Beautiful, Richard, thank you so much for posting this. And for your latest 
post about the Holy Tradition.





On Saturday, January 25, 2014 9:00 AM, Richard Williams <[email protected]> 
wrote:
 
  
Rajaram Mishra, later to become Swami Brahmananda Saraswati, was born on 
Thursday, 20 December, 1868 in village Gana, which is close to the city of 
Ayodhya, in North India. He was enrolled at the Sanskrit Institute at Kashi at 
the age of eight and later became a student of Swami Krishnanand Saraswati of 
Utter Kashi.




Our Guiding Light
One Endowed With Wealth
The Jagadguru Shankaracharya
Sri Swami Brahmananda Saraswati Maharaj of Jyotir Math
with all blessings from him both great and small

Shankaracharya Brahmananda Saraswati
http://youtu.be/5m77xHLoiHI

He took the renounced order and became Chaitanya Brahmachari. He was well known 
and often referred to as 'Guru Dev'. By the age of twenty-five, it is said that 
Chaitanya had become fully established in Unity Consciousness and had completed 
a full study of the Scriptures. At the turn of the century, at age 34, at the 
Khumbha Mela at Allahahabad, Chaitanya was ordained by his master into the 
order of Sanyas, thus becoming Sri Swami Brahmananda Saraswati, and recieved 
the insignia of the Holy Tradition of Sri Adi Shankaracharya. 

On Tuesday, 1 April 1941, at the age of 72, Swami Brahmananda Saraswati was 
invested, with traditional rites, as the Shankaracharya of Jyotirmath, 
Badrikashram, Himalayas, and given the title Jagadguru Maharaj.



Swami Brahmananda Saraswati


Excerpt from Rocks Are Melting:

'We are told the"yoga" of stopping the fluctuations of consciousness The 
ultimate aim is this, that by the practice of having stopped the fluctuations 
of the inner self, to experience the Supreme form of the Self. Calm without a 
wave in any part of the pool of water, that manner a person can see his own 
face. That really is the method, stopping  the fluctuations of the 
consciousness is really giving a clear reflection of the imperishable Self in 
the instrument of inner vision. This indeed is "darshan" (sight) of "atma" 
(self or soul).' - Shankaracharya Swami Brahmananda Saraswati

Excerpt from Living With the Himalayan Masters:

"He used to live only on germinated gram seeds mixed with a little bit of salt. 
He lived on a hillock in a small natural cave near a mountain pool. I was led 
by the villagers to that place, but I did not find anyone there and became 
disappointed. The next day I went again, and found a few footprints on the edge 
of the pool made by his wooden sandals. I tried, but I could not track the 
footprints. 

Finally on the fifth day of effort, early in the morning before sunrise, I went 
back to the pool and found him taking a bath. I greeted him saying, "Namo 
Narayan," which is a commonly used salutation among swamis, meaning "I bow to 
the divinity in you." He was observing silence, so he motioned for me to follow 
him to his small cave, and I did so gladly. This was the eighth day of his 
silence, and after staying the night with him he broke his silence and I gently 
spoke to him about the purpose of my visit. I wanted to know how he was living 
and the ways and methods of his spiritual practices.

During our conversation he started talking to me about Sri Vidya, the highest 
of paths, followed only by accomplished Sanskrit scholars of India. It is a 
path which joins raja yoga, kundalini yoga, bhakti yoga, and advaita Vedanta. 
There are two books recommended by the teachers of this path: 

The Wave of Bliss and The Wave of Beauty; the compilation of the two books is 
called Saundaryalahari in Sanskrit. There is another part of this literature, 
called Prayoga Shastra, which is in manuscript form and found only in the 
Mysore and Baroda libraries. No scholar can understand these spiritual yoga 
poems without the help of a competent teacher who himself practices these 
teachings.

Later on I found that Sri Vidya and Madhu Vidya are spiritual practices known 
to a very few-only ten to twelve people in all of India. I became interested in 
knowing this science, and whatever little I have today is because of it. In 
this science the body is seen as a temple and the inner dweller, Atman, as God. 

A human being is like a miniature universe, and by understanding this, one can 
understand the whole of the universe and ultimately realize the absolute One. 
Finally, after studying many scriptures and learning various paths, my master 
helped me in choosing to practice the way of Sri Vidya." - Swami Rama

Works cited:

'Rocks Are Melting: The Everyday Teachings of Brahmananda Saraswati' (Draft)
by L.B. Shriver
5/9/2003
http://bruceji.org/gurudev.html

"Living With the Himalayan Masters"
by Swami Rama
Himalayan Institute Press, 1999
pp. 245-247

Read more:

'The Mystics, Ascetics,and Saints of India'
by John Campbell Oman
Unwin, 1905

'A Tradition of Teachers'
Sankaracharya and the Jagadgurus Today
by William Cenkner, Ph.D.
South Asia Books, 1986

Notes:


According to Mason, Swami Brahmananda Saraswati (20 December 1868 – 20 May 
1953) was the Shankaracharya of the Jyotir Math monastery in India from 
1941-53.  

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmananda_Saraswati

Birthdate of Shankaracharya Swami Brahmanand Saraswati
by Paul Mason
http://www.paulmason.info/gurudev/GuruDevbirthdate.htm

Maharaj Shri, Rajaram Mishra, was born on Thursday, December 21, 1870. in 
village Gana, near Ayodhya. [1]

On Sunday, 20 December 1868 in the village of Gana close to Ayodhya, Rajaram 
Mishra was born. [2]

Several different accounts agree that Guru Dev was born on Thursday, which was 
the 21st. December 29th 1868 was Sunday. [3]

He was born on the 20th December 1868, but his hour of nativity claimed him for 
the recluse order and for that of the secular. (4)

 At age fourteen he became a disciple of Swami Krishnananda Saraswati. (5)

1. "Maharishi: The Biography"
By Paul Mason
Element 1997
Barnes and Noble
A Critical Review of the man who brought TM to the West.
p. 5

2. "The Whole Thing The Real Thing"
By Rameshwar Tiwari
Delhi 1977
The Biography of Sri Swami Brahmananda Saraswati, Shankacharya of
Jyotirmath.
Hardback. Illustrated.
p. 11

3. "Our Spiritual Heritage"
By Lynn D. Napper
Hesperides Books, 1998
An informal history of the Shankacharya Tradition by an early adopter of TM,
TTC 1968.
Paper. Illustrated. Bibliography.
p. 99

4. "Love and God"
By Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
SRM Publications, Oslo Norway 1965
Official Biography of Guru Dev by Maharishi - 'Our Guiding Light'
pp. 5-9

5. "Strange Facts About a Great Saint"
By Raj P. Varma
Jabalpur, India 1980
Varma & Sons Pub.
p.10 

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