Wisdom To Heal -
Paramhansa Yogananda
Mukunda Lal Ghosh
born 1893
Paramhansa Yogananda was born Mukunda Lal Ghosh on January 5, 1893,
in Gorakhpur, India, into a devout and well-to-do Bengali family. He
was the 2nd son and fourth child of 8 children. His earliest
memories were that of a past life as a yogi amidst the Himalayan
snows. These glimpses of the past by some dimensionless link also
afforded him glimpses of the future.
Paramhansa
Yogananda Early Years
His father, Bhagabati Charan Ghosh was the Vice President of the
Bengal-Naqpur Railway. He shunned all luxuries and took recreation
in spiritual practices. He helped to organize the Calcutta Urban
Bank without a salary, saying that this was a part of his civic
duty. Paramhansa Yogananda called his Mother the "Queen of Hearts"
because she only taught them through love. She always had an open
hand for the needy.
At eight years old he experienced a miraculous cure of Asiatic
Cholera. The incident occurred while praying to Lahiri Mahasaya. A
blinding light enveloped his body and he instantly recovered from
what is normally a fatal disease. When Yogananda was eleven years
old his mother died. It would be years before he could reconcile his
mothers death. His cries at last summoned the Divine Mother. Her
words brought him final healing: "It is I who have watched over
thee, life after life, in the tenderness of many mothers! See in my
gaze the two black eyes, the lost beautiful eyes thou seekest!
Paramhansa
Yogananda meets Sri Yukteswar
It was in 1910, at the age of 17, that he met Swami Sri Yukteswar
Giri. He became a disciple of Sri Yukteswar and spent the next ten
years in the hermitage under the discipline of this strict but
loving Master of yoga. He took formal vows in the monastic Swami
Order after he graduated from Calcutta University in 1915. He
received the name Yogananda (signifying bliss, ananda, through yoga,
divine union. In 1917 Yogananda founded a "how-to-live" high school
for boys, with yoga training and instruction in spiritual ideals.
Visiting the school a few years later, Mahatma Gandhi wrote: "This
institution has deeply impressed my mind."
Yogananda comes
to Boston
In 1920, Yogananda was invited to serve as India's delegate to the
International Congress of Religious Liberals convening in Boston.
Afterwards he stayed in America, founding the organization
Self-Realization Fellowship. For the next several years, he lectured
and taught on the East Coast, and in 1924 embarked on a
cross-continental speaking tour. The following year, he established
his spiritual headquarters in Los Angeles. Over the next decade,
Yogananda lectured widely, from New York&'s Carnegie Hall to the Los
Angeles Philharmonic.
Unity of the
world's Great Religions
The Los Angeles Times reported: "The Philharmonic Auditorium
presents the extraordinary spectacle of thousands being turned away
an hour before the advertised opening of a lecture with the
3000-seat hall filled to its utmost capacity. Yogananda emphasized
the underlying unity of the world's great religions, and taught
universally applicable methods for attaining a direct personal
experience with God. He taught the techniques of kriya yoga a sacred
practice that originated millennia ago in India.
Yogananda Returns
to India
In 1935, Yogananda returned to India to begin an 18-month lecturing
tour of Europe and India. He initiated Mahatma Gandhi in kriya yoga,
and met with Nobel-prize-winning physicist Sir C. V. Raman. He
visited Sri Ramana Maharshi, Anandamoyi Ma, and Theresa Neumann.
Swami Sri Yukteswar bestowed upon him India highest spiritual title,
Paramhansa.
Autobiography of
a Yogi
Autobiography of a Yogi, was published in 1946. The book has been in
continuous publication since it first appeared and has been
translated into 18 languages. It is regarded as a modern spiritual
classic. March 7, 1952, Paramhansa Yogananda made his final,
conscious, ecstatic exit from his body, or Mahasamadhi. At a banquet
held in the honor of the Ambassador of India, Yogananda was
finishing a speech with a few lines from his poem, My India. When he
was finished his eyes lifted, he turned slightly to his right and
sank quietly to the floor.
Westerners
Practical Approach to Spirituality
A
notarized statement signed by the Director of Forest Lawn
Memorial-Park testified: "No physical disintegration was visible in
his body even twenty days after death....This state of perfect
preservation of a body is, so far as we know from mortuary annals,
an unparalleled one....Yogananda''s body was apparently in a
phenomenal state of immutability. Yogananda came to the West in
answer to a universal need. It was time for the world to achieve
balance between material and spiritual prosperity. Master was born,
he told us, in response to a heart-felt desire on the part of
countless Westerners. Americans, especially for a practical approach
to spirituality, one that would match the practicality they'd
achieved in their material lives.
East and West
Yankee ingenuity and modern science had awakened in them an
awareness of the need for methods and techniques that would help
them demonstrate the practicality of the Scriptures also. By the
same token, Master said, people in India were becoming aware of the
practical benefits of modern life, and had begun to want to balance
spiritual faith and inner peace with material efficiency.
Spiritual
Awakening in the West
Many souls were therefore being drawn from America to take birth in
India, to help the Indian people learn the divine law as it is
expressed in the material world. Many Indian souls, similarly, were
being born here in the West to help bring about greater spiritual
awareness. In addition to this mass interchange, dictated by world
karma, there was also the fact that Master himself was sent here to
help in this process of spiritual awakening in the West
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