgusted, he left this world prematurely. I may
also leave. I don’t know. I will ask Gopal. I will do whatever He wants.”
The next day he went to Gadeigiri to see Gopal. While there he spoke to his
cousin Ghanashyam Giri, who recalls:
We were discussing Gopal’s new temple and the planned installation of large deities of Radha Gopal to go with the existing small ones. Suddenly, Maharaja told me, “I won’t see this deity installation. You will see it but I won’t.”
I said, “How is that? You are ten years younger than I am. If you won’t see it how will I?”
Maharaja said, “No, no. You will see the inauguration of the temple and the deity because you have served Gopal so nicely.” That was the last discussion I had with Maharaja. After that he went to Bhubaneswar for a few days and then to Mayapur where he stayed forever.”
In
Mayapur, on 9 February 1996, the appearance day of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta
Saraswati Thakur, two senior devotees requested an appointment to meet with
Gour Govinda Swami to ask some questions. They inquired, “Why did Chaitanya
Mahaprabhu stay in Jagannath Puri?” Gour Govinda Swami began to
enthusiastically explain the confidential significance of Mahaprabhu’s
pastimes in Puri. He described the pain of separation felt by Srimati
Radharani when Krishna was away from Vrindavan. He gradually unfolded the
pastime to the point where Radha and Krishna were finally united after Their
long separation. He described how Krishna became so ecstatic upon seeing
Radharani that He manifested a form with big round eyes and shrunken limbs,
Lord Jagannath. At that time the devotees noticed that tears had come to his
eyes and his voice had become choked up. In a whisper he said, “Then the
eyes of Krishna fell upon the eyes of Radharani. Eye to eye union.” Unable
to continue, he folded his hands and in a barely audible voice, apologized,
saying, “Please forgive me, I cannot speak more.” The devotees present
began to chant as he calmly lay back on his bed, breathing slowly and deeply.
Upon his request, a servant placed a picture of Gopal Jiu in his hand. Then,
gazing lovingly at the picture of his worshipable Deity, Gour Govinda Swami
said, “Gopal!” Then his eyes closed, he lost external consciousness and
left this world.
His
body was brought to the Sri Sri Krishna Balaram Mandir in Bhubaneswar where he
was placed in samadhi in the small mud hut that had served as his bhajana-kutira
for many years.