Arsha Prayoga -   Resistance To Change
			      
				  BY LOCANANANDA   DAS
			      
			      EDITORIAL, May 23   (VNN) — Let me first offer my prostrated obeisances unto the lotus feet of that   supreme swan-like devotee of the Lord, our spiritual master, His Divine Grace   A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, by whose   mercy the fallen souls of Kali Yuga may taste the sweetness of the narrations of   the pastimes of the Lord and His pure devotees. As the bonafide representative   of Sri Vyasadeva, he composed a mountain of transcendental literature to   enlighten the entire human society, explaining even the most confidential truths   regarding vaisnava philosophy. 
				  “As will be seen from the letters   and conversations cited in this article, Srila Prabhupada would finally insist   on an "absolutely no change" policy based on the principle of "arsa   prayoga".”
			      
			      His Divine Grace   Srila Prabhupada displayed all of the symptoms of an empowered jiva soul,   working tirelessly to distribute the transcendental message of love of Godhead   throughout the world. It is therefore the duty of his followers to preserve the   legacy and protect the honor of such a great spiritual personality whose every   moment was dedicated to the spreading of Krishna consciousness.
			      
			      To guarantee that his teachings would not be   forgotten in the oblivion of time, Srila Prabhupada created the Bhaktivedanta   Book Trust and, assisted by his disciples, he astounded the academic community   with his literary output. What follows is a brief account of Srila Prabhupada's   struggle with the BBT staff to keep the final version of his books intact by   resisting what he called the "American disease" of always wanting to change   things. As will be seen from the letters and conversations cited in this   article, Srila Prabhupada would finally insist on an "absolutely no change"   policy based on the principle of "arsa prayoga".
			      
			      That unwanted changes were being made to his books   came to his attention as early as 1975, and it quickly became a pressing matter.   In a letter to the production manager of the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust, Srila   Prabhupada expressed his alarm that changes he had not approved were appearing   in print.
			      
"I will have to   see personally what are the mistakes in the synonyms and also how you intend to   correct them. I was not satisfied with the corrections that were made before. I   saw some changes which I did not approve. Nitai may correct whatever mistakes   are there, but the corrected material must be sent to me for final approval."   (Letter to Radha-vallabha dasa dated 1-5-76)
			      
			      Srila Prabhupada never gave anyone carte blanche to   make revisions in his books. This letter confirms that any changes to his books   would require his personal approval before being printed.
			      
			      A few months later, the issue of change was raised   again by Radha-vallabha dasa regarding the text of several volumes of the Srimad   Bhagavatam which were soon to be reprinted. Srila Prabhupada advised him, "There   is no need for corrections for the First and Second Cantos. Whatever is there is   all right." (Letter of 5-4-76) Seeing how persistent his BBT managers were to   implement change in the text and presentation of his books, His Divine Grace   wrote again to Radha-vallabha dasa in August, 1976, this time more   firmly:
			      
"Do not try to   change anything without my permission."
			      
			      Srila Prabhupada consistently stated that he did   not want anything to be changed unnecessarily. Any changes they thought would be   an improvement in the text would require his written authorization.
			      
			      The most serious violation of this instruction   actually came years later, after Srila Prabhupada's disappearance, when BBT   personnel decided to print a new version of the Bhagavad-gita. It is a well   known fact that His Divine Grace never authorized anyone to re-edit the   Bhagavad-gita As It Is. If Srila Prabhupada ever intended to make changes in the   Gita, the ideal opportunity for him to say so came in a room conversation that   took place on February 24, 1977 in Mayapur. On that occasion, Radha-vallabha   dasa was describing how the upcoming printing of the Bhagavad-gita was going to   require so much paper that it would take seventy-six train cars to transport it   (1.5 million copies). Srila Prabhupada absolutely did not suggest making any   corrections before this largest printing ever of the Bhagavad-gita As It Is. In   fact, and to the contrary, in a discussion that took place three days later, he   established a definitive "no change" policy that he wanted applied henceforward   to all of his books. The tendency to want to make corrections was now a very   serious problem, and Srila Prabhupada dealt with it.
			      
			      The transcribed conversation of February 27, 1977   presented below clearly indicates that Srila Prabhupada would never have   approved of anyone changing the final edited version of his writings, even after   his disappearance. In this exchange, His Divine Grace states that for a disciple   to see mistakes in his production-ready finished manuscripts was a bad habit   that had to be given up. Even though the one correction his disciple Jagannatha   dasa wanted to propose would not have changed the wording of the verse, Srila   Prabhupada warned that to make any change whatsoever was "strictly forbidden".   As a servant of his spiritual master, Radha-vallabha dasa was obliged to accept   Srila Prabhupada's instruction that the text should be left exactly as is and   that making corrections should never be contemplated.
			      
			      To further enlighten his disciple, Srila Prabhupada   explained the rule of "arsa prayoga", that whatever the acharya has given, it   should be accepted. The tendency to think oneself sufficiently qualified to   correct one's authority is not only a breach of vaisnava etiquette, but is an   offense in the service of the spiritual master.
			      
			      If one continues to see mistakes that he thinks   need to be corrected, Srila Prabhupada says, "He is the mistake." Due to his   incomplete understanding, Radha-vallabha dasa reasoned, "So if we think there is   some mistake, we should just forget about it." Srila Prabhupada corrects him   again, saying that one should not even think his authority has made a mistake.   His opinion was that since Jagannatha dasa tended to see mistakes in the   writings of the acharya, he was an irresponsible man who could not be relied   upon. Srila Prabhupada then made his final point, that our true purpose is not   served by becoming so-called scholars able to find errors in the books of the   spiritual master, but by becoming advanced in devotion to Krishna.   Radha-vallabha dasa finally got the point, that Srila Prabhupada was   establishing the rule of "no corrections anywhere" once a book was submitted to   his department for publication.
			      
			      Room   Conversation of 2-27-77, Mayapura
			      
			      Radha-vallabha   Das: Now Jagannatha had some questions on corrections in the book. In verse   twenty-eight it says, "Then he worshiped Sri Krishna, the essence of all   Vedas, with this hymn."
			      
			      Srila Prabhupada: Where it is?   Brahma-samhita?
			      
			      RVD:   Yes.
			      
			      SP: What is   that?
			      
			      RVD: So it says,   "Then he worshiped Sri Krishna, the essence of all Vedas, with this hymn."
			      
			      SP: Where it is?
			      
			      RVD: It's verse twenty-eight, "Then he worshiped   Sri Krishna." So Jagannatha said it should be, "Then he worshiped..."
			      
			      SP: No, no. Jagannatha cannot correct. That bad   habit he must give up.
			      
			      RVD: So we   should just leave it exactly.
			      
			      SP: Oh yes. You   should not be more educated.
			      
			      RVD: He wasn't   changing any of the words. He was just...
			      
			      SP: Nothing of the.... This should be strictly   forbidden.
			      
			      RVD: So no   corrections. That makes it simple.
			      
			      SP: They can   divide the synonyms. That's all.
			      
			      RVD: Synonyms.   So even...
			      
			      SP: That is his   tendency, to correct. That's very bad. He should not do that.
			      
			      RVD: So I'll just forget this, then.
			      
			      SP: The system is: whatever authority has done,   even there is mistake, it should be accepted.
			      
			      RVD: Oh.
			      
			      SP: Arsa   prayoga. That is ha... He should not become more learned than the authority.   That is very bad habit.
			      
			      RVD: He was   always wondering how he should think. So I'll tell him that. He thinks, "If I   think I see a mistake, what should I think?" I'll tell him what you just   said.
			      
			      SP: He cannot   see mistake. He is mistake (laughter). That is being done by this rascal. I   don't want. And the Hayagriva has..., the Easy Journey, he has changed so many   things. That... He is now bad character. You should not maintain him.
			      
			      Later, in the same conversation
			      
			      SP: So Jagannatha should be strictly advised not to   become very learned to correct authorities. No.
			      
			      RVD: I think that the instruction you gave will   help him very much about even if he thinks there is some mistake, just forget   about it.
			      
			      SP: He is   mistake. He should not think his authority mistake.
			      
			      RVD: He didn't know what he should do. He didn't   know...
			      
			      SP: So why he   should be given this business. He's such irresponsible man.
			      
			      He should not be given any responsible work. Our   first business should see how he is advanced in devotion. We don't want   so-called scholars.
			      
			      RVD: Jagannatha   was somewhat affected by Nitai, but he's...
			      
			      SP: I know that.
			      
			      RVD: I think he understands what the problem was. I   think he understands what his problem was, and that's why he won't do anything   without asking you.
			      
			      SP: Don't allow   him to do anything.
			      
			      RVD: Well, now   that this system of no corrections anywhere, that makes it very simple. Then he   can't do anything. I don't think he wants to either. It makes it more simple for   him. It makes him very uncomfortable.
			      
			      SP: No   corrections.
			      
			      Six weeks later,   Srila Prabhupada was listening to the notes and resolutions of a meeting held by   the BBT trustees. He was generally pleased with the decisions that had been   made, but at one point he interrupted the reading to make a recommendation of   his own. He wanted them to include in their list the following   admonition:
			      
"And every time   Radha-vallabha changes something, that should be stopped. He is very much   inclined to change something. This practice should be stopped."
			      
			      Srila Prabhupada was assigning to the BBT trustees   the duty of safeguarding his books from being changed in the slightest by anyone   who had not been specifically ordered to do so.
			      
			      The principle of "arsa prayoga" was again referred   to on June 22, 1977 when Srila Prabhupada was in Vrndavana, India. In the middle of a reading of the Srimad   Bhagavatam, Srila Prabhupada objected when he heard the synonym that was given   for the word "sadhu". The word-for-word translation said, "it is relevant," but   Srila Prabhupada said, "No. 'Sadhu' means 'devotee'." The editors had changed   his translation, and he found this unacceptable. He spoke as though he had been   betrayed by a dangerous element within his movement. His authority was being   minimized by his own disciples to whom he had entrusted his most lasting   contribution: his books. A number of devotees present voiced their objection to   the production staff's practice of deleting entire sections from certain books,   and they mentioned discrepancies they had found in the Sanskrit to English   translations. Literally hundreds of changes had already been made in the text of   Srila Prabhupada's books from one printing to the next and the devotees   testified that the potency was not the same.
			      
			      Srila Prabhupada asked for suggestions from his   senior men to resolve this dilemma and they offered their advice. After hearing   various proposals, Srila Prabhupada's conclusion was that, "The next printing   should be again to the original way." He then ordered his secretary to contact   the GBC man he wanted to entrust this matter to in Los Angeles where the press was located. "So you bring this to   Satsvarupa. They cannot change anything."
			      
			      Drawing from these letters and conversations, we   can gain some insight into Srila Prabhupada's struggle to keep his books as they   were. One should rightly conclude that he would never have approved of the   wholesale changes that were made by the BBT editors after his disappearance. He   would have expected the BBT trustees to resist on his behalf. The unnecessary   and unauthorized changes in the Bhagavad-gita alone number more than seven   hundred, so where is Srila Prabhupada's signed approval for such changes to be   made? And where are the rave reviews of the revised edition from scholars and   professors praising the editors for having improved the original version of the   Gita published by their spiritual master? We do not expect to see any   testimonials from these mundane personalities glorifying the "revised and   enlarged" edition of the Gita. After all, which scholar would approve of having   his own writings altered after his physical demise?
			      
			      The adulteration of Srila Prabhupada's   Bhagavad-gita As It Is was the first major milestone in the BBT's refusal to   follow the rule of arsa prayoga (the unholy practice of dishonoring the   acharya), a program which reached its zenith when they declared in court that   Srila Prabhupada was simply a writer hired by ISKCON to compile the Vedic   classics. We do not know what kind of apology can be made by the BBT's editors   and trustees at this point, but it is our humble opinion that the best way to   make amends for past transgressions would be to accept Srila Prabhupada's   instruction that "the next printing should be again to the original   way."