Hari Om

Menu

Our Heritage

The Divine Life Society Rishikesh
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda

Swami Sankarananda

Swami Sankarananda Swami Sankarananda was born in Karnataka on the 13th May, 1900. He was a versatile genius. It is extremely rare nowadays to find one who so beautifully blends in himself the scholar and the Sevak, for whom cooking or scavenging, building construction or administration of an institution and thinking and writing on subtle philosophical subjects, would all be natural and therefore dear. Sankarananda was. a linguist and has utilised his mastery of Bengali literature to interpret Tagore’s works to the people of Karnataka. He has also translated several of Swami Sivanandaji’s works into the Canarese language. Since he joined the Sivananda Ashram in 1946 he has not spared himself in the service of the Master. Swami Sivananda initiated him into the Holy Order of Sannyasa on “Sankara Jayanti day” 1948. Since then Sankarananda has served the Master’s Cause with a rare zeal and spirit of dedication. He has distinguished himself in several departments of the Ashram. The Society’s Garden at Rishikesh owes its growth to him. Side by side, he has carried on his literary activities. At the invitation of the Mysore University, he delivered a series of lectures on Bengali Literature. At the Yoga Vedanta Forest Academy, too, he delivered a series of lectures on the spiritual significance of the Mahabharata, which have been brought together in a volume entitled “The Glorious Journey”. His talks and writings share the nature of his life itself; they are all thought provoking.

Swami Sankarananda Read Post »

download 23
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda

Swami Santananda

Swami Santananda Sri Chandrasekar, as he was known when he came to the Ashram. from Swami Jnanananda Ashram, Tirukkoilur (South India), hails from Tamil Nadu. He joined the Sivananda Ashram in 1957; a young man with an exceptional gift of melodious voice. He was ordained as a Sannyasin soon after his arrival and was named as Swami Santananda. By his soulful sweet Kirtans he used to commence the daily Satsangas in the Ashram, which would transport him and the audience to the realm of ecstasy. Devotees used to forget themselves in bliss. This young and enthusiastic Swami was also a personal Secretary to Sri Gurudev, especially during the last few years of the Master when his physical frame needed great care and service due to age and ailments, which he did with all love and dedication. After an year of the Master’s Mahasamadhi, sometime by the end of 1964, he felt an urge to live by himself and left the Ashram. His charming personality and sweet voice are irresistable and so wherever he went he attracted devotees in large numbers. Thus he soon found groups of Kirtan lovers gathering around him in different towns of South India, as well as in Malaysia and Singapore where the Indian population is quite large. He formed what is known as “Siva Family” in different places, the most dynamic of which is in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where the Swami has established a large spiritual and cultural Centre, which is doing social, cultural and spiritual services under his inspiration and guidance.

Swami Santananda Read Post »

shiva2 1
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda

Swam Chaitanyananda

Swami Chaitanyananda Swami Chaitanyananda hails from Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh. He came to the Ashram in the late forties, in the service of Sri Gurudev. Swami Sivananda initiated him into Sannyasa in 1951 and he became the first in charge of the correspondence section which assumed a position of a full fledged department since the return of Sri Gurudev after the All India tour in November, 1950 because of the stir the tour had created and the consequent bulk of correspondence that the daily mail brought. He did this service for many years, until he left for Uttarakashi in 1958, for seclusion and Sadhana. At Uttarakashi he stays in the small Sivananda Ashram, built by the Headquarters at Rishikesh, and conducts classes in Vedantic Texts for the bonefit of Sadhakas.

Swam Chaitanyananda Read Post »

2012 08 02 12.45.46
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda

Swami Sahajananda

Swami Sahajananda Sri Swami Sahajananda, Spiritual Head of Divine Life Society of South africa, was born in the KwaZulu-Natal town of Estcourt on 10 July, 1925. His pre-monastic name was V. Srinivasan. Although he had a promising academic career and was keenly interested in sports and games, the young teacher had a strong yearning to lead the spiritual life, as he found his mind tormented by turbulent thoughts. Coming to know that for success in such an endeavor a Guru was very necessary, he began to yearn for one. One day, visiting a bookshop in Durban that dealt with Vedic literature, he happened to glance at a book entitled, Practice of Karma Yoga. Its author was none other than the great Sage of India, Sri Swami Sivananda. Even though Srinivasan did not know the meaning of the words, “Karma Yoga” at that time, the book sent a strange thrill through him. Glancing through its pages, he instantly knew that he had found the Guru he was searching for. He was fascinated to discover that spiritual life can not only purify the mind but grant one God-realisation as well. Henceforth, God-realisation became the goal of his life. He at once lost all interest in his academic career in which he was highly ambitious. He also lost interest in sports and games which he loved so much. He corresponded with the Master and began following his instructions. On his first visit to the Master in 1948, the only instruction received from the Master was “Learn to type and make Tea.” On his return to South Africa, he took up a post at the FOSA TB settlement, teaching at the school and serving the sick. In 1949, he received the Master’s instruction to start a branch in this country. In 1956, on his second visit to the Master, he was initiated into the holy order of Sannyas, with Swami Sahajananda being his monastic name. One of the cornerstones of Swamiji’s spiritual life was his total obedience and dedication to the Master. On his return to South Africa, he continued the Master’s work at a vigorous pace. Dissemination of the Master’s spiritual literature was uppermost on his priority list. Swamiji worked tirelessly printing the Master’s books to the last days of his life, and was an expert editor, typesetter, printer, book binder, etc. He always ensured that the Master’s books were of the highest quality. Alongside this, Swamiji began building projects for the underprivileged in the province. These projects included schools, clinics, children’s homes, creches, low cost housing, peace & skills training centres, etc. From 1974 until his Mahasamadhi on 2007, Swamiji completed over 300 such projects. All the while, as such work continued, the Master’s Grace and guidance could be felt at every step. On the spiritual side, many devotees flocked to the Mission, engaging in spiritual practices and Sadhana outlined by the Master and Swamiji such as attending regular Satsangs, Meditation, Japa, etc. Karma Yoga formed and important part of Gurudev’s “Yoga of Synthesis”. Over the years, countless devotees engaged in selfless service, assisting Swamiji in various aspects of the work. The spectrum ranged from printing and working in the press to building, serving at the clinic, cleaning, cooking meals for the poor, etc. To this effect, Swami Sahajananda worked tirelessly for 58 years serving his Master, and the people of South Africa. He attained Mahasamadhi on 10 December 2007 after a short illness. Thousands made the journey to Sivanandashram, Reservoir Hills, to pay their final respects to one who left such a deep impression on the lives of so many.

Swami Sahajananda Read Post »

hq720 1
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda

Swami Sharadananda

Swami Sharadananda Sri Padmanabhan came to the abode of Sri Gurudev sometime in. the mid forties when he was a Brahmachari of very young age. Active in temperament, adventurous in spirit, and curious about knowing almost everything which he regarded as helpful for furthering the Mission of Sri Gurudev, Padmanabhan worked hard in the development of the photo-studio in the Ashram with such rapidity and success that he quickly earned a name in the locality as a photographer and artist endowed with a novel ingenuity. The various photoprints of Sri Gurudev that are available at present and the photographs of the Ashram are all the work of his pioneering effort. Padmanabhan accompanied Sri Gurudev during his All-India-Ceylon Tour and did an extraordinary job of making still and Moviefilms of the entire tour. His skill is something superb. Sri Gurudev ordained him into the order of Sannyasa on Mahasivaratri, the 3rd of March, 1951, and gave him the name of Swami Sharadananda. After that he worked more vigorously and produced some movie-films of 8 mm and 16 mm size, one of which was a sound-film executed with great labour. Swami Sharadananda, at the same time, was of an intensely studious type and was vigorously devoted to the study of such scriptures as the Srimad-Bhagavata and the Mahabharata. Later on, in the year 1957, he was inspired by a desire to go into seclusion and settled himself for a short time at Uttarkashi and then permanently in Gangottari, the snow-capped heights in the Himalayas. It was there that he took to a serious study of the Bhagavadgita with the famous commentary of Shankarananda and betook himself to intense forms of Tapas in many ways. His fame, as an austere Sannyasin, spread so wide that he spontaneously endeared himself to everyone in the Garhwal regions around Gangottari and among the Sadhus and Sadhakas living there.

Swami Sharadananda Read Post »

fa209a7cd7d64c973e80c9f27f451f0b
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda

Swami Premananda

Swami Premananda Swami Premananda was working as an officer in the revenue department of the Government, and he used to visit the Ashram. Later on he relinquished this job on a call from the spiritual ideal of life, in pursuit of which he came to the Ashram of Sri Gurudev, sometime in 1957. Sri Gurudev found him to be a very honest worker, having been already acquainted with managemental and administrative work as a revenue official. He was primarily, at the beginning, entrusted with looking to the Branches of the Divine Life Society through its office at the Headquarters, which work he did to the satisfaction of Sri Gurudev. He fell ill later on. He had an acute attack of Malaria which partially rendered him deaf, by the intake of Quinine, and in that connection to take rest he went from the Ashram to some place in Rajasthan where devotees finding him a very simple and amiable person requested him to continue to stay there for a long time and start a little Centre of the Divine Life Society. This nucleus of Sri Gurudev’s work in Rajasthan spread itself in different places especially in the Punjab where he became quite known to people there due to his discourses on the Ramacharita Manas of Sri Tulsidas, and spiritual messages that he gave to people together with his personal touch which began to make devotees feel that his presence has a healing touch to families and individuals who had difficulties and problems of one type or the other. For many years, Swami Premananda lived outside the Headquarters of the Ashram, carrying on this work of spreading spiritual messages, though visiting the Ashram almost annually. Once when he came to the Ashram on a visit, he was requested by Swamijis in the Ashram to settle down here and to render some service at the headquarters, which he graciously accepted and is rendering till his Mahasamadhi on 2003.

Swami Premananda Read Post »

images 43
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda

Swami Shanmugananda

Swami Shanmugananda Sri Venkataraman was born on the 9th of October, 1926 in the Dist. of Tanjore in Tamil Nadu, in an orthodox Brahmin family. He imbibed from his parents devotion and adherence to daily religious routines, which made him God loving and simple. He had High School education but set up an electrical shop, though an unusual profession for his community. But that is how God works, because that gave him an opportunity to have casual Darshan of Sri Gurudev, though by sheer chance, when he got a professional order to fix up the amplifying system at the Dharmapura Adhinam where Sri Gurudev paid a visit during his All India tour in October 1950. Even this chance Darshan of Swami Sivananda worked a miracle in the young lad. He started losing interest in his business and began to ponder over the purpose of working hard for a mere livelihood. Quickly he decided, left his business and home town without anyone’s knowledge, came straight to Sivananda Ashram, Rishikesh, and met Dr. K. C. Roy who too left his practice after meeting Sri Gurudev at Chidambaram during the All India tour and dedicated his services to the Ashram’s Hospital. Dr. Roy, thinking that he had come on pilgrimage, took him to Sri Gurudev for Darshan and introduced him as an honest and devoted person, having an electrical business. At once Swami Sivananda told Venkataraman, “Stay here and serve the Ashram.” Venkataraman’s joy knew no bounds, to the astonishment of Dr. Roy. He stayed and is still ‘staying, since 21st february, 1951. Soon after that electricity was brought to the Ashram. by Swami Dayananda’s superhuman efforts and Venkataraman it is who did all the electrical wiring and fitting work for the entire Ashram, with whom Sri Gurudev was highly pleased. He was ordained as a Sannyasin in the year 1957. He has rendered very valuable service in the Guest and electrical departments, and is now looking after the construction of buildings of the Ashram for nearly two decades. Though he is a follower of Advaita Vedanta, he firmly believes in the efficacy of ritualistic form of worship and devotes long hours in such worship of Lord Skanda or Shanmukha, of whom he is a very staunch devotee. He is thorough in ritualistic worship and is fully conversant with the Mantras and rituals. He is equally a scholar in Tamil literature, particularly of Lord Murugan or Shanmukha.

Swami Shanmugananda Read Post »

images 59
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda

Swami Vimalananda

Swami Vimalananda Sri Nagaraj was born in 1932 in Chamarajanagar(near mysore), Karnataka, and was a great patriot, having taken part in the quit India Movement in his early student life. He was at the same time a great admirer of Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa and Swami Vivekananda, whose teachings had a profound influence on his life. He used to regularly attend the Ramakrishna Mission Satsanga. Finally his love for seclusion on the banks of the Ganga for doing intense Sadhana brought him to Sivananda Ashram in 1953. Sri Nagaraj is an exemplary Nishkama Karma Yogi, and Swami Sivananda at once recognized this spirit in him. Because of his sincerity and trustworthy nature, he was entrusted with the job of receiving Sri Guredev’s mail and attending to his correspondence which he did to the great satisfaction of Sri Gurudev. He was at the same time doing personal service to Swami Chidananda, towards whom he slowly developed an exceptional type of devotion and implicit obedience, so much so that his words were gospel to Sri Nagraj. It is indeed rare to see such type of devotion and obedience these days. Even so his love for Sri Gurudev, the Ganga and the Himalayas is something unique. Often he would go into the Himalayan jungles for solitude and seclusion, for hours together. Since Sri Gurudev’s Mahasamadhi in 1963, Sri Nagaraj is serving Swami Chidananda as his personal secretary. On 26th of July, 1972, the sacred Guru Purnima, he embraced the Order of Sannyasa and got the monastic name Swami Vimalananda. Being Secretary to Swami Chidananda, he has traveled widely, both in India and abroad. He is an embodiment of patience and self-sacrifice.

Swami Vimalananda Read Post »

images 26 2
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda

Swami Shivapremananda

Swami Shivapremananda Sri Sukhendu Ray (Sri Shivaprem), as a young man, came to the Ashram from Calcutta in January, 1945, and like others got involved in the correspondence work of the Ashram directly under Sri Gurudev. He became proficient gradually in writing essays, contributing articles to journal and the like, due to the specialisation which he had for some years under Sri Gurudev. He became the Editor of the Society’s monthly journal ‘The Divine Life’, since January 1949. He did this work with great sincerity, love and affection, in addition to serving in the different departments of the Headquarters. He has also been editing the monthly journal for the members of the Divine Life Society, Wisdom-Light, since its inception in January 1949. Reticent, withdrawn and shy of publicity, Sri Shivaprem was not know to many as an able interpreter of comprehensive spiritual thought and a talented writer that he is. He has edited many of the publications of Gurudev, such as parliament of Religions: Commemoration Volume; wisdom of Siva; practice of Nature Cure; Religious Education; Every Man’s Yoga-to mention a few. He is also the author of Maharshi Sivananda. Acquainted with all the facets of religion and aspects of Yoga, amiable in disposition and capable of being at-home with everyone, widely informed and liberal in outlook, Sri Shivaprem was considered well suited by Sri Gurudev to propound the message of the East to the West, when there was an invitation from a devotee in Milwaukee (Wisconsin) in the United States of America. Sri Gurudev was also confident that his impact on the spiritual seekers in America (or wherever go) was bound to influence an inner awakening. Thus, in August 1961 Sri Gurudev gave him Sannyasa, named him Swami Shivapremananda and deputed him as a mouthpiece of his Mission in the West, which orders of Sri Gurudev he obeyed implicitly and left the Ashram for this noble work in September, 1961, for the States visiting some European countries and Canada en route. From 1961 to 1964, Swami Shivapremananda was the founder-president of the Sivananda Yoga-Vedanta Centre in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. From 1964 to 1970, he was the director and prime mover of the Sivananda Yoga-Vedanta Centre in New York City. He has traveled extensively in the U. S.A., giving lectures n the universities and conducting seminars on Yoga and Vedanta. In the course of the years, Swami Shivapremananda has established three great totally independent spiritual Centers of India’s spiritual culture and educational and public service in three South American countries,-Argentina, in Buenos Aires; Uruguay, in Montevideo; and Chile, in Santiago. Though these three are his main Centers, where he stays for two months at a time in each Centre giving regular programmes, he also tours extensively in U. S. A. and Europe.

Swami Shivapremananda Read Post »

images 54
Our Heritage, Swami Sivananda, Uncategorized

Swami Sivananda Radha

Swami Sivananda Radha Swami Sivananda Radha, (Sylvia Hellman), was born in Germany in 1911 and lived there until after World War II. Always of a very questioning nature, she soon realized that worldly success brought little of enduring value. The disruptive events in Germany through the War years only increased her desire to find a lasting and meaningful purpose in life. In 1951 she emigrated to Canada and became a Canandian citizen. A visionary experience led her to her Guru (Spiritual teacher)- Swami Sivananda Saraswati – In Rishikesh, India. At the time of her first visit she spent six months at his Ashram, and received a very intense training in the philosophy and practice of Yoga and the spiritual life. It was there that she choose to dedicate her life to the service of others, and in 1956 was initiated into the sacred order of Sannyas as Swami Sivananda Radha. Sannyasins renounce all worldly ambitions and emotional attachments, directing their life and energy to the ideals of selfless service and the search for the spiritual understanding and enlightenment. At her Guru’s request she returned to Canada to bring the Yogic teachings to the West. In the 1956 she hounded as Ashram in Burnaby, British Colombia, which moved to its present location in Kootenay Bay, B.C. in 1963. since then Swami Radha’s major emphasis has been to interpret the ancient teachings so they can be understood and applied in the daily life of the Westerners. Many of her recordings have been classified as educational material by Canadian Government. She is the author ofKundalini: Yoga for the West, Mantras: Words of Power, and the Divine Light invocations. Swami Radha sees Yoga not as a Religion, but rather as a science to help human beings realize their fullest potentials, to live with concern for others as well as themselves. She lectures as gives workshops throughout North-America and Europe, and training others to share the teaching as she has done. Much of her times were spent in writing and giving spiritual guidance to those that seek the light.

Swami Sivananda Radha Read Post »