The Man of God, Sri Chaitanya, said towards the beginning of the sixteenth century: ‘As an immoral woman constantly thinks of her illicit lover while living in the midst of her family, so do thou silently and ceaselessly meditate on Hari while doing your earthly work.’
Within the next two hundred years. Vaishnavism, or the religion deriving from Sri Chaitanya, conquered the majority of the Hindu population in the north-east. Today, another three hundred years later, Vaishnav Bhakti and its characteristic feature nam-kirtan (the chanting of Hari’s name) still live on.
On 4 February 1486. Nimai or Gouranga was born in the small town of Navadwip in Bengal, seventy-five miles north of Calcutta. He grew up possessing a precocity of intellect and mastery over all branches of Sanskrit learning. At the young age of twenty-four his intellectual pride changed to religious ecstasy. In January 1510 Keshav Bharati initiated him as a sannyasi under the name of ‘Krishna-Chaitanya’. Chaitanya was now seen by many as Krishna’s incarnation and worshipped. The ‘first Vaishnav’ spent many years preaching bhakti in various parts of India. This volume describes in detail Chaitanya s life and teachings.