ISKCON Swamy Skips Murder Case Bit
in Story of his Life
BY: B.V. SHIVA SHANKAR
Not a tell-all: Cueist Pankaj Advani (left), Radhanath Swamy (centre) and
Police Commissioner S.M. Bidari at the book launch.
[Photo: Vinod Kumar T.]
Jan 16, BANGALORE, INDIA (MIDDAY) American devotee of Krishna keeps bothersome chapter of life out of his 'autobiography'.
The Monday release of an autobiography by Radhanath Swamy, a senior ISKCON seer, has shocked many devotees. The Journey Home -- Autobiography of an American Swamy skips a significant chapter about the murder of Sulocana Das murder case, that shook the American chapter of ISKCON in 1985.
Radhanath said he skipped the episode because he thought it was not necessary for the story of the book: "The book is a memoir and a travelogue, so why should I mention each and everything here?" However, the author narrates his life story in a first person's account, so the book reads as an autobiography.
"If an autobiography skips an incident, then we must call the life of the author a big lie," said a devotee of ISKCON.
The murder of Sulocana Das, a member of New Vrindavan, an ISKCON branch in West Virginia, came to light in early 1980's and the US court convicted Kirtanananda Swamy, to whom Radhanath was closely associated.
Kirtanananda was released two years ago, after serving a 20-year jail term. Radhanath said that he was close to Kirtanananda until the murder charges were framed against him. "I broke all ties once I came to know about the murder."
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