The Bhagavad-gita
is universally renowned as the jewel of India's spiritual
wisdom. Spoken by Lord Krishna, the Supreme Personality
of Godhead to His intimate disciple Arjuna, the Gita's
seven hundred concise verses provide a definitive guide
to the science of self realization. No other philosophical
or religious work reveals, in such a lucid and profound
way, the nature of consciousness, the self, the universe
and the Supreme.
His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada is
uniquely qualified to present this English translation
and commentary on Bhagavad-gita. He is the world's foremost
Vedic scholar and teacher, and he is also the current
representative of an unbroken chain of fully self-realized
spiritual masters begining with Lord Krishna Himself.
Thus, unlike other editions of the Gita, this one is presented
as it is--without the slightest taint of adulteration
or personal motivation. This edition is certain to stimulate
and enlighten with its ancient yet thoroughly timely message.
Foreword by
Professor Edward C. Dimock Jr.
The Bhagavad-gita is the best known and the most frequently
translated of Vedic religious texts. Why it should be so appealing
to the Western mind is an interesting question. It has drama,
for its setting is a scene of two great armies, banners flying,
drawn up opposite one another on the field, poised for battle.
It has ambiguity, and the fact that Arjuna and his charioteer
Krsna are carrying on their dialouge between the two armies
suggests the indecision of Arjuna about the basic question;
should he enter battle against and kill those who are friends
and kinsmen? It has mystery, as Krsna demonstrates to Arjuna
His cosmic form. It has a properly complicated view of the
ways of the religious life and treats of the paths of knowledge,
works, discipline and faith and their inter-relationships,
problems that have bothered adherents of other religions in
other times and places. The devotion spoken of is a deliberate
means of religious satisfaction, not a mere outpouring of
poetic emotion. Next to the Bhagavata-purana, a long work
from South India, the Gita is the text most frequently quoted
in the philosophical writings of the Gaudiya Vaisnava school,
the school represented by Swami Bhaktivedanta as the latest
in a long succession of teachers. It can be said that this
school of Vaisnavism was founded, or revived, by Sri Krsna-Caitanya
Mahaprabhu (1486-1533) in Bengal, and that it is currently
the strongest single religious force in the eastern part of
the Indian subcontinent. The Gaudiya Vaisnava school, for
whom Krsna is Himself the Supreme God, and not merely an incarnation
of another deity, sees bhakti as an immediate and powerful
religious force, consisting of love between man and God. Its
discipline consists of devoting all one's actions to the Deity,
and one listens to the stories of Krsna from the sacred texts,
one chants Krsna's name, washes, bathes and dresses the murti
of Krsna, feeds Him and takes the remains of food offered
to Him, thus absorbing His grace; one does these things and
many more, until one has been changed: the devotee has become
transformed into one close to Krsna, and sees the Lord face
to face.
Swami Bhaktivedanta comments upon the Gita from this point
of view, and that is legitimate. More than that, in this translation
the Western reader has the unique opportunity of seeing how
a Krsna devotee interprets his own texts. It is the Vedic
exegetical tradition, justly famous, in action. This book
is then a welcome addition from many points of view. It can
serve as a valuable textbook for the college student. It allows
us to listen to a skilled interpreter explicating a text which
has profound religious meaning. It gives us insights into
the original and highly convincing ideas of the Gaudiya Vaisnava
school. In providing the Sanskrit in both Devanagari and transliteration,
it offers the Sanskrit specialist the opportunity to re-interpret,
or debate particular Sanskrit meanings--although I think there
will be little disagreement about the quality of the Swami's
Sanskrit scholarship. And finally, for the nonspecialist,
there is readable English and a devotional attitude which
cannot help but move the sensitive reader. And there are the
paintings, which, incredibly as it may seem to those familiar
with contemporary Indian religious art, were done by American
devotees.
The scholar, the student of Gaudiya Vaisnavism, and the increasing
number of Western readers interested in classical Vedic thought
have been done a service by Swami Bhaktivedanta. By bringing
us a new and living interpretation of a text already known
to many, he has increased our understanding manyfold; and
arguments for understanding, in these days of estrangement,
need not be made.
Professor Edward C. Dimock, Jr.
Department of South Asian Languages and Civilization
University of Chicago