okay [Music] so today um i was looking for quotes on the internet about judging others based on you know externals that's what this verse from the nectar of instruction talks about um and then i i found out that the jean de la fontaine does it ring a bell he's like this really famous poet this french poet who wrote these rhymes uh stories of like animals who speak to each other with a moral story at the end so he he apparently jean de la fontaine you know i used to read him when i was a kid
i mean every kid in france has to study or has to read jean de la fontaine uh it's like centuries centuries old and so he made this this statement that uh you know make sure not to judge others um based on appearances and i was like oh jean de la fontaine said that and the reason why i was looking for quotes about this theme is because the verse that we're going to talk about today which is not the bhagavad-gita now the bhagavad-gita is like kind of like the bible of of hinduism in general and the
bible of um yeah the sacred text by excellence of of the bhakti yoga tradition the tradition of devotion that you find in the ancient indian traditions so we're not going to talk about the i mean i had a choice between speaking on the gita we call it in short the gita or speak on a text which was written much much much much later only about 500 years ago called the sri ishopanishad sorry the um uh which literally means the essence of all teachings the essence of all advice the essence of all instructions and so today
we're you know we're reading this verse number six and and before i like we go into the verse i want to kind of bring you guys to to the context to the historical social context when this text was written why because you know for example if you go today to any christian church if you go to notre dame for example or the cathedral here when it's open you know whether you're a woman or a man or black or white or you come from a lower social rung in society or higher rung in society the doors
are open i mean that's a commonly understood thing right in the christian world and there's there's very little if not it's completely non-existent any sort of like fixed you know social structures in the sense of like us anywhere near like a caste system in in in the western world in europe today or in america you know centuries ago you did have you know before the industrial revolution and in europe you had the sort of what could consider to be some sort of like you know father to son to son to you know traditions of blacksmiths
and traditions of politicians and like you know they had like very sort of rigid sort of social structures but in today's society it's kind of like exploded so what we're gonna read here may seem to us like yeah like obvious you know but 500 years ago and in the context of a very strict social hierarchy of india of medieval india from which this entire tradition that we represent you know stems from um is the same french it wasn't you know it wasn't so obvious as it would be for us today you know india in the
16th century okay was under muslim rule but it was very stratified and when it comes to like religious access or access to to god i mean you did find this in the catholic church you know that's why the whole protestant revolution came where you know luther and company said no why should there be such a strong um via media of the of the priest in order to get to god you know we can have a direct relationship to god and why should we give money to the you know to the priests so that they can
whatever they want with it and and then we get so-called you know purified of our sins so we find that that in india about 500 years ago you had this very strong structure of what's called the brahman class is that wearing a bell with anyone the brahmanas brahmanas are the equivalent of the priests or the intellectuals of any given society and so there was this very strong um sense which is still you know you still see it in in religious circles in india today i mean for example if you go to a a famous temple
of like many temples in india because you're white you're croatian caucasian you can't have you can't go inside even if you're like let's say a practicing bhakti yogi or bhakti yogini of you know practicing devotee of krishna they see your skin your skin color sorry you can't and you can say you know but but you know i practice i'm you know i i have a plant-based diet i i don't drink i don't smoke i i i believe in in the teachings of the vedas right so you had this very strong caste system where the the
brahmanas the the cast brahmanas were the sort of the equivalent of the you know stereotypical and of course not all brahmanas but you had a strong sort of like monopoly of access to god that unless you're born in a particular caste you know the brahmana cast you really can't understand god you can't really access god similarly similar like judaism yeah no way similar like the chosen people exactly yeah the chosen people so it's in this context right that we see and it's interesting because historically the krishna tradition the hare krishna movement is seen as being
part of lord caitanya's famous of this devotional fervor that we find you know scriptural roots thousands of years back the thing that he's noted for or that the tradition is noted for as that of sort of a rebellion against the status quo of strict brahminical you know establishment it's interesting how the titanic was seen like that as a rebel against you know brahminical uh establishment so now we can you know now that we know a little bit of the the context we can we can read this verse together and what i'll do is i'll read
the translation and then there's a few passages that i picked that i'll comment on from the commentary to this particular verse which was written in the commentary was written by ac bhaktivedanta swami prabhupada you can see his little statue on the bottom left of the altar there with his finger like this he's the founder of the international society for krishna consciousness and and he translated and commented on on the main texts that that we in this room who practice bhakti yoga read on a regular basis but the text itself which was written about 500 years
ago was written by someone called rupa goswami and rupa goswami is kind of like the paul of christianity you know paul like how do you say so pavel for christianity is kind of like what rupa goswami is for the bhakti-yoga tradition and so this book that he wrote was a very small book with 11 text 11 instructions is one of the most important you know cardinal texts in the bhakti yoga tradition as a matter of fact it's one of the four books that uh that i teach for example and other centers of education around the
world teach in this course called the bhakti-sastri course where you study the bhagavad-gita and this one is it's so important so here's the sanskrit which i also don't understand because i tried to learn sanskrit a few times i couldn't but it sounds beautiful and it goes like this drishtai's so here's the translation there's a there's a few words in here that are mentioned and so i want to just define them quickly you know for you you're here for the first time for example there's this idea of a devotee okay a devotee or even a pure
devotee so what is this you know well it comes from the latin word devoto someone who has devotion who is devoted to and that you know devoted to god ciao speaking of italian so this notion of devotee which can be a woman or a man it would be that the feminine is someone who is you know living a god-conscious life who's dedicated who has devotion to god all right and the pure devotee is a soul who has sort of gotten rid by the grace of god of stuff that are not so cool for our happy
living in this world like you know anger and and greediness and jealousy and you know lust and stuff like that and who really has reawakened or awakened you know some very deep love for the divine for god and and therefore is can be considered pure a pure devotee okay so that's just a definition here and the rest of the verse talks about the ganges river who's never heard of the ganges river everyone's heard of it so the ganges river which flows you know in india is considered by all followers of the vedic tradition as a
very sacred river a river that has its origin you know beyond matter beyond the temporary small planet earth and which has purifying uh effects on whoever bathes in the ganges that's why you know still today you have people who bathe in the ganges and they feel like they're you know they're getting washed off of of sins okay so now that we've just you know defined these few words here's the translation from rupa goswami and then krishna is the name for god so being situated in his original krsna-conscious position a pure devotee does not identify with
the body such a devotee should not be seen from a materialistic point of view indeed one should overlook a devotee's having a body born in a low family a body with a bad complexion a deformed body or a diseased or infirm body according to ordinary vision such imperfections may seem prominent in the body of a pure devotee but despite such seeming defects the body of a pure devotee cannot be polluted it is exactly like the waters of the ganges which sometimes during the rainy season are full of bubbles foam and mud and now you know
chemicals from new delhi factories or from calcutta factories the ganges waters do not become polluted they actually made some experiments you can see it on on google they're still like figuring it out like bacteria doesn't really grow in the ganges water i mean there's historical records of like people who did trade from india to europe and stuff they would bring especially they would bring ganges water because the water would not go bad over the months and months of travel kind of far out so the ganges water does not become polluted those who are advanced in
spiritual understanding will bathe in the ganges without considering the condition of the water so what's revolutionary about here here is that you have this cast class of people right who are saying you know you can't access god kind of like the maybe the jews or the catholic priests you know you can't go to god except through us and here comes you know someone like rupa goswami says no wait a second better more advanced more much more important than what family you're born in is the condition of your consciousness how pure your consciousness is and if
your consciousness is pure and connected to the divine then everything else material is completely secondary your gender your skin of your color what social you know class you belong to educated not educated rich poor completely secondary and therefore and this is where it becomes like wow that person who is advanced spiritually speaking regardless of what body they're in what cast they belong to should not be judged should not be discriminated against based on that bodily um configuration so this is just like a total it's kind of very much like the pro you know the protestant
uh reformation standing up against the catholic church you have you know chaitanya mahaprabhu the founder of the bhakti tradition who's considered to be krishna himself appearing again in 1486 and his first you know followers his first apostles like rupa goswami here who's saying because bhakti because devotion is something that is completely intrinsic to the soul and because the soul by definition is pure and has nothing to do with what body you're in someone who is situated in pure devotion should be seen for what he or she is which is a pure servant of god basta
and so therefore rupa says such a devotee should not be seen from a materialistic point of view like oh you're a woman or oh you know you're not a brahmana right and we see examples in history of the bhakti tradition of individuals who broke this very strict rule both you know centuries ago and even in the 1960s and 70s for example with followers of srila prabhupada in the context of india in the 1970s as he actually mentions in this commentary you know there were people who were really upset like for example well before talking about
example of prabhupada a few centuries after rupa you have the example of narutom das takur and he was not from a brahmana family he was from a sort of a mediocre so-called you know these are all relative consent considerations anyway right high class low class you know how much love for god you have that's the bottom line you know what's your character right it's interesting because the bhagavatam has some predictions of this age we live in right and one of them is that you know a person will be considered very high class if he has
a lot of money so if you have a lot of money oh you're a real gentleman and you know forget that you are immoral in your behavior and everything but if you have a lot of money or you know bravo but if you're you know poor but you're noble you have normal character who is this person you know that's the age we live in so this naruto does we're talking about 17th century he was not from a brahman family but he was so exalted he started giving initiation like initiating there's this idea of getting initiate
an initiation ceremony where you actually kind of officially get connected to a you know to a lineage of teachers going up centuries so he would he himself was not a brahmana because only brahmana is going to do that kind of work right and he would give initiation to brahmanas you know to children of higher castes and that was just like a scandal you know scandal scandal scandal but he did it and fast forward you know 400 years to you know 1970s prabhupada would you know give what's called brahminical initiation or second initiation to you know
americans and europeans who in some way can be seen as descendant of the great kings of ancient india but also can also be seen as you know very low class untouchable so-called you know according to this very superficial strict indian classification system and so you had you know cast brahmanas in other words brown is born in these families generation after generation regardless of whatever their you know character is like who actually you know criticized brahmapod how dare you you know give this brahminical initiation to you know these americans and europeans who are not born in
india what to speak of in brahman families right but prabhupada following you know in the excuse me following in this in this ethos of our tradition would say no if you are devoted to god you're much better than any you know priest who's just doing the ritual because it's his job or because he was born in the tree in the family and you know he's just doing it because he's just doing it of course you can also be you know be part of a high class family and also be very devoted to god and that's
great you know you have a so-called high material birth and also devotion to god fantastic so it's not you know we're not like here you know bashing the all priests or all brahmanas you know but only those who are racist basically only those who are racist those who go against this idea which you find really already as a foundation of you know of christianity this universal this universal message a devotion to god transcends transcends any material consideration and it's just like the ganges river so the idea if you have some faith in the ganges in
the sanctity of the ganges river when you swim in the ganges have you you've never been to india yet so you go there and like i was there for the um kovid lockdown and it was rainy season so i really saw what rupaul's ghost i was talking about like the ganges was full of mud and bubbles and but you know you still went in and swam and so you can have a sort of a materialistic view and say oh the water has mud so therefore it's contaminated or you can have some faith that this water
is special and no matter how much mud and of course if there's tons and tons of chemicals from factories even even the most you know courageous would have hesitancy to swim in there so where where does you know like foam and mud is i've always scratched myself and asked that question you know foam and love is one thing but what about like super heavy yeah that was not consideration exactly it was not a consideration but it is now but you get the point right the ganges river is clean always no matter what's inside so similarly
if you're inspired by a spiritual teacher who's a woman or who's a man or who's black or who's you know from a muslim background or who you know it's limping like maducha i spent two days at our friends we have a friend called maduchan and he since childhood he had some experimental drugs given to him and and so so he you know he he he limps only a fool would say oh no he limps therefore i'm not going to listen to him speak about god especially if he's pure right so for us it's like yeah
okay yeah big deal but remember in this context of of of medieval india this was huge it empowered such an idea empowered anyone to have access to spirituality no you know no no what's it called no uh obstacle no material obstacle right so let me read just a few a few passages from the commentary okay now that i've read to you the verse we'll just go to a few commentaries on the verse by uh by prabhupada so he says for example no one should criticize the bodily defects of a pure devotee if there are such
defects they should be overlooked i mean even gentlemen and ladies like you know sometimes you walk in the street and there's some mother with a handicapped child right you don't like you know you just you you politely kind of smile and try to see the you know so the the mother doesn't feel embarrassed or the kid doesn't feel embarrassed right so what to speak of of someone who's you know supposed to teach you about god and the soul which is by definition beyond the body right what should be taken into account is the spiritual master
main business which is devotion or devotional service pure service to the supreme lord so here you have sort of a barometer a scientific barometer you know okay how do i who do i trust you know who do i listen to spirit for spiritual advice right and what's the criteria if spirituality can be considered kind of like a science then there should be some sort of criteria so you know you have criteria to find i don't know an orthodontist he has a diploma he's been to orthodontic school and okay he's got criteria you can you can
begin to trust him or her right and similarly with with every sort of a lawyer he has criteria a spiritual teacher what's the criteria i really like his beard you know it's just like it flows and it's just so maybe probably not you know i i i like that he can you know i mean people get attracted to like magical magic magic tricks you know even today there's some you know some pretty famous spiritual leaders who who have like i mean i don't know if you believe in you know mystic powers which are seen to
be very much uh studied by you know alternative scientific research levitation you know people who can read minds uh [Music] power of you know having effect on physical objects you know going through doors and walls and there's a whole body of studies about people who have like extra or extra sensorial you know powers which are made into movies in hollywood in the first place that's not necessarily a qualification you know age is not necessarily qualification i mean in the srimad-bhagavatam you have the example of prahlada maharaja who's a teacher of spiritual wisdom he's seven years
old in the bhagavat text you have examples of animals who give spiritual advice like they're they're not even human they're souls in animal bodies and they give fantastic spiritual advice you know so what really counts as prabhupada is saying here is the person's main business which is devotion devotion to god how dedicated he or she is to god and how how much he or she is trying his or her best to to live a life dedicated to god in his in his or her life you know and then whether that person again is poor or
rich educated uneducated it doesn't matter it doesn't matter what counts is the main thing which is to to serve god you know so coming back to history this is back to the 1970s listen to what prabhupad says okay am i boring you it's okay it's not too boring yet here prabhupada is saying one should not think oh here is an american swami swami means like a priest or a spiritual teacher oh here is an american goswami and discriminate against him there is an undercurrent of protest so this is written in 1972-1973 and before 1972 in
india the only people who were practicing bhakti yoga were people from india and all of a sudden you know in 1967 who arrived or 66 who arrives on the scene brahma who had at age 70 taken this ship this 90-day three-month trip all the way to new york at age 70 with no money having two heart attacks with this conviction that devotion to god or devotion to krishna is not just for indians it's for everybody and therefore i'm going to go to new york i'm going to go to america and convince you know new yorkers
about krishna and so he succeeds he succeeds and he gets tons of followers and then he goes back to him to india with these young you know blue-eyed white-skinned americans and they shock the the general people and also they shocked the brahmana cast so much so that you know some and some government agencies were trying to say that the the early members of the hare krishna movement in india were part of the cia they were saying yeah yeah no this is not possible they're actually cia agents disguised as religious devotees of krishna who are coming
to india for so-called devotion to krishna but actually there's cia trying to infiltrate the indian government so one of our teachers riding said yes we are cia we're chaitanya intelligence agency so so prabhupada is saying that there's this undercurrent of protest against our awarding the title goswami to the american vaishnavas of the krishna consciousness movement sometimes people flatly tell the american devotees that their sannyas title or title of you know goswami or brahman these are all sort of terms that kind of kind of make the same mean the same thing is not bona fide but
according to the statement of rupa goswami in this verse american goswami and a goswami and a family of you know cast brahmanas who are born family after family are non-different let me tell you a story just this is a cool story and it has to do with reincarnation okay story about reincarnation related to prabhupada the founder of the heart krishna movement which illustrates this point so this story this anecdote which takes place in somewhere sometime before 1977 you'll see how it relates to this theme of not judging others based on their appearance and how it
doesn't matter what family you're from any situation your love for god is what counts krishna supposedly appeared in a place called vrindavan about 90 minutes south of new delhi and it's a city which for thousands of years has had you know millions of people who are worshippers of krishna you love ringtone we all love rindavan and there are families of these caste brahmanas cast priests you know and there are some temples you cannot enter because you're white and so one disciple one student of prabhupad went to one of the most more famous temples of vrindavan
and he was and as you can see like in the in the just in the hindu traditions in general there is a pretty strong component of three-dimensional image worship whether it's a an actual form made of stone or or you know metal or marble or at least an image i mean you find out in the catholic church also with the christ and statues of mary and you know they offer candles and incense so you also find that in the in the christian tradition but it's really strongly pushed in the in the quran hindu traditions including
the tradition that worships krishna and so because of that you have very old temples who are established in centuries and where every day for last you know hundreds of years every day several times a day priests and who are often coming in a family of traditions have been you know offering food and offering flowers and offering incense to the main deity of the temple so in vrindavan there's like six or seven really important famous temples so this student of prabhupada went to imprabad was in vrindavan at the time at the hare krishna temple in vrndavan
and he went to one of these old temples and according to the story he was looking at you know the statue of krishna with a lot of devotion and the cast priest the cast brahmana from that temple noticed this young american and told him um i see that you have a lot of devotion for for my deity i mean we believe that the deity is nobody's property the deity is god so like you are the property of the deity not not the other way around anyway i see that you have a lot of devotion for
me you know the story oh it's so cool i just i love it i see that you have a lot of devotion for my family for my deity so i bless you i give you a blessing that in your next life so you know we believe in reincarnation so next life so that so so i bless you that in your next life you can take birth here in vrndavan in my family so that you can go actually on the altar and offer direct you know offerings and service to the to the deity nice blessing so
according to the story this boy ran young early 20s ran to the the iskcon temple where prabhupad was staying and went into prabha's room prabhupad i was just at such and such temple and the local priest the brahmana priest blessed me that in my next life i can take birth here in india in vrndavan and his family and worship the deity and according to the story prabhupad very cool said well you go and you go back to that temple and you tell him that bhaktivedanta swami speaking about himself blesses him that in his next life
he can take birth in america and spread the krishna consciousness movement fully illustrating this point from rupa goswami that we're not talking about cast considerations family considerations color of skin where you're born nothing we're talking about devotion to god and spreading devotion to god is done anywhere and everywhere and in one way doing it in the west in america is even more of a of a privilege than worshiping the deity even if it's a very famous old deity in vrndavan you know so we should be inspired by these kind of statements you know because that
gives us credibility that you know nothing can stop us from worshiping krishna if you want and of course nothing is stopping us in croatia there's no kaz brahma i mean in poland you know the catholic church for some time was giving some problems but they weren't saying you know they're not saying oh we can only worship krishna you cannot no they were saying you know this is a sect but there's really nothing stopping us here in the west for uh for worshiping krishna and we should really have this conviction that that devotion to krishna our
devotion to god in general is something for all of us is something that that really is the birthright of all souls that's it before we conclude is there any any question any comment you want to discuss it's clear think for us it's so natural true sure we have free will according to our tradition we have free will so theoretically we can always remain disconnected from from god for so long one day it invites you home thousand years thousand years thousand lifetimes right well said you just wanted to share when you were speaking about genji's water
i've been in india first time in 2003 and it took some genji's water it's still with me at home and it's pure 2003. yeah yeah still has like really nice fresh smell one can really see that it's special it's not like just ordinary water it depends on the part of the river she got it but but still even if she got it and you didn't get it in in like gangotri kankochi is like the mouth of the ganges you didn't get it there and it's because even if you did get it there after what two
thousand about 2003 so that's that's 18 years well shall we do a little clear though can you explain a little bit because she's first up here and maybe krishna and what is devotional services this i defined it at the beginning literally krishna means all attractive infinitely attractive infinitely beautiful so if if god exists then there's good chances that he must be unlimitedly beautiful and that's unlimitedly attractive that's literally what the word krishna means and bhakti i also translate means devotion and so you know our texts our sacred texts claim that that all of us and
not just in this room but i mean actually in this room theoretically there's millions of souls billions of soul between just me and you there's like you know millions of souls in like little micro bodies layers layers of soul and there's millions so just here and what to speak of all souls in zagreb and in croatia on this planet all souls are you know what the word ontology ontologically ontologically means like fundamentally like something that you just can't change like fundamentally ontologically all souls are um connected with god through love and through devotion and through
service that's why there's this famous statement that the the function or the yeah the function of the soul is to serve god that's our natural function supposedly but you know in happiness and not just like oh god i got to go to i got to serve my boss again you know because if you're in this world we think of god i have to serve someone who's going to exploit me and cheat me and you know take my time and take my service and give me just a few kunas you know right or an exploitative husband
or an exploitative you know wife ex itacodale right but here we're talking about theoretically we're talking about pure service from the soul to god and god being god being able to reciprocate in a way that fills the soul with just with more happiness than the soul can can experience theoretically um so that's that's that's that's about bhakti and so we're all about saying that we as souls are our servants so since we have to serve anyway we might as well incorporate in our daily life whatever career we have whatever family situation we may be in
to incorporate a practice which is what we're going to do now this chanting of krishna's names on a daily basis so that we can remain connected to god in our conscious in our original consciousness of being you know lovers of god you know what the word ciao means by the way this actually this guy who just called me before is a devotee from italy um gordon puja and and he he explained to me we were driving down to our farm to our iscon farm in france a place called new mayapur we were driving from uh
the lake of ansi three weeks ago and he told me the word ciao before was it's an old italian and before it was this chao then it just got shortened to ciao and it literally means i'm your servant yeah ciao means i'm your servant and you find that in spanish like paracel like you introduce yourself you know what's your name my name is you know juan or my name is rodrigo para which literally means i'm here to serve you and you say this in french also yes probably in croatian also like that i don't know
about this maybe this time because you know when you talk about serving others usually people uh have expression or or just like you did when i said that you're like the question is that you are actually how to say uh that you are putting yourself in a position of being often misused in a different way especially through history you know the people of so so to say hi or usually exploited those who were under them and we discussed that maybe better term to explain devotional services that as a from described that love is uh executed
to the verb loving that means doing something to please someone whom you love so in this relationship between soul and god is loving devotional service that means that out of love you want to please the object of your love and god as god as as such is anyway always serving everyone with love so that means exchange of this attitude of trying to please someone so it's maybe easier and out of love you are ready to do any sacrifice for a person whom you love well thank you thank you all right well let us do a
little little cure time how about i start for like five minutes five ten minutes do a quick fun and then you or whoever else wants to leave so we'll just sing the hare krishna mantra for like five ten minutes and then and then i forgot your name sir then ivana can continue igor can you play cartel um [Music] so you want to play more nuggets yes so this chanting is our bread and butter and it's kind of like uh gospel music aretha franklin style where you know there's a lead singer in church and then everyone
says amen you know so in a similar way yeah we believe that that the sound the name of god is sound that is of a different scientific nature than ordinary sound like coca-cola or whatever the names of god names of whatever god you know whatever name of god there is is a sound that is spiritual by nature and that goes directly to the soul that touches really the soul and so therefore we believe that by coming in contact with this sound so when i'm singing the mantra everyone's supposed to listen to my voice attentively and
then when i'm done singing i listen to everybody's voice together and then when i sing again you listen to my voice and then i listen to yours and you listen to mine i listen to yours so it's an exercise in hearing that's why it's called mantra or sonic meditation or mantra meditation sound sacred sound meditation and by like this getting locking in your ear really to the sound of the mantra to the sound of god's name you enter into a stage of yoga literally which means a stage of being connected to your source to god
that's when reawakening of sort of sleepy consciousness takes place and your your original love for god and your your consciousness as a soul who's living inside a body awakens and blossoms more and more and as a result you become more happy and more and more peaceful and less and more fearless because you're functioning excuse me on that platform of you as a soul which as we say we believe you are you know and as djokovic said the other day at the us open i was so happy you know djokovic was won a game and uh
and so the so andy andy roddick retired u.s player made a tweet on twitter saying about djokovic first he takes out your your feet your legs like because he's so good with endurance and then he takes out your soul right so the commentators said to djokovic and he's standing in front of you know whatever 40 000 people that what do you think of andy roddick's statement he said that first first joko takes out your legs and then he takes out your soul so everybody laughs and then djokovic said well i take that as a compliment
i agree with the first part but the second part i don't take anybody's soul away and he got serious i was you know he was joking but he took it seriously i don't take anybody's soul away everybody has a soul and we are all beautiful souls and therefore i appreciate everybody and when he said that the whole you know the whole uh the whole auditorium clapped that's really cool [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] so [Music] on the desk [Music] [Applause] [Music] shall be [Music] yes [Music] foreign [Music] is [Music] foreign [Music] [Music] is [Music] oh
[Music] [Music] is [Music] [Music] [Music] my [Music] [Music] [Music] is [Music] is [Music] is [Music] [Music] and now we'll have our next finger you want to sing um but like i said i don't know so many melodies i only really just know only one that's the one i knew [Music] i just did okay i'll sing the mantra once then we repeat and then you take over on the second [Music] uh [Music] yes [Music] everybody [Music] [Music] is [Music] [Music] is [Music] oh [Music] is [Music] [Music] is [Music] is [Music] foreign [Music] oh [Music] [Music] [Music]
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