Morning Walk — July 11, 1976, New York

Morning Walk

[in car]  comment

Prabhupāda: I spoke about this cosmic manifestation, where is Vaikuṇṭha, where is… This is a church?  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Second Church of Christ Scientist.  comment

Hari-śauri: Was it a Catholic church or…, where you went?  comment

Rāmeśvara: The Library Party said that everywhere they go in India, they find that you went there first with your first three volumes of Bhāgavatam. Especially in New Delhi, they said. There’s one institute which had fifty sets of your original first canto, so now they ordered fifty complete sets to complete the books they had. They said that all the major colleges had your original Bhāgavatams in India, first edition. So then they could understand that you were distributing books yourself.  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes.  comment

Rāmeśvara: They became very enlivened, inspired.  comment

Prabhupāda: In India the sannyāsīs beg, but I did not beg. I sold my Back to Godhead, books. I got income tax free…  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: You always gave literature.  comment

Prabhupāda: I think this church.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Oh, Universalist Church. You always gave literature in return for donations you received.  comment

Prabhupāda: That is going on still.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Yes.  comment

Prabhupāda: Knowledge…, what is this?  comment

Hari-śauri: It says “Truth, knowledge, vision.”  comment

Rāmeśvara: This is a museum.  comment

Hari-śauri: “State of New York Memorial to Theodore Roosevelt.”  comment

Prabhupāda: Who is this gentleman on the horse?  comment

Rāmeśvara: That’s one of the former presidents, Theodore Roosevelt.  comment

Prabhupāda: This road is very infamous.  comment

Hari-śauri: Very infamous?  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes. Means notorious. They say that black men, they capture white women.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Oh, yes. I’ve seen it. When I was very young I saw it. I was playing in the park, because I lived next to Central Park, and this…, these… We were playing with my friend and his sister, and this black man jumped and grabbed her and raped her right in Central Park. I was only about six years old.  comment

Prabhupāda: And what was the age of the girl?  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: About twelve. So I have personal experience. Especially in the upper part of this park, about Eighty, Ninetieth, Hundredth Street, there it’s very dangerous. Where we are on Fifty-ninth street, it’s not very dangerous. And on the east side down here it’s not that dangerous.  comment

Prabhupāda: Just see these black men living in such a highly rich country, and civilized men, but their nature is not changed. Angara satatau tena[?]. But they can be changed only in Kṛṣṇa consciousness. No other way. Kirāta-hūṇāndhra-pulinda-pulkaśā… [SB 2.4.18] comment

[break] [on walk]  comment

Bali-mardana: Fifty-ninth Street.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: This is a good location. This building is for sale.  comment

Prabhupāda: This is that Vedic oṁ or something like that?  comment

Hari-śauri: I think so. It says “Oṁ eternal.”  comment

Bali-mardana: Yes.  comment

Prabhupāda: The oṁ word is used in English?  comment

Bali-mardana: Oṁ is very popular in English language for a long time. When they think of mystical things, they think of oṁ. The English, originally because they were in India, they thought to imitate some Indian words.  comment

Prabhupāda: Many Indian words have been introduced in dictionary. And many English words is also introduced. That is natural. [break]  comment

Bali-mardana: …introduced Kṛṣṇa in the Western world.  comment

Prabhupāda: No, it was in the dictionary.  comment

Bali-mardana: But many people had never heard it before you brought it.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: And also the dictionary definition is not perfect.  comment

Bali-mardana: The first time I heard Kṛṣṇa was from Allen Ginsberg.  comment

Prabhupāda: He went to India.  comment

Bali-mardana: And he learned it from you.  comment

Hari-śauri: Generally in the dictionary they say Kṛṣṇa is one of the Hindu trilogy of gods. [break]  comment

Prabhupāda: …moha janmani.[?] This world is anitya; you cannot stay here. That is sure. And still we are attached. We make so many arrangements…  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Śrīla Prabhupāda, a man sees that his father has died—everyone is dying—why does he believe that he will not die?  comment

Prabhupāda: That is the wonderful thing. Kim āścaryam ataḥ param [Mahābhārata, Vana-parva 313.116], Yudhiṣṭhira Mahārāja said. He was asked, “What is the most wonderful thing in this world?” So he replied, “This is the most wonderful thing, that everyone sees that everyone is dying; he’s thinking ‘I shall not die.’ This is the most wonderful thing.”  comment

Bali-mardana: But the hedonists, they say that “Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow you will die.”  comment

Prabhupāda: No, no, he knows that he’ll die, but still he does not prepare, because he’s foolish. Pramattaḥ tasya līlānāṁ paśyann api na paśyati. Pramattaḥ, mad, crazy. He sees that everyone dies, “I am also dying,” but he does not know what is after death.  comment

Bali-mardana: He does not know what to do to prepare.  comment

Prabhupāda: That is ignorance. So this education, this civilization is so dangerous that everyone is kept in the darkness. And when he dies, this everything is finished, he’s going to accept. Whatever body the nature gives him, he has to accept.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Sometimes people criticize us that we are talking too much about death.  comment

Prabhupāda: Because we are not fool like you. Because “As sure as death.” But you are so fool you do not think of it. So we are not rascal like you. This is the difference. We take practical reality, but you are such a fool you don’t care for the reality. So we are not so fool like you are.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: But even though you are making so many arrangements to prepare yourself, still you have to die.  comment

Prabhupāda: That’s all right. I’ll die, but I am… Just like one has to go somewhere, he’ll know everyone has to go. Man…, suppose a building has to be dismantled. So the tenants or the residents, they make arrangement, “Where shall I go next?” And the foolish rascal, he doesn’t care. And when the time comes for dismantling the house, he becomes busy, oh, he does not know. That is the difference between you and me. I know this house is to be dismantled, so I’m making preparation where to go and stay. But you are such a fool, you are thinking that we’ll stay here.  comment

Bali-mardana: It’s like on the ship they have a drill in case the ship is going to sink, so you know where to go. But they make no preparation where to go after death, which is certain.  comment

Prabhupāda: That is dog’s life—the dog does not know.  comment

Bali-mardana: They are two-legged dogs.  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: But there’s a popular philosophy now that actually the dog is happy.  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes, ignorance is bliss. It is folly to be wise. Fool’s paradise. Anyone…, like a child is happy. There is danger, but child does not care for it. But therefore it is called foolish. That is the difference between child and the child’s father.  comment

Bali-mardana: They may say that he is happy, but he may kill himself at any moment. [break]  comment

Rāmeśvara: They say it is impossible for any man to know what will happen to him after death. It is not possible, so why think about it?  comment

Prabhupāda: But after all, there is death. So why you are afraid of death? Why you do not die peacefully? Why you protest against death? Huh? If I want to kill you, will you peacefully die?  comment

Rāmeśvara: No.  comment

Prabhupāda: Why you scream? Why don’t you want to die?  comment

Rāmeśvara: Give up my life, my body?  comment

Prabhupāda: Why you are so much attached to live? That is the question. Now “I’m dying, let me die.” Why you protest? That means your nature is that you shall live. But you are being interrupted by death. That is the…  comment

Rādhā-vallabha: The doctors say they have seen death, and it looks very much like a very peaceful sleep.  comment

Prabhupāda: Huh?  comment

Rādhā-vallabha: My mother told me this. She said… She was a nurse, and she’s seen many people die, and they all look very peaceful when they die.  comment

Prabhupāda: Nobody dies peacefully. [laughs] They shall cry.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: You have described it very vividly in the Bhāgavatam, how horrible it is.  comment

Prabhupāda: I have seen one of our relatives, she’s dying, and his second son, she’s calling, “My dear such and such, I give you in charge. I could not do,” like that. And died.  comment

Bali-mardana: She was attached.  comment

Prabhupāda: Everyone is attached. I have seen one of my nephews, young man. So his young wife and children, when he was… He began to strike his head like that, that “I am dying without any provision for my wife and…”  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: What is his future?  comment

Prabhupāda: Future means he’ll have to come back again, either in the same family or in the dog’s family, dog’s life. Bhūtvā bhūtvā pralīyate [Bg. 8.19]. In this way, he’ll take birth and die. Yes.  comment

Rādhā-vallabha: You were saying they take rest for seven months and they wake up a dog.  comment

Prabhupāda: Maybe dog or maybe somebody else; that doesn’t matter.  comment

Svarūpa Dāmodara: In the last, about three years ago or so, there is a new branch of study, it is called biomedical ethics, that deals with the symptom of death: How can one define when a person dies? What are the symptoms? And how can we judge that this man is dead? It is a great controversy in medical science.  comment

Bali-mardana: They went to the Supreme Court to question when does death occur.  comment

Prabhupāda: So what Supreme Court will decide? [laughter] What you nonsense judge know? He’s also as good a rascal as the person who put the question.  comment

Bali-mardana: Actually, they admitted that they could not decide.  comment

Rāmeśvara: The argument is that by medicine or by injecting some…, inserting some apparatus, some machine, they can keep the heart beating.  comment

Prabhupāda: You rascal, he’s another rascal. And one who believes in it, he’s also a rascal.  comment

Hari-śauri: I was reading the other day that at one university they started a course where they take the students through a course of death. They study death, and then they try to get them to…  comment

Prabhupāda: If it was possible to keep them by medicine, then no rich man would have died. They have got sufficient means to pay for medicine, and he would have kept his relatives, son alive. Bālasya neha śaraṇaṁ pitarau nṛsiṁha nārtasya cāgadam udanvati majjato nauḥ [SB 7.9.19]. Prahlāda Mahārāja has said. It is not possible.  comment

Rāmeśvara: They are very hopeful that modern medicine can keep them…  comment

Prabhupāda: They are hopeful of everything. That is their foolishness. Hope against hope, that’s all. The hope will never be fulfilled, still… Therefore they are called pramatta. Pramatta means mad, crazy. Their hopefulness means that is a proof that crazy, mad.  comment

Bali-mardana: Some of the rich men, they buy a cabinet that their body is put into, and they hope that they will wake up in a thousand years…  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes, hope there must be, otherwise how they are foolish? This is called… What is called? Bakāṇḍo nyāya. Bakāṇḍo nyāya. Baka, the duck, and aṇḍa, the testicle. So the bull, he has a testicle hanging, and the baka is thinking it is a fish. [laughter] So he’s going, he’s… [gesticulates] [laughter] This is called bakāṇḍo nyāya.  comment

Svarūpa Dāmodara: I have seen it.  comment

Prabhupāda: Everyone knows, this is a common thing in India. You’ll see, the baka is going on. He’s hoping, “This fish will drop and…” [laughter] Therefore they are baka. Bokā means rascal, bokā means rascal. In India we say any fool, bokā or baka.  comment

Bali-mardana: Baka is a duck?  comment

Prabhupāda: Means that the duck is a fool. Bakāṇḍo nyāya. Very appropriate, this bakāṇḍo nyāya. Logic of duck and testicle.  comment

Rāmeśvara: You say they are ghostly haunted.  comment

Prabhupāda: Hmm?  comment

Rāmeśvara: Ghostly haunted.  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes, everyone, the materialistic man means ghostly haunted. He’s talking so many nonsense. The whole grade, philosophy, science and everything, all ghostly talking, that’s all. There is no reality. Just like the new science you said, what is that?  comment

Svarūpa Dāmodara: Huh?  comment

Prabhupāda: That new medical science?  comment

Svarūpa Dāmodara: Biomedical ethics.  comment

Prabhupāda: A big name.  comment

Svarūpa Dāmodara: Yes, it’s a nice name. They started with theology also now, in the speculative branch of philosophy.  comment

Prabhupāda: So in spite of these big, big names and research and everything, man will die. This is bakāṇḍo nyāya. He’s thinking it will drop. It will never be possible, but they’re thinking that by these big, big names we shall find out the way that man will not die. This is bakāṇḍo nyāya. Hope against hope. So by that method they want to live? No.  comment

Bali-mardana: No. They want to decide when to turn off the machine that is keeping the heart beating, because sometimes the brain stops functioning. The person…, the body is still alive, but there’s no consciousness.  comment

Prabhupāda: The coma.  comment

Puṣṭa Kṛṣṇa: Also they cut out the hearts when they do these heart transplants. They’ve been accused of taking out the heart of a living person.  comment

Prabhupāda: Huh?  comment

Puṣṭa Kṛṣṇa: The doctors have been accused of taking out the hearts of living persons.  comment

Prabhupāda: Oh. So how to use it? What they’ll use?  comment

Rāmeśvara: Sometimes if a man is in critical condition he will donate his bodily organs, so they will kill him just to take out his heart so that they can use it for transplanting.  comment

Bali-mardana: When his brain stops, even though the heart is beating, they take it out.  comment

Prabhupāda: So?  comment

[pause]  comment

Prabhupāda: That is the question put by Sanātana Gosvāmī. Ke āmi, kene āmāya jāre tāpa-traya [Cc. Madhya 20.102]. “I want to live, but what is that force that does not allow me to live?” This is the question. This is the question. They are trying to find out so many laws, so many…, what is the purpose? They want to live, but there is a force that will not allow you to live. That is the human question. When this question arises, then he is human being; otherwise he’s a dog. Dog never inquires.  comment

Puṣṭa Kṛṣṇa: He has no control over it.  comment

Prabhupāda: Huh?  comment

Puṣṭa Kṛṣṇa: He has no control over it.  comment

Prabhupāda: Neither he can understand. He has no intelligence.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Today is the disappearance day of Sanātana Gosvāmī.  comment

Prabhupāda: Oh.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: It is also guru-pūrṇimā.  comment

Prabhupāda: Today?  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Yes. Is there some special celebration or significance?  comment

Prabhupāda: Guru-pūjā, that you are doing daily. [reads sign] “Model sailboat.”  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Yes, the children come here, not only children but adults, and they have some model, toy models which they sail around.  comment

Prabhupāda: So it is not very deep.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: No. It’s a very colorful display. Hundreds of people come, especially on Sundays, sailing their boats.  comment

Svarūpa Dāmodara: Śrīla Prabhupāda? In this biomedical science, this ethics, there’s a problem arising. The person, the family of the person who is suffering, says that “Please don’t apply these machines. Let the person die.” But the medical doctors say, “No, we’ll keep him alive as long as we can go on.” So this is a problem. So who’s right? Is the family right, or…  comment

Prabhupāda: Family right. Family is intelligent, that “You are rascal, why you are trying? Let him die peacefully.”  comment

Bali-mardana: They say, “Let him die in dignity. Why keep him in the machine?” The family says, “Let him die in dignity.”  comment

Rāmeśvara: They keep him in coma.  comment

Prabhupāda: After all, you cannot protect. Why you give trouble at the time of death? You cannot protect; your foolish attempt will not help him. This is the same philosophy, that the animal is suffering, to kill him. Mercy of killing, what is called?  comment

Rāmeśvara: Euthanasia. Mercy killing.  comment

Prabhupāda: So this is nonsense. Mercy killing. Killing mercy. [laughs] Just see. The action is killing, and that is his mercy. This is their mercy. All contradictory. Killing by mercy? Mercy is killing?  comment

Hari-śauri: There’s an example that’s just going up to the courts now. There’s one family, their daughter was being supported by one machine, so that one day they went in early and pulled out the plugs. So now they are being taken to court. They stopped the machine because she’d been in a coma for so long, so they just pulled out the plugs and everything, the machine. So that’s what they call mercy killing. They don’t like the doctors just to keep them there uselessly.  comment

Rāmeśvara: But then they want to kill the old people. This mercy killing, they think that “An old man is suffering, so let us kill him.”  comment

Puṣṭa Kṛṣṇa: They think if someone dies in their sleep, they are very lucky.  comment

Prabhupāda: It is dangerous to die here.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Not as dangerous as in Africa. I saw one movie, and there’s one tribe, that when a man becomes very old…  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes, I’ve heard of that.  comment

Hari-śauri: They throw him on the roof, and then eat him.  comment

Prabhupāda: That is a feast.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Love feast.  comment

Prabhupāda: Grandfather feast. Now great-grandfather feast.  comment

Cyavana: We’re preaching to them, Śrīla Prabhupāda. Trying to change them.  comment

Rāmeśvara: Also the Eskimos, when a man gets old, if he is an Eskimo, then he has to go out into the ice lands and wait for some animal to kill him. He cannot stay at home and be supported by the family.  comment

Bali-mardana: He eats too much, they say.  comment

Rāmeśvara: Too much burden.  comment

Bali-mardana: Because he’s eating, and he is not able to go and hunt, they send them out to die.  comment

Prabhupāda: The Communists also, they’ll do. All old men should be killed. That time is coming. Don’t become old. [laughter]  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: You are teaching us to remain young forever, Prabhupāda.  comment

Svarūpa Dāmodara: One must become Kṛṣṇa conscious to become young.  comment

Prabhupāda: So many difficulties will come unless there is Kṛṣṇa consciousness. Therefore Kṛṣṇa says, sarva-dharmān parityajya mām ekam [Bg. 18.66], if you want to be happy.  comment

Svarūpa Dāmodara: That’s true. If people are Kṛṣṇa conscious, then the origin[?] of these problems like death and all these…  comment

Bali-mardana: You are instructing us to finish up our business in this life.  comment

Prabhupāda:  comment

nārāyaṇa-parāḥ sarve
na kutaścana bibhyati
svargāpavarga-narakeṣv
api tulyārtha-darśinaḥ
[SB 6.17.28]

Just like Prahlāda Mahārāja was put in so many dangerous conditions. He was not afraid. “Hare Kṛṣṇa,” he would chant.  comment

Cyavana: All over the entire world we find the Indian community, practically speaking. Is this part of Lord Caitanya’s plan to help spread this Vedic culture?  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes. That is Caitanya Mahāprabhu’s order, that you speak the Vedic culture. That is India’s mission. But these rascals, they are speaking technology.  comment

Devotee: Try to make money.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: They say that it is due to this culture that India has been kept down. Because the British taught them that, and now they themselves think like that.  comment

Prabhupāda: Still, any Indian who comes to speak about some culture like this, you flock together. Why? Why you go to this Maharishi and this Bal Yogi and this one? Why?  comment

Puṣṭa Kṛṣṇa: They’re from India.  comment

Prabhupāda: Because you expect something from India. They are cheating, that is different thing, but you go there to get something from India. That’s a fact.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: That means you have delivered the real goods, Śrīla Prabhupāda.  comment

Prabhupāda: That’s a fact. They’re expecting. I read some article from India: they’re expecting some good message.  comment

Bali-mardana: They are like glowworms, and you are like the sun.  comment

Prabhupāda: No, they know that “These people, they are wanting something, so let us go and cheat.” This is going on.  comment

Bali-mardana: They’re simply businessmen.  comment

Prabhupāda: So far I am concerned, I have not come here to cheat you nor to gain. I’ve come to execute the order of my Guru Mahārāja.  comment

Bali-mardana: Jaya. All glories to Śrīla Prabhupāda.  comment

Prabhupāda: I have no business to cheat you, neither to get something from you.  comment

Devotee: Prabhupāda, is it possible that a living entity, a jīva soul, can have pastimes in relation to God?  comment

Prabhupāda: What is that?  comment

Devotee: If it’s not nonsense…  comment

Bali-mardana: He’s a crazy boy. [break]  comment

Prabhupāda: Caitanya Mahāprabhu’s mission, para-upakāra. One who is to come from India, he should come for para-upakāra, for doing welfare to others, not to cheat them. But these people, they come. In the name of para-upakāra, they cheat. Which way we have to go?  comment

Devotees: This way.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: This is easier.  comment

Bali-mardana: Prabhupāda, you are the only Indian who has taken up this mission, out of six hundred and eighty million. [dog barking loudly]  comment

Woman: Don’t touch that dog. He’s wearing a muzzle. Just leave him alone, he won’t trouble you. [laughter]  comment

Prabhupāda: What she said?  comment

Hari-śauri: She says don’t touch the dog, it’s wearing a muzzle.  comment

Rādhā-vallabha: She should wear a muzzle. [break]  comment

Prabhupāda: …come with dog. Dog is not allowed.  comment

Rādhā-vallabha: That’s her family.  comment

Prabhupāda: Huh?  comment

Rādhā-vallabha: That’s her family.  comment

Cyavana: Sometimes they say, “I treat my dog just like he were my own child.”  comment

Prabhupāda: “Dog’s mother.” Why don’t you call in one word, “I am dog’s mother.” [laughter]  comment

Hari-śauri: They keep all kinds of things as pets. My mother knew a woman who kept a pet pig. She used to carry it around like a dog, in her arms, with a little bow.  comment

Prabhupāda: When the natural tendency is to get child, but child is killed, and a pig is taken. This is their civilization. Child is killed and pig is taken, dog is taken. This is their civilization.  comment

Bali-mardana: They are preparing for their next birth as a pig.  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes. Naturally you take child, take it: “No, that kill.” And take artificially a pig or dog or cat. Take it.  comment

Tripurāri: They say animal has no soul, therefore they can kill the cow and eat the meat. But when we say, “What if I cut your dog’s head off,” they become very upset.  comment

Prabhupāda: Ācchā? Why upset? It has no soul. Kill it.  comment

Tripurāri: They cannot explain it.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: There was one story that this family came, they were touring the world, and they came to Hong Kong, and they were carrying their pet dog with them also. So they went to one restaurant and they left their dog tied up on a leash outside the restaurant, because that is the custom in America. So they told the man at the door, the doorman, they pointed to the dog, just to take care of the dog. So anyway, then they went in and they had their dinner and then they came out, and the dog was gone. They said, [laughter] “Where’s my dog?” And the man said, “Well, you pointed to him, we have prepared him for you.”  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes, they do that. He thought that he has pointed out this dog.  comment

Hari-śauri: They brought their dinners with them.  comment

Tripurāri: Man cannot understand, but a little child can understand very easily. Just like one of our book distributors, Praghoṣa, when he was a young child they had a pet duck, the family, and one day the father killed the duck and put him on the table.  comment

Prabhupāda: What is that?  comment

Tripurāri: They roasted the duck and put him on the table, but none of the children would eat. They became sick and they left. They would not eat. The father could not understand.  comment

Hari-śauri: My father did that with a pet rabbit that I had as well. Came home from school one day and it was gone.  comment

Prabhupāda: They are eating their own child even.  comment

Rāmeśvara: Prabhupāda, we come from the lowest of the low.  comment

[in car]  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: What about the possibility of opening more than one temple in this city? Just like if there’s a good building on the East Side, if we can manage, what about the possibility of that?  comment

Prabhupāda: If you can manage, very good. In a city like New York you can have ten, twelve centers.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Yes. I mean the Christians have so many churches in every part of the city.  comment

Prabhupāda: Oh, yes. Similarly, we can have temples.  comment

Rāmeśvara: You said that once in Los Angeles to me.  comment

Prabhupāda: That Juhu temple, Akash Ganga, you know? Everyone asked me not to go there, “Nobody will go there.” I said, “It is Bombay city. Wherever we shall go, people will come.”  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: The question is whether, if we open another temple, it will increase the total number of people coming, or whether simply the same people will come to two different locations.  comment

Prabhupāda: Yes, if you have got demand, then you can open.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: First let us fill up this place.  comment

Rāmeśvara: In other words, instead of filling up that building and then just buying a new one, you just buy a second temple. And keep it that way.  comment

Prabhupāda: That’s a good building.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: We shouldn’t give it up. Very good facility. Especially once we make all improvements on it, why we should give it up? Better to simply open another one.  comment

Prabhupāda: And that is advertised means nobody’s purchasing at this quarter, it is not very safe.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: This quarter? No, this is the most prestigious. Fifth Avenue between Seventy-ninth Street and Thirty-fourth Street is the prime location. That’s about as far north as you would want to go. Any further north uptown will not be nice, but this area here is very select. The best area is from Fifty-ninth Street to Thirty-fourth Street on Fifth Avenue, where all the shops are, the library. That area is very high class. This is Fifty-seventh Street, Fifty-fifth Street.  comment

Rāmeśvara: Prabhupāda, if the spiritual master has a mission, is it proper for the disciple to think that he can take more than one…, he can take many births to help the mission of the spiritual master?  comment

Prabhupāda: When the spiritual master goes there, somewhere, his nearest assistants, they automatically go there to assist him. When Kṛṣṇa comes, the demigods also come to help Him. That is there in the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam. All these Yadus, Yadu family, they came from heaven. So before Kṛṣṇa’s disappearance, by some trick they were all killed and they returned to their original place. It is nicely described in the Caitanya-caritāmṛta. Just see, small house, this yellow. Still, in New York City.  comment

Tamāla Kṛṣṇa: Yes, small little house. [end]  comment

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