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Vedic Cultural Center in Sammamish, WA. |
A Hindu-based Hare Krishna awareness movement (ISKON)
is alive and well on the Eastside.
Their Vedic Cultural Centers in Sammamish and Bothell house temples
and provide gathering space for activities.
I spent some time last month with Harry and
Elizabeth, the spiritual and operational leaders of the Eastside
congregations.
Harry Terhanian, affable Redmond resident, is the President of one of 20+ ISKON
congregations in the United States. His spiritual name is "Harivilas Das." Harry says ISKON plans to open a Vedic Cultural Center in Bellevue this
year and SE Redmond in the next year or two, but only with community acceptance and
under city guidelines.
Harry and his pleasant, outgoing wife Elizabeth recently purchased a 9 acre farm on Avondale Court north of the PCC Shopping Center
"to become a part of the growing farming culture in Redmond" and
practice
bhakta yoga. He
is negotiating to buy another farm nearby just off the bus line.
He plans to use the farm as a “factory” for growing
plants and manufacturing herbal pharmaceutical extracts.
Signage for the 4
th Annual Ananda
Mela Festival was constructed in the farm's outbuildings.
Elizabeth said
cows and bulls are
planned for Harry and Elizabeth's farm which has a Class 2 tributary to Bear Creek and buffers will be required for these large animals. Harry thought the farm will be attractive to bird watchers.
We visited Leon Hussey’s
KIS farm to pick up tips on soil nutrition and understand the value of stream buffers.
Bear Creek meanders through the Hussey farm with well preserved buffers and excellent salmon watching opportunities in the fall.
Elizabeth recently arrived from Florida where she was running an ISKON farm.
"When I see a flower, I see Krishna smiling." she told me. Elizabeth
is not a Hindu. She is German-Swiss American. Elizabeth lives in the farm house
which also serves as temple.
Elizabeth
didn’t make the Ananda Mela Festival in Redmond,
preferring to attend community farming activities
in Hawaii.
Harry was born in America to Armenian Christian Orthodox parents.
He’s not Hindu.
ISKON sent him to Seattle in l991 from
Pennsylvania, when the Seattle temple was on the verge of closing. (Early on in
the 60's-80's people were turned off by cultish, chanting, proselytizing
actions in the airports and college campuses.)
Slowly, he built up the community.
But it wasn't until the mid-1990s, as Indian
families began joining, that Terhanian saw a "base by which we rebuild our
legitimacy." (
Seattle Times, 8/2008)
Harry is also the founder of
"Northwest
SHARE", a Seattle-based human services non-profit. It includes a
restaurant providing free vegan food.
Free
food and food banking is a faith element of the Krishna congregation. They also
believe in spreading Kirshna's 'personality' with festivals. Harry was the lead
organzier for the 4th Annual Ananda Mela Festival. He runs it every year out of
his herbal extract retail store near Blazing Bagels.
By Bob Yoder
The International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON),
known colloquially as the Hare Krishna movement, is a Gaudiya
Vaishnava religious organization. ISKCON was formed to spread the practice
of bhakti
yoga, in which aspirant devotees (bhaktas) dedicate their thoughts
and actions towards pleasing the Supreme
Lord, Krishna.[5][6]
ISKCON today is a worldwide confederation of more than 400 centers, including
60 farm communities, some aiming for self-sufficiency, 50 schools and 90
restaurants.[7]
In recent decades the movement's most rapid expansions in terms of numbers of
membership have been within Eastern
Europe and India.[8]
The Hare Krishna mantra can be heard sung by George
Harrison in the backing vocals of his song "My
Sweet Lord" (1970)."
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Society_for_Krishna_Consciousness