Tears of Joy
This is one of the stories in our Story-Gems project, a collection of our experiences with our Guru, Sri Chinmoy. Project homepage »

Driving to Eugene, Oregon, on a crisp sunny fall Saturday, I was suffused with an inexplicable happy anticipation. It felt like such a gift of a special day. Only ten days earlier, I’d been accepted as a student of meditation Master Sri Chinmoy, who had flown in from New York City to give a Peace Concert that evening. Many of his students were there. Before the concert, we all met for a function. This would be my first time seeing Sri Chinmoy in person.
However, my joy soon drowned in copious tears that poured forth uncontrollably. Why, I wondered, was my happiness drenched in tears? Yet, it was strange⎯I didn’t feel any sadness. My tears quietly continued flowing. I sat to the side, assuring concerned friends I was okay. I just didn’t know why I was crying.
That evening, while Sri Chinmoy stood against the wall prior to ascending the stage to offer his concert, I caught his sweet glance—and my heart stopped. It was as if we’d known each other before. I fell to my knees inwardly, not knowing why, but ever so grateful for his unexpected glance.
Later, I learned that this is the soul’s way of expressing gratitude and love—with tears of joy.
Before I accepted
The life of aspiration,
My tears were the tears
Of real sorrow.
Now that I have accepted
The life of aspiration,
My tears are not tears of sorrow
But tears of real joy.Sri Chinmoy 1
- 1. Ten Thousand Flower-Flames, part 52, Agni Press, 1983
A Migraine Miracle
This is one of the stories in our Story-Gems project, a collection of our experiences with our Guru, Sri Chinmoy. Project homepage »
As a teenager and college student, I occasionally got extremely bad migraine headaches. There seemed to be no rhyme or reason to their occurrence. They could last anywhere from several hours to a couple of days.
One very hot day in New York, all the disciples went to a local track and field for our annual Sports Day. At that time we held this event every August in honour of Guru’s birthday, his youthful athletic prowess, and the importance he placed on his own disciples’ physical fitness.
It was my first Sports Day, and I was excited, but I also became dehydrated. Between that, the bright sunshine, and the vicious heat, I started developing a migraine. And I had no painkillers with me, or any way of getting some.
I immediately got more water and lay down on a hillside with my hat over my face, but the migraine had gone past the point of no return and it kept getting worse. I just endured, feeling guilty for wanting the day with Guru to end, but I was in such pain that all I could do was hang on and wait.
At long last the competitions ended. I agonizingly got up and went to join all the disciples who were gathering around Guru in a big semi-circle on the grass for the awards ceremony. My head was pounding like a hammer on an anvil with every heartbeat, and I was utterly nauseous. I just wanted it all to be over.
Finally it was, and prasad (a food offering, blessed by Guru) was brought out. At that point even the idea of food made me sick to my stomach, but I thought, “I can’t not take prasad from Guru.” So I took the smallest thing that I could—a cookie—and took the tiniest possible bite, then waited a minute and did it again. And again. A minute or two later I was still fine, so I risked a larger bite. No problem.
Very slowly I ate the whole cookie, and I started feeling better. My nausea was abating, and the headache itself actually started disappearing! Never had one of my migraines gone away without running its full course, but this one was breaking up rapidly like a wisp of cloud dissipating in a clear blue sky. Within about fifteen to twenty minutes, as we were all leaving the field, the headache was completely gone. By the time I got a ride back to the place I was staying, not only had the migraine disappeared, but I was flooded from head to toe with an almost indescribable sensation of absolute physical well-being.
The Master’s invisible miracles
Far outrun
His visible miracles.Sri Chinmoy 1
- 1. Seventy-Seven Thousand Service-Trees, part 49, Agni Press, 2008
The most beautiful place
This is one of the stories in our Story-Gems project, a collection of our experiences with our Guru, Sri Chinmoy. Project homepage »
Until two days before my father’s passing, I held out the hope that he would recover from his illness. And so I kept his accounting business afloat for the last two months. One evening, about two weeks before his passing, I had made arrangements to meet two clients in the office. I was completely exhausted—caring for my father, working full-time, squeezing in several hours a week for the accounting clients, all while working on my doctoral studies.
When I arrived at the office, one lady, a successful taxi driver, talked non-stop. All I wanted was silence, and I kept wishing I had cancelled. Having spent one month by my father’s side in the hospital, the last thing I wanted to hear about was hospital stories, so I only half-listened to the taxi driver’s hospital story.
Then I heard her say, “I was in a coma for two months.” My empathy and curiosity came to the fore and I began paying closer attention.
She went on to say, “I had a brain tumor and required a sixteen-hour operation. I remember going into the operating room. At a certain point, I was rising up and I looked down and could see myself on the surgical table. I then went to the most beautiful place. It was all light, and there was beautiful music. Then I reached a certain place and they told me I had to go back. Next, I remember waking up and the doctor began explaining that I had been in a coma for two months.”
I could barely believe my ears! The story was a classic near-death experience. At that point, I felt a tremendous peace. My mind quieted, my heart opened. All was calm. Guru had begun preparing me through the taxi driver’s words—reassuring me that my father’s soul would go to this beautiful place as well!
What is death after all?
Death is a sleeping child.
And what is life?
Life is a child that is playing, singing and dancing at every moment before the Father.
Death is the sleeping child inside the heart of the Inner Pilot.Sri Chinmoy 1
- 1. Beyond Within — A collection of writings 1964-1974, Agni Press, 1975
Why I Started Long-Distance Running
This is one of the stories in our Story-Gems project, a collection of our experiences with our Guru, Sri Chinmoy. Project homepage »
I was in my early 40s and new to Sri Chinmoy’s path. It was Father’s Day weekend in New York. I was out jogging and came across our Father’s Day Marathon being run around a high school track nearby, so I stopped to watch. I saw Guru at the far corner of the track.
As I watched, he started walking in my direction, but he was within the fenced-in field so I continued watching from outside the fence. He slowly came closer and closer, and then to my surprise stepped through a large hole in the fence I hadn’t noticed.
He continued to walk straight towards me! My heart started thumping. What should I do? I folded my hands and tried to be in my best consciousness, I had never been so close to a realised Master before. Guru walked right up to me, stopped, and looked at me in silence for a few moments. Those few moments felt like eternity.
Then he said, “What? Not running?” Since I had already been running, I understood he was asking me why I wasn’t running the marathon. Without thinking I found myself saying, “Next year.” Guru smiled and nodded, then continued on his way. I was left with an inner confidence that I would run a marathon.
I began researching how to run a marathon and I started training. It took me more than two years, but as a result of Guru’s words I did run not just one but many marathons and ultramarathons, and discovered both a love of running and a big help to my spiritual life through it.
Run, run, daily run
On aspiration-road!
Your new life will discard
Your old life's ignorance-load.Sri Chinmoy 1
- 1. Silence speaks, part 5, #47, Agni Press, 1994
A divine fragrance
This is one of the stories in our Story-Gems project, a collection of our experiences with our Guru, Sri Chinmoy. Project homepage »
The night before I was informed that I had been accepted as Guru’s disciple, I had a very significant dream. However, I did not remember it upon waking.
The next evening I went to the Centre, where I saw several copies of Guru’s Transcendental photograph—the special picture of him that we meditate on—sitting on a beautiful blue cloth. I was invited to pick a size that I liked to be my own personal copy of the Transcendental.
The moment I touched the photo in the middle I immediately remembered my dream from the previous night. In it I saw Guru’s disciples coming in through the front gate of my parents’ yard. I stood at the front door to welcome them, and I saw Guru standing right behind them, smiling while looking directly at me.
This all came back to me in a flash, and the next moment I was back at the Centre, where I chose my copy of the photograph.
One evening not long after this, during a Centre meditation, I had another experience with Transcendental photo. I saw the pupils of Guru’s eyes turn from plain black to pure white light, which radiated outward from them.
At one point, not long after I’d become Guru’s disciple, I had a rough experience when two boys tried to rob me. They gave me a severe head pounding, and I was rushed to the hospital. While I was being taken through the hospital hallway, I caught a fragrance like nothing I’d ever smelled before ⎯serene and pure, mystical and enchanting. I turned my head, and as I did, Guru’s Transcendental photograph—one that was taken when he was in an extremely high consciousness—appeared on the wall of the hallway.
A few months later, an exhibition of Guru’s weightlifting machines was touring trough Europe, and I went to help assemble the machines when they arrived. Once we were done with that, I stayed a little longer in the exhibition hall. An incredible fragrance wafted through the air. After searching unsuccessfully for the source, I left for the night.
I spent the next day guarding the hall, and the fragrance was still present. I grew more and more enchanted by it, and kept searching for the place it was coming from. There were now flowers in the room, but the scent did not come from them, or from incense. Nothing in the room had the fragrance that I was looking for!
A week later I was asked, along with a few other boys, to help assemble the machines again in different place. We agreed happily.
After working late into the night, I was picking up the last part of the Lifting Up the World with a Oneness-Heart machine, which Guru used to lift various people as a part of that program. I accidently touched it at the spot where Guru would put his hands when he would do a lift with it. At that exact moment, the enchanting fragrance wafting through the room became even more intense. I could sense it more clearly than I could anything else—it pervaded everything.
After composing myself, I asked if anyone else had experienced this, too. Without a moment’s hesitation, Devashishu replied, “It is Guru’s fragrance—it’s the fragrance that you could sense around Guru when he was still in the physical body.”
It was the same fragrance I had experienced at the hospital.
When your consciousness is high, you even can smell a kind of fragrance around a spiritual Master. Consciously he may not offer this fragrance, but it is your own aspiration-power, that, like a magnet, has pulled it from him.
Sri Chinmoy 1
The most beautiful and fulfilling of all possible experiences
This is one of the stories in our Story-Gems project, a collection of our experiences with our Guru, Sri Chinmoy. Project homepage »

A deep meditation is one of the most beautiful and fulfilling of all possible experiences. Once we have learnt how to find our way into that desireless inner stillness that is always there inside us, our life can never be the same. Here in the sanctuary of the heart, free of time and the burdens of the mind, everything is clear, everything is already done. Out of this silence comes wisdom, understanding, and delight.
In many ways Guru taught us to take our practice of meditation out into the everyday aspects of our life—karma yoga—to train ourselves to sustain the meditative feeling as long as possible. Walking through a park, sitting on a bus, waiting for somebody, travelling to the next moments of our life, learning to string these moments of calm together as a necklace of day-long moments of happiness.
At first, the experience of meditation itself relies upon a calm environment and some combination of time, place, and correct technique. But then it goes beyond these needs. We begin to realise that while our increasing moments of “success” have been possible through some combination of external factors—a workshop we attended, group practice, a new exercise we tried, or inspiring music—in reality these things have reconnected us with our deeper self, and that “self” is always there inside us, wherever we are.
Guru wanted us to understand our own capacity to uplift and serve the world, reminding us that “every human being is a very special dream of God.” And to also understand that meditation will take us past our identification with our body, thoughts, and personality to a deeper understanding of our ultimately God-like nature. The space in our lives where we put aside the burdens and preoccupations of the day’s dramas, silence our thoughts, and venture past the many attachments and distractions of the mind to a growing stillness—this space allows us to rediscover the very source of all our creative, intuitive, and spiritual capacities. The closer we move towards this “intelligence of silence,” our “inner pilot,” the more perfect our outer lives become.
Meditation comes easily for me today, sitting on the grass in a park in Auckland under a wide blue summer sky, a sky of such startling clarity and endless transparency as to illumine things and gather close the silhouettes of far-off, familiar mountains. There is this lovely sense of stepping outside of the story of one’s life into a state of just “being,” at rest in the here and now, a lovely inner space of pure consciousness. Over in the western corner of the park the tai-chi practitioners are also touching the lives of passers-by and strollers, their calm and gentle movements reminding us of other realities beyond the ordinary.

And I remember Sri Chinmoy’s words, reminding us that we co-create this world and that “Just one smile from my gratitude-heart immensely increases the beauty of the universe.”
From tomorrow on
My morning meditation
Will be as beautiful as the dawn,
My midday meditation,
As powerful as the sun
And my evening meditation,
As peaceful as the sky.Sri Chinmoy 1
Note: The tai-chi photo from de.wikipedia.org, available under a Creative Commons license
- 1. Ten Thousand Flower-Flames, part 42, #4189, Agni Press, 1982
Sri Chinmoy
For members of the Sri Chinmoy Centre, Sri Chinmoy is our Guru, or spiritual teacher. We joined the Centre because we felt we could make spiritual progress through his meditations and teachings.
Sri Chinmoy was born in 1931 in Bengal. From 1944 to 1964 he lived in an ashram, or spiritual community, in the south of India. He spent many hours a day in meditation and attained the high states of consciousness described in various traditions as enlightenment or God-realisation.
Out of obedience to an inner command, Sri Chinmoy came to New York in 1964 to be of service to spiritual seekers in the West. He lived in New York until his passing in 2007.
Here is an outline of Sri Chinmoy's philosophy and activities:
| Contents of this page: | 1. Sri Chinmoy's activities: Peace-Dreamer • Interfaith work • Writings and Poetry • Music • Athletics • Art • Humanitarian Service |
| 2. Sri Chinmoy's philosophy | |
| 3. Tributes from World Leaders | |
| 4. Sri Chinmoy as a spiritual teacher |
Activities
Sri Chinmoy believed that inside each human being lay a universal longing for peace and oneness.
First we have to establish peace within ourselves, and only then can we try to offer peace to others. If I feel peaceful, then I shall not find fault with you or quarrel with you. If you feel peaceful, then you will not quarrel with me or with somebody else. So if I can find inner peace within myself and if you can find peace within yourself, then that peace will grow in the world like a flower, petal by petal.
Sri Chinmoy 1
In 1970, at the invitation of then Secretary-General U Thant, Sri Chinmoy began a offering twice-weekly Peace Meditation for staff, delegates and affiliates at United Nations Headquarters in New York. The meditations and other programmes of Sri Chinmoy: The Peace Meditation at the United Nations continue to this day.
Sri Chinmoy founded the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run in 1987, and it is now the world's largest torch relay run for peace. An international team of runners carries the Peace Torch all over the world, and inviting local communities to take part and make the ideals of the Run their own. Millions of people in over 150 countries have held the torch and offered their own wish for a better world. • More on the Peace Run »
Hundreds of landmarks have been dedicated by governmental officials in the cause of peace as Sri Chinmoy Peace-Blossoms, including countries, national capitals and world-famous natural wonders.
Writings
More: Sri Chinmoy's writings » also: Quotes by Sri Chinmoy »
Sri Chinmoy began writing poetry in his early teens, and has a vast collection of writings to his name. To date, he has over 1600 published books, including poetry, talks, plays and answers to spiritual questions.
Much of his later output written upon his arrival in the West consists of short prayerful aphorisms, notable for their simplicity and purity.
Love is not a thing to understand.
Love is not a thing to feel.
Love is not a thing to give and receive.
Love is a thing only to become
And eternally be. 2
Learn the art of forgiving,
And apply it to yourself first.
Then it becomes easy
To forgive others. 3Sri Chinmoy
During his lifetime, he published 3 large collections of poetry and aphorisms, as well as many smaller collections:
- Ten Thousand Flower-Flames, written between 1978 and 1983
- Twenty-Seven Thousand Aspiration-Plants, written between 1983 and 1998.
- Seventy-Seven Thousand Service-Trees, started 1998. He had completed 50,000 aphorisms in this series by the time of his passing in 2007.
In the late 1960's and 1970's, Sri Chinmoy gave university lectures on spiritual philosophy in universities around the world, including Harvard, Yale, Cornell, Oxford and Cambridge. These were recorded in a collection of books called Eastern light for the Western mind. He has written over 60 plays, many about the lives of great spiritual figures such as the Christ and the Buddha.
Most of Sri Chinmoy's books are available for everyone to read on the Sri Chinmoy Library site. • Visit Sri Chinmoy Library »
Athletic Activities
More: Sri Chinmoy's sporting activities »
When we do something active, we feel joy. If we walk, even if we just stand up, we get joy. Then, if we can run, we get more joy. The blood is circulating in the body, the vital feels more dynamic, and even the mind gets a tremendous feeling that it has done something.
Sri Chinmoy 4
An excellent sprinter in his youth, Sri Chinmoy began running longer races in his forties and completed 22 marathons and five ultra-marathons. He placed particular emphasis on the ideal of self-transcendence - competing with your own capacities instead of with others - as a pathway to happiness.
In his later years, he turned to weightlifting and achieved remarkable feats in this area, which he credited to the inner strength that comes from a silent mind. In particular, he sought to inspire older people with his weightlifting, with the message that "Age is only in the mind, never in the heart."
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Sri Chinmoy is a very spiritual man. I feel the reason Sri Chinmoy lifted this weight is because of his love of God and belief that through God all things are possible. This man has done the impossible because of faith, wisdom and love of God. Through God we can do anything and He allows us to reach beyond human endeavours. We may feel we can’t go on, but because we find inner faith, we do. The body says “stop,” but the spirit cries “never.” In the warrior’s code there is no stopping.
Muhammad Ali 5
In 1977, Sri Chinmoy founded the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team to organise races around the world to serve the running community as they attempred to transcend their own limits. Over the years it has grown to be the largest organiser of endurance events in the world, and has pioneered many important developments in endurance events. From June to August each year in New York, it stages what is currently the world's longest certified road race - the 3100 Mile Self Transcendence Race. • More on sports in the Sri Chinmoy Centre » • View the 3100 Mile Race site »
Music
More: The songs and music of Sri Chinmoy »
Music is the inner or universal language of God. I do not know French or German or Italian, but if music is played, immediately the heart of the music enters into my heart, or my heart enters into the music. At that time, we don't need outer communication; the inner communion of the heart is enough. My heart is communing with the heart of the music and in our communion we become inseparably one.
- Sri Chinmoy 6
Sri Chinmoy began creating songs in his early teens. In total, he composed over 23,000 songs - around 13,000 in his native Bengali and the rest mostly in English. His songs range from short one line mantric songs to his longest song Dyulok Chariye Nara Narayan, which is 54 stanzas long.
The Sri Chinmoy Songs site has the music for most of Sri Chinmoy's songs. • Visit Sri Chinmoy Songs »
In 1984, Sri Chinmoy began to offer free concerts of meditative music - these concerts were called Peace Concerts, or sometimes Concerts of Prayerful Music. By the time of his passing in 2007, he had offered almost 800 such concerts including such prestigious venues as London's Royal Albert Hall, New York's Carnegie Hall and the Sydney Opera House.
After starting his concert with an opening meditation, Sri Chinmoy would play his compositions on a range of Eastern instruments (esraj, harmonium, bansuri) and Western instruments (cello, flute), as well as powerful improvisations on piano and synthesiser.
What power is in this man’s music! It’s incredible. My musical spirit is very, very deeply impressed.
Leonard Bernstein, legendary composer
Art
More: Sri Chinmoy's art »
These are among the most beautiful and stunning paintings I have ever seen. I see in Sri Chinmoy's art the joy of creating beauty. His art is the classic example that creating not only is joy, it should be joy. Through his art he takes his joy and shares it with others.
Hans Janitschek, President, United Nations Society of Writers
Sri Chinmoy began painting in 1974 on a visit to Canada. Over a 33 year span, he created 140,000 abstract paintings in a style that he called in his native Bengali Jharna-Kala, which translates as "Fountain-Art" - art that comes in a spontaneous flow directly from the inner source.
Between 1991 and 2007, he created a series of bird drawings which he called Dream-Freedom-Peace-Birds, or simply Soul-Birds, which numbered 16 million birds in total. For Sri Chinmoy, these birds embodied the infinite freedom of the human soul.
Over the years, Sri Chinmoy's paintings and drawings has been exhibited in galleries around the world, such as the Carrousel du Louvre in Paris, the United Nations building in New York and the national parliaments of Australia, Ukraine and New Zealand.
Interfaith Activities
More: Sri Chinmoy's Interfaith Activities »
In a world of suspicion, hostility and conflict, he worked tirelessly to bring the different faiths together and inspired many to emulate.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu 7
Sri Chinmoy grew up in a Hindu family; however, on the strength of his inner experiences, he saw that all approaches to Truth lead to the same goal. He would often say that his only religion was love of God, and that this is the core of every religion.
Sri Chinmoy set to music sacred utterances from the Christian, Hindu, Buddhist faiths and gave many talks and university lectures on the harmony behind all approaches to truth.
I fully agree that all religions lead to one truth, the Absolute truth. There is One truth. There is only one Goal, but there are various paths. Each religion is right in its own way. But, if one religion says that it is the only religion, or by far the best, at that point I find it difficult to see eye to eye with that particular religion...A religion is a house. I have to live in my house. You have to live in your house. I cannot stay in the street; you cannot either. But a day comes when we widen our vision. We feel that beyond the boundary of the rites and rituals of religion lies a higher Goal.
- Sri Chinmoy 8
In 1993, he was invited to hold the opening meditation at the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago, which marked the centenary of the first Parliament in 1893. He was again invited to hold the opening meditation in Barcelona in 2004.
Humanitarian Service
More: The Oneness-Heart-Tears and Smiles humanitarian project »
Sri Chinmoy is the founder of the Oneness-Heart -Tears and Smiles humanitarian programme. The programme had its origins in delivering much needed supplies to Russia at the beginning of the 1990's, including answering a request by President Mikhail Gorbachev for aid to help develop the Research Institute of Pediatric Hematology in Moscow. The hospital specialises in helping Russian children suffering from leukaemia.
Over the years, the programme has expanded to countries all over the world. Sri Chinmoy felt that giving in this way enriched the givers by enabling them to feel a sense of connection and oneness with people all over the world.
Charity I do not like. I like concern, true concern. When someone shows me charity, I feel a sense of inferiority, and when I offer charity to someone, I undoubtedly feel a sense of superiority. I want neither a superior feeling nor an inferior feeling: what I want is an equal feeling....It is only the feeling of oneness that can give me satisfaction, and this feeling of oneness has to be enlarged.
- Sri Chinmoy 9
Many of the programmes aim to connect and uplift people in ways that go beyond material aid. For example the Kids to Kids and Drawings of Love programmes connect children from different parts of the world through the exchange of drawings and gifts. • More on The Oneness-Heart-Tears and Smiles website »
Sri Chinmoy's philosophy
Sri Chinmoy called his spiritual path the path of the heart. He encouraged spiritual seekers to meditate on the heart centre in the middle of the chest, where we can feel the essence of our being. For example, he began a talk to his students in 1970 with these words:
Our path is basically the path of the heart and not the path of the mind. This does not mean that we are criticising the path of the mind. Far from it. We just feel that the path of the heart leads us faster towards our goal.
- Sri Chinmoy Read full talk »
Sri Chinmoy's appeal to seekers of truth stems from the consciousness, purity and peace that is embodied in his meditations and activities, rather than any particular philosophical concept. At the same time, he has written extensively on every conceivable aspect of the inner life with a simplicity and clarity that comes from direct experience of the highest states of consciousness.
Here are some common themes in Sri Chinmoy's writings:
The soul's special mission
Sri Chinmoy felt that each person had a unique role to play in creating a better world:
Your soul has a special mission. Your soul is supremely conscious of it. Maya, illusion or forgetfulness, makes you feel that you are finite, weak and helpless. This is not true. You are not the body. You are not the senses. You are not the mind. These are all limited. You are the soul, which is unlimited. Your soul is infinitely powerful. Your soul defies all time and space.
- Sri Chinmoy
God as one's own Highest reality
God-realisation, or siddhi, means Self-discovery in the highest sense of the term. One consciously realises his oneness with God. As long as the seeker remains in ignorance, he will feel that God is somebody else who has infinite Power, while he, the seeker, is the feeblest person on earth. But the moment he realises God, he comes to know that he and God are absolutely one in both the inner and the outer life. God-realisation means one’s identification with one’s absolute highest Self.
- Sri Chinmoy
According to Sri Chinmoy, God can be reached in many ways according to one's own temperament.
Each individual has to realise God according to his inner capacity. And each individual can choose to accept the aspect of God that pleases him most. Somebody may like God's personal aspect, as a most luminous Being, while another person may like the impersonal aspect: God as infinite Energy. Again, somebody else will be pleased only if the God he realises is a God beyond his imagination. God is both personal and impersonal. God will come to each individual according to that individual's choice, to please him in his own way.
- Sri Chinmoy
Sri Chinmoy particularly liked using the word 'Supreme' to describe the Highest, and this word is frequently used as a mantra by his students. He advocated an approach of divine love, devotion and surrender to the Supreme reality within us. He often contrasted this divine love with ordinary human love, saying that divine love comes with out any sense of expectation or appreciation in return
Spirituality does not mean escaping from the world.
Sri Chinmoy believed that in today's world, people can have a deep inner life while at the same time remaining a part of society.
If somebody says he is going to renounce the world in order to realise God, then I wish to say that he is mistaken. By leaving everyone, whom is the person accepting? God? No! God is in each human soul. Today he will renounce the world and tomorrow he will find that the God he is seeking is nowhere else. God is in the world itself. It is his attitude that prevents him from seeing God in the world……Certainly we have to renounce in the spiritual life. But we are not going to renounce individuals; we are going to renounce qualities, the qualities which stand in the way of our union with the Divine. We are going to renounce doubt, imperfection, ignorance and death.
- Sri Chinmoy 10
Sri Chinmoy's creative efforts in poetry, art, music and athletics were a way to demonstrate that the inner silence born of deep meditation can give added meaning and fulfilment to all human endeavours.
Transformation through acceptance
Each individual has to accept himself as he is: half ignorance and half knowledge. Unless we accept ourselves in totality, as part ignorance and part knowledge, we can never reach the Goal. First we have to accept the darkness and light together. Then we have to give more importance, infinitely more importance, to the light in us. Then only will the ignorant, obscure part in us be transformed.
- Sri Chinmoy 10
Sri Chinmoy believed that the world could only be changed for the better by accepting it and loving it the way it is now.
If you really want to love humanity, then you have to love humanity as it stands now and not expect it to come to a specific standard. If humanity has to become perfect before it can be accepted by you, then it would not need your love, affection and concern. Right now, in its imperfect state of consciousness, humanity needs your help. Give humanity unreservedly even the most insignificant and limited help that you have at your disposal.
- Sri Chinmoy 11
Kind Words from world leaders
During Sri Chinmoy's 43 years of service in the West, he met with many world leaders and inspirational people from all walks of life.
President Mikhail Gorbachev
“Your loving heart and profound wisdom are a matter of my boundless admiration.”
- Mikhail Gorbachev 1992
“There are not many people in the world who are so sincerely dedicated to the ideals of love of fellow human beings, peace and understanding and who are so self-giving in their actions...”
- Mikhail Gorbachev 1995 12

President Nelson Mandela
“I cannot express in words my joy! What you are doing is in the interest of the entire humanity and the world.”
- Nelson Mandela January 1996
“It makes me humbled to express a birthday wish to a person of your leadership calibre, for you have distinguished yourself as an outstanding soldier of peace.”
- Nelson Mandela August 1996 13

Pope John Paul II
“I am very grateful for your visit. God bless you and all your contemplative activities.”
- Pope John Paul II 1988
“Special blessings to you. Special greetings to your members. We shall continue together.”
- Pope John Paul II 1980 14

Pope Paul VI
This meeting of ours has been most essential. Your message and mine are the same. When we both leave this world, you and I, we will meet together.”
- Pope Paul VI 1972
“I want to tell you that I am truly proud of your service to the United Nations.”
- Pope Paul VI 1973 15

Mother Teresa
"May we continue to do God's Work together. How beautiful are all your works for world peace and for all mankind!"
- Mother Teresa
1996
"I am so pleased with all the good work you are doing for world peace and for people in so many countries. May we continue to work together and to share together all for the glory of God and for the good of man."
- Mother Teresa 1994 16
Princess Diana
“I know that you too strive to ease unnecessary suffering and indeed, have helped many, many people…I thank you for your generosity of spirit and send to you my heartfelt best wishes.”
- Princess Diana July 1997
“Your letters are so enormously encouraging. It is through this encouragement that I find the strength to continue with the fight against landmines, which is so vitally important to me...”
- Princess Diana August 1997 17

Archbishop Desmond Tutu
“You are part of the spiritual force of love that emanates from God and which will transform the evil of this world into its counterpart. Thank you for persisting and going on, going on. Perhaps the world continues in existence only because of people like yourselves who help to hold it in being.”
- Archbishop Desmond Tutu 2004 18
Sri Chinmoy as a spiritual teacher
Sri Chinmoy served as a spiritual teacher to thousands of students from all around the world. He advocated a balanced way of life that combined meditation and prayer with a dynamic outer life of service to the world:
Our path, the path of the heart, is also the path of acceptance. We have to accept the world. If we enter into a Himalayan cave or sit on a mountain top and cry for our personal achievement and satisfaction, then we are not going to do anything for the world. It will be like this: I shall eat food to my heart's content and let my brothers remain unfed and starving. That is not good. If I am a real human being, I have to see that my brothers also eat along with me. If we eat together, then only we shall get real satisfaction.
- Sri Chinmoy 19
To find out more about the spiritual life practised by Sri Chinmoy's students, please read: About the Sri Chinmoy Centre »
Many students have been inspired to write about their experiences with Sri Chinmoy, and the many ways in which he encouraged them to make progress in their lives.
- Meditations with Sri Chinmoy were a wonderful mix of silent meditation, music, poetry, prayer, creativity and humour - plus stories and wisdom from the Master himself.
- Moments with Sri Chinmoy: Our teacher had the ability to make even the briefest conversation or interaction full of love and sweetness.
- A Master's guidance: Students describe Sri Chinmoy's subtle guidance in life, from workplace matters to life-and-death situations.
- Photos of Sri Chinmoy - creative commons license
Other Sites about Sri Chinmoy:
- Sri Chinmoy.org - Sri Chinmoy's official site
- Biography of Sri Chinmoy on the New Zealand Sri Chinmoy Centre site
- 1. Sri Chinmoy Answers, Part 28
- 2. From: When God-Love Descends, Agni Press, 1975
- 3. From: Twenty-Seven Thousand Aspiration-Plants, Part 129, Agni Press, 1990.
- 4. Sri Chinmoy, Sri Chinmoy answers, part 37, Agni Press, 2005
- 5. Included in My Weightlifting Tears and Smiles, by Sri Chinmoy
- 6. From: God The Supreme Musician
- 7. Tributes to Sri Chinmoy on srichinmoy.org
- 8. From: Earth's Cry meets Heaven's Smile, Part 2
- 9. From: Everest Aspiration Part 2
- 10. a. b. From: Rainbow-Flowers, part 1
- 11. From: Earth's Cry Meets Heaven's Smile, Part 1
- 12. Source: Kind Words - Mikhail Gorbachev at Sri Chinmoy.org
- 13. Source: Kind Words - Nelson Mandela at Sri Chinmoy.org
- 14. Source: Kind Words - Pope John Paul II at Sri Chinmoy.org
- 15. Source: Kind Words - Pope Paul VI at Sri Chinmoy.org
- 16. Source: Kind Words - Mother Teresa at Sri Chinmoy.org
- 17. Source: Kind Words - Princess Diana at Sri Chinmoy.org
- 18. Source: Kind Words - Desmond Tutu at Sri Chinmoy.org
- 19. Sri Chinmoy, The Master And The Disciple, Agni Press, 1985.
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