Gaudiya Math

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The Gaudiya Math organisation was formed in 1918, shortly after Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura took the renounced order of life (sanyasa). Its purpose was to spread Gaudiya Vaishnavism throughout India through preaching and publishing work.[citation needed]

Eventually, sixty-four (64) branches of temples, ashrams, and mathas were established, with the Chaitanya Gaudiya Math as the flagship math of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura. An effort was made to preach to European countries by the Gaudiya Math in the 1930s (led by Bhaktisiddhanta's disciple Swami Bon Maharaj) which resulted in a handful of longtime adherents, such as E.G.Schulze of Germany, who became Sadananda Swami, and later, Walther Eidlitz of Austria, who became Vamana dasa.[citation needed]

With Bhaktisiddhanta's death in 1937, the mathas and disciples lost the cohesiveness and unity that they once enjoyed during his life of preaching. The disciples of Bhaktisiddhanta founded their own mathas and organizations and became acharyas.[citation needed]

A disciple of Bhaktisiddhanta, Srila A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, is the founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness.[1]

[edit] References and notes

  1. ^ Sherbow, P.H. (2004). "AC Bhaktivedanta Swami's Preaching In The Context Of Gaudiya Vaishnavism". The Hare Krishna Movement: The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant: p.139. 
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