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Monastic Name : Swami Ramakrishnananda
[1863 - 1911]
Swami Ramakrishnananda was born in an orthodox Brahmin family of Hooghly
district, Bengal, on 13th July 1863. His father, Ishwarachandra Chakravarti,
a strict observer of religious traditions and a devout worshipper of the
Divine Mother, gave the early training that laid the foundations of the
lofty character exhibited in the life of his great son.Shashi went to
school and having successfully completed the school course he entered
the Metropolitan College, Calcutta. He was a brilliant student at college
and his favourite subjects were literature (both English and Sanskrit),
mathematics and philosophy . He and his cousin Sarat Chandra - afterwards
Swami Saradananda - came under the influence of the Brahmo Samaj. Shashi
became intimately known to the Brahmo leader Keshab Chandra Sen, and was
appointed private tutor to his sons.
On a certain day in October 1883, Shashi and Sarat, along with a few
other boy-companions, arrived at Dakshineswar to see the Master. Shri
Ramakrishna received them with a smile and began to talk to them warmly
about the need of renunciation in spiritual life. Shashi was then reading
in the First Arts class and the others were preparing for matriculation.
As Shashi was the oldest of the band, the conversation was addressed to
him. Shri Ramakrishna asked Shashi whether he believed in God with form
or without form. The boy frankly answered that he was not certain about
the existence of God and was not, therefore, able to speak one way or
another. The reply pleased the Master very much. Shashi and Sharat were
fascinated by the personality of Sri Ramakrishna whom they henceforth
accepted as their Master, the pole-star of their lives. Of Shashi and
Sharat, Sri Ramakrishna used to say that both of them were the followers
of Jesus the Christ in a former incarnation. Shashi was the very embodiment
of service. Other disciples also gave the best in the service of Master.
But Shashi's case was conspicuous.
After the Master death, the boys who were children of the Master gathered
together at the newly founded monastery at Baranagore. While others were
indifferent as to whether the body lived or went in their intense search
for the Highest, Shashi took care that his brother disciples had not to
face any starvation actually. The time came when the boys decided to renounce
the world formally by taking the monastic vows. They changed their names.
Shashi became Swami Ramakrishnananda.
In 1897, Ramakrishnananda became the founder of the Ramakrishna Mission
in Madras and remained in the charge until his death in 1911. He was very
strict in his choice for novices for the Madras monastery; and he could
be strict to them and with the householder devotees. He was instrumental
in the spread of Ramakrishna-Vivekananda ideology in the South.
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