Ohio State University Students Write Their
Reactions To Hare Krishna
“It was with eager anticipation that I entered Hitchcock
Hall Auditorium on May 12. All around me were different types of people, of
all ages. There were a few adults, perhaps professors, who were still in
their business suits. Many students were dressed in skirts and sweaters or
jeans and a shirt. But there were many shudents who had come barefoot,
wearing bells and beads. Downstairs, the entire stage was filled, and all
the people reminded me of a can of sardines, it was so crowded. My mind
wandered as I looked at all the faces, and I wondered what they were
thinking, expecting. The magical chanting began and people all around the
stage were beginning to sway with the beat of the drums, clapping their
hands and chanting the words, Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna. At first, most of
the people in the balcony hesitated to join in the chant and clap their
hands. It was as if we in the balcony were separated from those people on
the ground floor, as if we were just watching, but not participating.
Gradually, however, we too began to feel the beat of the drums awakening
within us, and before I knew it, the entire audience in the balcony was
also caught in the magical rhythm of the chant. People around me were
standing, as if mysteriously enticed out of their seats by a strange force.
I too was hypnotized by the beat of the drums and rhythmic chanting of the
words. People below us were joining in circles, wildly lost in their own
gyrations, conscious only of the drums and the complete content that
overwhelmed them. To me, it was as if I were really ‘high,’ and
able to release all my inner anxieties and frustrations. I was swept with
exhiliration and it was a great feeling to know that I could scream the
words as loud as I wanted, and nobody would care. Flowers were thrown to
the audience. It was as if everyone had taken a ‘magical mystery
tour.’ Before I realized where the time had gone, the evening was
over. As Mardel and I slowly left our seats and walked down the stairs, we
saw many people milling about the building. Little was said between us, for
we were each engrossed in our own thoughts, still not entirely believing
what we had just witnessed and participated in. Yet we both know that,
indeed, something magical had occurred, if only because of the satisfaction
that we carried home with us in our hearts.”
—Marilyn Byrne
“It is hard to begin to write of a night, of an experience,
where so much has happened at once, an experience in which one actually
feels a part of a large group, an experience which draws one from his chair
and moves his lips to a chant, and an experience which provokes one to
thought. To have all this in one night is a rarity.
“I arrived at the scene of the meeting, Hitchcock Hall,
about a half-hour early, hoping to get a good seat. When I entered the
building I was truly surprised. It was packed. The halls were packed; so
were the seats, the aisles, the balcony, and the stage. I pushed my way
through the crowd into the auditorium and finally squeezed into a seat. I
was really tight until the session began.
“I looked around at the huge crowd and after sizing it up
(hip, straight, curious) I looked to the stage. The first person I noticed
was Mr. Wheeler (my English teacher) on stage close to Swami Bhaktivedanta.
He beat out the rhythm on a large drum for the chanting. Also on stage I
saw Allen Ginsberg, who was discussing microphone difficulty with one of
the sound equipment people. Most impressively and most importantly sat
Swami Bhaktivedanta, surrounded by his pupils and a mass of people on the
stage. While I was looking around I noticed the noise, people talking,
doors buzzing, and mikes screeching, but soon quiet was indeed heard. The
Swami was seated and the meeting began.
“The first chant began, led by the Swami. The chant, Hare
Krishna, was sung slowly until the words were memorized, and then it began
to gain in strength and speed. The chanting, coupled with the reaction of
the mass of people, made me tingle. At first I thought the people dancing
on the stage were phony, but by chanting and dancing and concentrating on
the chant I suddenly felt free and happy. Just to forget the problems I had
and express myself in such a way (chanting and dancing) was a unique and
indeed pleasant experience. I can say that for the first time in a long
time I felt I had no problems. The mantra was quite effective. From the
chanting the program moved to Allen Gineberg’s introduction to the
Swami and the message and philosophy of Swami
Bhaktivedanta.”
—Julie Fishley
“I was a little hesitant at the beginning of the chanting of
Hare Krishna, but after seeing that everyone else was joining in I did the
same. It was fantastic. The more I repeated the words of the mantra the
better I felt. A strange feeling seemed to seize control of my entire body.
My mind became disconnected from material matters, and all of my energy
seemed dedicated to achieving what the Swami later said was a complete
state of consciousness. The musical instruments seemed to fit all of the
chanting together into a perfect rhythm which made me want to clap and
dance. I thought the chanting of Hare Krishna to be a truly different
experience, and I must say it really turned me on.
“Swami Bhaktivedanta’s speech was very stimulating. It
helped me find something that I have been searching for for a long time. He
said when you find God you will be filled with the love of God and you will
be satisfied. The Swami’s speech inspired me to search deeper for the
love of God. He said that one would need a clean heart and an open mind. I
am now trying to accomplish this, and I must say it is an extremely hard
thing to do. I believe I am gaining a new outlook on life, and it is a very
wonderful feeling. I received a great deal of understanding from this
meeting and when I left I had really gained something.”
—Jeff Hunsaker
“I found worth in the speeches. I think that the Swami
really makes good sense. His speech involving materialism was excellent. It
made me reflect upon myself and my goals. I wholeheartedly agree with him
on the subject. It made me realize that most people only concern themselves
with monetary possessions. They work and strive all of their lives for
money and everything concrete which it can buy. There are so many important
things of value which money cannot buy. No one truly appreciates them until
they are gone.
“Fortunately, I happened to notice a few of my friends in
the audience. They have been repeatedly warned against materialism. When I
discovered the nature of the speech, I suspected that they would
immediately be rude and ‘turn off’ the Swami. It was
interesting to note their reactions. They sat perfectly still and paid full
attention to the Swami. It seemed that he had a sort of hypnotic control
over them. Later, I asked them what they thought of the purport of the
speeches. Two of them thought they were good and were beginning to realize
their ‘mistake.’ The other one listened, but is too deep in
materialism to take heed to advice. To get through to two out of three
persons deserves credit.”
—Sandra Homer
“Only a few of the more daring joined the chanting in the
beginning, but as it went on, those less daring were made to feel left out
and soon joined the others. Those on stage were in their zenith; their
faces flowed with wide smiles. To sit there and merely watch gave one an
inner desire to stand up and become a part of this. More and more of the
audience gave in to this desire and began clapping their hands and chanting
as the session went on.
“Suddenly a summit was reached and the atmosphere
overwhelmed everyone—the constant clanging produced by the Swami, the
incessant rhythm of the drum, the buzzing background sound of the sitar and
the clapping of the audience caused an emotional catharsis, as if everyone
were summoned by a divine force. They all rose at once, and started
chanting. The inner emotion proved overpowering, and I found myself rising
and clapping my hands as I began to chant. It was wonderful. Everywhere
there were smiling faces and happiness poured over everyone like a
sparkling liquid. At the end, everyone sat down; I was left with an empty
feeling as if something had been taken away from me. I wanted to chant some
more.”
—George Sims
“During the middle of the chant, I found myself almost lost
in the continuous rhythm of Hare Krishna. Obviously the chanting had the
same effect on most of the audience. The same people who walked into
Hitchcock Hall sure that they could not be moved by the chanting, left the
building feeling a little removed from mundane reality. I found the entire
evening an enlightening experience, and I feel that anyone who believes in
anything as strongly as those who believe in Krishna consciousness should
be respected for it.”
—Judith Hirsh
“I was impressed most by the Swami’s philosophy of
God. I understood this philosophy to mean that the only way to happiness is
through God. He said that one cannot achieve happiness from liquor, drugs,
cigarettes, and other vices which are entirely material and cannot make one
spiritually content. One must have spiritual enlightenment, and this can be
had through the chanting of Hare Krishna. This chant excites the soul and,
in a way, gets one ‘high,’ but this is a spiritual highness and
not like getting high on alcohol or drugs. I was expecting the Swami to
preach some new type of religion and a new God, but was surprised when he
did not. He said it was not actually a religion at all but a
science.”
—Steve Pottmeyer
“I was very skeptical as I entered the auditorium where the
Yoga meeting was to be held. Knowing very little about the subject, I did
not know what to expect. My first reaction was one of surprise at the large
number of people that filled the auditorium. Many of the students were
dressed in absurd ‘hippie’ costumes, but they appeared as
bewildered as I was. I had recently read an article about Allen Ginsberg
and easily identified him on the stage. The Swami and his disciples then
drew my attention, and I studied their strange garments and shaved heads.
After some technical difficulties, the Swami began to chant. At first only
the people on the stage joined him, but gradually the contagious melody
spread through the crowd. The people on the stage began clapping their
hands and dancing and some of the people in the audience followed suit.
Soon I was lost in the excitement of the crowd and amazed at the hypnotic
effect of the chanting as I timidly joined them.”
—Charlotte Beaudis
“The shouting at first was unbearable, but I continued to
chant softly and soon found myself shouting too.
“After about ten minutes the whole room shook with the
vibrations from everyone’s screaming throats. A large circle was
formed on the stage and people were dancing around and chanting over and
over again ‘Hare Hare, Hare Krishna.’
“Clapping and yelling I felt a release within myself.
Whether it was one of freedom, rebellion or the mere excitement of so many
screaming people, I did in fact realize a definite change in my inner
feelings, in my consciousness. As the chanting died down, I left the room,
and as I started to walk home the whole world seemed very tomb-like to me.
It was too still without the chant piercing my ears. I walked home asking
myself how one. man and one chant could have so much control over so many
people.”
—Jean Amrein
“Being caught right in the center of all the commotion on
stage, I became one of the many who made up the largest ‘turned
on’ groups ever. It felt great and wonderful to free the soul and
lift a heavy load from my mind after a trying day.
“After waiting in the lobby of the overcrowded auditorium
for more than a couple of hours and becoming impatient, instinct overtook
my sense and I followed my nose to find a way to get closer to the Swami
and the origin of the action. I ended up on the backstage scene where I was
no more than ten feet from the Holy Man himself. The setting was
breath-taking. There was a mound of golden cushions about the glowing
spirit. There were hundreds of people and glaring, blaring television
lights in front of me. On a silver platter beside the Swami were fruits
like jewels and a goblet of gold, holding a thirst quenching liquid. About
this majestic set were situated the musicians and devotees who played the
‘Pied Pipers’ music, leading the followers in the chanting.
Giving the stage players no room were the followers who were enchanted and
enticed. All wanted to become closer, yet ever closer to Krishna and
Rama.
“I have had the experience to being ‘turned on’
before, but never like this. The sensation grabs one’s soul and mind
and carries them to far off places like a great and ever flowing
river.”
—Vance E. Nichols
“I was most impressed with the overall affect mantra
produced. The evening of May 12th, 1969 was the first time I ever witnessed
unity among all types of people. Even though many persons there were
ignorant of the interpretation of the chants, everyone joined.
“I never knew mantra existed before, and I certainly am glad
I was exposed to it. My one experience with mantra enhanced my belief in my
fellow man. I needed someone like Swami Bhaktivedanta to see that unity and
compatibility among people is possible. Swami Bhaktivedanta and mantra made
me aware of a larger purpose of life, one with a greater meaning in terms
of true goals.”
—Barb Ponieski
“The chanting of Hare Krishna had a marvelous effect upon
me. While chanting Hare Krishna all else was forced from my mind and all I
could do was chant and dance. Nearly everyone in the auditorium was dancing
and chanting, and there was a feeling of love and peace circulating through
the auditorium.”
—Mark Poling
“The Monday night meeting with Swami Bhaktivedanta and Allen
Ginsberg was the first of its kind that I ever attended. Upon entering the
Hitchcock Hall auditorium I was shocked at the whole audience standing and
chanting Hare Krishna. This chant continued for fifteen minutes with every
person, including myself, participating. By participating I soon forgot all
my conscious worries and thoughts. It was as though my mind was free to
roam as it pleased. No one special idea or thought stayed with me for more
than several minutes. I was completely caught in the rhythm of the chant
and enjoyed every minute of it, as did the entire audience.
“The stage in the auditorium was jammed with people captured
by the powers of the Hare Krishna chant. Men and women alike were swaying
back and forth and dancing wildly across the entire stage. In the audience
the scene was practically the same. Every living soul was clapping his
hands, stamping his feet and chanting Hare Krishna to the beat of the
cymbals and drums on the stage. The audience seemed to forget about its
problems, classes, and everything else while this chanting was in progress.
Allen Ginsberg and Swami Bhaktivedanta kept the whole group of lively
people enjoying the whole evening.”
—Milton Watson
“Monday evening May 12 was an evening that I will remember
for a very long time. The Ohio State Yoga Society produced an event by
which people could release themselves from the problems of the world and
participate in a new light. Swami Bhaktivedanta was very impressive and
preached a self-releasing speech. The audience reacted to his speech in
many ways. I saw some people laugh, some meditating deeply, and even some
in a trance-like expression.
“The chant was about enjoyment in the fullest sense and was
directed to the Supreme God. I also detected restlessness for peace, and a
sense of love for all. The audience was quick in response to the
Swami’s encouragement to join in. People were practically hypnotized,
‘leaping out of their skins’ as Mr. Ginsberg stated. In
addition, the audience showed enjoyment, and there was a feeling of a
released pressure. The chanting was in a tempo that was very distinct and
gave the impression of power, and at the same time released worries by
giving supreme enjoyment. Hence, I feel that the Yoga Society was a huge
success in its attempt to try out a belief that is new in
Columbus.”
—Michal Peters
“The audience rose to their feet and began chanting and
clapping. The entire audience seemed to be awed and enchanted by the
chanting. I felt a sense of tranquility and friendliness between everyone
present. I was amazed the way everyone joined in and chanted without
hesitation. Allen Ginsberg and Swami Bhaktivedanta were greatly respected
by the audience, as shown by the silence when the Swami spoke and by the
responsive chanting of the masses. Although it was hard to understand the
Swami, he was graciously received when he spoke.”
—Neal Levitt
“For many the evening was a totally new experience, for
others a link in the chain leading to the realization of where to fit in
the puzzle of life. We are obligated to Allen Ginsberg and Swami
Bhaktivedanta for revealing a new course for students to
follow.”
—Lynn Miller
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