|
Yogamaharishi
Dr Swami Gitananda Giri Guru Maharaj was born on July 24, 1907, in
Maharajganj, northern India, to an Irish mother and a Sindhi father. His
father, Sukraj Bhavanani, was a High court Advocate in the Patna High
Court and an extensive landowner. His mother Leelavathi was converted to
Hinduism through the Arya Samaj rites. The Yogamaharishi received his
early schooling at home from his mother. Tragically, his mother died when
he was but eight years of age. When he was ten years, his Guru, the great
Siddha and Master, Yogamaharishi Swami Kanakananda Brighu, (Ram Gopal
Majumdhar) entered his life. For six years, he studied in the Guru Kula of
his Master, imbibing not only the traditional education, but also the
great mystic sciences of Yoga, Tantra and Yantra. Swamiji often remarked
that everything he taught and preached and knew about Yoga, he learned
only from his Master during that intensive training. When he was sixteen
years of age, his Guru sent him to England to study medicine. After
receiving his medical degree, he entered the British Royal Navy to serve
as a doctor on board several ships during World War II. He was injured
during the war, and used the time recuperating to further his medical
education. He migrated to Canada and set up his practice there, also
establishing Yoga schools and centres wherever he lived. Pujya Swamiji was
one of the pioneers to introduce Yoga to the Western mind in the early
1950s. He was also instrumental in hosting many visiting Yoga Gurus and
Swamijis at his centre in Vancouver. In addition to his busy medical
practice, he traveled widely lecturing and teaching. He worked several
years for the US Atomic Energy Commission in the United States and also
took up assignments for World Health Organisation in South America. He
returned to settle permanently in India in 1967 and established his Ananda
Ashram in Pondicherry. He set up the Ananda Ashram in Lawspet, Pondicherry
in 1972. In 1975 Srila Shri Shankaragiri Swamigal appointed Dr Swami
Gitananda Giri as Madathiapathy of Sri Kambali Swamy Madam, which was then
a dilapidated Samadhi site of around five acres in Thattanchavady near the
Lawspet Ashram. Yogamaharishi Dr Swami Gitananda Giri undertook the
renovation of the ancient Samadhi site with great enthusiasm and built
what was acclaimed as the Shanti Niketan of South India and An ideal Guru
Kula on the Madam lands. Thus Swamiji who was the representative of the
North Indian Brighu lineage also became a representative of the Saiva
Siddantha Yoga Tradition of South India. The lineage of Kambaliswamy is
said to go back to the Rishi Agasthya himself. Gurus of the Kambaliswamy
Madam tradition include Srila Sri Kambaliswamigal, Srila Sri Ambalavana
Swamigal, Srila Sri Manikka Swamigal, Srila Sri Shanmuga Swamigal, Srila
Sri Velu Swamigal, Srila Sri Subramaniya Swamigal and Srila Sri
Shankaragiri Swamigal. Pujya Swamiji became an active fighter for Hindu
rights and leader of the Hindu community in addition to his many other
numerous duties. He served as vice president of the All India Association
of Maths and Ashrams under the president ship of Sri Jayendra Saraswathi
Swamigal the present Shankaracharya of the Kanchi Kamakoti Petam. From
1968 until his Samadhi on December 29, 1993, Swamiji offered every year a
six month Intensive Residential International Yoga Teachers Training
Course in his Pondicherry Ashram from October 2nd through March 31st. This
annual course has been continued uninterrupted to this date. In this
intensive 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. per daily schedule, students are instructed in
classical Rishiculture Ashtanga (Gitananda) Yoga. Hundreds of Asanas,
Kriyas, Mudras, Pranayamas, Raja Yoga practices, Kundalini techniques and
higher meditative activities as well as yoga theory are studied in great
depth. The Yogamaharishi used to tell his students, In six months I will
give you enough material to occupy your Yoga Sadhana for not only one, but
several lifetimes. In addition to this busy teaching schedule, in which
every single class was taught by the Yogamaharishi himself, he also edited
from 1970, an international English monthly Yoga journal YOGA LIFE. He
wrote twenty-five books on the subjects of Yoga and made ten world tours
and more than twenty All India tours. He was the Chief Guest for
innumerable Yoga, Medical and Scientific Conferences, Seminars and
meetings held all over India and was in great demand as a speaker because
of his immense and charismatic vitality. Known as the Lion of Pondicherry
he was a great example of an ancient Yoga Rishi (Seer). Majestic in
bearing and manner, with luxurious flowing beard and hair, and a
magnificent, booming, powerful voice, Swamijis dynamic personality
captured the hearts of people wherever he went.
Pujya Swamiji was Patron and President of hundreds of Yoga and Scientific
Organisations World Wide. Notably he was Patron of the Indian Academy of
Yoga with headquarters at the famous Banaras Hindu University. This is an
organisation of eminent Yogis, professional men, scientists and doctors
interested in Yoga. He was President of Vishwa Yoga Samaj, a World Wide
Organisation of Yogis, and Vice President of the All India Association of
Madathiapathis. He was also the Governor-General for Yoga (1992-1995) in
the World development Parliament (Vishwa Unnayan Samsad) with headquarters
in West Bengal, India. He trained tens of thousands of students in
Rishiculture Ashtanga (Gitananda) Yoga. His students have established more
than 135 centres of Yoga in 30 countries around the world.
He received many honors in his lifetime. He was chosen by the Ministry of
Health, Government of India, New Delhi, as a Governing Body Member of the
prestigious Central Council for Research in Yoga and Naturopathy in March
1986and he held this post till his Mahasamadhi in 1993. He was awarded
YOGA SHIROMANI by the then President of India Sri Zail Singh at the World
Yoga Conference held at the Asian Village, New Delhi in December 1986. The
Vishwa Unnayan Samsad at New Delhi honoured him in 1992 with the title
Father of Modern Yoga Science. Pujya Swamiji had himself organised five
World Conferences in Pondicherry, attended by hundreds of professional
persons and Yogis from all over the world. He sponsored the First Ever
International Yoga Asana Competition in Pondicherry in 1989. Since that
time an International Yoga Competition has been held each year in various
places in South America, India and Europe. He was one of the driving
forces behind Yoga Sports. In this regard he is considered the Founding
Father of the Yoga Sport Movement. Due to his inspiration and support, the
Government of Pondicherry instituted an annual International Yoga Festival
from January 1993 in Pondicherry, which features lectures by eminent
speakers, Yoga Asana Competitions, and Yogic cultural programmes etc. Due
to his influence, the Government of Pondicherry has also instituted Yoga
teaching in all Government schools from 1997.
Pujya Swamiji collaborated with many films makers in making educational
films on Yoga, including the famous film MUDRA by Rajiv Mehrotra. He also
was the guiding spirit behind the immensely popular television series YOGA
FOR YOUTH, directed by Yogacharini Meenakshi Devi Bhavanani which has been
broadcast for several years from 1989 over Doordarshan, Indias national
television network.
Swamiji was a great scientist and researcher and presented more than
thirty papers on his scientific research into Yoga at various Conferences
throughout India. He collaborated with scientists from leading institutes
throughout the country including AIIMS in New Delhi, NIMHANS in Bangalore,
DIPAS (Indian Defense Institute) in New Delhi and JIPMER in Pondicherry.
Swamiji entered Mahasamadhi on the auspicious day of Arudra Darshan on
Wednesday, December 29, 1993 at 2.20 a.m. He was placed into Samadhi by
his son and successor, Yogacharya Dr Ananda Balayogi Bhavanani with all
honors due to a Madathiapathy of his status in Sri Kambaliswamy Madam at
Thattanchavady, Pondicherry on December 30, 1993. His Samadhi has become a
famous pilgrimage place for all those seeking the blessings of this great
modern Yogamaharishi, who embodied so well the spirit of the ancient Hindu
sages in a modern twentieth century body and mind. |