In
the previous posting, “Swami Vivekananda’s Early Death,” I stated that in 1896
Vivekananda confided to Abhedananda, a fellow disciple of the Ramakrishna Math
(monastery) and Mission, that he, Vivekananda, only expected to live another
six years, at most. It was in that same
year that Vivekananda, while in London to give a lecture, sent for Abhedananda
to join him.
Unbeknownst
to Abhedananda, Vivekananda had arranged for him to also give a lecture, announcing
it in advance to the Press. As it
happened, Abhedananda had never spoken in public before in his life, but his faith
in Vivekananda, the head of their Order, was such that he agreed to do it. Stepping in front of an audience which filled
the hall to its capacity, Abhedananda gave what all agreed was a brilliant
lecture.
Due
to this and the subsequent successful lectures that Abhedananda delivered in
London that year, Vivekananda asked him to take charge of the Vedanta Society
in New York. Abhedananda agreed to it
and again was highly effective. With the
exception of one short trip to India in 1906, Abhedananda stayed on in New York, teaching
and lecturing, until 1921. By this time,
Vivekananda had long since passed away.
Returning
to India in 1921, Abhedananda went on to found his own Vedanta Society two
years later, which gradually dissociated itself from the original Ramakrishna
Math and Mission. There were, however, no
unfriendly feelings between the members of the two institutions; they simply
were different institutions.
Abhedananda
died in 1939 and was the last of the original sixteen direct disciples of
Ramakrishna, the last to have ever actually met Ramakrishna.
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