Swami Sundaranand

Swami Sundaranand

Swami Sundaranand (born 1926 India) is a Yogi, photographer, and mountaineer who lectures widely in India on threats to the Ganges river and the loss of Himalayan glacers due to global warming. [cite news|url=http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/430/india-journal5.html|title=Gangotri: The Clicking Swami|last=Brancaccio|first=David|coauthors=photographs by John Siceloff|date=2008-08-01|work=NOW|publisher=PBS|accessdate=2008-08-06]

Sundarananda was a student of the famous and reclusive yoga master Swami Tapovan Maharaj, (1889-1957) who wrote the classic yoga book "Wanderings in the Himalayas" (Himagiri Vihar) [Wanderings in the Himalayas, English Edition, Pulished by Chinmaya Publication Trust, Madras-3, 1960, translated by T.N. Kesava Pillai, M.A.] about yogic life in the Himalayas in the late 19th and early 20th century. Sundaranand lived with Swami Tapovan in the then inaccessible area of Gangotri at the source of the Ganges river, considered one of India’s most sacred places.

Since 1946, he has lived next to the Ganges in Gangotri, at 10,400 feet, in a modest hut (Kuti) which his master Swami Tapovan bequeathed to him on his passing. Swami Sundaranand has lived there alone throughout the severest winters without any comforts or conveniences. [Elixir Magazine, Spring 2006, page 87] He has witnessed up close the gradual shrinking of the Gangotri Glacier from which the Ganges springs forth, and has chronicled his devotion to the natural beauty of the Indian Himalayas as an accomplished photographer. A museum devoted to environmental protection and spiritual guidance, containing Swami Sundaranand's Himalayan photography, is now in the planning stages. It will be located in Gangotri on the property of Sundaranand and his master.

As an ascetic, he took the brahmacharya sadhu vow over 59 years ago and now devotes his life to a rigorous daily practice of meditation and spiritual practices. He continues to be a principal advocate for the ecological preservation of the Himalayas, the Ganges and its source at Gangotri.

Over 50 years, he has taken more than 100,000 photos of the shrinking Gangotri glacier in the Indian Himalayas. He now travels India raising awareness of the Gangotri's rapid demise.cite journal |url=http://www.unep.org/pdf/ourplanet/2007/may/en/op-2007-05-en-fullversion.pdf |title=Melting Ice: A Hot Topic, Climate Change and the Crysosphere |format=pdf |journal =Our Planet:The Magazine of the United Nations Environment Programme | month =May | year= 2007| pages=4 |accessdate=2008-07-15] .

Nicknamed "the "Sadhu" Who Clicks" because of his photography, he is a noted mountain climber having scaled over 25 Himalayan peaks, climbing twice with Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgaycite news |url=http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0103/p07s02-sten.htm |title=Himalaya's receding glaciers suffer neglect | csmonitor.com |author=Janaki Kremmer |work=Christian Science Monitor | date=3 January 2007 |accessdate=2008-07-15] . Sir Edmund Hillary paid his respects to Swami Sundaranad in the 1980's at his Gangotri hut. [Personal Time with Swami-ji, 157 mins Film, The Center for Healing Arts] Of the Gangotri glacier, Swami Sundaranand says:

"In 1949, when I first saw the glacier, I felt as if all my sins were washed away and I had truly attained rebirth. But now, it is impossible to experience that Ganga of the past."

Swami Sundaranand is also the subject of a feature documentary film 157 mins. produced by [http://www.thecenterforhealingarts.com The Center for Healing Arts] titled "Personal Time with Swamiji". The film was directed and edited by Victor Demko and was shot at Sundaranand's home in Gangotri.

Swami Sundaranand is the author of the book "Himalaya: Through the Lens of a Sadhu" with over 425 photographs spanning 60 years of his work.cite journal |url=http://www.meaus.com/himalaya-sundaranand.htm |title=himalaya-sundaranand |title=Book Review: HIMALAYA: THROUGH THE LENS OF A SADHU|author = B. John Zavrel |journal=Prometheus:Internet Bulletin for News, Arts, Politics and Science|month=Fall|year=2003 |accessdate=2008-07-15] He sought to capture the Eternal in Nature and to document the region as it once was with a special emphasis on planting the seeds of hope and inspiration to solve the environmental concerns of the area. A lookout point and plaque down river from Gangotri has been built and dedicated to the Swami's work and efforts. The book also contains a letter of endorsement from the former Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee.

Bibliography

* "Himalaya: Through the Lens of a Sadhu" Published August 2001 ISBN 81-901326-0-1

Filmography

* "Personal Time with Swami-ji" (157 mins, film, 2008, The Center for Healing Arts [Directed and Edited by Victor Demko, Film Synopsis, The Center for Healing Arts [http://thecenterforhealingarts.com/Yoga-Swami_Sundaranand-Yoga_Film_Himalayas] ] )

External links

[http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/430/india-journal5.html Gangotri: The "Clicking Swami"] PBS Now article about Swami Sundaranand.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Tapovan Maharaj — Swami Tapovan Maharaj (1889 1957) was a Hindu Sannyasi and Vedanta scholar who taught both Swami Chinmayananda, the founder of the Chinmaya Mission Movement and Swami Sundaranand.Born in Palakkad, Kerala as Subramanian Nair, Tapovan Maharaj… …   Wikipedia

  • Himalayas — Geobox|Range name=Himalayas image caption=The north face of Mount Everest as seen from the path to the base camp in Tibet country=Bhutan| country1=Tibet (invaded by PRC) | country2=India| country3=Nepal| country4=Pakistan| country5 = Burma |… …   Wikipedia

  • Ganges — otherusesGeobox River name = Ganges native name = Ganga map caption = Map showing the course of the Ganges and selected tributaries country = India country1 = Nepal country2 = Bangladesh city = Haridwar city1 = Soron city2 = Kannauj city3 =… …   Wikipedia

  • Ганг — У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Ганг (значения). Ганг गङ्गा …   Википедия

  • Himalayan Mountains —    Himalaya (the abode of the snows) is a vast moun tain range spreading across six countries: India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, China, and Tibet (ruled by China). Geographically it separates the Indian subcontinent from the Tibetan plateau.… …   Encyclopedia of Hinduism

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”