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SEEKERS AND FINDERS AT PRINCETON RITES by Linda
Brown, Trentonian Shyam Bhatnagar emerges from the
vestibule at 56 Jefferson St. in Princeton into a cloud of fresh floral incense
rising from the shrine room. In pairs and alone, the faithful drift into the
small, dimly lit house, silently removing their shoes and sinking into the
lotus position. Stepping into the roseate light, Shyam whispers a few
words of greeting and sweeps into an adjoining room. Seated at a table drenched
in a liquid blue light, he smiled and the light sparkles in his dark eyes and
the incense hangs heavy in the warm evening air. In pale tunics, in beads and
sandals, come students and very Princeton housewives and silent ones with wide
silent eyes blending into the omnipresent shadows. A dozen, 20 at the
most, moving through the doorway under the sacred symbol "OM" and easing
themselves onto the madras covered mattress, the scattered rough-textured rugs
in the room where Shyam will soon strum his tamboura and the chanting will
begin. "After the therapy," reads a small, hand-lettered sign beside
the door, "leave silently and try to sustain the effect. Do not throw away
Energy." Mrs. Harriet Wills, unexpectedly beautiful with her graying
hair swept back from her simple black tunic, smiled when asked why she returned
week after week. "I am a seeker," she said softly. "The value of
meditation," said Shyam, "is exactly the same as day is opposed to night. It is
only after meditation that you experience what life is all about.
"Meditation is an art to still the
mind and then to be able to see what is beyond it. "We cannot really
understand the nature of Absolute Reality with the rational mind. The object of
meditation is to explore minds that lie beyond our regular minds.
"Union with God is impossible with logic and rationale. It is the rational
mind, which keeps us from experiencing our own Godhood. Meditation is the first
step to overcoming the rational mind. But it is only the beginning."
At 8:30 p.m. Friday they sit cross-legged on the floor, facing the shrine where
Shyam plays his tamboura, a four-stringed droning instrument, which sets the
mood for calming the mind. Gradually the chanting begins: a low moaning, the
rising and interweaving of voices in the dark fragment room. When the hypnotic
rhythms die away, the atmosphere rings with the silence of the infinite.
"Beyond meditation," said Shyam, "are secrets which cannot be described.
If you are courageous to look beyond this doorway, you come in touch with that
Consciousness. "There are two aspects to meditation, external and
internal. In a group, we observe certain external conditions. You must not have
eaten for two hours and what you have eaten must be light. When you go into
meditation, you do not hear the sound of your own breathing. Your hands, feet
and body are clean and you sit in a place you don't associate with any social
roles or games. You play, if you like, the holy game. "Closing your
eyes, you say you won't think about anything. You reach the contentment of the
mindless state. "Internal meditation can only be practiced after you have a
guru, or guide. Not one single method, however, is applicable to all.
"Why do we meditate in a group? Why do people drink in social groups? The more
the merrier! Reaching a total state of contentment, you make the mind go out of
its mind. We call it 'Ananda.' Bliss."
Shyam Bhatnagar began training in
Tantra Yoga when he was 12. Tantra Yoga incorporates knowledge of kundalini, or
"serpent power," the spiritual energy in all living things, according to the
ancient philosophy of India. This power is believed to be "coiled" at the base
of the spine and rises through several levels until it matures at the base of
the brain and enlightenment is achieved. A strenuous program of physical and
spiritual disciplines is undertaken to achieve this state. In 1966,
Shyam established the Self Development Institute in Bareilly, India, for the
practical study of Tantric Yoga. He has since established other institutes in
New York City, Princeton and Akron, Ohio. Last June, Shyam and Dr.
Joseph Campbell co-led a two-day workshop at Bucks County Seminar House Inc. on
Freud, Jung and Kundalini Yoga. Among Shyam's other accomplishments,
he has played his tamboura with Ravi Shankar in New York City's Lincoln Center
and with the singer Pran Nath, professor of vocal music at the University of
Delhi, whom Shyam considers one of the greatest of all Indian musicians. Since
1960, Shyam has worked in this country, conducting groups here for the past
three years, including the past year in Princeton. Shyam employs
mainly traditional methods such as mental and physical exercises and Bija
Mantras, psychically potent sound syllables. Krishna speaking in the
Bhagavad Gita: "The light that lives in the sun, Lighting all the
world, The light of the moon, The light that is in fire: Know
that light to be mine." The aroma of hot spice cider floods the kitchen as
the first hour of meditation concludes with light refreshments and a question
period. Over Jefferson St., the moon dangles like a white sapphire from a
thousand groaning branches. The moon alone will not break.
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