Society
The International Society for Krishna Consciousness
Founder-Acarya Sri Srimad A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
The Origin
Although the International Society for Krishna
Consciousness, also known as the Hare Krishna movement,
is relatively new in the West, its roots date back to
ancient India, to the most advanced civilization the
world has ever known.
The most important witnesses of this era are the Vedic
scriptures, written in Sanskrit. Outstanding among these
writings are the texts that deal with philosophy and
religion. The Vedic religion is monotheistic and teaches
the worship of one Supreme God (named Krishna in Sanskrit),
and it was this God conscious lifestyle that ensured
the long lasting prosperity of the Vedic culture.
Under the influence of time everything in this world
is subject to a cycle of revival and destruction. About
5000 years ago Kali-yuga, the iron age of quarrel and
hypocrisy, began. In due course of time kings, priests
and teachers, followed by the rest of the populace,
slowly lost their qualities of cleanliness and godliness,
and with it the principles of their spiritual society.
Still, even in Kali-yuga for a long time India remained
a country possessing legendary opulence. Again and again
we find how throughout history great powers have tried
to exploit its treasures. All those who penetrated the
Indian sub-continent -- from Alexander the Great in
327 BC up to the Muslims and Englishmen -- were astonished
at the sight of this country with its imposing temples
and palaces. But what these conquerors saw (and often
also destroyed) were merely the remains of an earlier
and even greater civilization.
The True Treasure of India
The great sages and saints of the Vedic tradition could
understand that in Kali-yuga materialism would predominate.
Therefore they decided to put all Vedic knowledge, which
had been an oral tradition up till then, into writing
to save it from the influence of Kali-yuga. Thus the
Vedic scriptures came into being 5000 years ago, although
their contents, originating from divine revelation,
had been existing from time immemorial.
Besides the scriptures there were also teachers (gurus)
who embodied the Vedic teachings by their own example
and in this way passed it on to their disciples, who
passed it on to their disciples, etc. This unbroken
chain of spiritual masters, which can be traced back
to Lord Krishna Himself, has kept the Vedic tradition
alive, even while the people of Kali-yuga turned away
from it more and more. Thus those who knew the meaning
and goal of the Vedas could foresee the coming of every
incarnation of God who would reestablish the Vedic culture
and religion.
In 1486 Lord Krishna appeared in Bengal as Sri Caitanya.
His appearance as an incarnation of God (avatar) had
already been predicted in the Vedic scriptures. He established
the movement for Krishna consciousness in India and
revealed the recommended method of God-realization for
the present age (yuga-dharma): the congregational chanting
of the holy names of the Lord. In other words, the same
Krishna, who spoke the Bhagavad-gita 5000 years ago,
had now appeared to show how to live the Bhagavad-gita.
God always gives both the perfect teachings and the
perfect example.
Lord Caitanya explained that real God consciousness
does not depend on caste or church membership, and opposed
Himself to any social, religious or racist prejudice.
He spread the chanting of the holy name as the method
to enable anyone to become Krishna conscious and predicted
that one day the holy name of Lord Krishna would be
heard all over the world.
In fulfilling this prophecy of the Lord His followers
saw their life's mission. They traveled all over India,
wrote volumes of books, and since the 19th century also
started to make the Vedic knowledge available to the
whole world through the English language. A major step
was taken ten generations after Lord Caitanya by the
great scholar and devotee A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
(1896-1977), who gave the name of Lord Krishna and the
message of the Vedas to the whole world.
ISKCON Nowadays
ISKCON, founded in 1966 in New York by A.C. Bhaktivedanta
Swami Prabhupada, is the contemporary representative
of the ancient religion of Krishna consciousness. It
is a cultural and religious movement that offers humanity
facilities to acquire, study and practice Vedic knowledge.
This ISKCON section of "The Complete Picture"
offers those who are not that familiar with our movement
an insight in its structure, goals, means, and future.