Swami Muktananda
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Swami Muktananda Paramahamsa (16 May 1908 – 2 October 1982), born Krishna Rai, was a yoga guru, the founder of Siddha Yoga. He was a disciple of
Bhagavan Nityananda Bhagawan Nityananda (November/December, 1897 – 8 August 1961) was an Indian guru. His teachings are published in the "Chidakash Gita". Nityananda was born in Koyilandy (Pandalayini), Madras Presidency, British India (now in Kozhikode ...
. He wrote books on the subjects of Kundalini Shakti, Vedanta, and
Kashmir Shaivism Kashmir Shaivism or Trika Shaivism, is a nondualist tradition of Shaiva-Shakta Tantra which originated sometime after 850 CE. Since this tradition originated in Kashmir it is often called "Kashmiri Shaivism". It later went on to become a pan ...
, including a spiritual autobiography entitled ''The Play of Consciousness''. In honorific style, he is often referred to as '' Swami Muktananda'', or ''Baba Muktananda'', or in a familiar way just ''Baba''.


Biography

Swami Muktananda was born in 1908 near Mangalore in
Madras Presidency The Madras Presidency, or the Presidency of Fort St. George, also known as Madras Province, was an administrative subdivision (presidency) of British India. At its greatest extent, the presidency included most of southern India, including the ...
, British India, to a wealthy family. His birth name was Krishna Rai. At 15, he encountered Bhagawan Nityananda, a wandering avadhoot who profoundly changed his life. After this encounter, Krishna left home and began his search for the experience of God. He studied under Siddharudha Swami in Hubli, where he learned Sanskrit, Vedanta, and all branches of yoga. He received sannyasa initiation in the Sarasvati order of the Dashanami Sampradaya, taking the name of Swami Muktananda. After Siddharudha's death, Muktananda left to study with a disciple of Siddharudha called Muppinarya Swami at his Sri Airani Holematt in Ranebennur Haveri District. Then Swami Muktananda began wandering India on foot, studying with many different saints and gurus. In 1947, Muktananda went to Ganeshpuri to receive the darshan of Bhagavan Nityananda, who had originally inspired Muktananda's search for God. He received shaktipat
initiation Initiation is a rite of passage marking entrance or acceptance into a group or society. It could also be a formal admission to adulthood in a community or one of its formal components. In an extended sense, it can also signify a transformation ...
from him on August 15 of that year. Muktananda often said that his spiritual journey did not truly begin until he received shaktipat from Nityananda. He described it as a profound and sublime experience. For the next nine years, Muktananda lived and meditated in a small hut in Yeola. He wrote about his sadhana and kundalini-related meditation experiences in his autobiography. In 1956, Bhagawan Nityananda acknowledged the culmination of Muktananda's spiritual journey. He appointed Muktananda as the leader of an ashram in Ganeshpuri, near Bombay. The same year he started teaching his Siddha Yoga path. Between 1970 and 1981, Muktananda went on three world tours. During these tours, he established Siddha Yoga ashrams and meditation centers in many countries. In 1975, he founded the
Siddha Yoga Ashram in Oakland The Siddha Yoga Ashram in Oakland (or Oakland Ashram) is a Siddha Yoga retreat site in the Golden Gate, Oakland, California, Golden Gate neighborhood of Oakland, California, on the east side of San Francisco Bay. It was the second ashram established ...
in the San Francisco Bay area. In 1979, he established Shree Nityananda Ashram (now Shree Muktananda Ashram) in the Catskills, northwest of New York City. Muktananda established Gurudev Siddha Peeth as a public trust in India to administer his work there. He founded the SYDA Foundation in the United States to administer the global work of Siddha Yoga meditation. He wrote many books, sixteen of which are still in print with the SYDA Foundation. In May 1982, Muktananda appointed two successors, Swami Chidvilasananda and her younger brother, Swami Nityananda, as joint leaders of Siddha Yoga. Nityananda later resigned and formed his own group. Muktananda died in October 1982. He is buried in his samādhi shrine in Gurudev Siddha Peeth in Ganeshpuri.


Teaching and practice

Central to his teachings were to "See God in each other," and "Honor your Self. Worship your Self. Meditate on your Self. God dwells within you as you." Muktananda often gave a shorter version of this teaching: "God dwells within you as you." According to Lola Williamson, Muktananda was known as a " shaktipat guru because kundalini awakening occurred so readily in his presence". Through ''Shaktipat Intensives'' participants were said to receive shaktipat initiation, the awakening of Kundalini Shakti that is said to reside within a person, and to deepen their practice of Siddha Yoga meditation. Historically, Shaktipat initiation had been reserved for the few who had done many years of spiritual service and practices; Muktananda offered this initiation to newcomers and yogis alike. There are several published accounts that describe the reception of ''shaktipat'' from Muktananda. Paul Zweig wrote one such account of receiving ''shaktipat'' from Muktananda.Paul Zweig, in John White (editor), ''Kundalini, Evolution, and Enlightenment'' () In '' Gurus of Modern Yoga'', Andrea Jain, in her chapter on Muktananda, quotes an anonymous source, who describes his moment of shaktipat, when he was 19 years old, conferred by Muktananda with a wand of peacock feathers in 1975:


Controversy

Sarah Caldwell, in an essay in the academic journal ''Nova Religio'' (2001), argued that Muktananda was both an enlightened spiritual teacher and a practitioner of Shakta Tantrism, but also "engaged in actions that were not ethical, legal or liberatory with many disciples." According to Lola Williamson, "Muktananda stressed the value of celibacy for making progress on the spiritual path, but he almost certainly violated his own rules." Author Andrea Jain asserts "Muktananda engaged in secret sexual rituals with several of his young female disciples—some of whom were teenagers—that were meant to transmit ''sakti'' to the tantric hero." In 1981, Stan Trout, a swami for Siddha Yoga, wrote an open letter in which he referred to a number of stories of Muktananda engaging in sexual activities with young women, and threats and harassment in order to force people to "stop talking about your escapades with young girls in your bedroom." In 1983 William Rodarmor printed several allegations in '' CoEvolution Quarterly'' from anonymous female devotees that Muktananda regularly had sex with them and raped them. In the article, based on twenty five interviews, former devotees charged that Muktananda had molested under-age girls, and engaged in sexual interactions with young devotees, which "drew naive young women into esoteric Tantric rituals." Lis Harris repeated and extended Rodarmor's allegations in an article in '' The New Yorker'' (1994).


Bibliography

* ''Light on the Path'' (1972), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''Mukteshwari: The Way of Muktananda'' (1972), SYDA Foundation * ''Getting Rid of What You Haven't Got'' (1974), Wordpress * ''Ashram Dharma'' (1975), SYDA Foundation, * ''I Love You'' (1975), SYDA Foundation * ''Selected Essays'' (1976), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''God is With You'' (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications * ''I Am that: The Science of Hamsa from the Vijnana Bhairava'' (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''I Welcome You All With Love'' (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''In the Company of a Siddha: Interviews and Conversations With Swami Muktananda'' (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications * ''The Nectar of Chanting: Sacred Texts and Mantras Sung in the Ashrams of Swami Muktananda'' (1978), SYDA Foundation, * ''Play of Consciousness: A Spiritual Autobiography'' (1978), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''Satsang with Baba : questions and answers between Swami Muktananda and his devotees'' (1978), Volumes 1 – 5, SYDA, * ''Kundalini: The Secret of Life'' (1979), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''To Know the Knower'' (1979), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''Meditate'' (1980), State University of New York Press, * ''Kundalini Stavah'' (1980), SYDA Foundation, * ''The Perfect Relationship: The Guru and the Disciple'' (1980), SYDA Foundation, * ''Reflections of the Self'' (1980), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''Secret of the Siddhas'' (1980), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''A Book for the Mind'' (1981), SYDA Foundation * ''Does Death Really Exist?'' (1981), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''Lalleshwari'' (1981), SYDA Foundation, * ''Where Are You Going?: A Guide to the Spiritual Journey'' (1981), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''I Have Become Alive: Secrets of the Inner Journey'' (1985), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''From the Finite to the Infinite'' (1990), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''Mystery of the Mind'' (1992), SYDA Foundation * ''The Self is Already Attained'' (1993), Siddha Yoga Meditation Publications, * ''Bhagawan Nityananda'' (1996), Siddha Yoga Publications, * ''Nothing Exists that Is Not Shiva: Commentaries on the Shiva Sutra, Vijnana Bhairava, Guru Gita, and Other Sacred Texts'' (1997) Siddha Yoga Publications,


References


Sources

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External links

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Muktananda 1908 births 1982 deaths 20th-century Hindu religious leaders Indian Shaivite religious leaders Indian autobiographers Indian spiritual writers Indian yoga teachers Kashmir Shaivism Modern yoga gurus Tulu people Writers from Mangalore