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Swami Satchidananda

 
(1914-)

Disciple of the late Swami Sivananda and founder of Integral Yoga International. He was born December 22, 1914, into a wealthy family. He married, but his wife died only five years later. Following World War II he began a wandering life that led him for a brief period to the monastery of the Ramakrishna order at Timpurraiturai, and then to Sivananda's forest academy at Rishikesh. He was initiated as a renunciate in 1949 and emerged as Swami Satchidananda. He served as a professor of raja and hatha yoga at the academy, the educational arm of the Divine Life Society.

Toward the end of his life, Sivananda assigned different parts of the world to his leading disciples and gave them a commission to spread his yoga teaching around the globe. In 1953 Satchidananda settled in Sri Lanka, where he founded a branch of the Divine Life Society and led in the spread of its work of social service, so integral to Sivananda's life and work.

Then in 1966 he undertook a global tour sponsored by artist Peter Max, during which he visited the United States and gained popularity in the counter culture. He became widely recognized as a result of his making the opening address for Woodstock. While in America, not part of his assigned territory, he established the Integral Yoga Institute (now Integral Yoga International) in New York. Shortly thereafter he broke with the Divine Life Society and settled permanently in the United States. As a master of hatha yoga, in 1970 he wrote what has become one of the most popular yoga texts in the English language. To his students he taught the integral yoga system of Sivananda, which attempted to integrate the various branches of yoga into a unified practice.

In the 1980s Satchidananda established a new headquarters complex near Buckingham, Virginia, which included the Light of Truth Universal Shrine (LOTUS), a temple embodying the universalist religious perspective taught by Satchidananda and honoring all religious traditions. In his later years Satchidananda was known for his busy schedule of writing and lecturing, which he has since cut back.

Sources:

Satchidananda, Swami. Beyond Words. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1977.

——. The Glory of Sannyasa. Pomfret Center, Conn.: Integral Yoga Institute, 1975.

——. Integral Hatha Yoga. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970.

Satchidananda, Swami, et al. Living Yoga: The Value of Yoga in Today's Life. New York: Gordon and Beach Science Publishers, 1977.

——. Sri Satchtheidananda: A Decade of Service. Pomfret Center, Conn.: Satchidananda Ashram-Yogaville, 1976.

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Swami Satchidananda at Nambassa 1979

Swami Satchidananda (born as C.K. Ramaswamy Gounder; from December 22, 1914 - to August 19, 2002) was an Indian religious teacher, spiritual master and yoga adept, who gained fame and following in the West, during his time in New York. He was the author of many famous philosophical and spiritual books, including the most popular illustrative book on Hatha Yoga. He is widely known in India particularly Southern India as the spiritual guru of the popular Indian cinema star Rajinikanth.

Contents

Early years

Swami Satchidananda was born into a pious and devoted South Indian Hindu family at Chettipalayam in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu and was named C. K. Ramaswamy Gounder. He was born in the year 1914 to a respectable and observant Hindu parents who affectionately called him Ramu. Swami remained a vegetarian all his life and abstained from eating meat at all times.[1] After graduating from an agricultural college, he took a position with his Uncle's firm, which imported motorcycles. By the age of 23 he became a reputed, multi-skilled, adept manager at India’s National Electric Works. During this period of time he got married and had two loving children. His life took a sudden tragic turn when his wife died five years later. Ramaswamy then left his two young sons with their paternal grandmother and decided to go on a spiritual journey.[2]

Spiritual quest

After the sudden tragic death of his wife, Ramaswamy traveled throughout India, meditating at holy shrines and studying along with revered spiritual teachers. For years, Ramaswamy searched for people who are real sages, saints, and spiritual masters. Eventually, he was initiated into pre-sannyasa in the Ramakrishna Thapovanam and given the name Brother Sambasiva Chaitanya. While at the ashram, his job was to care of orphaned young boys. During this period, he also studied along with the renowned Sri Ramana Maharshi. He eventually left the ashram when he could not bear the suffering of Sri Ramana's arm cancer and treatment procedures. Ramana Maharshi died shortly after his departure. He then traveled to Rishikesh, a holy town in the foothills of the Himalayas, located on the banks of the Ganges River. There, he discovered his guru, Sri Swami Sivananda who ordained him into the order of sannyasa in 1949 and gave him the name Swami Satchidananda.[2]

During the late 1950s and into the 1960s, Swami Satchidananda headed, along with another swami female disciple of Sri Swami Sivananda, to the Kandy Thapovanam, one of Swami Sivananda's ashrams situated in the hill country of Sri Lanka. Here, Swami Satchidananda taught yoga, conceived and implemented innovative interfaith approaches to traditional Hindu festivals and modernized the ancient mode of living that renunciates had followed for many years. For instance, Swami Satchidanda drove a car (to teach throughout Sri Lanka), wore a watch (to be on time), and actively engaged the questions of seekers. These modernizations were ridiculed by certain individuals in the orthodoxy but he felt them to be necessary natural extensions and serving tools for betterment in his spiritual yogic work.

Swami's time in America

The name Saccidānanda, Satchidananda, or Sat-cit-ānanda (Sanskrit: सच्चिदानंद) is a compound of three Sanskrit words, Sat (सत्), Cit (चित्), and Ānanda (आनंद) (the ā is of longer vocal length), meaning essence, consciousness, and bliss respectively. The expression is used in yoga and other schools of Indian philosophy to describe the nature of Brahman as experienced by a fully liberated yogi. Satcidānanda may be understood as the energetic state of non-duality, a manifestation of our spiritually natural, primordial and authentic state which is comparable in quality to that of deity.

After serving his guru for many years, in 1966 he visited New York City at the request of the artist Peter Max. Soon after his initial visit, Swamiji, as he was known to disciples, formally moved to the United States and eventually became a citizen. From his new home he spread his teachings of yoga, selfless service, ecumenism and enlightenment.

Satchidananda came to public attention as the opening speaker[3] at the Woodstock music and arts festival in 1969. Over the years he wrote numerous books and gave hundreds of lectures. He also ordained a number of western disciples into the order of sannyasa. He was the founder of the Integral Yoga Institute and Yogaville in America and Spiritual Guru of major Hollywood actors & western musicians and also the spiritual guru for the popular Tamil Indian Cinema actor Shivaji Rao Gaekwad known as "Rajinikanth" (screen name).[4] and in 1986 opened the Light of Truth Universal Shrine (LOTUS) at Yogaville in Buckingham, Virginia.

On August 19, 2002, Satchidananda died from a ruptured thoracic aneurysm in his native Tamil Nadu, India. However, Integral Yoga and Yogaville continue.

Satchidananda's better-known western disciples include: Alice Coltrane, John Fahey, Allen Ginsberg, Dean Ornish, Jeff Goldblum, Carole King, and Scott Shaw. Liev Schrieber and Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo lived at the Satchidananda Ashram during the early part of their lives.

Integral Yoga origins

Although Satchidananda is thought to have briefly met Sri Aurobindo, he viewed his brand of teaching as a unique entity. Swami Satchidananda characterized Integral Yoga as "...a flexible combination of specific methods to develop every aspect of the individual: physical, intellectual, and spiritual. It is a scientific system which integrates the various branches of Yoga in order to bring about a complete and harmonious development of the individual."

This would make it very similar to Sri Aurobindo's concept of Integral Yoga, which clearly preceded the work of Swami Satchidananda. Sri Aurobindo describes the nature and practice of integral yoga in his opus The Synthesis of Yoga. As the title of that work indicates, his integral yoga is a yoga of synthesis, intended to harmonize the paths of karma, jnana, and bhakti yoga as described in the Bhagavad Gita. It can also be considered a synthesis between Vedanta and Tantra, and between Eastern and Western approaches to spirituality.

There are also similarities in the symbolism used by Sri Aurobindo and Swami Satchidananda. In addition, Satchidananda's center was given the name "Yogaville." (Aurobindo's "Auroville" had been founded in 1968.)

Satchidananda's group trademarked the term "Integral Yoga" in the United States.[5] [6]

Credo

Manifestos relating to religious belief are described as Credos. "Easeful, peaceful and useful" was the simple motto of Yogiraj Sri Swami Satchidananda

Integral Yoga believes:

"The goal and the birthright of all individuals is to realize the spiritual unity behind the diversity throughout creation and to live harmoniously as members of "one universal family". This goal is achieved by the maintaining of our natural condition as:

  • a body of optimal health and strength,
  • senses under total control,
  • a mind well disciplined, clear, and calm,
  • an intellect as sharp as a razor,
  • a will as strong and pliable as steel,
  • a heart full of unconditional love and compassion,
  • an ego as pure as crystal, and
  • a life filled with supreme peace, joy and bliss.

Attain this through asanas, pranayama, the chanting of holy names, self-discipline, selfless action, mantra japa, meditation, study, and reflection."

Notes

  1. ^ Sri Swami Satchidananda, The Healthy Vegetarian, Integral Yoga Publications, third edition, 1994, p. 115.
  2. ^ a b Swami Satchidananda: His Biography, Straight Arrow Books, First Edition, 1970.
  3. ^ Attendance at Woodstock
  4. ^ Integral Yoga Institute
  5. ^ Trademark history 1
  6. ^ Trademark history 2

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Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Copyright © 2001 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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