JAYADEVA GOSVAMI
Jayadeva Gosvami is the author of the Gita-govinda, a poem about the
pastimes of Sri Sri Radha Krsna. He appeared 300 years before the
advent of Lord Caitanya. Lord Caitanya relished hearing the
Gita-govinda sung by His close associates. To this day the poem is
recited daily in the temple of Lord Jagannatha in Jagannatha Puri,
Orissa. Jayadeva Gosvami is also the author of the famed Dasavatara
Stotra.
Jayadeva lived for a long time in Navadwip during
the reign of the king of Bengal , Lakshman Sena, making his home not
far from the king's palace. At that time, the king's chief scholar was
Govardhana Acharya. Lakshman Sena was delighted when he heard
Jayadeva's hymn to the ten incarnations, the Dasavatara-stotra. The
king learned from Govardhana Acharya that this hymn had been composed
by Jayadeva and became desirous of meeting him. He went incognito to
Jayadeva's house and when he saw him, he noticed that Jayadeva
possessed the characteristics of a greatly powerful spiritual
personality. Greatly impressed and attracted by him, the king revealed
his identity to Jayadeva and invited him to come and live in the royal
palace. Jayadeva was leading a very renounced life and was therefore
unwilling to live in the opulent environment of the palace. He told the
king that it was his desire to live in Jagannath Puri.
Lakshman
Sena was disturbed by Jayadeva's intention. He quickly suggested to him
that he stay in the village of Champa Hati , saying that it was a place
suitable for him. He also promised him that he would never come to see
him again. When Jayadeva agreed, Lakshman Sena had a cottage built for
him in the village which was formerly known as Champaka-hatta.
Previously, there had been a beautiful garden of champa trees and their
flowers were sold in the village market. In this village, Mahaprabhu's
associate Dvija Baninath had a vision of him in the Satya Yuga, seeing
him in the form of a Brahmin whose skin was the color of a champa
flower. Similarly, while living here, Jayadeva had a vision, first of
Radha Madhava, then of their combined form as the golden champa-colored
Gauranga Mahaprabhu.
The Lord gave him this vision and
then told him to go to Jagannath Puri. Although Jayadeva was sad to
leave the future abode of Lord Chaitanya, Jayadeva obeyed the Lord's
command and went to Puri. It is said that he also was engaged as the
court poet of the king of Orissa. He spent the remainder of his life in
the abode of Lord Jagannath. This is where he wrote the transcendental
poem based on the sentiments of separation known as Gita-Govinda.
Indeed, Mahaprabhu told Jayadeva while giving him the vision in
Nabadwip that when he himself appeared there, he would take sannyas and
go to Jagannath Puri where he would relish Jayadeva's Gita-Govinda.
Jayadeva's marriage to Padmavati
It
is said that Jayadeva was obliged to marry his wife Padmavati at
Jagannath's order. The story is told in the Visvakosa as follows: There
was a Brahmin who had no children. He worshiped Jagannath for many
years in the hope of having a son. Finally, he and his wife had a
daughter and they named her Padmavati. When she came of marriageable
age, the Brahmin brought her to Jagannath to offer her to his lotus
feet. When he saw them, Jagannath himself said to the Brahmin, "I have
a servant whose name is Jayadeva. He has given up family life and has
dedicated himself to chanting my names. Give your daughter to him in
marriage."
The Brahmin took his daughter to Jayadeva
and asked him to marry his daughter. However, since Jayadeva had no
desire to get married, he refused to agree to any arrangement. Then the
Brahmin told him that it was Jagannath himself who had arranged this
marriage and without another word, left, leaving his daughter behind.
Jayadeva found himself totally unprepared for this situation and told
the girl, "Tell me where you want to go and I will take you and leave
you there. You cannot stay here, however."
Padmavati
started to cry and said, "My father brought me here to marry you on
Jagannath Deva's order. You are my husband, my all in all. If you do
not accept me, then I will fall down at your feet and die right here.
You are my only hope, my lord."
The poet and scholar Jayadeva could not abandon her after such a heartfelt plea. So he became a householder.
The Lord helps Jayadeva write Gita-Govinda
He
established the worship of a Narayan deity and in the waves of love
which he felt for this deity, he began writing Gita-Govinda, with its
incomparable ambrosia. It is said that though Jayadeva is responsible
for all the moods and sentiments which appear in the Gita-Govinda, he
had some reticence about writing that Krishna fell down at Radharani's
feet to beg her forgiveness when she was angry with him for having
deceived her.
On that day, when he left the house to
take his bath in the ocean, Lord Jagannath himself came in, disguised
as Jayadeva, opened his manuscript and completed the verse he had
started: "Place the noble sprout of your foot as an ornament on my
head, it dispels the poison of love in separation." (GG 10.8)
Padmavati
was surprised to see her husband back so soon from his bath and asked,
"What are you doing here? You just left a minute ago." The disguised
Jagannath answered, "I thought of something on my way. I was afraid I
might forget so I came back to write it down."
Not long
after Jagannath had left, the real Jayadeva returned. This time,
Padmavati was really astonished to see him. She said, "You just left to
go and take your bath. Just a few moments ago you were writing in your
manuscript and then you left. How could you have finished and come back
so quickly? I am beginning to wonder who that was and who you are?"
Jayadeva was clever enough to guess what had happened and he went and
looked at his unfinished text and saw the words that the Lord himself
had written. His entire body was covered with horripilation and tears
came pouring from his eyes. He called Padmavati and said to her, "You
are so fortunate. Your life has been made worthy. You have had the good
fortune to see the Lord himself. I am so lowly that I did not have that
opportunity!"
Jagannath's love for Gita-Govinda
There
is a legend told in Jagannath Puri that there was a flower gardener's
daughter who had learned Géta-Govinda and would sing it with great
emotion. Jagannath was attracted by her singing and would go to listen
to her, only returning to the temple after she had finished singing.
One
day, when the king of Orissa came to see the deity, he saw that the
Lord's body was covered in dust and his clothes were filled with
thorns. He asked the pujaris the reason for the Lord's disheveled
condition, but no one could explain how it had come about. The servants
of the deity were afraid that they would be punished, but that night,
Jagannath appeared to the king in a dream and explained that no one was
to blame for his soiled condition that day. He had gone to listen to
the gardener's daughter and that the dust and thorns had covered him
when in the garden.
The king was astonished to have
received such information in a dream and he immediately sent for the
gardener's daughter to be brought to the court in a palanquin. After
making inquiries from her, he decided that she should sing for
Jagannath in the temple, rather than obliging the Lord to leave the
temple and get all dirty. Ever since that time, girls named deva-däsés
have been engaged by the temple to sing Géta-Govinda for Jagannath's
pleasure.
Many other amazing and miraculous events
surrounded the life of Jayadeva. He used to serve his deities Radha and
Madhava in a trance of divine love. It is said that just as the devotee
dedicates himself to the Lord, the Lord also dedicates himself to his
devotee. One day, Jayadeva was thatch his roof under the unforgiving
midday sun. Jagannath saw the discomfort of his devotee and decided to
help him finish the work quickly by handing him the rope needed to bale
the straw and removing the finished bundles and placing them on the
roof. Jayadeva thought that it was Padmavati who was helping him in
this way. But when he came down from the roof after finishing much
earlier than expected, he saw no one there. He asked his wife and she
told him that she had been busy elsewhere at the time. He was curious
about what had happened, but struck with wonder when he went into the
deity room and saw that Madhava's hands were black from handling the
straw. He was thus able to understand that it was Madhava himself who
had come to help him thatch the roof. He fell down before his Lord and
started to cry.
Jayadeva and the robbers
On
another occasion, Jayadeva wished to put on a festival for his deities
Radha and Madhava, but he was short of money. He decided to travel in
order to collect some funds by using his poetic skills. On his return
journey, he was stopped by robbers who not only stole his money but cut
up his hands and feet and threw him down a well to die. Despite the
pain, Jayadeva shouted out the names of the Lord as loudly as he could.
After Jayadeva had spent three days in this way, the
king happened that way on a hunting expedition and heard the sound of
the holy names coming from the well. The king approached the well out
of curiosity and was horrified to see Jayadeva in this serious
condition. He had him taken out of the well and brought back to his
palace where he had him treated. Under the queen's care, Jayadeva was
gradually returned to health.
Both the king and queen
were charmed by Jayadeva's sweet singing of the Géta-Govinda as well as
by his saintly character. They immediately sent for Padmavati and had
her brought to their home. The king and queen took initiation from
Jayadeva and heard about Krishna from him and started to make their
lives successful through service to the Lord and his devotees. One day,
the robbers who had attacked Jayadeva came to the king's palace as
guest disguised as devotees. Even though Jayadeva recognized who they
were, he gave them the honor that was due to their outward appearance
and arranged for the appropriate hospitality to be proffered them. The
robbers, however, did not understand Jayadeva's forgiving and generous
nature and, fearing capture and punishment, thought it best to leave
without accepting the royal hospitality. Jayadeva understood their fear
and asked the king to give them a large sum of money and an escort and
send them on their way.
After they had gone a certain
distance, the robbers said to the escort of soldiers, "You need not go
any further. We would like to tell you a secret message to convey to
the king, however. Prior to becoming Vaishnavas we were the servants of
a certain king who for very good reason ordered us to murder this
priest, Jayadeva. So we cut up his hands and feet and left him to die.
Because he was afraid that this secret would come out, this priest gave
us a lot of money and asked us to leave quickly."
The
Earth herself was unable to tolerate the telling of such a great lie
and so she opened up and swallowed the entire gang of thieves. The
goddess of the Earth was unable to support the weight of these sinful
liars and so she swallowed them up. As they blasphemed the great
devotee of the Lord, they met their doom in the bowels of the earth.
The
servants of the king who had accompanied these robbers were amazed to
see them punished for their offense to Jayadeva right before their very
eyes. They came back to the king's palace and told him everything that
they had witnessed. The king inquired from Jayadeva about the robbers
and he told the entire story. He said, "O king! A saintly man does not
seek revenge from those who have done evil toward him. He attempts to
satisfy them by polite behavior. Even so, the Lord's flawless will
makes them suffer the consequences of their own sinfulness, as he did
in this case."
Padmavati is tested
Jayadeva's
wife became a close friend of the queen. In those days, the custom of a
wife dying with her husband was in vogue. After her brother's death,
the queen was mortified that her sister-in-law would have to die on the
funeral pyre with him. Padmavati said to the queen, "From the moment
that her husband dies, a faithful wife's life airs leave her body."
When
the queen heard this, she decided to test Padmavati herself. One day
she announced to Padmavati that her husband Jayadeva had suddenly died.
As soon as this news entered her ears, Padmavati gave up her life. This
shocked the queen and she began to cry out of a sense of guilt for
being responsible for her death. The king also came to Jayadeva and
begged him to return the life to his wife's corpse. The great devotee
Jayadeva whispered the name of Krishna into Padmavati's ear and she
opened her eyes as though she were just waking up. Having seen this
manifestation of both Jayadeva and Padmavati's glories, the king and
queen as well as all their courtiers and servants paid their obeisances
at their feet.
Jayadeva goes to Vrindavan
After
this, Jayadeva wanted to see Vrindavan. He took leave of the king and
queen and then, taking his deities, Radha and Madhava with him, set off
on the long journey. Once in Vrindavan, he began to serve his deities
in a spot near Keshi Ghat. When they heard Jayadeva sing the
Gita-Govinda in his sweet voice, the residents of the dham were
entranced. One merchant built a large temple for the deities on that
spot.
It is said that Jayadeva lived in Vrindavan for
many years and then returned to his birthplace in Kendubilva. Each day,
he would make the long walk to the Ganges to take his bath there. One
day, for some reason or another, he was unable to make it. Ganga Devi
was so kind to him that she came personally to the village of
Kendubilva so that he could take his bath in her waters. It is said
that he died there in Kendubilva and every year a large festival is
held there in his memory on the first day of the month of Magh.
There
is a difference of opinions about where Jayadeva finished his life.
Some say Puri, while others say that he returned to Kendubilva, and
others say that he went to Vrindavan. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Thakur
has stated his opinion that Jayadeva died in Jagannath Puri. Though
some people say that Jayadeva returned to Kendubilva to spend his last
days, there is no indication anywhere that his Radha-Madhava deities
were brought there. In fact, these deities were taken by the king of
Jaipur to a place named Ghati sometime after Jayadeva's death and they
are still being served in the Jaipur area. Jayadeva's disappearance day
is on the sixth day of the waning moon of the month of Paush. From the book "Sri Chaitanya: His Life and Associates" by Srila Bhakti Ballabh Tirtha Goswami Maharaj
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