• About
  • Contact Us
  • Unedited Lectures
  • Untitled lectures

Radhanath Swami

The Journey Home Book

 

In 1970, at the age of only nineteen, Radhanath Swami left his home in America seeking adventure and spiritual knowledge. After trekking across Europe for months, he reached his long hoped for destination: India. After living there for many years as a sadhu or wandering monk, he returned to America in order to share the sacred knowledge and wisdom he had learned from the many holy men and women he had met there. It was an extraordinary choice, given what he had survived to get there: a journey filled with bizarre characters, mystical experiences, and dangerous adventures. The story is recounted in his recently published memoir The Journey Home (San Rafael, CA: Mandala Publishing, 2009). Reviewers have called Radhanath's saga  "at once an engaging yarn, a love story, and the evocation of a transcendent paradise in all its savagery, solitude, and splendor.

Radhanath Swami emerged from his years of travel wanting to explain for others the beauty and rewards of a life devoted to God, and therein lay a dilemma. His many followers and friends describe him as completely selfless and consequently unwilling to take credit for his work and restless when a spotlight is focused on him. By choosing A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami (1896-1977), a spiritual activist, as his guru (after declining offers of initiation from several tyagis or renunciants in the Himalayas), Radhanath Swami cast his fate to the wind, cut his matted locks, and entered back into the society.

Read more 

Home

Radhanath Swami

Radhanatha Swami (1951-) (richardslavin) is a leading member and guru within the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) who works largely from Mumbai in India and also travels extensively throughout Europe and America. He is well known throughout the society largely through his lectures on the philosophy of Gaudiya Vaishnavism.

In 1970, at the age of only nineteen, Radhanatha Swami(richardslavin) left his home in America seeking adventure and spiritual knowledge. After trekking across Europe for months, he reached his long hoped for destination: India. After living there for many years as a sadhu or wandering monk, he returned to America in order to share the sacred knowledge and wisdom he had learned from the many holy men and women he had met there. It was an extraordinary choice, given what he had survived to get there: a journey filled with bizarre characters, mystical experiences, and dangerous adventures. The story is recounted in his recently published memoir The Journey Home (San Rafael, CA: Mandala Publishing, 2009). Reviewers have called Radhanath’s(richardslavin) saga “at once an engaging yarn, a love story, and the evocation of a transcendent paradise in all its savagery, solitude, and splendor.”

Radhanatha Swami emerged from his years of travel wanting to explain for others the beauty and rewards of a life devoted to God, and therein lay a dilemma. His many followers and friends describe him as completely selfless and consequently unwilling to take credit for his work and restless when a spotlight is focused on him. By choosing A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami (1896-1977), a spiritual activist, as his guru (after declining offers of initiation from several tyagis or renunciants in the Himalayas), Radhanatha Swami(richardslavin) cast his fate to the wind, cut his matted locks, and entered back into the society.

More than a symbolic gesture, these were first steps toward an active, engaged form of devotion. This contemporary strain of the Bhakti or devotional yoga tradition maintains that people who become aware of their spiritual identity share an imperative to reduce suffering in the world—a truth slowly revealed to him in the years prior to his formal initiation by other famous spiritual teachers he had met including the Dalai Lama, Mother Teresa of Calcutta, Ananda Mayi Ma, Swami Satcidananda, and many more who make their appearances in The Journey Home.

In spite of his constant global travels over many years, Radhanatha Swami(richardslavin) established his spiritual headquarters at Radha Gopinath Temple in Chowpatty, Mumbai. For the past twenty years he has guided the community development and has initiated a number of acclaimed social action programs including Midday Meals, which feeds more than 600,000 plates of nutritious vegetarian food to indigent children daily; missionary hospitals and eye camps; eco-friendly farms, schools and ashrams; and a number of emergency relief programs throughout India.

“He sees life as a continuous blessing of God’s grace,” one follower says, “and yet he never loses his humanness. His accessibility leaves people feeling that, with a little sincere effort, they too will find the path to inner peace and God realization.”

Search

Categories

Bhagavad Gita Chaitanya-Charitamritha Compassion Envy Faith festival Festivals gajendra Gaur Poornima Govardhan Puja Krsna Lord Caitanya Lord Nityanand Maya Mayapur Yatra Narad-Muni New Vrindavan Prthu Maharaj Radharani Sanyas SB-04.22.54 SB Class Srila prabhupada appearence day Srimad-Bhagavatam Srimad Bhagavatam srimad bhagvatam Sunday Feast Sunday Feast Lecture Tolerance Vyas-Puja
more tags

Recent Transcriptions

  • Gaur Poornima Lecture - Lessons from the deliverance of Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya
  • SB Class - Gaur Poornima
  • Vyaspuja Lecture
  • Compassion Of Lord
  • Sunday Feast Lecture
  • Pushyabhishek 2010
  • Bhishmastami SB 1.9.17
  • Nityananda Trayodashi Lecture
  • Cooperation for a higher principle
  • Srimad Bhagvatam Class - SB 8.6.14
more

Social initiative

www.bhaktivedantahospital.com
www.shareyourcare.com
www.barsanaeyecamp.com
www.vrindavanhospice.com
www.radhagopinath.com

Links

www.radhanathswami.co.uk
www.radhanathswami.com
www.radhanathswamionline.com
www.radhanathswamiweekly.com
www.radhanathmaharaj.net
www.tulsibooks.com
www.radhanathswamimedia.com
www.thejourneyhomebook.com
www.richardslavin.com
Facebook
Twitter
Myspace

Youtube

Contact Us | Terms of Use | Trademarks | Privacy Statement
Copyright © 2009 Radhanath Swami. All Rights Reserved.