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CHAPTER ONE

The Hare Kṛṣṇa Mantra: “There Is Nothing Higher ...”

A 1982 Interview with George Harrison

If you open up your heart
You will know what I mean
We’ve been polluted so long
But here’s a way for you to get clean

By chanting the names of the Lord and you’ll be free
The Lord is awaiting on you all to awaken and see

“Awaiting On You All”
from the album All Things Must Pass

In the summer of 1969, before the dissolution of the most popular music group of all time, George Harrison produced a hit single, “Hare Krishna Mantra,” performed by George and the members of the London Rādhā-Kṛṣṇa Temple. Soon after rising to the Top 10 or Top 20 best-selling record charts throughout England, Europe, and parts of Asia, the Hare Kṛṣṇa chant became a household word – especially in England, where the BBC had featured the Hare Kṛṣṇa Chanters, as they were then called, four times on the country’s most popular television program, Top of the Pops.

At about the same time, five thousand miles away, several shaven-headed, saffron-robed men and sari-clad women sang along with John Lennon and Yoko Ono as they recorded the hit song “Give Peace a Chance” in their room at Montreal’s Queen Elizabeth Hotel:

John and Yoko, Timmy Leary, Rosemary, Tommy Smothers, Bobby Dylan, Tommy Cooper, Derek Taylor, Norman Mailer, Allen Ginsberg, Hare Krishna, Hare Hare Krishna. All we are saying is give peace a chance.

The Hare Kṛṣṇa devotees had been visiting with the Lennons for several days, discussing world peace and self-realization. Because of this and other widespread exposure, people all over the world soon began to identify the chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa devotees as harbingers of a more simple, joyful, peaceful way of life.

George Harrison was the impetus for the Beatles’ spiritual quest of the sixties, and up until his death in 2001, the chanting of the Hare Kṛṣṇa mahā-mantra – Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare / Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare – continued to play a key role in his life.

In this conversation with his long-time personal friend Contemporary Vedic Library Series editor Mukunda Goswami, taped at George’s home in England on September 4, 1982, George reveals some of the memorable experiences he had chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa and describes in detail his deep personal realizations about the chanting. He explains what factors led him to produce the “Hare Krishna Mantra” record, “My Sweet Lord,” and the LPs All Things Must Pass and Living in the Material World – all of which were influenced to a great extent by the Hare Kṛṣṇa chanting and philosophy. He speaks lovingly and openly of his association with His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda, founder-ācārya of the Hare Kṛṣṇa movement. George also speaks frankly about his personal philosophy regarding the Hare Kṛṣṇa movement, music, yoga, reincarnation, karma, the soul, God, and Christianity. The conversation concludes with his fond remembrances of a visit to the birthplace of Lord Kṛṣṇa in Vṛndāvana, India, home of the Hare Kṛṣṇa mantra, and with George discussing some of his celebrity friends’ involvement with the mantra now heard and chanted around the world.

Mukunda Goswami: Oftentimes you speak of yourself as a plainclothes devotee, a closet yogi or “closet Kṛṣṇa,” and millions of people all over the world have been introduced to the chanting by your songs. But what about you? How did you first come in contact with Kṛṣṇa?

George Harrison: Through my visits to India. So by the time the Hare Kṛṣṇa movement first came to England in 1969, John and I had already gotten ahold of Prabhupāda’s first album, Kṛṣṇa Consciousness. We had played it a lot and liked it. That was the first time I’d ever heard the chanting of the mahā-mantra.

Mukunda: Even though you and John Lennon played Śrīla Prabhupāda’s record a lot and had chanted quite a bit on your own, you’d never really met any of the devotees. Yet when Gurudāsa, Śyāmasundara, and I [three of the six devotees sent from America to open the first Hare Kṛṣṇa temple in London] first came to England, you co-signed the lease on our first temple in central London, bought Bhaktivedanta Manor for us, which has provided a place for literally hundreds of thousands of people to learn about Kṛṣṇa consciousness, and financed the first printing of the book Kṛṣṇa. You hadn’t really known us for a very long time at all. Wasn’t this a kind of sudden change for you?

George: Not really, for I always felt at home with Kṛṣṇa. You see, it was already a part of me. I think it’s something that’s been with me from my previous birth. Your coming to England and all that was just like another piece of a jigsaw puzzle that was coming together to make a complete picture. It had been slowly fitting together. That’s why I responded to you all the way I did when you first came to London. Let’s face it. If you’re going to have to stand up and be counted, I figured, “I would rather be with these guys than with those other guys over there.” It’s like that. I mean I’d rather be one of the devotees of God than one of the straight, so-called sane or normal people who just don’t understand that man is a spiritual being, that he has a soul. And I felt comfortable with you all, too – kind of like we’d known each other before. It was a pretty natural thing, really.

Mukunda: You were a member of the Beatles, undoubtedly the greatest single pop group in music history – one that influenced not only music but whole generations of young people. After the dissolution of the group, you went on to emerge as a solo superstar with albums like All Things Must Pass, the country’s top-selling album for seven weeks in a row, and its hit single “My Sweet Lord,” which was number one in America for two months. That was followed by Living in the Material World, number one on Billboard for five weeks and a million-selling LP. One song on that album, “Give Me Love,” was a smash hit for six straight weeks. The concert for Bangladesh with Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, Bob Dylan, Leon Russell, and Billy Preston was a phenomenal success and, once the LP and concert film were released, would become the single most successful rock benefit project ever. So, you had material success. You’d been everywhere, done everything, yet at the same time you were on a spiritual quest. What was it that really got you started on your spiritual journey?

George: It wasn’t until the experience of the sixties really hit. You know, having been successful and meeting everybody we thought worth meeting and finding out they weren’t worth meeting, and having had more hit records than everybody else and having done it bigger than everybody else. It was like reaching the top of a wall and then looking over and seeing that there’s so much more on the other side. So I felt it was part of my duty to say, “Oh, okay, maybe you are thinking this is all you need – to be rich and famous – but actually it isn’t.”

Mukunda: In your recently published autobiography, I, Me, Mine, you said your song “Awaiting on You All” is about japa yoga, or chanting mantras on beads. You explained that a mantra is “mystical energy encased in a sound structure,” and that “each mantra contains within its vibrations a certain power.” But of all mantras, you stated that “the mahā-mantra” [the Hare Kṛṣṇa mantra] has been prescribed as the easiest and surest way for attaining God realization in this present age. As a practitioner of japa yoga, what realizations have you experienced from chanting?

George: Prabhupāda told me once that we should just keep chanting all the time – or as much as possible. Once you do that, you realize the benefit. The response that comes from chanting is in the form of bliss, or spiritual happiness, which is a much higher taste than any happiness found here in the material world. That’s why I say that the more you do it, the more you don’t want to stop, because it feels so nice and peaceful.

Mukunda: What is it about the mantra that brings about this feeling of peace and happiness?

George: The word Hare is the word that calls upon the energy that’s around the Lord. If you say the mantra enough, you build up an identification with God. God’s all happiness, all bliss, and by chanting His names we connect with Him. So it’s really a process of actually having a realization of God, which all becomes clear with the expanded state of consciousness that develops when you chant. Like I said in the introduction I wrote for Prabhupāda’s Kṛṣṇa book some years ago, “If there’s a God, I want to see Him. It’s pointless to believe in something without proof, and Kṛṣṇa consciousness and meditation are methods where you can actually obtain God perception.”

Mukunda: Is it an instantaneous process, or gradual?

George: You don’t get it in five minutes. It’s something that takes time, but it works because it’s a direct process of attaining God and will help us to have pure consciousness and good perception that is above the normal, everyday state of consciousness.

Mukunda: How do you feel after chanting for a long time?

George: In the life I lead, I find that I sometimes have opportunities when I can really get going at it, and the more I do it, I find the harder it is to stop, and I don’t want to lose the feeling it gives me.

For example, once I chanted the Hare Kṛṣṇa mantra nonstop all the way from France to Portugal. I drove for about twenty-three hours and chanted all the way. It gets you feeling a bit invincible. The funny thing was that I didn’t even know where I was going. I mean, I had bought a map and I knew basically which way I was aiming, but I couldn’t speak French, Spanish, or Portuguese. But none of that seemed to matter. You know, once you get chanting, then things start to happen transcendentally.

Mukunda: The Vedas inform us that because God is absolute, there is no difference between God the person and His holy name; the name is God. When you first started chanting, could you perceive that?

George: It takes a certain amount of time and faith to accept or realize that there’s no difference between Him and His name – to get to the point where you’re no longer mystified by where He is. You know, like, “Is He around here?” You realize after some time, “Here He is – right here!” It’s a matter of practice. So when I say that “I see God,” I don’t necessarily mean to say that when I chant I’m seeing Kṛṣṇa in His original form when He came five thousand years ago, dancing across the water, playing His flute. Of course, that would also be nice, and it’s quite possible too. When you become real pure by chanting, you can actually see God like that – I mean personally. But no doubt you can feel His presence and know that He’s there when you’re chanting.

Mukunda: Can you think of any incident where you felt God’s presence very strongly through chanting?

George: Once I was on an airplane that was in an electric storm. It was hit by lightning three times, and a Boeing 707 went over the top of us, missing us by inches. I thought the back end of the plane had blown off. I was on my way from Los Angeles to New York to organize the Bangladesh concert. As soon as the plane began bouncing around, I started chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. The whole thing went on for about an hour and a half or two hours, the plane dropping hundreds of feet and bouncing all over in the storm, all the lights out and all these explosions, and everybody terrified. I ended up with my feet pressed against the seat in front, my seat belt as tight as it could be, gripping on the thing, and yelling Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare at the top of my voice. I know for me, the difference between making it and not making it was actually chanting the mantra. Peter Sellers also swore that chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa saved him from a plane crash once.

John Lennon and Hare Kṛṣṇa

Mukunda: Did any of the other Beatles chant?

George: Before meeting Prabhupāda and all of you I had bought that album Prabhupāda did in New York, and John and I listened to it. I remember we sang it for days, John and I, with ukulele banjos, sailing through the Greek islands chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa. Like six hours we sang, because we couldn’t stop once we got going. As soon as we stopped it was like the lights went out. It went on to the point where our jaws were aching, singing the mantra over and over and over and over and over. We felt exalted; it was a very happy time for us.

Mukunda: You know, I saw a video the other day sent to us from Canada, showing John and Yoko Ono recording their hit song “Give Peace a Chance,” and about five or six of the devotees were there in John’s room at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal, singing along and playing cymbals and drums. You know, John and Yoko chanted Hare Kṛṣṇa on that song. That was in May of ’69, and just three months later, Śrīla Prabhupāda was John and Yoko’s houseguest for one month at their estate outside London.

While Prabhupāda was there, you, John, and Yoko came to his room one afternoon for a few hours. I think that was the first time you all met him.

George: That’s right.

Mukunda: At that point John was a spiritual seeker, and Prabhupāda explained the true path to peace and liberation. He talked about karma, reincarnation, and the eternality of the soul, which are all elaborately dealt with in the Vedic literatures. Although John never made Hare Kṛṣṇa a big part of his life, he echoed the philosophy of Kṛṣṇa consciousness in a hit song he wrote just about a year after that conversation, “Instant Karma.”

Now what’s the difference between chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa and meditation?

George: It’s really the same sort of thing as meditation, but I think it has a quicker effect. I mean, even if you put your beads down, you can still say the mantra or sing it without actually keeping track on your beads. One of the main differences between silent meditation and chanting is that silent meditation is rather dependent on concentration, but when you chant, it’s more of a direct connection with God.

Practical Meditation

Mukunda: The mahā-mantra was prescribed for modern times because of the fast-paced nature of things today. Even when people do get into a little quiet place, it’s very difficult to calm the mind for very long.

George: That’s right. Chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa is a type of meditation that can be practiced even if the mind is in turbulence. You can even be doing it and other things at the same time. That’s what’s so nice. In my life there’s been many times the mantra brought things around. It keeps me in tune with reality, and the more you sit in one place and chant, the more incense you offer to Kṛṣṇa in the same room, the more you purify the vibration, the more you can achieve what you’re trying to do, which is just trying to remember God, God, God, God, God as often as possible. And if you’re talking to Him with the mantra, it certainly helps.

Mukunda: What else helps you to fix your mind on God?

George: Well, just having as many things around me that will remind me of Him, like incense and pictures. Just the other day I was looking at a small picture on the wall of my studio of you, Gurudāsa, and Śyāmasundara, and just seeing all the old devotees made me think of Kṛṣṇa. I guess that’s the business of devotees – to make you think of God.

Mukunda: How often do you chant?

George: Whenever I get a chance.

Mukunda: Once you asked Śrīla Prabhupāda about a particular verse he quoted from the Vedas, in which it’s said that when one chants the holy name of Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa dances on the tongue and one wishes one had thousands of ears and thousands of mouths with which to better appreciate the holy names of God.

George: Yes. I think he was talking about the realization that there is no difference between Him standing before you and His being present in His name. That’s the real beauty of chanting – you directly connect with God. I have no doubt that by saying Kṛṣṇa over and over again He can come and dance on the tongue. The main thing, though, is to keep in touch with God.

Mukunda: So your habit is generally to use the beads when you chant?

George: Oh, yeah. I have my beads. I remember when I first got them, they were just big knobby globs of wood, but now I’m very glad to say that they’re smooth from chanting a lot.

Mukunda: Do you generally keep them in the bag when you chant?

George: Yes. I find it’s very good to be touching them. It keeps another one of the senses fixed on God. Beads really help in that respect. You know, the frustrating thing about it was in the beginning there was a period when I was heavy into chanting and I had my hand in my bead bag all the time. And I got so tired of people asking me, “Did you hurt your hand – break it or something?” In the end I used to say, “Yeah, yeah. I had an accident,” because it was easier than explaining everything. Using the beads also helps me to release a lot of nervous energy.

Mukunda: Some people say that if everyone on the planet chanted Hare Kṛṣṇa, they wouldn’t be able to keep their minds on what they were doing. In other words, some people ask that if everyone started chanting, wouldn’t the whole world just grind to a halt? They wonder if people would stop working in factories, for example.

George: No. Chanting doesn’t stop you from being creative or productive. It actually helps you concentrate. I think this would make a great sketch for television: imagine all the workers on the Ford assembly line in Detroit, all of them chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa while bolting on the wheels. Now that would be wonderful. It might help out the auto industry, and probably there would be more decent cars too.

Experiencing God Through the Senses

Mukunda: We’ve talked a lot about japa, or personalized chanting, which most chanters engage in. But there’s another type, called kīrtana, when one chants congregationally, in a temple or on the street with a group of devotees. Kīrtana generally gives a more supercharged effect, like recharging one’s spiritual batteries, and it gives others a chance to hear the holy names and become purified.

Actually, I was with Śrīla Prabhupāda when he first began the group chanting in Tompkins Square Park on New York’s Lower East Side in 1966. The poet Allen Ginsberg would come and chant with us a lot and would play his harmonium. A lot of people would come to hear the chanting. Then Prabhupāda would give lectures on the Bhagavad-gītā back at the temple.

George: Yes, going to a temple or chanting with a group of other people – the vibration is that much stronger. Of course, for some people it’s easy just to start chanting on their beads in the middle of a crowd, while other people are more comfortable chanting in the temple. But part of Kṛṣṇa consciousness is trying to tune in all the senses of all the people: to experience God through all the senses – not just by experiencing Him on Sunday, through your knees by kneeling on some hard wooden kneeler in the church. But if you visit a temple, you can see pictures of God, you can see the Deity form of the Lord, and you can just hear Him by listening to yourself and others say the mantra. It’s just a way of realizing that all the senses can be applied to perceiving God, and it makes it that much more appealing, seeing the pictures, hearing the mantra, smelling the incense, flowers, and so on. That’s the nice thing about your movement. It incorporates everything – chanting, dancing, philosophy, and prasāda [vegetarian food that has been spiritualized by being offered to Lord Kṛṣṇa]. The music and dancing is a serious part of the process too. It’s not just something to burn off excess energy.

Mukunda: We’ve always seen that when we chant in the streets, people are eager to crowd around and listen. A lot of them tap their feet or dance along.

George: It’s great – the sound of the cymbals. When I hear them from a few blocks away, it’s like some magical thing that awakens something in me. Without their really being aware of what’s happening, people are being awakened spiritually. Of course, in another sense, in a higher sense, the kīrtana is always going on whether we’re hearing it or not.

Now, all over the place in Western cities, the saṅkīrtana party has become a common sight. I love to see these saṅkīrtana parties, because I love the whole idea of the devotees mixing it up with everybody – giving everybody a chance to remember. I wrote in the Kṛṣṇa book introduction, “Everybody is looking for Kṛṣṇa. Some don’t realize that they are, but they are. Kṛṣṇa is God ... and by chanting His holy names, the devotee quickly develops God consciousness.”

Mukunda: You know, Śrīla Prabhupāda often said that after a large number of temples were established most people would simply begin to take up the chanting of Hare Kṛṣṇa in their own homes, and we’re seeing more and more that this is what’s happening. Our worldwide congregation is very large – in the millions. The chanting on the streets, the books, and the temples are there to give people a start, to introduce them to the process.

George: I think it’s better that it is spreading into the homes now. There are a lot of “closet Krishnas,” you know. There’s a lot of people out there who are just waiting, and if it’s not today it will be tomorrow or next week or next year.

Back in the sixties, whatever we were all getting into, we tended to broadcast it as loud as we could. I had certain realizations and went through a period where I was so thrilled about my discoveries and realizations that I wanted to shout and tell it to everybody. But there’s a time to shout it out and a time not to shout it out. A lot of people went underground with their spiritual life in the seventies, but they’re out there in little nooks and crannies and in the countryside, people who look and dress straight – insurance salesmen types – but they’re really meditators and chanters – closet devotees.

Prabhupāda’s movement is doing pretty well. It’s growing like wildfire, really. How long it will take until we get to a golden age where everybody’s perfectly in tune with God’s will I don’t know, but because of Prabhupāda, Kṛṣṇa consciousness has certainly spread more in the last sixteen years than it has since the sixteenth century, the time of Lord Caitanya.1 The mantra has spread more quickly, and the movement’s gotten bigger and bigger. It would be great if everyone chanted. Everybody would benefit by doing it. No matter how much money you’ve got, it doesn’t necessarily make you happy. You have to find your happiness with the problems you have – not worry too much about them – and chant Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare.

The great saint, mystic, and incarnation of Kṛṣṇa who popularized the chanting of Hare Kṛṣṇa and founded the modern-day Hare Kṛṣṇa movement.

The Hare Kṛṣṇa Record

Mukunda: In 1969 you produced a single called “Hare Krishna Mantra,” which eventually became a hit in many countries. That tune later became a cut on the Rādhā-Kṛṣṇa Temple album, which you also produced on the Apple label and which was distributed in America by Capitol Records. A lot of people in the recording business were surprised by this – your producing songs for and singing with the Hare Kṛṣṇas. Why did you do it?

George: Well, it’s just all a part of service, isn’t it? Spiritual service – in order to try to spread the mantra all over the world. Also, to try and give the devotees a wider base and a bigger foothold in England and everywhere else.

Mukunda: How did the success of this record of Hare Kṛṣṇa devotees chanting compare with some of the rock musicians you were producing at the time like Jackie Lomax, Splinter, and Billy Preston?

George: It was a different thing. Nothing to do with that really. There was much more reason to do it. There was less commercial potential in it, but it was much more satisfying to do, knowing the possibilities that it was going to create, the connotations it would have just by doing a three-and-a-half-minute mantra. That was more fun really than trying to make a pop hit record. It was the feeling of trying to utilize your skills or job to make it into some spiritual service to Kṛṣṇa.

Mukunda: What effect do you think that tune, “Hare Krishna Mantra,” having reached millions and millions of people, has had on the world’s cosmic consciousness?

George: I’d like to think it had some effect. After all, the sound is God.

Mukunda: When Apple called a press conference to promote the record, the media seemed shocked to hear you speak about the soul and God being so important.

George: I felt it was important to try and be precise – to tell them and let them know. You know, to come out of the closet and really tell them. Because once you realize something, then you can’t pretend you don’t know it anymore.

I figured this is the space age, with airplanes and everything. If everyone can go around the world on their holidays, there’s no reason why a mantra can’t go a few miles as well. So the idea was to try to spiritually infiltrate society, so to speak. After I got Apple Records committed to you and the record released, and after our big promotion, we saw it was going to become a hit. And one of the greatest things, one of the greatest thrills of my life, actually, was seeing you all on BBC’s Top of the Pops. I couldn’t believe it. It’s pretty hard to get on that program, because they only put you on if you come into the top twenty. It was just like a breath of fresh air. My strategy was to keep it to a three-and-a-half-minute version of the mantra so they’d play it on the radio, and it worked. I did the harmonium and guitar track for that record at Abbey Road studios before one of the Beatles’ sessions, and then overdubbed a bass part. I remember Paul McCartney and his wife, Linda, arrived at the studio and enjoyed the mantra.

Mukunda: Paul’s quite favorable now, you know.

George: That’s good. It still sounds like quite a good recording, even after all these years. It was the greatest fun of all, really, to see Kṛṣṇa on Top of the Pops.

Mukunda: Shortly after its release, John Lennon told me that they played it at the intermission right before Bob Dylan did the Isle of Wight concert with Jimi Hendrix, the Moody Blues, and Joe Cocker in the summer of ’69.

George: They played it while they were getting the stage set up for Bob. It was great. Besides, it was a catchy tune, and the people didn’t have to know what it meant in order to enjoy it. I felt very good when I first heard it was doing well.

Mukunda: How did you feel about the record technically – the voices?

George: Yamuna, the lead singer, has a naturally good voice. I liked the way she sang with conviction, and she sang like she’d been singing it a lot before. It didn’t sound like the first tune she’d ever sung.

You know, I used to sing the mantra long before I met any of the devotees or long before I met Prabhupāda, because I had his first record then for at least two years. When you’re open to something it’s like being a beacon, and you attract it. From the first time I heard the chanting, it was like a door opened somewhere in my subconscious, maybe from some previous life.

Mukunda: In the lyrics to the song “Awaiting On You All” from All Things Must Pass, you come right out front and tell people that they can be free from living in the material world by chanting the names of God. What made you do it? What kind of feedback did you get?

George: At that time nobody was committed to that type of music in the pop world. There was, I felt, a real need for that, so rather than sitting and waiting for somebody else, I decided to do it myself. A lot of times we think, “Well, I agree with you, but I’m not going to actually stand up and be counted. Too risky.” Everybody is always trying to keep themselves covered – stay commercial – so I thought, just do it. Nobody else is, and I’m sick of all these young people just boogeying around, wasting their lives, you know. Also, I felt that there were a lot of people out there who would be reached.

I still get letters from people saying, “I have been in the Kṛṣṇa temple for three years, and I would have never known about Kṛṣṇa unless you recorded the All Things Must Pass album.” So I know, by the Lord’s grace, I am a small part in the cosmic play.

Mukunda: What about the other Beatles? What did they think about your taking up Kṛṣṇa consciousness? What was their reaction? You’d all been to India by then and were pretty much searching for something spiritual. Śyāmasundara said that once, when he had lunch with you and the other Beatles, they were all quite respectful.

George: Oh, yeah, well, if the Fab Four didn’t get it – that is, if they couldn’t deal with shaven-headed Hare Kṛṣṇas – then there would have been no hope! [Laughter.] And the devotees just came to be associated with me, so people stopped thinking, “Hey, what’s this?” You know, if somebody in orange with a shaved head would appear, they’d say, “Oh, yeah, they’re with George.”

Mukunda: From the very start you always felt comfortable around the devotees?

George: The first time I met Śyāmasundara I liked him. He was my pal. On the back of Prabhupāda’s record I’d read about Prabhupāda coming from India to Boston, and I knew that Śyāmasundara and all of you were in my age group, and that the only difference, really, was that you’d already joined and I hadn’t. I was in a rock band, but I didn’t have any fear, because I had seen dhotīs – your robes – and the saffron color and shaved heads in India. Kṛṣṇa consciousness was especially good for me because I didn’t get the feeling that I’d have to shave my head, move into a temple, and do it full time. So it was a spiritual thing that just fit in with my lifestyle. I could still be a musician, but I just changed my consciousness, that’s all.

Mukunda: You know, the Tudor mansion and estate that you gave us outside London has become one of our largest international centers. How do you feel about the Bhaktivedanta Manor’s success in spreading Kṛṣṇa consciousness?

George: Oh, it’s great. And it also relates to making the Hare Kṛṣṇa record or whatever my involvements were. Actually, it gives me pleasure – the idea that I was fortunate enough to be able to help at that time. All those songs with spiritual themes were like little plugs – “My Sweet Lord” and the others. And now I know that people are much more respectful and accepting when it comes to seeing the devotees in the streets and all that. It’s no longer like something that’s coming from left field.

And I’ve given a lot of Prabhupāda’s books to many people, and whether I ever hear from them again or not, it’s good to know that they’ve gotten them, and if they read them, their lives may be changed.

Mukunda: When you come across people who are spiritually inclined but don’t have much knowledge, what kind of advice do you give them?

George: I try to tell them my little bit, what my experience is, and give them a choice of things to read and a choice of places to go – like you know, “Go to the temple, try chanting.”

Mukunda: In the “Ballad of John and Yoko,” John and Yoko rapped the media for the way it can foster a false image of you and perpetuate it. It’s taken a lot of time and effort to get them to understand that we are a genuine religion, with scriptures that predate the New Testament by three thousand years. Gradually, though, more people – scholars, philosophers, theologians – have come around, and today they have a great deal of respect for the ancient Vaiṣṇava tradition [the spiritual culture centered on loving devotional service to Lord Viṣṇu, or Kṛṣṇa, the Supreme Personality of Godhead], where the modern-day Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement has its roots.

George: The media is to blame for everything – for all the misconceptions about the movement – but in a sense it didn’t really matter if they said something good or bad, because Kṛṣṇa consciousness always seemed to transcend that barrier anyway. The fact that the media was letting people know about Kṛṣṇa was good in itself.

Mukunda: Śrīla Prabhupāda always trained us to stick to our principles. He said that the worst thing we could ever do would be to make some sort of compromise or to dilute the philosophy for the sake of cheap popularity. Although many swamis and yogis had come from India to the West, Prabhupāda was the only one with the purity and devotion to establish India’s ancient Kṛṣṇa conscious philosophy around the world on its own terms – not watered down but as it is.

George: That’s right. He was a perfect example of what he preached.

Mukunda: How did you feel about financing the first printing of the Kṛṣṇa book and writing the introduction?

George: I just felt like it was part of my job, you know. Wherever I go in the world, when I see devotees, I always say “Hare Kṛṣṇa!” to them, and they’re always pleased to see me. It’s a nice relationship. Whether they really know me personally or not, they feel they know me. And they do, really.

Mukunda: When you did the Material World album you used a photo insert taken from the cover of Prabhupāda’s Bhagavad-gītā showing Kṛṣṇa and His friend and disciple Arjuna. Why?

George: Oh, yeah. It said on the album, “From the cover of Bhagavad-gītā As It Is by A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami.” It was a promo for you, of course. I wanted to give them all a chance to see Kṛṣṇa, to know about Him. I mean that’s the whole idea, isn’t it?

Spiritual Food

Mukunda: At lunch today we spoke a little about prasāda, vegetarian food that has been spiritualized by being offered to Kṛṣṇa in the temple. A lot of people have come to Kṛṣṇa consciousness through prasāda, especially through our Sunday Feast at all our centers around the world. I mean, this process is the only kind of yoga that you can actually practice by eating.

George: Well, we should try to see God in everything, so it helps so much having the food to taste. Let’s face it, if God is in everything, why shouldn’t you taste Him when you eat? I think that prasāda is a very important thing. Kṛṣṇa is God, so He’s absolute: His name, His form, prasāda – it’s all Him. They say the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach, so if you can get to a man’s spirit soul by eating, and it works, why not do it? There’s nothing better than having been chanting and dancing, or just sitting and talking philosophy, and then suddenly the devotees bring out the prasāda. It’s a blessing from Kṛṣṇa, and it’s spiritually important.

The idea is that prasāda is the sacrament the Christians talk about, only instead of being just a wafer, it’s a whole feast, really, and the taste is so nice – it’s out of this world. And prasāda’s a good little hook in this age of commercialism. When people want something extra, or they need to have something special, prasāda will hook them in there. It’s undoubtedly done a great deal toward getting a lot more people involved in spiritual life. It breaks down prejudices, too. Because they think, “Oh, well, yes, I wouldn’t mind a drink of whatever or a bite of that.” Then they ask, “What’s this?” and “Oh, well, it’s prasāda.” And they get to learn another aspect of Kṛṣṇa consciousness. Then they say, “It actually tastes quite nice. Have you got another plateful?” I’ve seen that happen with lots of people, especially older people I’ve seen at your temples. Maybe they were a little prejudiced, but the next thing you know, they’re in love with prasāda, and eventually they walk out of the temple thinking, “They’re not so bad after all.”

Mukunda: The Vedic literatures reveal that prasāda conveys spiritual realization, just as chanting does, but in a less obvious or conspicuous way. You make spiritual advancement just by eating it.

George: I’d say from my experience that it definitely works. I’ve always enjoyed prasāda much more when I’ve been at the temple, or when I’ve actually been sitting with Prabhupāda, than when somebody’s brought it to me. Sometimes you can sit there with prasāda and find that three or four hours have gone by and you didn’t even know it. Prasāda really helped me a lot, because you start to realize, “Now I’m tasting Kṛṣṇa.” You’re conscious suddenly of another aspect of God, understanding that He’s this little samosā. It’s all just a matter of tuning into the spiritual, and prasāda’s a very real part of it all.

Mukunda: You know, a lot of the rock groups like the Grateful Dead and Police get prasāda backstage before their concerts. They love it. It’s a long-standing tradition with us. I remember one time sending prasāda to one of the Beatles’ recording sessions. And your sister was telling me today that while you were doing the Bangladesh concert, Śyāmasundara used to bring you all prasāda at the rehearsals.

George: Yes, he’s even got a credit on the album sleeve.

Mukunda: What are your favorite kinds of prasāda, George?

George: I really like those deep-fried cauliflower things – pakorās?

Mukunda: Yes.

George: And one thing I always liked was ras malai. And there’re a lot of good drinks as well – fruit juices and lassi.

Mukunda: Do you remember the time we called the press in London for a big feast when we were promoting the “Hare Krishna Mantra” record? They were pretty surprised, for no one really knew us then for our food. Now, pretty much when people think about us, they still think, “They’re the ones chanting and dancing in the streets,” but they’re connecting us more and more now with prasāda: “They’re the ones with those free vegetarian dinners.”

George: The press was probably thinking, “Oh, we’ve got to go and do this now.” And then suddenly they find that they’re all sitting around and eating a much better Indian take-away than they would ever have at any one of the local spots. They were pretty impressed.

Mukunda: We’ve served about 150 million plates of prasāda so far at the free feasts around the world, what to speak of our restaurants.

George: You ought to have it up outside on billboards like those hamburger places do. You know, like “150 million served.” I think it’s great. It’s a pity you don’t have restaurants or temples on all the main streets of every little town and village like those hamburger and fried chicken places. You should put them out of business.

Mukunda: You’ve been to our London restaurant, Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise?

George: Lots of times. It’s good to have these and other restaurants around, where plainclothes devotees serve the food. People slowly realize, “This is one of the best places I’ve been,” and they keep coming back. Then maybe they pick up a little bit of the literature or a pamphlet there and say, “Oh, hey, that was run by the Hare Kṛṣṇas.” I think there’s a lot of value also to that kind of more subtle approach. Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise has proper foods, good, balanced stuff, and it’s fresh. Even more important, it’s made with an attitude of devotion, which means a lot. When you know someone has begrudgingly cooked something, it doesn’t taste as nice as when someone has done it to try and please God – to offer it to Him first. Just that in itself makes all the food taste so much nicer.

Mukunda: Paul and Linda McCartney have prasāda frequently from Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise. Not long ago Paul met a devotee near his London studio and wrote a song about it. In an interview with James Johnson in a London paper he said, “One song, ‘One of These Days,’ is about when I met someone on the way to the studio who was a Hare Kṛṣṇa and we got talking about lifestyles and so forth. I’m not a Hare Kṛṣṇa myself, but I’m very sympathetic.”

You’ve been a vegetarian for years, George. Have you had any difficulties maintaining it?

George: No. Actually, I wised up and made sure I had dāl bean soup or something every day. Actually, lentils are one of the cheapest things, but they give you A1 protein. People are simply screwing up when they go out and buy beef steak, which is killing them with cancer and heart troubles. The stuff costs a fortune too. You could feed a thousand people with lentil soup for the cost of half a dozen fillets. Does that make sense?

Mukunda: One of the things that really has a profound effect on people when they visit the temples or read our books is the paintings and sculptures done by our devotee artists of scenes from Kṛṣṇa’s pastimes when He appeared on earth five thousand years ago. Prabhupāda once said that these paintings were “windows to the spiritual world,” and he organized an art academy, training his disciples in the techniques for creating transcendental art. Now, tens of thousands of people have these paintings hanging in their homes, either as originals, lithographs, canvas prints, or posters. You’ve been to our multimedia Bhagavad-gītā museum in Los Angeles. What kind of an effect did it have on you?

George: I thought it was great – better than Disneyland, really. I mean, it’s as valuable as that, or the Smithsonian Institute in Washington. The sculpted dioramas look great, and the music is nice. It gives people a real feeling for what the kingdom of God must be like, and much more basic than that, it shows in a way that’s easy for even a child to understand exactly how the body is different from the soul and how the soul’s the important thing. I always have pictures around like the one of Kṛṣṇa on the chariot that I put in the Material World album, and I have the sculpted Śiva fountain 2 the devotees made for me in my garden. Pictures are helpful when I’m chanting. You know that painting in the Bhagavad-gītā of the Supersoul in the heart of the dog, the cow, the elephant, the poor man, and the priest? That’s very good to help you realize that Kṛṣṇa is dwelling in the hearts of everybody. It doesn’t matter what kind of body you’ve got – the Lord’s there with you. We’re all the same, really.

After seeing the dioramas at the Los Angeles Bhagavad-gītā museum, George asked if the artists and sculptors who had produced the museum could sculpt a life-sized fountain of Lord Śiva, one of the principal Hindu demigods and a great devotee of Lord Kṛṣṇa. Lord Śiva, in a meditative pose, complete with a stream of water spouting from his head, soon resided in the gardens of George’s estate, heralded as among the most beautiful in all of England.

Meeting Śrīla Prabhupāda

Mukunda: George, you and John Lennon met Śrīla Prabhupāda together when he stayed at John’s home in September of 1969.

George: Yes, but when I met him at first, I underestimated him. I didn’t realize it then, but I see now that because of him, the mantra has spread so far in the last sixteen years – more than it had in the last five centuries. Now that’s pretty amazing, because he was getting older and older, yet he was writing his books all the time. I realized later on that he was much more incredible than what you could see on the surface.

Mukunda: What about him stands out the most in your mind?

George: The thing that always stays is his saying “I am the servant of the servant of the servant.” I like that. A lot of people say “I’m it. I’m the divine incarnation. I’m here and let me hip you.” You know what I mean? But Prabhupāda was never like that. I liked Prabhupāda’s humbleness. I always liked his humility and his simplicity. The servant of the servant of the servant is really what it is, you know. None of us are God – just His servants. He just made me feel so comfortable. I always felt very relaxed with him, and I felt more like a friend. I felt that he was a good friend. Even though he was at the time seventy-three years old, working practically all through the night, day after day, with very little sleep, he still didn’t come through to me as though he was a very highly educated intellectual being, because he had a sort of childlike simplicity. Which is great – fantastic. Even though he was the greatest Sanskrit scholar and a saint, I appreciated the fact that he never made me feel uncomfortable. In fact, he always went out of his way to make me feel comfortable. I always thought of him as sort of a lovely friend, really, and now he’s still a lovely friend.

Mukunda: In one of his books, Prabhupāda said that your sincere service was better than some people who had delved more deeply into Kṛṣṇa consciousness but could not maintain that level of commitment. How did you feel about that?

George: Very wonderful, really. I mean it really gave me hope, because as they say, even one moment in the company of a divine person – Kṛṣṇa’s pure devotee – can help a tremendous amount.

And I think Prabhupāda was really pleased at the idea that somebody from outside the temple was helping to get the album made. Just the fact that he was pleased was encouraging to me. I knew he liked the “Hare Krishna Mantra” record, and he asked the devotees to play that song “Govinda.” They still play it, don’t they?

Mukunda: Every temple has a recording of it, and we play it each morning when the devotees assemble before the altar, before kīrtana. It’s an ISKCON institution, you might say.

George: And if I didn’t get feedback from Prabhupāda on my songs about Kṛṣṇa or the philosophy, I’d get it from the devotees. That’s all the encouragement I needed, really. It just seemed that anything spiritual I did, either through songs or helping with publishing the books or whatever, really pleased him. My song “Living in the Material World,” as I wrote in I, Me, Mine, was influenced by Śrīla Prabhupāda. He’s the one who explained to me how we’re not these physical bodies. We just happen to be in them.

Like I said in the song, this place’s not really what’s happening. We don’t belong here but in the spiritual sky:

As I’m fated for the material world
Get frustrated in the material world
Senses never gratified
Only swelling like a tide
That could drown me in the material world

The whole point to being here, really, is to figure a way to get out.

That was the thing about Prabhupāda, you see. He didn’t just talk about loving Kṛṣṇa and getting out of this place; he was the perfect example. He talked about always chanting, and he was always chanting. I think that that in itself was perhaps the most encouraging thing for me. It was enough to make me try harder, to be just a little bit better. He was a perfect example of everything he preached.

Mukunda: How would you describe Śrīla Prabhupāda’s achievements?

George: I think Prabhupāda’s accomplishments are very significant; they’re huge. Even compared to someone like William Shakespeare, the amount of literature Prabhupāda produced is truly amazing. It boggles the mind. He sometimes went for days with only a few hours’ sleep. I mean even a youthful, athletic young person couldn’t keep the pace he kept up at seventy-nine years of age.

Śrīla Prabhupāda has already had an amazing effect on the world. There’s no way of measuring it. One day I just realized, “God, this man is amazing!” He would sit up all night translating Sanskrit into English, putting in glossaries to make sure everyone understands it, and yet he never came off as someone above you. He always had that childlike simplicity. And what’s most amazing is the fact that he did all this translating in such a relatively short time – just a few years. And without having anything more than his own Kṛṣṇa consciousness, he rounded up all these thousands of devotees, set the whole movement in motion, which became something so strong that it went on even after he passed away in 1977. And it’s still escalating even now at an incredible rate. It will go on and on from the knowledge he gave. It can only grow and grow. The more people wake up spiritually, the more they’ll begin to realize the depth of what Prabhupāda was saying – how much he gave.

Mukunda: Did you know that complete sets of Prabhupāda’s books are in all the major colleges and universities in the world, including Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Oxford, Cambridge, and the Sorbonne?

George: They should be! One of the greatest things I noticed about Prabhupāda was the way he would be talking to you in English, and then all of a sudden he would say it to you in Sanskrit, and then translate it back into English. It was clear that he really knew it well. His contribution has obviously been enormous from the literary point of view because he’s brought the Supreme Person, Kṛṣṇa, more into focus. A lot of scholars and writers know the Gītā, but only on an intellectual level. Even when they write “Kṛṣṇa said ...,” they don’t do it with the bhakti or love required. That’s the secret, you know – Kṛṣṇa is actually a person who is the Lord and who will also appear there in that book when there is that love, that bhakti. You can’t understand the first thing about God unless you love Him. These big, so-called Vedic scholars – they don’t necessarily love Kṛṣṇa, so they can’t understand Him and give Him to us. But Prabhupāda was different.

Mukunda: The Vedic literatures predicted that after the advent of Lord Caitanya five hundred years ago there would be a golden age of ten thousand years, when the chanting of the holy names of God would completely nullify all the degradations of the modern age, and real spiritual peace would come to this planet.

George: Well, Prabhupāda’s definitely affected the world in an absolute way. What he was giving us was the highest literature, the highest knowledge. I mean there just isn’t anything higher.

Mukunda: You write in your autobiography that “No matter how good you are, you still need grace to get out of the material world. You can be a yogi or a monk or a nun, but without God’s grace you still can’t make it.” And at the end of the song “Living in the Material World,” the lyrics say, “Got to get out of this place by the Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa’s grace, my salvation from the material world.” If we’re dependent on the grace of God, what does the expression “God helps those who help themselves” mean?

George: It’s flexible, I think. In one way, I’m never going to get out of here unless it’s by His grace, but then again, His grace is relative to the amount of desire I can manifest in myself. The amount of grace I would expect from God should be equal to the amount of grace I can gather or earn. I get out what I put in. Like in the song I wrote about Prabhupāda:

The Lord loves the one that loves the Lord
And the law says if you don’t give
Then you don’t get loving
Now the Lord helps those that help themselves
And the law says whatever you do
Is going to come right back on you

“The Lord Loves The One (That Loves The Lord)”
from Living in the Material World

Have you heard that song “That Which I Have Lost,” from my new album, Somewhere in England? It’s right out of the Bhagavad-gītā. In it I talk about fighting the forces of darkness, limitations, falsehood, and mortality.

God Is a Person

Mukunda: Yes, I like it. If people can understand the Lord’s message in the Bhagavad-gītā, they can become truly happy. A lot of people, when they just get started in spiritual life, worship God as impersonal. What’s the difference between worshiping Kṛṣṇa, or God, in His personal form and worshiping His impersonal nature as energy or light?

George: It’s like the difference between hanging out with a computer or hanging out with a person. Like I said earlier, “If there is a God, I want to see Him,” not only His energy or His light but Him.

Mukunda: What do you think is the goal of human life?

George: Each individual has to burn out his own karma and escape from the chains of māyā [illusory energy], reincarnation, and all that. The best thing anyone can give to humanity is God consciousness. Then you can really give them something. But first you have to concentrate on your own spiritual advancement. So in a sense we have to become selfish to become selfless.

Mukunda: What about trying to solve the problems of life without employing the spiritual process?

George: Life is like a piece of string with a lot of knots tied in it. The knots are the karma you’re born with from all your past lives, and the object of human life is to try and undo all those knots. That’s what chanting and meditation in God consciousness can do. Otherwise you simply tie another ten knots each time you try to undo one knot. That’s how karma works. I mean, we’re now the results of our past actions, and in the future we’ll be the results of the actions we’re performing now. A little understanding of “As you sow, so shall you reap” is important because then you can’t blame the condition you’re in on anyone else. You know that it’s by your own actions you’re able to get more in a mess or out of one. It’s your own actions that relieve or bind you.

Mukunda: In the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, the crest jewel of all the Vedic literatures, it’s described how those pure souls who live in the spiritual world with God have different types of rasas, or relationships, with Him. Is there any special way you like to think of Kṛṣṇa?

George: I like the idea of seeing Kṛṣṇa as a baby, the way He’s often depicted in India. And also Govinda, the cowherd boy. I like the idea that you can have Kṛṣṇa as a baby and feel protective of Him, or as your friend, or as the guru or master-type figure.

“My Sweet Lord”

Mukunda: I don’t think it’s possible to calculate just how many people were turned on to Kṛṣṇa consciousness by your song “My Sweet Lord.” But you went through quite a personal thing before you decided to do that song. In your book you write, “I thought a lot about whether to do ‘My Sweet Lord’ or not because I would be committing myself publicly ... Many people fear the words Lord and God ... I was sticking my neck out on the chopping block ... but at the same time I thought ‘Nobody’s saying it ... why should I be untrue to myself?’ I came to believe in the importance that if you feel something strong enough, then you should say it.

“I wanted to show that Hallelujah and Hare Kṛṣṇa are quite the same thing. I did the voices singing ‘Hallelujah’ and then the change to ‘Hare Kṛṣṇa’ so that people would be chanting the mahā-mantra – before they knew what was going on! I had been chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa for a long time, and this song was a simple idea of how to do a Western pop equivalent of a mantra which repeats over and over again the holy names. I don’t feel guilty or bad about it; in fact it saved many a heroin addict’s life.”

Why did you feel you wanted to put Hare Kṛṣṇa on the album at all? Wouldn’t Hallelujah alone have been good enough?

George: Well, first of all Hallelujah is a joyous expression the Christians have, but Hare Kṛṣṇa has a mystical side to it. It’s more than just glorifying God; it’s asking to become His servant. And because of the way the mantra is put together, with the mystic spiritual energy contained in those syllables, it’s much closer to God than the way Christianity currently seems to be representing Him. Although Christ in my mind is an absolute yogi, I think many Christian teachers today are misrepresenting Christ. They’re supposed to be representing Jesus, but they’re not doing it very well. They’re letting him down very badly, and that’s a big turn off.

My idea in “My Sweet Lord,” because it sounded like a pop song, was to sneak up on them a bit. The point was to have the people not offended by Hallelujah, and by the time it gets to Hare Kṛṣṇa they’re already hooked and their feet are tapping, and they’re already singing Hallelujah – to kind of lull them into a sense of false security. And then suddenly it turns into Hare Kṛṣṇa, and they will all be singing that before they know what’s happened, and they will think, “Hey, I thought I wasn’t supposed to like Hare Kṛṣṇa!”

People write to me even now asking what style that was. Ten years later they’re still trying to figure out what the words mean. It was just a little trick really. And it didn’t offend. For some reason I never got any offensive feedback from Christians who said, “We like it up to a point, but what’s all this about Hare Kṛṣṇa?”

Hallelujah may have originally been some mantric thing that got watered down, but I’m not sure what it really means. The Greek word for Christ is Kristos, which is, let’s face it, Kṛṣṇa and Kristos is the same name actually.

Mukunda: What would you say is the difference between the Christian view of God and Kṛṣṇa as represented in the Bhagavad-gītā?

George: When I first came to this house it was occupied by nuns. I brought in this poster of Viṣṇu. You just see His head and shoulders and His four arms holding a conch shell and various other symbols, and it has a big om written above it. He has a nice aura around Him. I left it by the fireplace and went out into the garden. When we came back into the house, they all pounced on me, saying, “Who is that? What is it?” as if it were some pagan god. So I said, “Well, if God is unlimited, then He can appear in any form, whichever way He likes to appear. That’s one way. He’s called Viṣṇu.”

It sort of freaked them out a bit, but the point is, why should God be limited? Even if you get Him as Kṛṣṇa, He is not limited to that picture of Kṛṣṇa. He can be the baby form, He can be Govinda, and He can manifest in so many other well-known forms. You can see Kṛṣṇa as a little boy, which is how I like to see Kṛṣṇa. It’s a joyful relationship. But there’s this morbid side to the way many represent Christianity today, where you don’t smile, because it’s too serious, and you can’t expect to see God – that kind of stuff. If there is God, we must see Him, and I don’t believe in the idea you find in most churches, where they say, “No, you’re not going to see Him. He’s way up above you. Just believe what we tell you and shut up.”

I mean, the knowledge that’s given in Prabhupāda’s books – the Vedic stuff – that’s the world’s oldest scriptures. They say that man can become purified, and with divine vision he can see God. You get pure by chanting. Then you see Him. And Sanskrit, the language they’re written in, is the world’s first recorded language. Devanāgarī [the Sanskrit alphabets] actually means “language of the gods.”

Mukunda: Anyone who is sincere about making spiritual advancement, whatever one’s religion may be, can usually see the value of chanting – I mean, if that person is really trying to be God conscious and trying to chant sincerely.

George: That’s right. It’s a matter of being open. Anyone who’s open can do it. You just have to be open and not prejudiced. You just have to try it. There’s no loss, you know. But the “intellectuals” will always have problems, because they always need to “know.” They’re often the most spiritually bankrupt people because they never let go; they don’t understand the meaning of “to transcend the intellect.” But an ordinary person’s more willing to say, “Okay, let me try it and see if it works.” Chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa can make a person a better Christian, too.

Karma and Reincarnation

Mukunda: In I, Me, Mine you speak about karma and reincarnation, and how the only way to get out of the cycle is to take up a bona fide spiritual process. You say at one point, “Everybody is worried about dying, but the cause of death is birth, so if you don’t want to die, you don’t get born!” Did any of the other Beatles believe in reincarnation?

George: I’m sure John does! And I wouldn’t want to underestimate Paul and Ringo. I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re hoping it’s true, you know what I mean? For all I know, Ringo might be a yogi disguised as a drummer!

Mukunda: Paul had our latest book Coming Back: The Science of Reincarnation. Where do you think John’s soul is now?

George: I should hope that he’s in a good place. He had the understanding, though, that each soul reincarnates until it becomes completely pure, and that each soul finds its own level, designated by reactions to its actions in this and previous lives.

Mukunda: Bob Dylan did a lot of chanting at one time. He used to come to the Los Angeles temple and came to the Denver and Chicago temples as well. In fact, he drove across the United States with two devotees once and wrote several songs about Kṛṣṇa. They spent a lot of time chanting.

George: That’s right. He said he enjoyed the chanting and being with them. Also, Stevie Wonder had you on one of his records, you know. And it was great – the song he put the chanting in, “Pastimes Paradise.”

Mukunda: When you were in Vṛndāvana, India, where Lord Kṛṣṇa appeared, and you saw thousands of people chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa, did it strengthen your faith in the idea of chanting to see a whole city living Hare Kṛṣṇa?

George: Yeah, it fortifies you. It definitely helps. It’s fantastic to be in a place where the whole town is doing it. And I also had the idea that they were all knocked out at the idea of seeing some white person chanting on beads. Vṛndāvana is one of the holiest cities in India. Everyone, everywhere, chants Hare Kṛṣṇa. It was my most fantastic experience.

Mukunda: You write in your book: “Most of the world is fooling about, especially the people who think they control the world and the community. The presidents, the politicians, the military, etc., are all jerking about, acting as if they are Lord over their own domains. That’s basically Problem One on the planet.”

George: That’s right. Unless you’re doing some kind of God conscious thing and you know that He’s the one who’s really in charge, you’re just building up a lot of karma and not really helping yourself or anybody else. There’s a point in me where it’s beyond sad, seeing the state of the world today. It’s so screwed up. It’s terrible, and it will be getting worse and worse. More concrete everywhere, more pollution, more radioactivity. There’s no wilderness left, no pure air. They’re chopping the forests down. They’re polluting all the oceans. In one sense, I’m pessimistic about the future of the planet. These big guys don’t realize for everything they do there’s a reaction. You have to pay. That’s karma.

Mukunda: Do you think there’s any hope?

George: Yes. One by one, everybody’s got to escape māyā. Everybody has to burn out his karma and escape reincarnation and all that. Stop thinking that if Britain or America or Russia or the West or whatever becomes superior, then we’ll beat them, and then we’ll all have a rest and live happily ever after. That doesn’t work. The best thing you can give is God consciousness. Manifest your own divinity first. The truth is there. It’s right within us all. Understand what you are. If people would just wake up to what’s real, there would be no misery in the world. I guess chanting’s a pretty good place to start.

Mukunda: Thanks so much, George.

George: All right. Hare Kṛṣṇa!

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