Paramhansa Yogananda: Difference between revisions

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===Documentary film===
===Documentary film===
''Awake: The Life of Yogananda'' is a 2014 documentary about Paramahansa Yogananda, in English with subtitles in seventeen languages. The documentary includes commentary by [[George Harrison]] and Ravi Shankar, among others.<ref name=WPaboutTheFilm>Wikipedia has an [[Wikipedia:Awake: The Life of Yogananda|article about the 2014 documentary film]].</ref>
''Awake: The Life of Yogananda'' is a 2014 documentary about Paramahansa Yogananda, in English with subtitles in seventeen languages. The documentary includes commentary by [[George Harrison]] and Ravi Shankar, among others.<ref name=WPaboutTheFilm>Wikipedia has an [[Wikipedia:Awake: The Life of Yogananda|article about the 2014 documentary film]].</ref><ref name=IMDb>The [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt3741860/ IMBd filmography database] has a full cast list and other details about the 2014 documentary film.</ref>


===Footnotes===
===Footnotes===

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Paramahansa Yogananda circa 1920.

Paramhansa Yogananda (1893–1952) was one of the first Indian spiritual teachers to reside permanently in the West and to teach yoga to Americans. He moved from India to the United States in 1920 and eventually founded the Self-Realization Fellowship in Los Angeles. He published his own life story in a book called Autobiography of a Yogi, first published in 1946. In his Autobiography, Yogananda provided some details of his personal life, an introduction to yoga, meditation, and philosophy, and accounts of his meetings with a wide variety of personalities, including Mohandas K. Gandhi, Luther Burbank, and Jagadis C. Bose. In this memoir, he claimed to have been given to know in advance the time when he would die.

Paramhamsa, also spelled Paramahamsa, is a Sanskrit title used for Hindu spiritual teachers who have become enlightened. The title of Paramhansa originates from the legend of the swan. The swan (hansa) is said to have a mythical ability to sip only the milk from a water-and-milk mixture, separating out the more watery part. The spiritual master is likewise said to be able to live in a world like a supreme (param) swan, and only see the divine, instead of all the evil mixed in there too, which the worldly person sees.

Early life

Yogananda was born Mukunda Lal Ghosh in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, India to a Hindu Bengali Kayastha family. He was the fourth of the eight children of Bhagabati Charan Ghosh, the vice president of Bengal-Nagpur Railway, and Gyanprabha Devi. Mukunda's awareness and experience of the spiritual were far beyond the ordinary even from his earliest years. The demands of his father's job caused the family to move several times during Mukunda's childhood, including to Lahore, Bareilly, and Kolkata. According to his memoir Autobiography of a Yogi, he was eleven years old when his mother died, just before the marriage of his eldest brother Ananta. Throughout his childhood, his father would fund train passes for his many sight-seeing trips to distant cities and pilgrimage spots, which he would often take with friends. In his youth he sought out many of India's Hindu sages and saints, including the Soham "Tiger" Swami, Gandha Baba, and Mahendranath Gupta, hoping to find an illumined teacher to guide him in his spiritual quest.

After finishing high school, Mukunda left home and joined a Mahamandal Hermitage in Varanasi; however, he soon became dissatisfied with its insistence on organizational work instead of meditation and God-perception. He began praying for guidance; in 1910, his seeking after various teachers ended when, at the age of 17, he met his guru, Swami Sri Yukteswar Giri. In his autobiography, he describes his first meeting with Sri Yukteswar as a rekindling of a relationship that had lasted for many lifetimes.

He would go on to train under Sri Yukteswar as his disciple for the next ten years (1910–1920) at his hermitages in Serampore and Puri. Later on, Sri Yukteswar informed Mukunda that he had been sent to him by the great guru of their lineage, Mahavatar Babaji, for a special world purpose of yoga dissemination.

After passing his Intermediate Examination in Arts from the Scottish Church College, Calcutta, in 1915, he graduated with a degree similar to a current-day Bachelor of Arts or B.A. (at the time referred to as an A.B.) from Serampore College, the college having two entities, one as a constituent college of the Senate of Serampore College (University) and the other as an affiliated college of the University of Calcutta. This allowed him to spend time at Yukteswar's ashram in Serampore.

In July 1915, several weeks after graduating from college, he took formal vows into the monastic Swami order; Sri Yukteswar allowed him to choose his own name: Swami Yogananda Giri. In 1917, Yogananda founded a school for boys in Dihika, West Bengal that combined modern educational techniques with yoga training and spiritual ideals. A year later, the school relocated to Ranchi.

Teaching in America

Meditating in 1910

In his autobiography, Yogananda writes that he received a vision one day in 1920 while meditating at his Ranchi school: faces of a multitude of Americans passed before his mind's eye, intimating to him that he would soon go to America. After giving charge of the school to its faculty, he left for Calcutta. On the following day, he received an invitation from the American Unitarian Association to serve as India's delegate to an International Congress of Religious Liberals convening that year in Boston. Yogananda sought his guru's advice, and Sri Yukteswar advised him to go. Still seeking guidance, in deep prayer in his room he received a surprise visit from Mahavatar Babaji, the foremost guru of his lineage, who told him he was the one chosen to spread Kriya Yoga to the West. Yogananda soon afterwards accepted the offer to go to Boston.

In August 1920, he left for the United States aboard the ship The City of Sparta on a two-month voyage that landed near Boston by late September. He spoke at the International Congress in early October and was well received; later that year he founded Self-Realization Fellowship (SRF) to disseminate worldwide his teachings on yoga and its tradition of meditation. Yogananda spent the next four years in Boston; in the interim, he lectured and taught on the East Coast and in 1924 embarked on a cross-continental speaking tour. During this time he attracted a number of noted followers, including soprano Amelita Galli-Curci and Clara Clemens Gabrilowitsch, the daughter of Mark Twain. In 1925, he established an international center for Self-Realization Fellowship in Los Angeles, California, which became the heart of his growing work. Yogananda was the first major Indian spiritual teacher to spend a major portion of his life in America.

Autobiography of a Yogi

In 1946, Yogananda published his Autobiography of a Yogi. It has since been translated into 45 languages, and in 1999 was designated one of the "100 Most Important Spiritual Books of the 20th Century" by a panel of spiritual authors convened by Philip Zaleski and HarperCollins publishers.

The book describes Yogananda's spiritual search for enlightenment, in addition to encounters with notable figures such as Therese Neumann, Anandamayi Ma, Mohandas Gandhi, Rabindranath Tagore, Luther Burbank, and Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose. The book is a literary tour de force, full of references to world literature, modern science, and ancient wisdom of India and contains numerous references to supernatural events.

The Autobiography has been an inspiration for many people including George Harrison, Ravi Shankar, and Steve Jobs. In the 2011 book Steve Jobs: A Biography Walter Isaacson writes that Jobs first read the Autobiography as a teenager and regularly reread it. Jobs famously gave away digital copies of the book on his death. TV producer Gene Roddenberry is said to have been inspired by some of the miracles in the book when creating the TV science-fiction series Star Trek.

Documentary film

Awake: The Life of Yogananda is a 2014 documentary about Paramahansa Yogananda, in English with subtitles in seventeen languages. The documentary includes commentary by George Harrison and Ravi Shankar, among others.[1][2]

Footnotes

  1. Wikipedia has an article about the 2014 documentary film.
  2. The IMBd filmography database has a full cast list and other details about the 2014 documentary film.