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Religion You can
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Milk: Secret to Long Life by A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada The industrialists or businessmen are involved in big, big industrial enterprises, but they are not interested in food grains and milk. However, as indicated here, by digging for water, even in the desert, we can produce food grains; when we produce food grains and vegetables, we can give protection to the cows; while giving protection to the cows, we can draw from them abundant quantities of milk; and by getting enough milk and combining it with food grains and vegetables, we can prepare hundreds of nectarean foods. We can happily eat this food and thus avoid industrial enterprises and joblessness. more |
We've
all experienced the sweet taste and nutritional benefits of milk. Few
of us are aware of its finer qualities.
"It's fitness you can drink," say the billboards, as a sportsman goes
diving for a ball. The milk ads these days hit us right where we
live—the body. For ages, though, India's sages and scriptures have
offered us a spiritual reason to drink milk. From the spiritual
perspective, therefore, a more appropriate billboard ad might be:
"Milk. It's religion you can drink."
What does milk have to do with religion? Let's go to God's
country—where cows make milk—and find out.
The sun shines on our hillside pasture, green and serene against the
morning sky. Bells tinkle where the cows munch fresh grasses and drop
their fertile compliments to the earth. Sometimes the cows team up to
lick and nuzzle each other, or to tail-whisk the flies. Now ruminating
with half-closed eyes, the cows look a little like sages themselves.
Their meditation: making milk.
Cows make milk from their blood. The blood carries the products of
digestion and absorption to the udder, which changes the raw materials
into milk components. To make fifty pounds of milk in a day, a cow must
pump some ten tons of blood through her udder. That's why all the
grazing and cud-chewing. But exactly how that grass turns into milk is
as mystical as life itself.
"Within your body, by mystic power, you can transform food into blood
and tissue," writes Srila Prabhupada,
the Hare Krishna movement's founder and spiritual master. "Similarly,
by mystic power, the cow eats grass and produces milk."
Scientists say that the chemicals of life vary in their proportion and
distribution from one species to another, and that a specific
biochemical condition accounts for the cow's producing milk.
"But who produced those chemicals and that arrangement?" Prabhupada
presses. "You cannot produce milk from grass in your laboratory. But
the cow can give you milk by mystic power."
Twice daily our ruminating mystics enter the barn to let down their
milk. Giving milk is a function of motherhood; kindly treatment helps
the flow. And so our milkers sing to the cows as they go, handling each
mother with care as they draw the sweet liquid from her body. From
nature's lab comes miraculous milk.
The single most important article of food for the maintenance and
health of both child and adult," proclaims The Mother
's Encyclopedia. "The most valuable food we have," advises the
Red Cross. "Contains almost all the food elements that the human being
needs," says Dr. Spock. All the elements a milk marketer needs, too.
Hence the blizzard of ads. We are reminded that "you never outgrow your
need for milk." We are encouraged by some athlete with milk on his
upper lip to "wear a moo-stache." We are exhorted by trim, glamorous
movie stars to drink milk and "be somebody."
"Hold on!" the sages announce. "You're not that body; you're the soul
within. If you miss that point, you'll miss all others
—like the spiritual value of cow's milk."
Take it from the sages—cow's milk is God-given nectar. It fortifies the
body and develops the brain's finer tissues as well. By filling us with
goodness, milk clears the consciousness so we can consider higher,
spiritual life.
In ancient India, early in the morning at milking time, the sages would
approach the dairymen for a pound or two of milk. The villagers would
welcome these holy men, who would enlighten them with sublime,
spiritual knowledge. Their inspiration: Lord Krishna, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead.
"As the sun alone illuminates all this universe," says Krishna in the Bhagavad-gita,
"so does the living entity, one within the body, illuminate the entire
body by consciousness."
Consciousness is the symptom of the soul. Though we cannot see the soul
inside the body, we can perceive its presence by consciousness. During
the dawn milking, we can't see the sun, but we can perceive its
presence by the early light. Similarly, the presence of an individual
consciousness illumining all living bodies—whether man or
animal—indicates the presence of the soul. Each soul, though divine,
displays different powers according to its bodily circumstance. The
soul embodied as a cow, for instance, can turn grass into milk. And the
soul embodied as a human being can turn his consciousness toward God.
It's natural to remember God in the country, whose beauty reflects His
eternal kingdom. The Bhagavad-gita and other Vedic
literatures describe the kingdom of God as a spiritual wonderland,
where everything is possible in loving service to Krishna. The "desire
trees" there yield any fruit upon request, and the surabhi
cows, beyond the constraints of flesh and blood, give a limitless
supply of milk. The Lord keeps many such cows, and in His
transcendental form as a cowherd boy. He herds them.
"Lord Krishna and His cowherd friends entered the forest to enjoy the
new, seasonal atmosphere," the sage Shukadeva relates in the Srimad-Bhagavatam.
"The cows, being fed by new grasses, became very healthy, and their
udders were all very full. When Lord Krishna called them by name, they
immediately came to Him out of affection, and in their joyful condition
the milk flowed from their udders."
Sadly, though, the cries of the cows in the modern slaughterhouses mock
the country's reflection of Krishna's peaceable kingdom. We've heard
that "man is made in the image of God," and so we hold human life
sacred and religiously protect a person's right to live. But the cow,
made in the image of the Lord's beloved surabhis, also protects
us by supplying us nourishing milk. Shouldn't we protect her, too?
Srila Prabhupada comments, "By God's grace, the innocent cow is simply
eating grass and supplying the finest food, milk. The cow's blood is
very nutritious, but a civilized person uses it in the form of milk.
From milk, we can make so many things
—yogurt, cheese, butter—and by combining these products with fruits,
vegetables, and grains, we can make hundreds of wholesome preparations.
That is civilized. Not spilling the cow's blood in big slaughterhouses
and eating her flesh.
"So protect the cow," Srila Prabhupada continues. "Don't be ungrateful.
That is Krishna's advice. From infancy, we are drinking the cow's milk,
and if in return we cut her throat, that is barbaric, less than animal.
Even an animal respects its mother. But the 'civilized' men are doing
that—killing mother cow. And they want peace. Just see the fools. They
are less than the lowest animal."
The message is clear. Milk—a product of the cow's goodness—enriches
human consciousness. Meat—a product of man's ignorance
—degrades it. That's why meat-eaters, even if they drink milk, cannot
understand the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
So draw your nourishment from the cow, say the sages—not by spilling
her blood, but by drinking her milk—and listen to the messages of
Godhead. There's a limit to the amount of milk you can drink, but
there's no limit to how much you can hear about Krishna. And the more
you hear, the more you grow in spiritual understanding. Such is the
milk of Krishna's kindness. And that's religion you can drink forever.