| |
e
present below a brief biography of the amazing life and
misson of this pure God-realized soul. For those who want
an 86-page issue of our magazine, Hinduism Today, dedicated
to him and produced in March of 2002, you may purchase a
copy by e-mailing us at jothi@hindu.org.
Once in a while on this Earth there arises
a soul who, by living his tradition rightly and wholly,
perfects his path and becomes a light to the world. Satguru
Sivaya Subramuniyaswami was such a being, a living example
of awakening and wisdom, a leader recognized worldwide as
one of Hinduism's foremost ministers. In 1947, as a young
man of 20, he journeyed to India and Sri Lanka and two years
later was initiated into sannyasa by the renowned siddha
yogi and worshiper of Siva, Jnanaguru
Yogaswami of Sri Lanka, regarded as one of the 20th
century's most remarkable mystics.
For over five decades Subramuniyaswami, affectionately known
as Gurudeva, taught Hinduism to Hindus and seekers from
all faiths. In the line of successorship, he was the 162nd
Jagadacharya of the Nandinatha Sampradaya's Kailasa Parampara
and Guru Mahasannidhanam of Kauai
Aadheenam (also known as Kauai's Hindu Monastery), a
458-acre temple-monastery complex on Hawaii's Garden Island.
From this verdant Polynesian ashram on a river bank near
the foot of an extinct volcano, Gurudeva's successor, Satguru
Bodhinatha Veylanswami, and the monastics live their cherished
vision, following a contemplative and joyous existence,
building a jewel-like white granite Siva temple, meditating
together in the hours before dawn, then working, while rainbows
fill the sky, to promote the Sanatana Dharma together through
four areas of service: Saiva
Siddhanta Church, Himalayan
Academy, Hindu
Heritage Endowment and Hinduism
Today international monthly magazine.
Gurudeva was lauded as one of the strictest and most traditional
gurus in the world. His Hindu Church nurtures its membership
and local missions on five continents. The Academy serves,
personally and through its magazine, books, courses and
travel/study programs, serious seekers and Hindus of all
denominations. Gurudeva's mission, received from his satguru,
was to protect, preserve and promote the Saivite Hindu religion
as expressed through its three pillars: temples, satgurus
and scripture. That mission is now carried forward by his
monastic and family communities. The congregation of
Saiva Siddhanta Church is a disciplined, global fellowship
of family initiates, monastics and students who follow the
sadhana marga, the path of inner effort, yogic striving
and personal transformation. Gurudeva was the hereditary
guru of 2.5 million Sri Lankan Hindus. His various institutions
form a Jaffna-Tamil-based organization which has branched
out from his Sri Subramuniya Ashram in Alaveddy to meet
the needs of the growing Hindu diaspora of this century.
He also established a seven-acre monastery in Mauritius,
which includes a public Spiritual Park. Gurudeva gently
oversaw more than 50 independent temples worldwide. Missionaries
and teachers within the family membership provide counseling
and classes in Saivism for children, youth and adults.
Hinduism Today is the influential, award-winning, international
monthly magazine founded by Gurudeva in 1979. It is a public
service of his monastic order, created to strengthen all
Hindu traditions by uplifting and informing followers of
the Sanatana Dharma everywhere. Gurudeva was author of more
than 30 books unfolding unique and practical insights
on Hindu metaphysics, mysticism and yoga. His Master
Course lessons on Saivism, taught in many schools, are
preserving the teachings among thousands of youths. Hindu
Heritage Endowment is a public service trust founded
by Gurudeva in 1995. It seeks to establish and maintain
permanent sources of income for Hindu institutions worldwide.
In 1986, New Delhi's World Religious Parliament named Gurudeva
one of five modern-day Jagadacharyas, world teachers, for
his international efforts in promoting and chronicling a
Hindu renaissance.
Then in 1995 it bestowed on him the title of Dharmachakra
for his remarkable publications. The Global Forum of Spiritual
and Parliamentary Leaders for Human Survival chose Subramuniyaswami
as a Hindu representative at its unique conferences. Thus,
at Oxford, England, in 1988, Moscow in 1990 and Rio de Janiero
in 1992, he joined hundreds of religious, political and
scientific leaders from all countries to discuss privately,
for the first time, the future of human life on this planet.
At Chicago's historic centenary Parliament
of the World's Religions in September, 1993, Gurudeva was
elected one of three presidents, along with His Holiness
Swami Chidananda Saraswati of the Rishikesh-based Divine
Life Society and Kerala's Ammachi, Mata Amritanandamayi
Ma, to represent Hinduism at the prestigious Presidents'
Assembly, a core group of 25 men and women voicing the needs
of world faiths.
In 1996 Gurudeva upgraded the newspaper Hinduism
Today to a magazine, a quantum leap that placed it on
newsstands everywhere, alongside Newsweek, Time and India
Today. In 1997 he responded to the US President's call for
religious opinions on the ethics of cloning from the Hindu
point of view. Later that year, he spearheaded the 125th
anniversary of Satguru
Yogaswami and his golden icon's diaspora pilgrimage
through many of the over 75 Sri Lanka temples and societies
around the globe. In 1998, the Vishva Hindu Parishad of
Kerala sent an envoy to Kauai to honor and recognize Gurudeva
as the "Hindu Voice of the Century."
In the last few years of his life Gurudeva was a key member
of Vision Kauai 2020, a small group of community leaders
that includes the Mayor, former Mayor and County Council
members. They met monthly to fashion the island's future
for twenty years ahead, based on moral and spiritual values.
If you ask people who know Gurudeva what was so special
about him, they may point to his great peace, presence and
centeredness, to his incredible power to inspire others
toward their highest Self, to change their lives in ways
that are otherwise impossible, to be an unfailing light
on their path, to be a voice of Indian spiritual life, to
bring the best of the East and the best of the West together,
to be a father and mother to all who draw near, a living
example of the pure path taught by his guru and followed
by his devoted shishyas.
In April of 1999 Gurudeva lead 45 spiritual aspirants on
an Innersearch from Vancouver to Anchorage, Alaska. Their
ship, the MS Noordam, journeyed for 7 days and nights as
they studied meditation and the mystical life together,
explored the glaciers and redefined the cruise experience
along the way. In Anchorage, Gurudeva founded the first
Hindu temple in that state, calling together the native
American Indian leaders to participate in the event. He
also initiated a powerful series of book signings in California,
Washington and Alaska, introducing his newest legacy book,
Merging with Siva, to thousands of seekers.
In August he traveled to Malaysia and Mauritius, where he
met with the nation's leaders on several family-related
topics, opened his Spiritual Park for 3,000 special guests,
spent precious time with his Church members and continued
the dynamic book signings, this time adding his newest book,
Weaver's Wisdom, to the list.
In March and April of 2000 he lead another Innersearch Travel-Study
program to the Caribbean, visiting six nations with 53 of
his devotees and meeting the Hindu leadership in that remote
part of the world, with special events among 4,500 Hindus
who came to honor him in Trinidad.
In August of 2001 Gurudeva took 72 devotees on an incredible
journey through Northern Europe, founding new Hindu temples
along the way and visiting the Tamil communities in a dozen
nations. It was a fitting end to his remarkable life. Just
before departing for the European Innersearch, he completed
his last legacy book, ''Living with Siva.'' Only weeks after
returning from that dynamic odyssey, he attained his Maha
Samadhi. Gurudeva was known to the end for spending personal
time with new members, island visitors who pilgrimaged to
his sacred home on Kauai and new young monks who have come
to the monastery to give their life in selfless service
and the Great Search for God within man. All of his work
and mission, his amazing vision and all-encompassing projects
now go forward under the able guidance of his successor,
Bodhinatha. Aum Namasivaya!
|
|