SRI RAMAKRISHNA
Sri Ramakrishna is one of the greatest yogis and mystics of all time. He was adept at deifying the world - at recognizing the divine dwelling in everyone and everything. His life was centered around continuous contemplation and experience of divine mystery, consistently giving up the illusion of materiality for the truth of the unknown. He was known for his sincere devotion and love for the Goddess Kali.
Ramakrishna was born in West Bengal, India on February 18, 1836. His father, Khudiram Chatterjee, and mother, Chandramani Devi, were loving individuals of great ethics and integrity. As a young boy, Ramakrishna reveled in the beauty of nature and delighted in myths about gods and goddesses. He created art around stories of epic heroes and heroines, including drawings, clay sculptures, dramatic performances, and devotional music. Throughout his youth, he possessed a mystical attitude, deeply revering Life itself. He also demonstrated great courage and rebellious spirit of independence.
After the death of Ramakrishna’s father in 1843, his older brother Ramkumar, established a Sanskrit school in Kolkata and later served as a priest in the Dakshineswar Kali Temple in West Bengal. Ramakrishna came to the temple around 1855 to assist Ramkumar in the daily rituals. In 1956, Ramkumar died, leaving Ramakrishna to take over the position of head priest.
Ramakrishna became obsessed in the worship of Kali and began desperately begging Kali to reveal herself to him. He spent his days and nights in ongoing prayer, song, and meditation devoted to Kali - often naked and lacking food and sleep - pleading with Kali to show him a vision of truth. His longing for her vision was extreme and in a moment of unbearable pain at the thought of never having her vision, he contemplated ending his life with a temple sword. As he grabbed the sword, he had a vision: “What I saw, was a boundless infinite conscious sea of light! How far and in whatever direction I looked, I found a continuous succession of effulgent waves coming forward, raging and storming from all sides with a great speed. Very soon they fell on me and made me sink to the unknown bottom. I panted, struggled and fell unconscious. I did not know what happened then in the external world - how that day and the next slipped away. But in my heart of hearts, there was a flowing current of intense bliss, never experienced before, and I had immediate knowledge of the light that was the Mother.” He described the Mother Kali as the absolute - pure existence, knowledge, and bliss - satchitananda - infinite, all-pervading, and consciousness itself.
Out of concern for the destabilizing effects of Ramakrishna’s spiritual practices and visions, Ramakrishna’s mother and brother, Rameswar, began arranging marriage for Ramakrishna. They hoped family duties would steady Ramakrishna mentally and emotionally. Ramakrishna suggested they could find his bride in Sarada Devi, who was five years old, and lived in a neighboring town. In 1859, Ramakrishna was married to Sarada Devi. She was about six years old and he was twenty-three years old. The couple lived separately until Sarada was eighteen years old when she joined Ramakrishna in Dakshineswar. Ramakrishna had already embraced monastic life, and as a result, their marriage was never consummated. Ramakrishna viewed Sarada as the embodiment and incarnation of the Divine Mother and addressed her as Sri Ma. Sarada was an ardent follower of her husband’s meditation and spiritual practices, and over time took up the role of mother to Ramakrishna’s followers with ease.
For Ramakrishna, the purpose of life was God-realization, yet he was never dogmatic about a specific path, emphasizing that God can be realized through several spiritual paths and disciplines so long as there is earnestness. Ramakrishna never taught within a system of philosophical concepts or religious ideology. Rather, he experienced life directly and shared the fullness of his experience. He found that Hinduism, Islam, and Christianity all moved toward realization of the divine using different paths. To him, “God is formless, and God is possessed of form too. And He is also that which transcends both form and formlessness. He alone knows what all He is. . . . God the Absolute and God the Personal are one and the same. Belief in one implies belief in the other.”
One of Ramakrishna’s greatest teaching legacies may be his message about the harmony of religions. For him, all religions are the revelation of God in diverse aspects to satisfy the many aspects of human minds. Each wisdom tradition giving us part of the truth from different standpoints - not contradictory but complementary. Ramakrishna faithfully practiced the spiritual disciplines of different religions and came to realize that they all lead to the same result – communion with God. Harmony of religions is not uniformity, but rather unity in diversity.
In 1885, Ramakrishna was diagnosed with throat cancer. He suffered much physical pain and Sarada tended to Ramakrishna’s needs and took care of his followers who surrounded Ramakrishna during his illness. Ramakrishna endured much physical pain, but late on the night of August 15, 1886, Ramakrishna apparently fell into a deep samadhi. He regained regular consciousness around midnight speaking the name of Kali three times and gently laying down afterward. He is described as entering into mahasamadhi at that point and departing his body the morning of August 16, 1886.
Ramakrishna’s most prominent disciple, Swami Vivekananda, carried on his teachings through the Ramakrishna Mission, a philanthropic service organization that, in Vivekananda’s words, “preach[es] unto mankind their divinity and how to make it manifest in every moment of life.”