Muktananda
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Swami Muktananda (May 16, 1908-October 2, 1982) is the monastic name of an Indian Hindu guru. Muktananda was the founder of Siddha Yoga, a new religious movement based on the Hindu philosophy of Kashmir Shaivism. He wrote a number of books, including an autobiography entitled The Play of Consciousness.
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[edit] Life
Muktananda was born in 1908 near Mangalore in Karnataka State, India into a wealthy family. His birth name was Krishna.[1] At 15 he encountered Bhagawan Nityananda, a wandering avadhoot who profoundly influenced his life.[2] He studied under Siddharudha Swami at Hubli where he learned Sanskrit, Vedanta and all branches of yoga and took the initiation of sannyasa, becoming Swami Muktananda. He began wandering India on foot.
In 1947 Muktananda went to Ganeshpuri to receive the darshan of Bhagawan Nityananda. He received shaktipat initiation from his guru in the early morning of August 15 of that year. According to his description, it was a profound and sublime experience.[3] Muktananda spent the next eight years living and meditating in a little hut in Yeola. He wrote about his sadhana and meditation experiences, kundalini-related, in his autobiography published in 1978. In 1956, Nityananda gave Muktananda a small piece of land at Gavdevi, near Ganeshpuri, on which Muktananda developed an ashram.
In the 1970s, on behalf of his guru Bhagawan Nityananda, Muktananda brought the tradition of Siddha Yoga to the West, giving shaktipat initiation to thousands of spiritual seekers. Rudi (Swami Rudrananda), a fellow disciple of Bhagawan Nityananda, sponsored his first trip to the United States in September 1970.[4]
Muktananda established Gurudev Siddha Peeth as a public trust in India to administer the work there, and founded the SYDA Foundation in the United States to administer the global work of Siddha Yoga meditation.[5] He wrote many books; sixteen are still kept in print by the SYDA Foundation.
In May 1982, Muktananda appointed two successors as joint leaders of the movement, Swami Chidvilasananda, his former translator, and her brother Swami Nityanand, who later resigned and formed his own group. Muktananda died in October 1982 and is buried at Ganeshpuri, where the Gurudev Siddha Peeth ashram houses his Samadhi shrine.
[edit] Muktananda's message
Swami Muktananda's main messages are:
- Honor your Self, Worship your Self, Meditate on your Self, God dwells within you as you.
- See God in Each Other.
[edit] Criticism
Some former members of Siddha Yoga have accused Muktananda of abusive behaviour which is at odds with his teachings. William Rodarmor made these accusations public in “CoEvolution Quarterly" of winter 1983.[6] Lis Harris repeated and extended those in the The New Yorker of November 14, 1994.[7] Sarah Caldwell suggests in 2001, in the academic journal Nova Religio, that Muktananda was both an enlightened teacher and a secret practitioner of an esoteric form of Tantric sexual yoga, and that he also engaged in actions that were not ethical, legal, or liberatory with many disciples.[8]
[edit] Bibliography
- Light on the Path (1972), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-914602-54-3
- Mukteshwari: The Way of Muktananda (1972), SYDA Foundation
- Getting Rid of What You Haven't Got (1974), Wordpress ISBN 0-915104-00-8
- Ashram Dharma (1975), SYDA Foundation, ISBN 0-911307-38-9
- I Love You (1975), SYDA Foundation
- Selected Essays (1976), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-37-0
- God is With You (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications ISBN 0-914602-57-8
- I Am that: The Science of Hamsa from the Vijnana Bhairava (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-914602-27-6
- I Welcome You All With Love (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-65-6
- In the Company of a Siddha: Interviews and Conversations With Swami Muktananda (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications ISBN 0-911307-53-2
- The Nectar of Chanting: Sacred Texts and Mantras Sung in the Ashrams of Swami Muktananda (1978), SYDA Foundation, ISBN 0-914602-16-0
- Play of Consciousness: A Spiritual Autobiography (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-81-8
- Satsang with Baba : questions and answers between Swami Muktananda and his devotees (1978), Volumes 1 - 5, SYDA, ISBN 0-914602-40-3
- Kundalini: The Secret of Life (1979), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-34-6
- To Know the Knower (1979), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-914602-91-8
- Meditate (1980), State University of New York Press, ISBN 0-87395-471-8
- Kundalini Stavah (1980), SYDA Foundation, ISBN 0-914602-55-1
- The Perfect Relationship: The Guru and the Disciple (1980), SYDA Foundation, ISBN 0-914602-53-5
- Reflections of the Self (1980), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-914602-50-0
- Secret of the Siddhas (1980), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-31-1
- A Book for the Mind (1981), SYDA Foundation
- Does Death Really Exist? (1981), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-36-2
- Lalleshwari (1981), SYDA Foundation, ISBN 0-914602-66-7
- Where Are You Going?: A Guide to the Spiritual Journey (1981), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-60-5
- I Have Become Alive: Secrets of the Inner Journey (1985), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-26-5
- From the Finite to the Infinite (1990), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-31-1
- Mystery of the Mind (1992), SYDA Foundation
- The Self is Already Attained (1993), Siddha Yoga Meditation Publications, ISBN 0-914602-77-2
- Bhagawan Nityananda (1996), Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-45-1
- Nothing Exists that Is Not Shiva: Commentaries on the Shiva Sutra, Vijnana Bhairava, Guru Gita, and Other Sacred Texts (1997) Siddha Yoga Publications, ISBN 0-911307-56-7
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Baba Muktananda: 'Meditation Revolution' Continues Ten Years After His Passing
- ^ "Baba Muktananda's Meditation Revolution Continues Ten Years After His Passing" (October 1992). Hinduism Today.
- ^ Muktananda, Swami (1978). Play Of Consciousness. Siddha Yoga Publications. ISBN 0-911307-81-8.[page # needed]
- ^ John Mann. Rudi: 14 Years With My Teacher.
- ^ "Muktananda's Legacy" (April 1995). Hinduism Today.
- ^ Rodarmor, William (1983). "The Secret Life of Swami Muktananda". CoEvolution Quarterly.
- ^ Harris, Lis (November 14, 1994). "O Guru, Guru, Guru". The New Yorker.
- ^ Sarah Caldwell (2001). "The Heart of the Secret: A Personal and Scholarly Encounter with Shakta Tantrism in Siddha Yoga" (PDF). Nova Religio 5 (1): 9-51. doi: .
[edit] Further reading
- Brooke, Tal. "Riders of the Cosmic Circuit". Chariot Victor Pub, 1987 ISBN 0-595-09315-9