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By this time, Sri Ramakrishna lived in a near-constant state of god-intoxicated
ecstasy. Word of his illumined state spread and devotees
began arriving in earnest. As priest at the Dakshineshwar
Kali Temple, Rani Rashmoni who had built the temple
and Mathur Nath Biswas, her son-in-law were among Sri
Ramakrishna’s early and most fervent followers.
Well-known pundits and religious scholars of the time
came as well and declared him to be an avatar.
Now, came Bengal’s intellectual, westernized
elite – starting with members of the popular socio-religious
movement, the Brahmo Samaj and their leader, Keshab
Chandra Sen who was to hold Sri Ramakrishna in great
love and admiration.
But seeing first-hand the influence Western philosophies
and modernization had on India’s youth, Sri Ramakrishna
yearned for his “own beloved companions”
who would follow his teaching which aimed at God-realization
in its purest form.
Devotees and disciples began arriving and were of two
categories: householders who remained such and young
men from Bengal’s educated middle-class who were
to become the future monks of the Ramakrishna Order.
Both groups were taught according to their capability
and what was required of them to reach the goal of God-realization.
Householders were not asked to totally renounce the
world, but to practice discrimination between the Eternal
and the temporal, devote time to prayer, japa and meditation,
to keep holy company, to repair to solitude every now
and then. Those with spouses were advised to live as
brother and sister after the birth of one or two children.
All were strongly urged to cling to God with intense
faith come what may.
Among his householder disciples were Mahendranath Gupta
or ‘M’, the author of Kathamrita (The Gospel
of Sri Ramakrishna); Nag Mahashay; Girish Ghosh and
Surendra Mitra.
Those who were to be future monks and the torchbearers
of his message to mankind were taught the path of renunciation
and discrimination and told to give up the world both
inwardly and outwardly. They were to take vows of absolute
celibacy and totally shun greed and lust. Their lives
were to be blemish-free.
Among this group were Narendranath Dutta and Rakhal.
The former as Swami Vivekananda would take Sri Ramakrishna’s
message to the West, the latter as Swami Brahmananda
would be the first President of the Ramakrishna Math.
All these outstanding young men were trained to revitalize
Hinduism and re-awaken the soul of India.
While he welcomed an endless stream of spiritual seekers,
the strain coupled with the intensity of his spiritual
practices took a toll on Sri Ramakrishna’s health.
By 1885, he developed cancer of the throat.
He was shifted to a home surrounded by a spacious garden
in Cossipore, a suburb of Kolkatta where this band of
future monks along with the Holy Mother nursed him day
and night.
Even as he suffered intense pain, Sri Ramakrishna continued
to instruct his young disciples all the while instilling
in them love for one another. Thus he laid the foundation
of the future monastic brotherhood - the Ramakrishna
Math.
The end came in the wee hours of the 16th of August,
1886. Chanting the name of his beloved Mother Kali,
Sri Ramakrishna gave up his physical body and passed
into Eternity.
“He is born in vain who, having attained human
birth, so difficult to get, does not attempt to realize
God in this very life.” Sri Ramakrishna. (Sayings
of Sri Ramakrishna, Swami Brahmananda.)
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