I have always been a faithful ISKCON follower.
Over the years I have waited patiently, observing occasional mistakes made by ISKCON’s Governing Body Commission (GBC).
Discovering that after many years of holding the line against introducing leftist feminist ideology into ISKCON, that the GBC finally caved-in to pressure to authorize female diksha gurus has succeeded in breaking my resolve not to criticize the ISKCON leadership.
Of course I am not alone. Many of my godbrothers and their disciples find themselves facing the same dilemma as I find myself, and are speaking out in opposition to this recent decision of the ISKCON GBC.
Recently viewing a video on YouTube entitled, “Can She Become Guru?”, I was struck by a realization. It wasn’t a philosophical realization but a realization of how to frame the issue.
Visakha devi Dasi (ACBSP) was speaking in the video. She was recounting how she had served side by side with male devotees in ISKCON’s earliest days.
Mataji was expressing effrontery that although she had served side by side with male devotees, the male devotees were denying her her just due – that of serving as an initiating guru in ISKCON.
To paraphrase what Mataji said: “If they can do this [be an initiating – diksha – guru in ISKCON] why can’t I? Have I not also given my life to the guru”?
Listening to Mataji it became clear to me how to understand this controversy. Those who support the introduction of female diksha gurus in ISKCON are laboring under a delusion.
That delusion is that men and women are equal in their spiritual development. However, this is not possible due to the difference of the subtle body each soul possesses. None of us begins bhakti at the same point, nor do we progress equally.
But, one might ask: “how do you know this?”
We can know this by opening the Bhagavad-Gita [4.13].
Krishna says:
catur varnam maya srstam
guna-karma vibhagasya
catur varnam means four divisions
“Maya srstam” means “created by Me”.
“Guna-karma vibhagasya” means “graded according to quality and activity.”
These qualities Krishna mentions are not qualities of the gross body made of the five gross elements., as the five gross elements are identically present in both male and female bodies.
These qualities Krishna is speaking of are present in the subtle body of the living entity.
The present GBC decision denies differences in qualities, thus neutering Krishna consciousness.
Naturally male and female devotees will sometimes be engaged in identical duties such as cooking, honoring prasadam, chanting, hearing, distributing books, etc., but the male and female devotees are not experiencing everything equally. The GBC has come to an opposite conclusion. That is its fundamental error.
Those who are opposed to ISKCON allowing females to initiate quote Srila Prabhupada’s purport to SB 4.12.32:
“It is the duty of the siksa-guru or diksa-guru to instruct the disciple in the right way, and it depends on the disciple to execute the process. According to sastric injunctions, there is no difference between siksa-guru and diksa-guru, and generally the siksa-guru later on becomes the diksa-guru. Suniti, however, being a woman, and specifically his mother, could not become Dhruva Maharaja’s diksa-guru.”
Those in favor of female initiating gurus quote this conversation with Professor O’Connell (whose wife was present) to support their position:
Prof. O’Connell: Is it possible, Swamiji, for a woman to be a guru in the line of disciplic succession?
Prabhupada: Yes. Jahnava devi was-Nityananda’s wife. She became. If she is able to go to the highest perfection of life, why it is not possible to become guru? But, not so many.”
It should be noted here that Jahnava-mata was a nitya-siddha devotee from Goloka Vrindavana and that her devotees were also devotees of her husband, Lord Nityananda. In this regard Srila Prabhupada states in his purport to CC, Adi 11.21 as follows:
“Jahnava-mata is also within the list of Lord Nityananda’s followers. She is described in the Gaura-ganoddesa-dipika (66) as Ananga-manjari of Vrndavana. All the devotees who are followers of Jahnava-mata are counted within the list of Sri Nityananda Prabhu’s devotees.”
The female diksha proponents also quote this letter from Srila Prabhupada dated 3 January 1969:
“Next January there will be an examination on this Bhagavad-gita. Papers will be sent by me to all centers, and those securing the minimum passing grade will be given the title as Bhakti-sastri. Similarly, another examination will be held on Lord Caitanya’s Appearance Day in February, 1970 and it will be upon Srimad-Bhagavatam and Bhagavad-gita. Those passing will get the title of Bhakti-vaibhava. Another examination will be held sometimes in 1971 on the four books, Bhagavad-gita, Srimad-Bhagavatam, Teachings of Lord Caitanya, and Nectar of Devotion. One who will pass this examination will be awarded with the title of Bhaktivedanta. I want that all of my spiritual sons and daughters will inherit this title of Bhaktivedanta, so that the family transcendental diploma will continue through the generations. Those possessing the title of Bhaktivedanta will be allowed to initiate disciples. Maybe by 1975, all of my disciples will be allowed to initiate and increase the numbers of the generations. That is my program.”
It should be noted here that Srila Prabhupada was present in 1975 and never implemented this program.
So which instructions from Srila Prabhupada should be given more weight? This paper proposes that since Srila Prabhupada stated in 1976 in Los Angeles, “My books will be the law books for the next ten thousand years,” and since the letters and conversations are spoken and written in the context of time and place considerations, what is written in Srila Prabhupada’s books should be taken as more significant than his letters and conversations. After all, Srila Prabhupada ordered us to mass distribute his books, not his conversations and correspondence. To now establish a direction for ISKCON, which is against what Srila Prabhupada has written in his books, is a very dangerous precedent, which will have long lasting devastating effects on our movement. If we can violate this instruction, we can also violate other instructions. Where will it end? It’s a slippery slope, a real Pandora’s Box that ISKCON ‘s leaders should be intelligent enough to avoid.
The proponents of female initiating gurus have also argued that for the sake of preaching in this age of gender equality we must allow female initiating gurus, otherwise our movement will appear to outdated and irrelevant. They argue that people will not join our movement if ISKCON does not give equal positions to men and women. If we are to buy this line of logic, we will have to change many things established by Srila Prabhupada. For example, women will have to be given brahmana threads. They will also have to be allowed to take sannyasa. When we chant the Sanskrit verses in class it will be considered discriminatory for the women to have to wait to chant the verse after the men.
Also if we allow female diksha gurus, certain statements in Srila Prabhupada’s books will appear to be very odd and out of place. For example:
“The first birth is made possible by the parents, and the second birth is made possible by the spiritual father and Vedic knowledge.” From purport to SB 4.12.48
“Under the guidance of the spiritual master, the spiritual father, one can return home, back to Godhead.” From purport to SB 6.16.6
How can the spiritual father be a woman? Will someone then propose an edit to these purports changing “spiritual father” to “spiritual parent”?
Srila Prabhupada writes in his purport to SB 1.11.28:
“According to scriptures also, there are seven mothers: (1) the real mother, (2) the wife of the spiritual master, (3) the wife of a brahmana, (4) the wife of the king, (5) the cow, (6) the nurse, and (7) the earth.”
So will “the wife of the spiritual master” be eventually taken as indication that a female guru can have a wife, in other words, be a lesbian?
I propose that as Srila Prabhupada did not name any female initiating gurus we also should not do so. However our women can all be potent, powerful siksha gurus. I cite the example of my wife, Her Grace Srimati Vishnupriya devi dasi, who is addressed as Gurumata by my disciples. She is certainly a bona fide spiritual master, although she is not initiating. She leaves that service to me and assists me in my service as an initiating spiritual master. She is just as much of a spiritual master as me, and in some ways she is more than me, definitely my better half.
In conclusion, I urge everyone for the sake of ISKCON’s connection with Srila Prabhupada to understand and realize the importance of this and to then inform your GBC representative that you are strongly opposed to ISKCON’s allowing women to initiate disciples. By staying connected with Srila Prabhupada as siksa and diksa gurus we will have the potency to be successful in our mission of making the whole world Krishna conscious. If we deviate from Srila Prabhupada, our movement is finished. And if we remain loyal to Srila Prabhupada, our movement will be successful in its mission of saving the world from irreligion. So we don’t really have a choice.
Thank you for taking the time to read this paper. I hope that you are now convinced that ISKCON should not open Pandora’s Box by allowing women to initiate disciples.
Your eternal servant,
Sankarshan Das Adhikari