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Guru and disciple

por Swami Abhishiktananda

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Swami Abhishiktananda (Henri Le Saux, 1910-1973) was one of the most fascinating spiritual figures of the 20th century and a bridge-builder between East and West. In his extraordinary book Guru and Disciple, Swami Abhishiktananda gives a vivid and magnificent account of his meeting with Sri Gnanananda Giri, an Advaitic sage whom he met at his ashram in Tamil Nadu. He regarded this encounter as one of the high points of his life in India, for it was at that time that he recognized him as his guru. Through the intense upadesha (teaching) and unreserved grace of Sri Gnanananda, Swami Abhishiktananda was led closer to the heart of Advaita. He spoke of his retreat with him as days of grace, "days of peace and fulfilment... when one was conscious of living at a spiritual depth in which the whole world of outward appearance has been left behind and one has come close to what is Real." Indeed, he received from his guru the purest teaching of a jnani (realized sage)-which was none other than the timeless message of the Upanishads: Behind the appearance of the phenomenal ego is the Ultimate Reality, the eternal Self of All, which can be directly realized. Guru and Disciple has been praised by many as a classic and as being one of the most remarkable introductions in recent times to the importance of meditation (dhyana) and the essential nature of the spiritual master-the guru tattva-of which Sri Gnanananda Giri was the perfect embodiment.… (más)
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Swami Abhishiktananda (1910 - 1973) is the Indian name of Dom Henri Le Saux, a Benedictine monk. He co-founded in 1950, with Father Jules Monchanin, Satchidananda Ashram, a monastic institution dedicated to integrating the monastic values of the Benedictine tradition with the values of the Indian monastic tradition.

This volume contains two books of Abhishiktananda's which were previously published separately: 'A Sage from the East' (1970) and 'The 'Mountain of the Lord' (1966). 'A Sage From the East' is the story of Abhishiktananda's visit to a Hindu guru in the Tamil country, Sri Gnanananda, who is reputed to be 120 years old. 'The Mountain of the Lord' is a fascinating account of the author's journey with an Indian fellow-priest to the sacred source of the Ganges in the company of Hindu pilgrims, which culminates in a moving description of the first Christian Eucharist to be celebrated there.
  Saraswati_Library | Feb 1, 2015 |
Swami Abhishiktananda (1910 - 1973) is the Indian name of Dom Henri Le Saux, a Benedictine monk. He co-founded in 1950, with Father Jules Monchanin, Satchidananda Ashram, a monastic institution dedicated to integrating the monastic values of the Benedictine tradition with the values of the Indian monastic tradition.

This volume contains two books of Abhishiktananda's which were previously published separately: 'A Sage from the East' (1970) and 'The 'Mountain of the Lord' (1966). 'A Sage From the East' is the story of Abhishiktananda's visit to a Hindu guru in the Tamil country, Sri Gnanananda, who is reputed to be 120 years old. 'The Mountain of the Lord' is a fascinating account of the author's journey with an Indian fellow-priest to the sacred source of the Ganges in the company of Hindu pilgrims, which culminates in a moving description of the fisrt Christain Eucharist to be celebrated there.
  Saraswati_Library | Nov 12, 2008 |
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Swami Abhishiktananda (Henri Le Saux, 1910-1973) was one of the most fascinating spiritual figures of the 20th century and a bridge-builder between East and West. In his extraordinary book Guru and Disciple, Swami Abhishiktananda gives a vivid and magnificent account of his meeting with Sri Gnanananda Giri, an Advaitic sage whom he met at his ashram in Tamil Nadu. He regarded this encounter as one of the high points of his life in India, for it was at that time that he recognized him as his guru. Through the intense upadesha (teaching) and unreserved grace of Sri Gnanananda, Swami Abhishiktananda was led closer to the heart of Advaita. He spoke of his retreat with him as days of grace, "days of peace and fulfilment... when one was conscious of living at a spiritual depth in which the whole world of outward appearance has been left behind and one has come close to what is Real." Indeed, he received from his guru the purest teaching of a jnani (realized sage)-which was none other than the timeless message of the Upanishads: Behind the appearance of the phenomenal ego is the Ultimate Reality, the eternal Self of All, which can be directly realized. Guru and Disciple has been praised by many as a classic and as being one of the most remarkable introductions in recent times to the importance of meditation (dhyana) and the essential nature of the spiritual master-the guru tattva-of which Sri Gnanananda Giri was the perfect embodiment.

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