Stallions Ghore Fera Split Mind Art by Partha

Old Temple of Vedanta Society, San Francisco

Author: Partha Sircar | Posted on: 8th, Jun, 2019

The Old Temple of the Vedanta Society in San Francisco in the picture below somehow made me think about the little poem below by Rabindranath Tagore.  I have appended my (admittedly poor) translation below the poem.

বহু দিন ধরে    বহু ক্রোশ দূরে
বহু ব্যয় করি    বহু দেশ ঘুরে
দেখিতে গিয়েছি পর্বতমালা
দেখিতে গিয়েছি সিন্ধু।
দেখা হয় নাই চক্ষু মেলিয়া
ঘর হতে শুধু দুই পা ফেলিয়া
একটি ধানের শিষের উপরে
একটি শিশির বিন্দু।।

“Over many many years, I traveled many many miles, spent a fortune and visited many distant lands to enjoy the majestic beauty of great mountain ranges and seashores.  But I just did not spare the time to merely step outside my front door and open my eyes to the simple beauty of a drop of dew glistening on a blade of grass in a paddy field.”

We travel to London, Paris, Rome, Greece, Egypt to see the Buckingham Palace, Notre Dame, St. Peter’s Basilica, the Acropolis and the pyramids.  We travel east to visit the famous Borobudur and Prambanan in Indonesia, Beijing’s Summer Palace, and the Great Wall of China.  We take time to visit the famous temples of Kedar/Badri, Varanasi and Tirupati.  But how many among us have noticed the Old Temple of the Vedanta Society of Northern California – a rather unusual structure – at the southwest corner of Webster and Filbert Streets in San Francisco.  How many of us even knew about it?

The Old Temple has its own unique history.  It is the oldest universal Hindu temple in the western world.  It was completed in 1906, just before the great San Francisco earthquake. It somehow survived the earthquake and the fire that followed – some may think it was divine intervention. The temple was built under the leadership of Swami Trigunatitananda, who at the time was in charge of the Vedanta Society of San Francisco (founded by Swami Vivekananda himself in 1900).  Swami Trigunatitananda was a brother disciple of Swami Vivekananda, one of Sri Ramakrishna’s sixteen monastic disciples.  Incidentally, he died in 1915 resulting from the injuries from a bomb thrown at him by a deranged disciple, while he was speaking from the pulpit of his beloved temple – the first martyr of the Ramakrishna Vedanta Movement.

Swami Trigunatiatnanda had grandiose visions of the temple.  He wanted it to reflect an architectural representation of the message of religious harmony, the central theme of his Guru Sri Ramakrishna’s message to the modern world, as so ably expounded by Swami Vivekananda.  Therefore it is not built like an Indian temple.  Each of its four towers on the roof and the small tower at the entrance to the auditorium is architecturally unique.  They have echoes of the Shiva temples of Bengal, the Varanasi temple, a medieval Christian church, the Taj Mahal and a Muslim mosque.  The veranda running along the north and east sides of the building on the third floor is lined with sculpted arches in Moorish style.  In addition to the auditorium, the temple housed monk’s quarters and administrative offices. With time came requirements for additional space. Major activity was shifted to the New Temple built in 1959 at the northwest corner of Vallejo and Fillmore Streets, a few blocks from the Old Temple. The Old Temple was recently subjected to a major renovation, including seismic retrofit, to bring it up to the current Building Code requirements.  A  Re-Dedication Ceremony for the Old Temple took place on October 29 (Kali Puja Day) and October 30, 2016, graced by a senior monk from Belur Math and about a dozen monks from all over North America.  The renovation is now complete and it is now open

Perhaps now some of us will take a closer look at the Old Temple and try to find out more about it. And that also includes me.

Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment

What’s new

 

Our Picture Board

https://usbengalforum.com/ourpictureboard/

https://www.amazon.com/Detour-Incredible-Tales-That-Take/dp/1943190224

Collection of short stories: A book written by Sunil Ghose.

 

p/1943190224Paperback and e-book formats. Please click below:

https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=zLrHEAAAQBAJ
Editor’s book:
https://www.archwaypublishing.com/en/bookstore/bookdetails/829905-born-in-heaven
Poems – I keep Searching for you, Poems of Twilight Years from Kamal Acharyya.
Short Story:
নারী স্বাধীনতা – Soumi Jana
ঝুমকির ঝমক্ – Krishna Chaudhuri
Variety – মেচ রমনীর দোকনা ফাস্রা – Dr. Shibsankar Pal
সেলাই দিদিমণি, Women help in Carpet making. – Dr Shibsankar Pal.
Arts – Partha Ghosh

Q3-2025 contributors (School and College)
Arhon Jana
Molay Konar
Anuska Saha
Ayush Roy
Sagnika Sinha

Q1-2024
Arnab Dalui
Deblina Singha Roy

Q3-2024
Saniya Bharti
Anwesha Dey
Neelkantha Saha

Our deep appreciation for many young contributors in all categories.

Quotes

Funniest Quotes about ageing

“At fifty, everyone has the face he deserves.”
– *George Orwell*

HAPPY AGEING AND GROWING

Day's history

1st March

1872 Yellowstone becomes the world’s first national park
1692 Sarah Goode, Sarah Osborne, & Tituba arrested for witchcraft in Salem, Massachusetts

2nd March

1807 US Congress bans the slave trade within the US, effective January 1, 1808
1969 1st test flight of the supersonic Concorde

3rd March

1885 American Telephone & Telegraph (AT&T) incorporates
1939 Mahatma Gandhi begins a fast in Mumbai (Bombay) to protest against autocratic rule in India

4th March

1918, the first cases were reported of the historic influenza pandemic of 1918, later known as Spanish flu. The flu killed approx 40 million people.
1825 John Quincy Adams inaugurated as 6th President of the USA
1927 Babe Ruth becomes the highest-paid player in MLB history when he signs 3-year, $70,000 per season contract with the New York Yankees

5th March

1616 Astronomical work ‘de Revolutionists’ by Nicolaus Copernicus placed on Catholic Forbidden index
1924 Computing-Tabulating-Recording Corp becomes IBM
1949 The Jharkhand Party is founded in India.
1851 Geological Survey of India was established in Calcutta.

6th March

1899 “Aspirin” (acetylsalicylic acid) patented by Felix Hoffmann at German company Bayer
1971 Test Cricket debut of Sunil Gavaskar, v West Indies at Port-of-Spain
1915 Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore met for the first time at Shantiniketan.

7th March

321 Roman Emperor Constantine I decrees that the dies Solis Invicti (sun-day) is the day of rest in the Empire
1973 Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s Awami League wins election in Bangladesh

Day's humor

Week's Horoscope

Horoscope