Kalki Bhagawan

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Kalki Bhagawan
Sri Bhagavan.jpg
Born
Vijay Kumar Naidu

(1949-03-07) 7 March 1949 (age 75)
Natham, Madras State, India (present-day Tamil Nadu)
NationalityIndian
Other namesSri Bhagavan, Amma Bhagavan (as a couple)
Alma materDG Vaishnav College, Chennai
Known forSpiritual teacher from India
Spouse
Padmavathi
(m. 1977)

Kalki Bhagawan (born 7 March 1949 as Vijay Kumar Naidu), also known as Sri Bhagavan, is a spiritual teacher from India. [1] [2] He is the founder of a spiritual organization called Oneness. [3] [4] which has its headquarters in Varadaiahpalem, Tirupati district in Andhra Pradesh. [5]

Contents

Early life

Bhagavan (front row center) with his son NKV Krishna (back row left) and wife Padmavathi (back row center). Circa 1990 Vk old.jpg
Bhagavan (front row center) with his son NKV Krishna (back row left) and wife Padmavathi (back row center). Circa 1990

Bhagavan was born as Vijay Kumar Naidu on 7 March 1949 in Natham village, Vellore district in Tamil Nadu, to Smt. Vaidarbhi Amma and Sri Varadarajulu. [4] His father was the head of the accounts department of Indian Railways. [4]

Education and Early Career

In 1955 his family moved to Chennai where he attended Don Bosco School. He graduated from DG Vaishnav College in Chennai, majoring in Mathematics. [6] After completing college, he worked as an office clerk for Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC). [7] In his childhood he was introduced to the philosophy of Jiddu Krishnamurti by his friend R. Sankar. He was a visitor to the Theosophical Society in Chennai. [7]

Marriage

He married Smt. Padmavathi on 9 June 1977, following the customary practice in India where marriages are decided by elders in the family. [4] Padmavathi, also known as “Amma” by the followers, participated in building the Oneness spiritual organization. [4]

Work

In 1984, Bhagavan established a residential school called Jeevashram in Chittoor District, Andhra Pradesh to provide an alternative form of education with the goal of “developing an environment for children to discover themselves and reach their full potential". [8]

In 1994, the Jeevashram school campus was renamed to Satyaloka and spiritual programs for the public was started. [9] In 2000, he subsequently founded the Oneness organization with the stated mission to create “lasting spiritual transformation" and to alleviate human suffering “at its roots by awakening humanity into Oneness and transforming the world into a better place”. [9] [10]

During the early stages of the movement, Bhagavan was regarded by his followers as Kalki, the tenth incarnation of Vishnu and his work was locally referred to as the “Kalki movement”. [9] Bhagavan has also stated that "although this is the time for Kalki’s emergence, Kalki is not one person but a collective awakening". [8]

The organization’s work includes the practice of giving and receiving the “Oneness Blessing” also known as the Deeksha, which is a technique of “energy transmission to usher the receiver into a state of higher consciousness.” The practice does not require initiation into following a new path. [8]

Bhagavan believes that when a critical mass of people have received the "Oneness Blessing", it would affect the "collective DNA" of humanity, resulting as an "Age of Enlightenment", which will take few decades to fully take effect. [11] Followers of the movement have reported psychosomatic ailments to have been healed by the "Oneness Blessing". [4] [5] In 2004, Carl Johan Calleman (based on the Mayan calendar), collaborated with Bhagavan to initiate a festival called Oneness Celebration. [12] On 21st December 2012, worldwide events were conducted by the Oneness organization. [2]

In 2017, the Oneness organization was handed over to Bhagavan's son, NKV Krishna and daughter-in-law Preetha Krishna and was renamed to Ekam. [3] Over the years, the Oneness movement is known by various names including the Foundation for World Awakening, Golden Age Foundation, Bhagavad Dharma, Kalki Dharma, Oneness University and Oneness Organization. [5]

Teachings

Bhagavan's stated belief is that the cause for human suffering is the sense of a separate self that each individual experiences that gives each the feeling of "me and a not-me”, which is what causes conflicts in families, relationships and wars between nations. [1] According to him, enlightenment is a neurobiological process in which this sense of separate self ends. [11]

There are no required set of texts or doctrines in the Oneness movement. [2] Though the founder Bhagavan's writings or sayings are used as teachings, the movement’s emphasis is for followers to acquire direct personal experience. [2] It does not dictate conversion. [1]

The Oneness movement sees its message as compatible with major religious traditions, and simultaneously allows cultural adaptation of the teachings. [8]

Business Activities

Bhagavan founded the White Lotus Conglomerate [13] involved in various sectors like real estate, property development, energy, media and sports. It is now owned by his son N.K.V. Krishna. [13]

Kosmik Music, [14] is a music label producing titles ranging from traditional, spiritual and fusion tracks. "Sacred Chants" containing traditional Vedic hymns is one of its successful brands. [14]

Criticisms

R. Sankar, Bhagavan's first disciple and childhood friend, left in 1998, after alleging that the Oneness movement was controlling. However, he also asserts that Kalki Bhagavan did not harbour ambitions beyond the spiritual aspects. They continue to meet every year. [15]

Freddy Nielsen, his associate from Sweden, left him in 2005 after directing criticism against the Oneness movement. [9]

Issues

In 2002, a public interest litigation for income tax probe of the Kalki Trust was dismissed and rejected by the Madras High Court and subsequently by the Indian Supreme Court. [16]

In 2019, Income Tax department officials conducted raids on more than forty properties of the White Lotus Conglomerate owned by Bhagavan's son and seized cash and gold with total estimated seizure worth Rs 93 crore. [13]

Publications

Books

See also

Notes

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