Alambazar Math

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Alambazar Math
Alambazar Math transparent Logo.jpg
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Formation1892
HeadquartersBelur
Coordinates22°38′50″N 88°21′53″E / 22.647352°N 88.364682°E / 22.647352; 88.364682Coordinates: 22°38′50″N 88°21′53″E / 22.647352°N 88.364682°E / 22.647352; 88.364682
Websitealambazarmath.azurewebsites.net

Alambazar Math is the second monastery of the Ramakrishna Order established in February 1892, which remained the order's headquarters till February 1898, when it was finally moved to Belur village on the bank of Ganga.[1]

History[]

Alambazar Math 1896

After the demise of Sri Ramakrishna, the 19th century mystic and saint, some of his younger disciples decided to stay together and perform spiritual practices following the ideology of saint. Prominent among them were Narendra Nath Dutta, later famous as Swami Vivekananda and Rakhal Chandra Ghosh, later , who was also the first president of the Ramakrishna Order. The first monastery of the Ramakrishna order was established in Baranagar, Calcutta and it came to be known as the Baranagar Math. The dilapidated building of Baranagar Math could not serve the monastery for long and hence in 1892, the Math was shifted to a new building in Alambazar, a place in Baranagar. The building was dis reputed as a haunted house as two persons had committed suicide there and hence it was available cheap.[1]

Building layout[]

The house was fairly large, quadrangular, two storey building comprising two sections, outer and inner.[2] The Ramakrishna shrine in the Alambazar Math was situated in the first floor of the building. The brother disciples slept together in the large hall in the ground floor.[1] The building was adorned with a pond, several country wells and an orchard.[2] There were balconies on the ground and first floor and the building overlooked the present Deshbandhu Road. There were two flights of stairs to reach the first floor. Near the shrine were three rooms used by Swami Nirmalananda, Swami Abhedananda, and Swami Ramakrishnananda.[2] Vivekananda stayed in the second room in the western side of the first floor.[1]

Members[]

When the Math premises were shifted, at that time most of the brother disciples of Sri Ramakrishna, including Swami Vivekananda, were wandering monks in various parts of India. Swami Ramakrishnananda assisted for most part of the period by Swami Nirmalananda was the only person who stayed indoor throughout and took care of the activities of the monastery during this period. Among the direct disciples of Sri Ramakrishna, came back to Alambazar Math in 1895. Swami Turiyananda and Swami Shivananda returned to stay in the Math in 1894. Swami Premananda came back a few days after the return of Swami Vivekananda. Swami Niranjananda returned to stay before the birth anniversary of Sri Ramakrishna in 1895. Swami Saradananda was a permanent resident from the beginning, from where he left for Europe in 1895. Swami Abhedananda also traveled widely before he settled in Alambazar Math in 1892. Swami Trigunatitananda stayed for about two years, from 1892 to 1894. Brahmachari Hariprasanna, later Swami Vijnanananda, joined Alambazar Math after the return of Swami Vivekananda.[2] New members who joined as Brahmacharins or monks, who stayed in Alambazar monastery, included Swami Virajananda and .

Important visitors[]

Durga Charan Nag, better known as Nag Mahasay, an important householder disciple of Sri Ramakrishna, visited the Math. Girish Chandra Ghosh, the famous playwright and father of modern theater in India, used to visit the monastery as a devotee. In 1896, Dr. Turnbull, who had heard Swami Vivekananda in Chicago and was an ardent fan, visited Alambazar Math. Gopaler Ma and Gauri Ma, two foremost women devotees of Sri Ramakrishna, were also occasional visitors.

Important events[]

Swami Vivekananda went to America in 1893 and participated in the parliament of religions when the monastery was located in Alambazar. He also came back to stay in Alambazar monastery. He wrote several letters to his brother disciples in Alambazar Math, several of which were addressed to Swami Ramakrishnananda, between 1894 and 1896. He advised them on management affairs, Governing Body and also the organization structure and activities of the proposed monastery.[3]

The inmates of Alambazar Math, most notably Swami Abhedananda and Swami Yogananda (Yogin Maharaj) organized a public convention to declare Swami Vivekananda as the official representative of Hinduism in Calcutta Townhall, which was presided by Raja Pyarimohan Mukherjee and attended by the famous persons of Calcutta in 1894.[1]

After his return from the West, Swami Vivekananda, stayed for sometime in the Alambazar Math and here he framed the rules and guidelines for a future Ramakrishna Order.

An earthquake on 12 June 1897 caused much damage to the building, and the monastery had to be shifted to Nilambar Mukherjee's garden house in Belur.

It is in this Math that Swamiji first taught systematic meditation to the disciples.

In this Math, Swamiji first gave the vow of Sannyasa to his disciples.

Swami Jitatmananda[]

Swami Jitatmananda (May 11, 1941- December 21, 2020) was a monk of the Ramakrishna order, until his expulsion from the Order in 2009. His pre-monastic name was Shyamal Sengupta, born into a Bengali Baidya family of Ariadaha, very close to Dakshineswar, in Calcutta. Shyamal had one elder brother and two elder sisters, being the youngest child of his parents. Astrological calculation shows he was born under Vishakha nakshatra (rakshas gan), in either Tula rashi (if born before 3:15 PM on May 11) or Vrishchika rashi (if born after 3:15 PM), probably the latter correlating with his personal characteristics. In his teenage years, before 1958, he came under the influence of Swami Lokeswarananda (April 19, 1911- December 31, 1998) who was in charge of the Pathuriaghata Students' Home of the R.K. Mission, and probably started living there. After Swami Lokeswarananda founded the Ramakrishna Mission Ashrama at Narendrapur in 1958, Shyamal went to stay there as a boarder.

At the Narendrapur Ashrama, where he spent ~12 of his formative years, Brahmachari Shyamal was known as a multi-talented individual, for his reading habits, oratory, singing abilities, artistic sensibilities and sports activities, other than an abiding interest in Ramakrishna-Vivekananda and spiritual topics. He was a student in Presidency College (B.Sc. Hons in Chemistry), Kolkata, he later did M.A. in English from Jadavpur University, staying at the Narendrapur Ashrama. He received his spiritual initiation (deeksha) from Swami Shankarananda, the 7th President of the Ramakrishna Math and Mission, probably before 1962.

After joining the Ramakrishna Mission Ashrama in Narendrapur ~1963 as a monk probationer, Br. Shyamal was appointed as the headmaster of Ramakrishna Mission Vidyalaya at Narendrapur in mid-1970, where he continued for 5 years. The period 1970-1975 was a turbulent one for the Vidyalaya as well as the R.K. Mission Ashrama, Narendrapur as there were constant political unrest outside which eventually affected the workers of the Ashrama too. As headmaster, Br. Shyamal was very strict and often expelled some students (popularly known as giving T.C., an abbreviation for "Transfer Certificate") for not-so-serious violations of ashrama discipline. Around 1973, he was given a new name, Brahmachari Tridib Chaitanya, for having satisfied the necessary prerequisites for monastic life, according to the rules of the Ramakrishna math and Mission, Belur. On official Narendrapur Vidyalaya documents, he used to sign as "Br. T. Chaitanya" for some years and the standing joke among the students was, even his name suggested he was prone to give T.C. to errant students ! In mid-1975, he was transferred to the R.K. Mission school Deoghar as headmaster. A few months later, the Higher Secondary results were announced and one of the Vidyalaya students, Rajagopal Chattopadhyaya, stood first in the West Bengal Board in Science and all streams combined, for the first time in the history of the Vidyalaya. Swami Jitatmananda was very pleased with this result, and it may be mentioned in this context that Rajagopal went on to complete his studies at I.I.T. Kanpur and UCLA, became a Professor of Biochemistry and even wrote several books on Sri Ramakrishna, Swami Vivekananda, Margaret Noble during 1993-2018 independently. It may also be mentioned that the present (2021) Chief Secretary, Government of West Bengal, Sri Alapan Bandyopadhyay, IAS, was also one of his favourite students at Narendrapur during 1971-1975.

Jitatmananda was then transferred to R.K. Mission College at Rahara as its principal in 1977. He acted as the Deputy Director of the R.K. Math Institute of Foreign Language in Hyderabad, under Swami Ranganathananda (December 15, 1908- April 25, 2005), the future 13th President of the Ramakrishna Math and Mission. Jitatmananda then served as the editor of Prabuddha Bharata (1987–1989), the monthly English journal started by Swami Vivekananda in 1896. He was in charge of six massive rehabilitation township programs for the cyclone affected people of Andhra Pradesh (1990) and Gujarat (1998). In Saurashtra and Bhuj as president of the Ramakrishna Ashram, Rajkot he took up a massive rehabilitation project worth Rs.3 crore for the quake – affected people of the region in 2001.

In 1999 he acted as the chairman of the last session in the National Science Summit held in Bangalore. On invitation, he visited Singapore Malaysia (1994), and again Hong Kong, Australia, Fiji and New Zealand (1995) where he spoke in some forty institutions on Vedanta, Modern Management and Modern Science. In 1998 the Swami went on invitation from the Government of Sri Lanka. In 1999 the Swami was chosen as the chief representative of the Government of India for International Millennium Celebration organized by Chicago Mayor at Chicago. Thereafter, he lectured in New York, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, Berkeley, Sacramento, Portland, Hollywood and other cities. He had interviewed with Physicist John A. Wheeler, the maker of America's Hydrogen bomb, in Princeton. In August 2000 he was invited by the United Nation for the Millennium world, where he spoke on the Neo-Hinduism of Sri Ramakrishna in a Hall of the United Nations, New York to a small crowd of ~10 listeners.

In 2004, he was invited to address the scientists` conference in the Paris UNESCO headquarters. In 2004, he was also invited to speak in the Indian forum of Bali University. In 2005 February, he addressed the chamber of commerce in Chittagong, Bangladesh. In 2006, he acted as the first secretary in the Foundation for unity of Religions and Enlightened Citizenship, instituted by APJ Abdul Kalam, President of India. Since 1991 the Swami is addressing corporate houses, industrialists & Youths on the urgent need of spiritual culture for modern management.

In 2005, he was appointed as the first secretary of Swami Vivekananda's Ancestral House and cultural centre in Calcutta, where he got involved in some incidents in 2008 that embarrassed the Ramakrishna Math & Mission authorities in Belur as he clearly violated the strict disciplines meant for sadhus. He was removed from his post in the Ancestral House by the RKM trustees as punishment. As he never replied to the three letters sent to him by the then General Secretary, the Governing Body or Trustees expelled him from the Order in 2009. Thereafter, he was living in the Ramakrishna Vivekananda Mission, Barrackpore, at the invitation of its Secretary, late Swami Nityananda, but in late 2012, Swami Jitatmananda suddenly left the Ramakrishna Vivekananda Mission to live in the Satyananda-Alambazar Math. The Alambazar Math was originally established by Swami Vivekananda, where the direct disciples of Sri Ramakrishna did tapasya during 1892 to 1898. It is to this Alambazar Math that Swami Vivekananda entered on the very evening he came back to Calcutta after his first visit to the West, and he lived here, with occasional gaps, from 19 February 1897 to February 1898. However, there was no Math at this location for about 70 years until Swami Satyananda, disciple of Swami Abhedananda, took possession of part of the original property in 1968 and re-started a Math at the same location.

Swami Jitatmananda was spreading the universal messages of Vedanta, Science and Spirituality as preached and practiced by Sri Ramakrishna and Swami Vivekananda (e.g., vide his 2004 video titled 'Memory Lane Swami Jitatmanandaji' on Chidananda rupa, a value education speech now available on YouTube). He used to hold regular classes on Vedanta & conducts sessions on meditation for public, especially the younger generation on every Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday from 5 pm to 6.30 pm in the Satyananda-Alambazar Math during 2013-2015. However, he was never a bona fide member of the Satyananda-Alambazar Math, but rather a guest. Finally, the Satyananda-Alambazar Math authorities realized Jitatmananda was not contributing funds for the renovation of the Alambazar Math as he had promised them, and Jitatmananda had to leave around May 2018 to live with a devotee in Belgharia. However, when he fell sick, it was too much for the devotee to care for him properly, and at this point, around September 2018, a band of his former students from R.K. Mission Vidyalaya, Narendrapur, took responsibility to nurse and care for him. The same group, composed of Dr. Parijat De, Sri Deepnarayan Sarkar, Sri Arindam Bhattacharya, Sri Debasis Datta, Dr. Abhijit Pal, Sri Pradeep Sanyal, Sri Amitabha Bhattacharya and others, cared for Jitatmananda by raising funds for him and kept him in some old age homes near Sonarpur and Subhasgram, West Bengal. He was admitted to the Peerless Hospital near Garia on December 17, and died four days later on December 21, 2020.

Celebrations in the Math[]

It is in this Math that the first birthday celebration of Sarada Devi was organized on 16 December 1897. Swami Prakashananda conducted the worship and the homa (fire) ceremony.[S.P: p. 92]

In October 1897 Durga Puja was celebrated in at this Math. It was conducted with a photo of Mother instead of the Durga image. On the Kali Puja night, the inmates performed "Guru Puja". Premananda performed the puja and homa.[S.P: p. 160]

Adbhutananda (Latu) and one Shivaratri night conducted the worship of Shiva throughout the four quarters of the night [Ghatanabali]

Present state[]

The building remained in a dilapidated state, was neglected for about seventy years and was forcefully occupied through illegal encroachments. Swami Satyananda, a disciple of Swami Abhedananda, first started the initiative to reclaim the historic building. A portion was finally purchased in 1968. The tenants opposed the establishment of the monastery, and they threatened the monks. Slowly all the rooms were occupied by the newly established Sri Ramakrishna Satyananda Ashrama and most of the tenants agreed to leave after being paid hefty compensation. In 2007 the remaining portion of the old monastery building was purchased, but it was still not completely encroachment free. As part of the celebration of 150 years of Swami Vivekananda, the Government of India has officially recognized the Alambazar Math as a national heritage structure and has initiated a project to restore the building and set up a Vivekananda Centre for Spiritual Culture. Prime Minister of India Dr. Manmohan Singh wrote an appreciation letter and with his help, the ministry of culture, Government of India's National Culture Fund, has come forward to help partially fund the restoration work. Archaeological Survey of India has taken up the restoration and reconstruction project.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f "AlambazarMath". alambazarmath.com. Archived from the original on 10 January 2014. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d The Early History of Ramakrishna Movement, by Swami Prabhananda, Sri Ramakrishna Math, Chennai, ISBN 81-7823-226-X
  3. ^ Letters of Swami Vivekananda Archived 2013-12-17 at the Wayback Machine

External links[]

  • "Alambazar Math". Alambazar Math. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  • The Early History of Ramakrishna Movement, by Swami Prabhananda, Sri Ramakrishna Math, Chennai, ISBN 81-7823-226-X
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