kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! he
kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! he
kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! rakᚣa mÄm
kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! kášášŁáša! pÄhi mÄm
rÄma! rÄghava! rÄma! rÄghava! rÄma! rÄghava! rakᚣa mÄm
kášášŁáša! keĹava! kášášŁáša! keĹava! kášášŁáša! keĹava! pÄhi mÄm
Caitanya-caritÄmášta (Madhya 7.96)
While attempting to write this book, KášášŁáša, let me first offer my respectful obeisances unto my spiritual master, Oáš ViᚣášupÄda 108 ĹrÄŤ ĹrÄŤmad BhaktisiddhÄnta SarasvatÄŤ GosvÄmÄŤ MahÄrÄja PrabhupÄda. Then let me offer my respectful obeisances to the ocean of mercy, Lord ĹrÄŤ KášášŁáša Caitanya MahÄprabhu. He is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, KášášŁáša Himself, appearing in the role of a devotee just to distribute the highest principles of devotional service. Lord Caitanya began His preaching from the country known as Gauá¸adeĹa (West Bengal). And as I belong to the Madhva-Gauá¸ÄŤya-sampradÄya, I must therefore offer my respectful obeisances to the disciplic succession of that name. This Madhva-Gauá¸ÄŤya-sampradÄya is also known as the Brahma-sampradÄya because the disciplic succession originally began from BrahmÄ. BrahmÄ instructed the sage NÄrada, NÄrada instructed VyÄsadeva, and VyÄsadeva instructed Madhva Muni, or MadhvÄcÄrya. ĹrÄŤ MÄdhavendra PurÄŤ, the originator of the Madhva-Gauá¸ÄŤya-sampradÄya, was a sannyÄsÄŤ (renunciant) who belonged to the MadhvÄcÄrya disciplic succession. He had many renowned disciples, such as NityÄnanda Prabhu, Advaita Prabhu and ÄŞĹvara PurÄŤ. ÄŞĹvara PurÄŤ happened to be the spiritual master of Lord Caitanya MahÄprabhu. So let us offer our respectful obeisances to ÄŞĹvara PurÄŤ, NityÄnanda Prabhu, ĹrÄŤ Advaita ÄcÄrya Prabhu, ĹrÄŤvÄsa Paášá¸ita and ĹrÄŤ GadÄdhara Paášá¸ita. Next, let us offer our respectful obeisances to SvarĹŤpa DÄmodara, who acted as the private secretary to Lord Caitanya MahÄprabhu; and let us offer our respectful obeisances to ĹrÄŤ VÄsudeva Datta and the constant attendant of Lord Caitanya, ĹrÄŤ Govinda, and the constant friend of Lord Caitanya, Mukunda, and also to MurÄri Gupta. And let us offer our respectful obeisances to the six GosvÄmÄŤs of VášndÄvanaâĹrÄŤ RĹŤpa GosvÄmÄŤ, ĹrÄŤ SanÄtana GosvÄmÄŤ, ĹrÄŤ RaghunÄtha Bhaášáša GosvÄmÄŤ, ĹrÄŤ GopÄla Bhaášáša GosvÄmÄŤ, ĹrÄŤ JÄŤva GosvÄmÄŤ and ĹrÄŤ RaghunÄtha dÄsa GosvÄmÄŤ.
KášášŁáša Himself has explained in the Bhagavad-gÄŤtÄ that He is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and that whenever there are discrepancies in the regulative principles of man's religious life and a prominence of irreligious activities, He appears on this earthly planet. In other words, when Lord ĹrÄŤ KášášŁáša appeared, there was a necessity of minimizing the load of sinful activities accumulated on this planet, or in this universe.
For affairs of the material creation, Lord MahÄ-Viᚣášu, the plenary portion of KášášŁáša, is in charge. Thus, when the Lord descends, the incarnation emanates from Viᚣášu. MahÄ-Viᚣášu is the original cause of the material creation, and from Him GarbhodakaĹÄyÄŤ Viᚣášu expands, and then KᚣčrodakaĹÄyÄŤ Viᚣášu. Generally, all the incarnations appearing within this material universe are plenary expansions from KᚣčrodakaĹÄyÄŤ Viᚣášu. Therefore, the business of minimizing the overload of sinful activities on this earth does not belong to the Supreme Personality of Godhead, KášášŁáša Himself. But when KášášŁáša appears, all the Viᚣášu expansions join with Him. KášášŁáša's different expansionsânamely NÄrÄyaáša, the quadruple expansion of VÄsudeva, Saáš karᚣaáša, Pradyumna and Aniruddha, as well as partial plenary expansions like Matsya, the incarnation of a fish, and the yuga-avatÄras (incarnations for the millennium) and the manvantara-avatÄras (incarnations associated with the reigns of the Manus)âall combine together and appear with the body of KášášŁáša, the Supreme Personality of Godhead. KášášŁáša is the complete whole, and thus all plenary expansions and incarnations always live with Him.
Therefore when KášášŁáša appeared, Lord Viᚣášu was with Him. KášášŁáša actually appears in order to demonstrate His VášndÄvana pastimes and in this way attract the fortunate conditioned souls and invite them back home, back to Godhead. The killing of the demons in VášndÄvana was carried out only by the Viᚣášu portion of KášášŁáša.
The Lord's abode is described in the Bhagavad-gÄŤtÄ, Eighth Chapter, twentieth verse, where it is stated that there is another, eternal nature, the spiritual sky, which is transcendental to this manifested and nonmanifested matter. The manifested world can be seen in the form of many stars and planetary systems, such as the sun and moon, but beyond this there is a nonmanifested portion, which is not approachable by anyone in this body. And beyond that nonmanifested matter is the spiritual kingdom. That kingdom is described in the Bhagavad-gÄŤtÄ as supreme and eternal, never to be annihilated. This material nature is subjected to repeated creation and annihilation. But that part, the spiritual nature, remains as it is, eternally.
The supreme abode of the Personality of Godhead, KášášŁáša, is also described in the Brahma-saášhitÄ as the abode of cintÄmaáši. That abode of Lord KášášŁáša, known as Goloka VášndÄvana, is full of palaces made of touchstone. There the trees are called desire trees, and the cows are called surabhi. The Lord is served there by hundreds and thousands of goddesses of fortune. His name is Govinda, the Primeval Lord, and He is the cause of all causes. There the Lord plays His flute, His eyes are like lotus petals, and the color of His body is like that of a beautiful cloud. On His head is a peacock feather. He is so attractive that He excels thousands of Cupids. Lord KášášŁáša gives only a little hint in the GÄŤtÄ of His personal abode, which is the supermost planet in the spiritual kingdom. But in ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam KášášŁáša actually appears with all His paraphernalia and demonstrates His activities in VášndÄvana, then at MathurÄ, and then at DvÄrakÄ. The subject matter of this book will gradually reveal all these activities.
The family in which KášášŁáša appeared is called the Yadu dynasty. This Yadu dynasty belongs to the family descending from Soma, the god in the moon planet. There are two different kᚣatriya families of the royal order, one descending from the king of the moon planet and the other descending from the king of the sun planet. When the Supreme Personality of Godhead appears, He generally appears in a kᚣatriya family because He has to establish religious principles, or the life of righteousness. The kᚣatriya family is the protector of the human race, according to the Vedic system. When the Supreme Personality of Godhead appeared as Lord RÄmacandra, He appeared in the family descending from the sun-god, known as the Raghu-vaášĹa; and when He appeared as Lord KášášŁáša, He did so in the family known as the Yadu-vaášĹa. There is a long list of the kings of the Yadu-vaášĹa in the Ninth Canto, Twenty-fourth Chapter, of ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam. All of them were great, powerful kings. KášášŁáša's father's name was Vasudeva, son of ĹĹŤrasena, descending from the Yadu dynasty. Actually, the Supreme Personality of Godhead does not belong to any dynasty of this material world, but the family in which the Supreme Personality of Godhead appears becomes famous, by His grace. For example, sandalwood is produced in the states of Malaya. Sandalwood has its own qualifications apart from Malaya, but because accidentally this wood is mainly produced in the states of Malaya, it is known as Malayan sandalwood. Similarly, KášášŁáša, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, belongs to everyone, but just as the sun rises from the east, although there are other directions from which it could rise, so by His own choice the Lord appears in a particular family, and that family becomes famous.
As explained above, when KášášŁáša appears, all His plenary expansions appear with Him. KášášŁáša appeared along with BalarÄma (Baladeva), who is known as His elder brother. BalarÄma is the origin of Saáš karᚣaáša, of the quadruple expansion. BalarÄma is also the plenary expansion of KášášŁáša. In this book, the attempt will be made to show how KášášŁáša appeared in the family of the Yadu dynasty and how He displayed His transcendental characteristics. This is very vividly described in ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatamâspecifically, the Tenth Cantoâand thus the basis of this book will be the Tenth Canto of ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam.
The pastimes of the Lord are generally heard and relished by liberated souls. Those who are conditioned souls are interested in reading stories of the material activities of some common man. Although similar narrations describing the transcendental activities of the Lord are found in ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam and other PurÄášas, the conditioned souls still prefer to study ordinary narrations. They are not so interested in studying the narrations of the pastimes of the Lord, KášášŁáša. And yet the descriptions or the pastimes of Lord KášášŁáša are so attractive that they are relishable for all classes of men. There are three classes of men in this world. One class consists of liberated souls, another consists of those who are trying to be liberated, and the third consists of materialistic men. Whether one is liberated or is trying to be liberated, or is even grossly materialistic, the pastimes of Lord KášášŁáša are worth studying.
Liberated souls have no interest in materialistic activities. The impersonalist theory that after liberation one becomes inactive and need not hear anything does not prove that a liberated person is actually inactive. A living soul cannot be inactive. He is active either in the conditioned state or in the liberated state. A diseased person, for example, is also active, but his activities are all painful. The same person, when freed from the diseased condition, is still active, but in the healthy condition the activities are full of pleasure. Similarly, the impersonalists only seek to get free from the diseased, conditioned activities, but they have no information of activities in the healthy condition. Those who are actually liberated and in full knowledge take to hearing the activities of KášášŁáša; such engagement is pure spiritual activity.
It is essential for persons who are actually liberated to hear about the pastimes of KášášŁáša. That is the supreme relishable subject matter for one in the liberated state. Also, if persons who are trying to be liberated hear such narrations as the Bhagavad-gÄŤtÄ and ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam, then their path of liberation becomes very clear. The Bhagavad-gÄŤtÄ is the preliminary study of ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam. By studying the GÄŤtÄ, one becomes fully conscious of the position of Lord KášášŁáša; and when he is situated at the lotus feet of KášášŁáša, he understands the narrations of KášášŁáša as described in ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam. Lord Caitanya has therefore advised His followers that their business is to propagate kášášŁáša-kathÄ.
KášášŁáša-kathÄ means narrations about Lord KášášŁáša. There are two kášášŁáša-kathÄ's: narrations spoken by KášášŁáša and narrations spoken about KášášŁáša. The Bhagavad-gÄŤtÄ is the narration or the philosophy on the science of God, spoken by KášášŁáša Himself. ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam is the narration about the activities and transcendental pastimes of KášášŁáša. Both are kášášŁáša-kathÄ. It is the order of Lord Caitanya that kášášŁáša-kathÄ should be spread all over the world, because if the conditioned souls, suffering under the pangs of material existence, take to kášášŁáša-kathÄ, then their path of liberation will be open and clear. The purpose of presenting this book is primarily to induce people to understand KášášŁáša or kášášŁáša-kathÄ, because thereby they can become freed from material bondage.
This kášášŁáša-kathÄ will also be very much appealing to the most materialistic persons because KášášŁáša's pastimes with the gopÄŤs (cowherd girls) are exactly like the loving affairs between young girls and boys within this material world. Actually, the sex feeling found in human society is not unnatural because this same sex feeling is there in the original Personality of Godhead. The pleasure potency is called ĹrÄŤmatÄŤ RÄdhÄrÄášÄŤ. The attraction of loving affairs on the basis of sex feeling is the original feature of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and we, the conditioned souls, being part and parcel of the Supreme, have such feelings also, but they are experienced within a perverted, minute condition. Therefore, when those who are after sex life in this material world hear about KášášŁáša's pastimes with the gopÄŤs, they will relish transcendental pleasure, although it appears to be materialistic. The advantage will be that they will gradually be elevated to the spiritual platform. In the BhÄgavatam it is stated that if one hears the pastimes of Lord KášášŁáša with the gopÄŤs, from authorities with submission, then he will be promoted to the platform of transcendental loving service to the Lord, and the material disease of lust within his heart will be completely vanquished. In other words, such hearing will counteract material sex life.
This book, KášášŁáša, which is filled with kášášŁáša-kathÄ, will thus appeal equally to the liberated souls and to persons who are trying to be liberated, as well as to the gross, conditioned materialist. According to the statement of MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit, who heard about KášášŁáša from Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ, kášášŁáša-kathÄ is equally applicable to every human being, whatever condition of life he is in. Surely everyone will appreciate it to the highest magnitude. But MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit also warned that persons who are simply engaged in killing animals and in killing themselves may not be very much attracted to kášášŁáša-kathÄ. In other words, ordinary persons who are following the regulative moral principles of scriptures, no matter in what condition they are found, will certainly be attracted, but not persons who are killing themselves. The exact word used in ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam is paĹu-ghna, which means killing animals or killing oneself. Persons who are not self-realized and who are not interested in spiritual realization are killing themselves; they are committing suicide. Because this human form of life is especially meant for self-realization, by neglecting this important part of his activities one simply wastes his time like the animals. So he is paĹu-ghna. The other meaning of the word refers to those who are actually killing animals. This means persons who are animal-eaters (even dog-eaters), for they are all engaged in killing animals in so many ways, such as hunting and opening slaughterhouses. Such persons cannot be interested in kášášŁáša-kathÄ.
King ParÄŤkᚣit was especially interested in hearing kášášŁáša-kathÄ because he knew that his forefathers, particularly his grandfather, Arjuna, were victorious in the great Battle of Kurukᚣetra only because of KášášŁáša. We may also take this material world as a Battlefield of Kurukᚣetra. Everyone is struggling hard for existence on this battlefield, and at every step there is danger. According to MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit, the Battlefield of Kurukᚣetra was just like a vast ocean full of dangerous animals. His grandfather Arjuna had to fight with such great heroes as Bhčᚣma, Droáša, Karáša and many others who were not ordinary fighters. Such warriors have been compared to the timiáš gila fish in the ocean. The timiáš gila fish can very easily swallow up big whales. The great fighters on the Battlefield of Kurukᚣetra could swallow many, many Arjunas very easily, but simply due to KášášŁáša's mercy, Arjuna was able to kill all of them. Just as one can cross with no exertion over the little bit of water contained in the hoofprint of a calf, so Arjuna, by the grace of KášášŁáša, was able to very easily jump over the ocean of the Battle of Kurukᚣetra.
MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit very much appreciated KášášŁáša's activities for many other reasons. Not only was his grandfather saved by KášášŁáša, but he himself also was saved by KášášŁáša. By the end of the Battle of Kurukᚣetra, all the members of the Kuru dynasty, both the sons and grandsons on the side of DháštarÄᚣášra and those on the side of the PÄášá¸avas, had died in the fighting. Except the five PÄášá¸ava brothers, everyone died on the Battlefield of Kurukᚣetra. MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit was at that time within the womb of his mother. His father, Abhimanyu, the son of Arjuna, also died on the Battlefield of Kurukᚣetra, and so MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit was a posthumous child. When he was in the womb of his mother, a brahmÄstra weapon was released by AĹvatthÄmÄ to kill the child. When ParÄŤkᚣit MahÄrÄja's mother, UttarÄ, approached KášášŁáša, KášášŁáša, seeing the danger of abortion, entered her womb as the Supersoul and saved MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit. MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit's other name is ViᚣášurÄta because he was saved by Lord Viᚣášu Himself while still within the womb.
Thus everyone, in any condition of life, should be interested in hearing about KášášŁáša and His activities because He is the Supreme Absolute Truth, the Personality of Godhead. He is all-pervading: inside He is living within everyone's heart, and outside He is living as His universal form. And yet, as described in the Bhagavad-gÄŤtÄ, He appears as He is in the human society just to invite everyone to His transcendental abode, back home, back to Godhead. Everyone should be interested in knowing about KášášŁáša, and this book is presented with this purpose: that people may know about KášášŁáša and be perfectly benefited in this human form of life.
In the Ninth Canto of ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam, ĹrÄŤ Baladeva is described as the son of RohiášÄŤ, a wife of Vasudeva. Vasudeva, the father of KášášŁáša, had sixteen wives, and one of them was RohiášÄŤ, the mother of Baladeva. But Baladeva is also described as the son of DevakÄŤ, so how could He be the son of both DevakÄŤ and RohiášÄŤ? This was one of the questions put by MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit to Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ, and it will be answered in due course. MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit also asked Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ why ĹrÄŤ KášášŁáša, just after His appearance as the son of Vasudeva, was immediately carried to the house of Nanda MahÄrÄja in VášndÄvana, Gokula. He also wanted to know what the activities of Lord KášášŁáša were while He was in VášndÄvana and while He was in MathurÄ. Besides that, he was especially inquisitive to know why KášášŁáša killed His maternal uncle, Kaášsa. Kaášsa, being the brother of His mother, was a very intimate superior to KášášŁáša, so how was it that He killed Kaášsa? Also, MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit asked how many years Lord KášášŁáša remained in human society, how many years He reigned over the kingdom of DvÄrakÄ, and how many wives He accepted there. A kᚣatriya king is generally accustomed to accept more than one wife; therefore MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit also inquired about His number of wives. The subject matter of this book is Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ's answering of these and other questions asked by MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit.
The position of MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit and Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ is unique. MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit is the right person to hear about the transcendental pastimes of KášášŁáša, and Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ is the right person to describe them. If such a fortunate combination is made possible, then kášášŁáša-kathÄ immediately becomes revealed, and people may benefit to the highest possible degree from such a conversation.
This narration was presented by Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ when MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit was prepared to give up his body, fasting on the bank of the Ganges. In order to assure Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ that by hearing kášášŁáša-kathÄ he would not feel tired, MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit expressed himself very frankly: "Hunger and thirst may give trouble to ordinary persons or to me, but the topics of KášášŁáša are so nice that one can continue to hear them without feeling tired because such hearing situates one in the transcendental position." It is understood that one must be very fortunate to hear kášášŁáša-kathÄ as seriously as MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit did. He was especially intent on the subject matter because he was expecting death at any moment. Every one of us should be conscious of death at every moment. This life is not at all assured; at any time one can die. It does not matter whether one is a young man or an old man. So before death takes place, we must be fully KášášŁáša conscious.
At the point of his death, King ParÄŤkᚣit was hearing ĹrÄŤmad-BhÄgavatam from Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ. When King ParÄŤkᚣit expressed his untiring desire to hear about KášášŁáša, Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ was very much pleased. Ĺukadeva was the greatest of all BhÄgavata reciters, and thus he began to speak about KášášŁáša's pastimes, which destroy all inauspiciousness in this Age of Kali. Ĺukadeva GosvÄmÄŤ thanked the King for his eagerness to hear about KášášŁáša, and he encouraged him by saying, "My dear King, your intelligence is very keen because you are so eager to hear about the pastimes of KášášŁáša." He informed MahÄrÄja ParÄŤkᚣit that hearing and chanting the pastimes of KášášŁáša are so auspicious that the processes purify the three varieties of men involved: he who recites the transcendental topics of KášášŁáša, he who hears such topics, and he who inquires about Him. These pastimes are just like the Ganges water, which flows from the toe of Lord Viᚣášu: they purify the three worlds, the upper, middle and lower planetary systems.