RENUNCIATION AND AUSTERITY
In his book My Guru and His Disciple, Christopher
Isherwood describes a situation where spiritual lecturer Gerald Heard, an early
follower of Swami Prabhavananda, decided to resign his association with the
Swami's Vedanta Society of Southern California. His reason for doing so, as
Heard stated in a letter to Prabhavananda, was that the Swami's way of life
there in California violated the monastic standards of austerity. It was too social, too
comfortable, too relaxed.
This was to say, the Swami had Hindu notions of
hospitality and often invited guests to lunch--some of them not even devotees,
but just their relatives or friends. Appetizing meals were served--that is, if
one liked curry--and they were not necessarily vegetarian. The Swami had
a car at his disposal. He chain-smoked, which set a bad example for those
who were struggling with their own addictions. The women, nuns, waited on him
hand and foot and he accepted their service as a matter of course. His
relations with them--though doubtless absolutely innocent--could easily cause
misunderstandings and suspicions among outsiders. For, after all, he WAS the
only male in a household of females.
Even if Heard's letter was tactfully worded, it hurt
Prabhavananda's feelings deeply, and he later answered Heard indirectly in an
article entitled "Renunciation and Austerity," which he wrote for the
Vedanta Society magazine. It read in part, "You would identify the
life of renunciation with a life of poverty and discomfort and you would say
that if a spiritual teacher lives in comfort and in a plentiful household he is
inevitably not living the consecrated life. Your view is too simple.
A man of true renunciation concerns himself neither with poverty nor with
riches. If the poor man hugs his few trivial possessions, he is as much
attached and as much a worldly man as the rich man. Only, the poor man is
worse off--because of his envy. Mere outward austerity is a degenerate
form of ritualism. A spiritual soul never makes any demonstration of his
renunciation."
According to Isherwood, Aldous Huxley, another of
Prabhavananda's early followers, was distressed over this rift. It was a
disaster, Huxley said, when two sincere practitioners of the spiritual life
fell out with each other--especially since there were so few of them.
"Judge not that ye be not judged," he murmured to himself
several times--which suggested that he thought Heard was wrong. Heard had
his own style which others might well disagree with too, he seemed to be
saying; Heard could be seen as too much of a "life-hater," as
Isherwood put it, and a task master.
This, however, was not the end of the Prabhavananda
and Heard relationship. The spiritual college that the latter went on to
build in the Trabuco Canyon south of Los Angeles was not as successful as Heard
had hoped. As a result, he eventually turned it over to the Swami and the
Vedanta Society with whom it had a brighter future, ironically as a monastery.
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