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Come - Hear My Song!Swami Vibhooti SaraswatiIf you sing kirtan daily, you can see God face to face.
These four he wove into song and kirtan; music was just one of his many ways of imparting his wisdom and transmitting his love. Swami Sivananda propagated purely non-sectarian universal ideas of the most tolerant and all-embracing character. He could as readily sing the names of Christ, Mother Mary, Allah and Buddha as he sang the names of Sita and Rama, Radhe and Krishna. His fundamental teaching, which he also made into a song, was: 'Serve, Love, Give, Purify, Meditate, Realise. Sivananda kirtanSwami Sivananda's style of kirtan is dynamic, power-packed and invigorating - totally energising! The mantras surge forth from his heart in a relentless flood, sweeping all before them with their positive waves, charging and purifying the atmosphere. His resounding Om's, Rama's, Narayana's and Haro-Hara's pound into the brain, purifying the consciousness, driving out all negativity, stimulating the mind and infusing the listener with energetic joy. His kirtans have a bounce, enthusiasm, humour and jollity that is unique to him alone. They are light, free and delightful. His frank, forthright and childlike nature comes bursting through, and to hear the song is to love the singer, his happiness is so infectious! Those kirtans set to dadara tat, a swinging rhythm, are especially irresistible - the body just has to sway and dance to the beat, the analytical mind being totally overcome by the waves of devotion. Teaching through kirtanSwami Sivananda set all his basic teachings to music, with catchy tunes easily grasped in essence by both child and adult alike. Whether they teach sense control and moderation, yoga and meditation, or the highest Adwaita Vedanta philosophy, his eternal lessons are flavoured with humour and presented with a childlike simplicity which bypasses the intellect, making them easily digestible by the subconscious mind. Many of Swami Sivananda's tapes are currently available from the Divine Life Society, Rishikesh, where he lived beside his beloved 'Mother' Ganga, with the backdrop of the Himalayas, which he considered as his 'Father'. They include inspiring Satsangs, talks on Brahma vidya, yoga and spiritual life, as well as kirtans and songs. They are so very much alive that today's listener can fully experience the magnanimity of his character, the power of his presence and appreciate his high-minded generosity of spirit. Along with his deep wisdom, there is the perfect openness and spontaneity of a child. Using his creative genius, Swami Sivananda mixed Hindi, English and Sanskrit with perfect ease in his tireless effort to reach and teach the greatest spectrum of people from every caste, creed and country. All his spiritual and moral admonitions are sweetened with the soft showers of the names of Krishna, Shiva and Rama to make them palatable. Thus we find in the 'Song of a Little':
And in the 'Song of Sadhana Instructions':
Instructing young women in the 'Song of God is Truth', he sings to them:
If you listen to these songs with your heart and not your head, you will be uplifted, and infused with the joyful spirit of Swami Sivananda. "Just hear this!"Imagine this enormous figure, Swami Sivananda, sitting in his tiny kutir surrounded by devotees, full of smiles, his laughing eyes radiating love all around. Each and every guest and devotee is made comfortable and inquired after. He talks constantly, addressing everyone on his or her own level, and giving instructions to the various swamis in between to fetch this or that. Not a moment is wasted. Sanskrit chanting can be heard in the background, the sound of the veena or mridanga, the scampering of monkeys outside, the honk of a passing rickshaw. There is the distribution of coffee and dosa, chocolate for the children, much laughter and joking, the giving of books and anything else that he could possibly give (for Swami Sivananda would have given away the entire ashram). In this warm-hearted, relaxed and convivial atmosphere, when everyone is receptive and at ease, Swami Sivananda, who has been preparing for the right moment to plant the seed of yoga and divine life in those present, announces, "Now, just hear this." Upon which he bursts into the 'Song to Eradicate Egoism': Self-sacrifice, self-surrender, self-denial, these are the instruments to slay egoism. 'I'-lessness, 'mine'-lessness, fearlessness, selflessness, desirelessness, these are the instruments to slay egoism, and the lesson is happily repeated by the devotees as they join in the refrain of the kirtan. In this way his message penetrates deeply into the hearts of the listeners and is remembered. Thus the transmission of energy, idea and ideal takes place in the living presence of a great saint who had such a deep understanding of the psychology, suffering and needs of humanity. Beauty, innocence and humourSwami Sivananda's kirtans have a natural beauty and appealing innocence that melt the heart. For example, the 'Song of Soham Shivoham':
Or the 'Song of Immortality': The grass is green, the rose is red and the sky is blue, but the atman is colourless, formless and guna-less too. O, Children of Light, will you drink not the nectar of immortality? Rama Rama Rama Rama, jaya Sita-Rama, jaya jaya Sita-Rama. Giving light-hearted instructions to small children to utilise every part of their body for worshipping God and doing all work as an offering unto him, he quickly composes a pleasing rhyme they will like and understand:
He also taught children the story of the Ramayana by singing it to them in simple verse. It was his gentle humour and direct simplicity that enabled him to touch the hearts of others. Who will not smile at the words of the 'Song of Brahmamayam':
Yoga and meditation kirtanSwami Sivananda also gave his instructions on yoga and meditation through song. After singing salutations to Krishna and Shiva, followed by a short kirtan, he would then change the subject to:
Teaching yoga to children, he would first have an asana demonstrated and then sing them the benefits. He would set everyone laughing with the song: You have come to Rishikesh to practise asana. Do not think of chapati, chutney and paratha. Be up and doing japa, kirtan, meditation. Of course, he did not leave out kundalini and the chakras, but included them also in his songs:
In the same way he explained the process of meditation:
He had the gift of taking any subject and turning it into a song of instruction. Songs of VedantaAs well as being a great yogi, Swami Sivananda also laid much emphasis on the teaching of Adwaita Vedanta, which he propagated world-wide. In the 'Song of a Vedantin' he sings:
He brought the seemingly inaccessible philosophy of Vedanta into the homes of ordinary people in a way they could understand, inspiring them to 'live' this great philosophy, rather than just read about it:
In this way he was able to give colour and flavour to an otherwise dry subject and bring the teachings of the rishis and yogis out into the open once more. Song of a sannyasinSwami Sivananda was a real yogi, a real Brahmajnani, a real bhakta and a real sannyasin, who performed severe tapasya (austerities) for twelve years, observing silence and fasting, performing japa while standing up to his hips in the icy-cold Ganga and spending more than twelve hours daily in meditation. After these twelve years of unbroken sadhana, along with the seva of serving the sick, he attained the bliss of nirvikalpa samadhi before he started his mission of spreading the 'Divine Life' world-wide. So let us end with his 'Song of a Sannyasin' in which he describes, with the same characteristic touch of humour, his own realised state:
And glory to Swami Sivananda! [top]
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