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OVING
GANESHA: HINDUISM'S ENDEARING ELEPHANT-FACED GOD WAS DESIGNED
AND ILLUSTRATED BY THE SWAMIS OF THE SHAIVA SIDDHANTA Yoga
Order at Kauai's Hindu Monastery on the Garden Island in
Hawaii. This second edition of Loving Ganesha was edited
using Quark XPress on a Ethernet network of Power Macintosh
G3 computers. Original input and author's editing were created
on an ethernet-based series of Macintosh PowerBooks using
Farallon's Timbuktu in a Winnebago &Mac222;eld of&Mac222;ce.
Text was typeset in Adobe's Minion family of fonts, to which
diacritical marks were added with Fontographer. The text
is set in 11.5-point Minion medium with 13.5-point linespacing.
The glossary and index are set in Minion, 9 on 11. For Devanagari
and Tamil, we used fonts created by Ecological Linguistics
in Washington, D.C., and by Shrikrishna Patel of Cupertino,
California. Pages were output to &Mac222;lm and printed
by offset press on 60# Finch Opaque paper by Sheridan Books
in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
The cover design and Himalayan
Academy logo were created by San Francisco artist John Kuzich.
Sanskrit proofreading and guidance was studiously provided
by: Pandit Satya Pal Sharma, founder of the Vedic University
of America in San Diego; Vyaas Houston, founder of the American
Sanskrit Institute; Dr. P. Jayaraman, Executive Director
of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Woodside, New York; Pandit and
Jyotisha Sastri Laxmishanker Trivedi and his son Devendra
of Fremont, California; and Professor Jayaram Sethuraman
at Florida State University in Tallahassee. Assistance was
also given by Dr. Deendayal Khandelwal of the Hindu University
of America in Orlando, Florida, and Sri Sri Bairavasundaram
Sivacharya at the New England Hindu Temple. Comprehensive
proofreading was accomplished by Tirumati Sundari Peruman
of Houston, Texas; Sri Krishna Mohan of Boise, Idaho; Tirumati
Chamundi Sabanathan of El Sobrante, California, and the
family members of our Saiva Siddhanta Church Wailua Mission.
The multi-level index for further
study and research was created with the professional help
of Jordan and Vita Richman of Writers Anonymous, in Phoenix,
Arizona.
Similarly, we are most grateful
for the extracts from Tattvaloka, a monthly religious
journal edited by Sri T.R. Ramachandran and produced under
the guidance of H.H. Jagadguru Shankaracharya of Shri Sarada
Pitham, Karnataka, India. Sections on Pranava Aum and the
life and teachings of Auvaiyar Ma are from Aum Ganesha,
the Peace of God, a work of Ratna Ma Navaratnam, respected
educationalist, author and close devotee of my satguru,
Asan Yogaswami, whom we worked with in promoting the dharma
in Sri Lanka for over 30 years. My dear friend Sadguru Sant
Keshavadas kindly contributed "A Special Collection of Ganesha
Mantras" from his book Lord Ganesha. Sangaratna
Dr. S.M. Ponniah of Malaysia, a renowned Hindu scholar and
Sivabhakta, produced the chapter "In Praise of Pillaiyar,"
a collection of Tamil devotional poetry translated into
English.
For all this noble, talented
and selfless assistance, we want to offer our heartfelt
appreciation. May many blessings come to each one who contributed
to this tome.
In defining the practical and
esoteric aspects of Hindu liturgy, as reflected here in
the chapter "Home Liturgy," we were blessed with the insights
of Sri Sambamurthi Sivacharya of the South India Archaka
Sangam, who in the mid-'80s sent to Hawaii two expert priests,
Kumaraswami Gurukal and Shanmuga Gurukal, to train my Saiva
swamis in the performance of Saiva puja.
Calling
forth the blessings of inner worlds, Dr. A. Anandanataraja
Dikshitar and others of the ancient hereditary Dikshitar
priesthood at Chidambaram Temple in South India (see illustration)
performed monthly pujas blessing this work for many years.
At Kauai Aadheenam's Kadavul Hindu Temple on the island
of Kauai in the Hawaiian Islands, the world's most remote
land mass, during the two years it took to create this edition,
my monks, mathavasis, held (and continue to hold)
successive three-hour vigils around the clock and performed
puja every three hours, night and day, without fail.
Going back even further in
our history, deep thanks and appreciation go out to a wonderful
soul, Kandiah Chettiar, who assisted in introducing me to
the culture and holy people of Jaffna, Sri Lanka, and especially
for taking me to meet my satguru, the venerable Sage
Yogaswami. Indeed, Lord Ganesha was there to bless our journey.
On the way from Colombo to Jaffna, Chettiar, my guide and
mentor appointed by Yogaswami stopped the car at the small
roadside shrine in Murukandi. He explained that travelers
who did not halt to worship here were not admitted safe
passage to the psychically protected area of the carefully
guarded northern Saiva peninsula.
We
got out of the car just as night was falling. We could hardly
see the Deity but for the flames of camphor that the many
pilgrims were burning. In the twilight could be heard the
loud crack of coconuts being broken for safe passage. I
remember standing transfixed near that little Pillaiyar
shrine, not far from our car. My sahasrara chakra
began to spin powerfully, and I inwardly observed a flame
at the top of my head about three or four inches in height.
It remained with me for a week or more. At that moment,
I knew Ganesha's grace and blessings for my travels now
and in the future would always be with me. I was twenty-two
at the time. Five decades later this has proven to be true.
Little did we know, in that summer twilight in 1949, what
doors that wise, elephant-faced Deity would open to us in
the years ahead.
We conclude Loving Ganesha with abundant
thanks to all His devotees who participated so willingly
in writing this biography of a universal God. All who enter
the path to Self Realization do so through His grace and
His alone. This has proven to be true through the many years
of my life.
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