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The Bhagavata Podcast

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The Bhagavata Podcast

The Bhagavata Podcast invites listeners on an engaging journey through the Bhagavata Purana, more commonly known as the Srimad Bhagavatam. Each episode features conversations between scholars, many of whom are also practitioners, as they reflect on and analyze a chapter of this text together. The podcast offers a unique blend of academic rigor and personal insight, providing fresh perspectives that illuminate the beauty and uniqueness of the Bhagavatam.In each episode, host Dr. Måns Broo, an esteemed scholar and Gaudiya Vaishnava practitioner, invites expert guests to reflect on a chapter of the Bhagavata Purana. Following a linear progression through the text, the discussions explore the philosophical, theological, and literary dimensions of the Bhagavatam, offering both traditional insights and modern academic interpretations. This thoughtful approach enables listeners to journey through the Bhagavata Purana chapter by chapter, uncoveri

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    2.2 What the Manosphere Gets Wrong About Worth | Bhagavata Podcast with Shaunaka Rishi Das

    A teenager thinks his father is a loser because he doesn't drive a Lamborghini. The Bhagavatam asks: when you can use your arm as a pillow, what is the necessity of a pillow at all? These two visions of the good life are further apart than they look — and closer together than you'd expect.Canto 2, Chapter 2 continues Shukadeva Goswami's answer to Pariksit's question: what should a person do who is about to die? Shaunaka Rishi Das, director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, joins host Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo) to read a chapter that turns out to be less about death and more about how to see the world clearly. Shukadeva describes the cosmic form, yogic meditation, and the soul's progression through higher planets — then sets all of it aside at the end of the chapter. The reason he goes through it at all is the same reason any good teacher meets a student where they are: you cannot hand someone a destination without first acknowledging the roads they already know.The conversation moves across a lot of ground. Shaunaka reads the Bhagavatam's renunciation verses alongside the Gospel of Matthew and finds them saying the same thing. He recalls a dinner at a Jesuit house where the priest asked, point-blank: do you believe all that? And 14 heads turned to look at him. He traces the commentarial tradition from Sridharaswami through Sanatana Goswami to Prabhupada, and what it means that every translator leaves their own impression on the text. And he describes the experience of waking up to God's presence everywhere as something that has to happen in stages — because waking a sleepwalker too fast gives them a shock.The Bhagavata Podcast is produced in association with the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.🔔 Subscribe to join listeners around the world exploring the Bhagavatam together:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxspSZeIYq_ZZaW89hhnptA?sub_confirmation=1Starting from the beginning? Episode 1.1 is here: https://youtu.be/2LcGX8iK5tM#Bhagavatam #BhaktiYoga #HinduPhilosophy #Renunciation #ManosphereSend us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    2.1 What Should You Do When You're About to Die? | Bhagavata Podcast with Jayananda Dasa

    A well-known contemporary guru was asked, mid-event, how to prepare for death. He laughed — not dismissively, but his answer was: "You should be focusing on how to live." The Bhagavatam disagrees. And its answer turns out to be not about the future at all.Canto 2, Chapter 1 is where Shukadeva Goswami finally begins to speak. The first book of the Srimad Bhagavatam spent its entire length setting up one question: what should a person do who is about to die? Now, with Pariksit seated on the banks of the Ganges with seven days left to live, Shukadeva answers. He gives the full answer in the first ten verses. The remaining 15,000 verses are the elaboration.Jayananda Dasa (Dr. Janne Kontala of Åbo Akademi University in Finland) brings a researcher's precision to the chapter's opening moves. He and host Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo) work through Shukadeva's strategy: why he begins by validating every other yoga system before identifying naama kirtana as the single recommendation for everyone, regardless of what they want. The episode also examines the chapter's panentheistic meditation on the universal form, what it would actually take to practice it seriously, and how it differs in aim from the Tantric framework of imagining the universe within oneself.Along the way: the ashrama system and whether spiritual practice can begin too early and the story of King Katvanga (who learned he had only moments to live and used them to achieve perfection).The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.🔔 Subscribe to join listeners around the world exploring the Bhagavatam together: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxspSZeIYq_ZZaW89hhnptA?sub_confirmation=1Starting from the beginning? Episode 1.1 is here: https://youtu.be/2LcGX8iK5tM#Bhagavatam #BhaktiYoga #HinduPhilosophy #Shukadeva #NaamaKirtanaSend us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.19 What Would You Do If You Had Seven Days to Live? | Bhagavata Podcast with Sundar Gopal Das

    What would you do if you learned you had seven days to live? Most of us would panic, bargain, or spend those days in dread. King Parikshit sat down by the river and prepared to die with complete clarity.  This is the final chapter of the first book of the Srimad Bhagavatam, and it arrives like a carefully placed door: everything in Canto 1 has been building toward this moment.  In this episode, Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo) and Sundar Gopal Das (Dr. Simon Haas) explore Canto 1, Chapter 19 of the Srimad Bhagavatam, in which King Parikshit, cursed to die by snakebite within seven days, renounces his kingdom and fasts by the Ganga. The great sages of the age converge not out of ceremony but out of omniscient foreknowledge: the Bhagavatam itself is about to be spoken. Sundar Gopal Das, joining from Costa Rica, draws on the commentary of Baladeva Vidyabhushan throughout, uncovering details that move quickly past in the text: the sages who could not reach agreement on what Parikshit should do, the tears and embraces when Shukadeva Goswami finally arrives, and the king's quiet, anxious gratitude that this wandering sage has agreed to stay longer than it takes to milk a cow.  The conversation ranges across the nature of the Bhagavatam as a literary structure (a text that ends every sequence on a cliffhanger), the contested identity of Shukadeva, the art of physiognomy by which the sages immediately recognise a great personality, and the Bhagavata Parampara: the lineage of instruction that does not pass through initiation but through teaching. The episode closes on a question the Srimad Bhagavatam poses in its first chapter and repeats here at the end of its first book: what is the duty of a human being, especially one who is about to die? The mortality rate, as Bhrigupada's teacher once reminded a Finnish audience, is 100 percent.  This episode covers Canto 1, Chapter 19 of the Srimad Bhagavatam. The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.#Bhagavatam #BhaktiYoga #HinduPhilosophy #Parikshit #ShukadevaSend us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.18 A King, a Curse, and a Seven-Day Deadline | Bhagavata Podcast with Manjari Devi Dasi

    A great king, exhausted and thirsty, makes an impulsive mistake. A young brahmin boy responds with a curse: die within seven days. What unfolds from that moment is the reason the entire Bhagavatam exists.Canto 1, Chapter 18 is the hinge on which the Bhagavatam turns. In this episode, host Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo, Senior Lecturer at Åbo Akademi University and Senior Research Fellow at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies) reads it with Manjari Devi Dasi, PhD, of Bhaktivedanta College in Budapest, who spent six years translating Prabhupada's books into Hungarian. Manjari Devi Dasi brings both scholarly precision and lived practice to a chapter that raises some of the hardest questions in the text: Why would Krishna protect Parikshit as an unborn child and then arrange his death as a king? What does it mean for a devotee's mistake to be "the Lord's arrangement"? And what separates a curse from ordinary speech?The conversation covers a lot of ground. The chapter's unusual structure, which leaps forward to Parikshit's death and then circles back in what Manjari Devi Dasi calls "temporal oscillation," is examined as a deliberate narrative strategy. The famous verse Tulayama lavenapi, on the superiority of the devotee's association over even the Lord's direct presence, becomes an occasion for a close reading alongside Baladeva Vidyabhushana's commentary and a brief detour into J.L. Austin's philosophy of performative speech. The contrast between the boy Sringi's rash curse and his father Shamika's grief-stricken wisdom gives the chapter its moral tension, and the episode closes with Prabhupada's argument for trained, selfless leadership, read in light of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur's counter-claim that individual spiritual elevation matters more than any political arrangement.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.17 If Evil Surrenders to You, What Do You Do? | Bhagavata Podcast with Krishna Ksetra Swami

    Kali kneels before Parikshit and asks for mercy. What an emperor does in that moment, and why, is the subject of Canto 1, Chapter 17 of the Bhagavatam.Krishna Ksetra Swami (Dr. Kenneth Valpey) and host Bhrigupada Dasa examine the full range of this chapter: the cosmic structure of Kali's four abodes (gambling, intoxication, illicit sex, and slaughter), the Bhagavatam's sustained case for non-violence including its application to food, and the question of whether Parikshit's decision to spare Kali and confine him is mercy, political realism, or both.The conversation also takes up the problem of evil in its Bhagavatam form: if dharma requires that Kali exist, what does that say about the nature of the age we live in and the choices available to us within it?Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.16 The Age We're Living In and What It's Actually Doing to Us | Bhagavata Podcast with Gopal Hari Das

    A bull standing on one leg. A cow weeping in an empty field. A strange figure beating them both. Parikshit, the last great emperor, comes upon this scene on the road and has to decide what to do with it. Canto 1, Chapter 16 of the Bhagavatam is the text's account of how the Kali Yuga began, and what it is.Gopal Hari Das (Dr. Gopal Gupta) and host Bhrigupada Dasa explore what the Bhagavatam actually means by the present age: its four characteristic symptoms (the collapse of truthfulness, cleanliness, mercy, and austerity), the allegorical figure of Kali himself, and why Parikshit does not simply kill him. The episode gives particular attention to a long and unusual digression in this chapter on the nature of truth, drawing on stories from the Mahabharata and Ramayana.The conversation asks directly: does the Bhagavatam's diagnosis of the present age still hold? And what does it recommend?Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.15 What Remains When Everything Is Taken Away? | Bhagavata Podcast with Radhika Raman Das

    Arjuna's bow arm has failed. His powers are gone. The warriors who once fled before him now barely trouble him. The Bhagavatam in Canto 1, Chapter 15 asks what this means, not just for Arjuna but for the entire question of identity and spiritual life.Radhika Raman Das (Dr. Ravi Gupta) and host Bhrigupada Dasa trace the Pandavas' decision to retire from kingship and set out on their final journey. The episode gives careful attention to Arjuna's grief and the startling moment when he realises that everything he was capable of, he was capable of only because of Krishna. Without that presence, the gifts simply withdraw.The conversation also addresses Draupadi's departure (the Bhagavatam gives her genuine agency here), the reappearance of a key verse from the Bhagavad Gita in an entirely new context, and what it means for the Bhagavatam to succeed the Mahabharata as a literary and spiritual project.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.14 Why Does Grief Feel Like Love? | Bhagavata Podcast with Jayananda Das

    Arjuna has returned from Dvaraka. One look at his face and Yudhishthira knows. Krishna is gone. What the Bhagavatam does with that knowledge, across Canto 1, Chapter 14, is one of the most carefully constructed passages in the entire text.Jayananda Das (Dr. Janne Kontala) and host Bhrigupada Dasa examine how the Bhagavatam handles grief among those who have genuinely understood what they have lost. The episode explores the long catalogue of omens that Yudhishthira reads in the days before Arjuna returns, what the Vedic understanding of signs and portents actually involves, and why the Bhagavatam insists that even a perfected practitioner can and should grieve.The conversation draws out the text's central paradox: that separation from Krishna is not only painful but is, in the Gaudiya Vaishnava understanding, one of the most intensified forms of devotional experience.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.13 What Do You Do When Someone You Love Refuses to Let Go? | Bhagavata Podcast with Sundar Gopal Das

    Vidura has returned from years of pilgrimage. He has seen enough of the world to know what he needs to say. And what he says to Dhritarashtra in the palace of the Pandavas is one of the most direct and uncomfortable speeches in the Bhagavatam.In Canto 1, Chapter 13, Sundar Gopal Das and host Bhrigupada Dasa trace the arc of Dhritarashtra's departure from the Pandava household: what Vidura tells him, why Yudhishthira cannot bring himself to ask the question he already knows the answer to, and what the text says about the nature of grief, attachment, and renunciation in old age. The episode gives particular attention to the famous verse on tirthas (holy places) and what it means that saints do not need sacred sites; sacred sites need saints.The conversation also examines Narada's subsequent arrival and his pointed instruction not to mourn those who understand what they are doing.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.12 The Child Who Survived a Nuclear Weapon | Bhagavata Podcast with Jayananda Das

    Before he could be born, the last of the Pandava line was nearly destroyed by a weapon of devastating power. What saved him, and what that survival meant, is the subject of Canto 1, Chapter 12.Jayananda Das (Dr. Janne Kontala) and host Bhrigupada Das explore the birth narrative of Parikshit, the king whose impending death will eventually prompt the entire recitation of the Bhagavatam. The episode examines the Vedic understanding of birth omens and astrological signs, the significance of Parikshit's name (the one who examines), and what it means that he entered the world already searching for the divine light that had protected him in the womb.This chapter is the origin story not just of a king but of the Bhagavatam's central narrative frame. Understanding it changes how you read everything that follows.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.11 What Does It Feel Like When God Comes Home? | Bhagavata Podcast with Krishna Ksetra Swami

    What would it actually look like if an entire city experienced devotional joy at the same moment? The Bhagavatam in Canto 1, Chapter 11 attempts to describe exactly that.Krishna Ksetra Swami (Dr. Kenneth Valpey) and host Bhrigupada Dasa examine what the text is doing when it describes Krishna's return to Dvaraka: the crowds, the flowers, the women on rooftops, the elephants and birds, all participating in a single moment of welcome. This episode takes seriously both the literary craft of the passage and its theological claims about the nature of collective spiritual experience.The conversation also addresses the famous episode of the sixteen thousand wives, how Dvaraka functions as a sacred city in the Bhagavatam's geography, and what the text's vision of joy (ecstasy without intoxication) actually means.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.10 What Do You Do When the One You Love Has to Leave? | Bhagavata Podcast with Shaunaka Rishi Das

    The war is over. The kingdom is restored. And Krishna is leaving. How do you say goodbye to the person whose presence has held everything together?In Canto 1, Chapter 10, the Bhagavatam slows to watch the citizens of Hastinapura stand in the street, unable to move, as Krishna's chariot disappears from view. Shaunaka Rishi Das and host Bhrigupada Dasa explore what the text is doing in this moment: theologically, poetically, and emotionally. The concept of viraha (loving separation) is introduced here not as a problem to be solved but as a mode of devotional life in its own right.The episode asks whether absence can be a form of presence, and what the Bhagavatam understands by the relationship between loss and longing.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.9 How Do You Want to Die? | Bhagavata Podcast with Radhika Raman Das

    Bhishmadeva has lain on a bed of arrows for fifty-eight days, waiting. He has the rare gift of choosing his own moment of death. What he does with that time is one of the Bhagavatam's most extraordinary scenes.In Canto 1, Chapter 9, the greatest warrior of the Mahabharata composes a hymn to Krishna in his final moments, watched by kings, sages, and the Pandavas themselves. Radhika Raman Das (Dr. Ravi Gupta) and host Bhrigupada Dasa examine what the text reveals about conscious dying, the relationship between a warrior's vision of God and a devotee's vision, and why the Bhagavatam treats death not as an ending but as the most concentrated moment of spiritual life.This episode asks directly: can we prepare for the quality of our own death? And what does the Bhagavatam actually recommend?Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.8 A Queen Prays for More Suffering | Bhagavata Podcast with Radhika Raman Das

    What kind of prayer asks for more calamity? And what does it tell us that the Bhagavatam treats this as one of its most beautiful passages?In Canto 1, Chapter 8, Queen Kunti offers a hymn that inverts every assumption about what prayer is for. Radhika Raman Das (Dr. Ravi Gupta) and host Bhrigupada Dasa examine the theological logic behind her request, the literary craft of the Sanskrit verses, and why the Bhagavatam presents suffering not as something to escape but as a context in which devotion becomes most clear.The episode also turns to the infant Parikshit, saved in the womb by a divine light when the Brahmastra was unleashed against the Pandava line. His survival, and what it prefigures, sets the stage for the entire narrative structure of the Bhagavatam.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.7 Can You Forgive the Unforgivable? | Bhagavata Podcast with Jayananda Das

    Ashvatthama has just committed the most heinous act in the Mahabharata, killing the sleeping sons of the Pandavas. Now Arjuna has him at sword-point. What happens next is one of the most morally complex scenes in Sanskrit literature.In Canto 1, Chapter 7, the Bhagavatam refuses easy answers. Jayananda Das (Dr. Janne Kontala) and host Bhrigupada Dasa explore the tension between justice and mercy, the theological significance of Draupadi's unexpected plea for her enemy's life, and what it means when the text asks us to hold punishment and forgiveness at the same time. This is not a chapter about letting wrongdoing go unpunished. It is about something far more demanding than that.The conversation also draws out what the Bhagavatam's treatment of this episode reveals about the nature of honour, grief, and the limits of retributive justice in a Vaishnava framework.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.6 Why Does the World's Greatest Scholar Feel Empty? | Bhagavata Podcast with Radhika Raman Das

    Vyasadeva has compiled the Vedas, the Puranas, the Mahabharata. By any measure, his life's work is complete. And yet a deep, unnamed dissatisfaction settles over him. What could possibly be missing?In Canto 1, Chapter 6, Narada arrives at Vyasa's ashram and delivers a diagnosis that reframes the entire Bhagavatam project. Radhika Raman Das (Dr. Ravi Gupta) and host Bhrigupada Dasa explore one of the text's most psychologically precise conversations: why scholarly achievement alone cannot resolve inner unease, what it means to write from devotion rather than duty, and how the Bhagavatam itself was born from this moment of creative and spiritual crisis.This episode also traces Narada's own biography, from a servant boy in a sage's household to one of the most travelled figures in Sanskrit literature, and asks what his story tells us about how transformation actually happens.The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.5 What If Everything You've Accomplished Still Isn't Enough? | Bhagavata Podcast with Krishna Ksetra Swami

    Vyasa had divided the Vedas, composed the Mahabharata, and written more scripture than any author in history. He sat down at dusk on the bank of the Sarasvati and felt empty. His guru Narada arrived and told him: not only have your works failed to satisfy you, they are actively misleading people.In this episode, host Bhrigupada Dasa reads Canto 1, Chapter 5 with Krishna Ksetra Swami (Dr. Kenneth Valpey), returning for a second conversation after their discussion of Chapter 2. This chapter is where Narada delivers his verdict on everything Vyasa has written, and where he proposes a remedy: stop writing about dharma, artha, kama and moksha as ends in themselves. Write about the Lord. Glorify Krishna directly, and let everything else follow.Krishna Ksetra Swami examines Narada's striking philosophy of literature, which distinguishes writing that serves the lower modes of nature (described in verse 10 as fit for crows) from writing that carries transcendental content, and insists that even imperfectly composed work of the latter kind is heard by honest people. The discussion moves to why Narada, the son of a maid servant and likely born outside of wedlock, becomes the guru of Vyasa, and what that reversal says about the Bhagavatam's understanding of qualification. A close reading of the Pancharatra connections in verses 37 and 38 leads into a reflection on why Vyasa is the author but not the speaker: the author needs empathy for those still suffering, and Vyasa has it. The episode closes on verse 18, which argues that material happiness will arrive regardless of effort, so the only intelligent pursuit is the one thing that cannot be obtained by wandering through the universe without devotion.This episode covers Canto 1, Chapter 5 of the Srimad Bhagavatam.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.4 Why Does Despair Produce the Greatest Wisdom? | Bhagavata Podcast with Sundar Gopal Das

    The Bhagavad Gita begins with Arjuna in crisis. The Ramayana begins with its author's grief. The Srimad Bhagavatam begins with Vyasa's inexplicable emptiness after completing every other text he had ever written. India's greatest literature keeps emerging from its authors' darkest moments. Why?Canto 1, Chapter 4 is a short chapter of 33 verses, but it carries a striking amount of weight. Host Bhrigupada Dasa reads it with Sundar Gopal Das (Simon H.), a doctoral candidate at Oxford University whose work focuses on the teachings of Baladeva Vidyabhushana. The chapter establishes the qualities required of an ideal speaker of the Bhagavatam, introduces Parikshit as the model listener, and then turns to Vyasa sitting alone at dusk on the bank of the Sarasvati, accomplished beyond measure and strangely dissatisfied.Sundar Gopal Das works through the qualities of the ideal speaker from Baladeva Vidyabhushana's commentary, including being fixed in samadhi, seeing all things equally, having overcome ignorance, and being unconcerned with appearing as a fool. The contrast with Vyasa is examined in some detail. The discussion then opens into a question both speakers find genuinely difficult: if a person of Vyasa's stature cannot be under illusion, is the commentarial move of calling his distress "the Lord's arrangement" theologically sound, or does it drain the episode of its human drama? Jiva Goswami's answer, that Vyasa's emotional states arise from his svarupa-shakti rather than the three gunas, offers a way through. The episode closes with a distinction from the Gita between pain and suffering, and Vyasa's own intuition that he already knows what is missing before Narada even arrives to tell him.This episode covers Canto 1, Chapter 4 of the Srimad Bhagavatam.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.3 Is Krishna Just Another Avatar — or the Source of All of Them? | Bhagavata Podcast with Radhika Raman Das

    The Bhagavatam lists 22 divine descents and then, almost in passing, singles one of them out as different in kind from the rest. That half-verse, "Krishna is Bhagavan himself," became the theological foundation on which the entire Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition was built. Was that a legitimate reading of the text, or a creative imposition on it?In this episode, host Bhrigupada Dasa reads Canto 1, Chapter 3 with Radhika Raman Das (Dr. Ravi Gupta), Professor of Religious Studies at Utah State University. The chapter catalogues the Lord's incarnations and poses a question that runs through the whole Bhagavatam: how can a God who is utterly transcendent also be genuinely accessible to human beings? Radhika Raman Das works through this carefully, distinguishing the Vaishnava understanding of avatara from the Christian concept of incarnation, and explaining why the two traditions resolve the problem of divine transcendence and immanence in such different ways.The conversation moves across several distinct questions. What is the difference between avatara and "incarnation," and why does it matter theologically? How does the Bhagavatam respond to the charge that a God with a body is a limited God? Where do the shaktyavesha avataras fit in the larger picture, and what do they tell us about the relationship between the divine and the human? The episode closes with two verses from the chapter's end: the Bhagavatam's description of itself as a sun rising in the age of Kali, and Suta Goswami's statement that he will teach the text both "as I have learned it" and "as I have realized it."This episode covers Canto 1, Chapter 3 of the Srimad Bhagavatam.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.2 Can Devotion Ever Really Be "Without Motivation"? | Bhagavata Podcast with Krishna Ksetra Swami

    What would it mean to give yourself to something completely, with no expectation of return? The Srimad Bhagavatam names this "unmotivated, uninterrupted devotion" as the highest good for humanity. It is a remarkable claim, and a demanding one.In this episode, host Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo, Senior Lecturer at Åbo Akademi University and Senior Research Fellow at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies) reads through Canto 1, Chapter 2 with Krishna Ksetra Swami (Dr. Kenneth Valpey), co-translator of the Oxford University Press Bhagavata Purana. The chapter begins where the whole Bhagavatam begins in spirit: with the question of what is actually worth pursuing. Suta's answer, drawn out across a series of interlocking verses, is not liberation, not religious merit, but bhakti, practised for its own sake.The conversation moves through a lot of ground. Krishna Ksetra Swami introduces the idea of the Bhagavatam as a grand symphony, with themes stated briefly in the first canto and then elaborated across all twelve. They examine what "uninterrupted devotion" could plausibly mean in practice, look at verses 16 to 20 as a step-by-step map of spiritual progress (and debate where the leap-moments fit in), and consider the famous verse 11, which introduces non-dual knowledge in a text that is otherwise firmly Vaishnava in its orientation. The discussion also turns to the history of the text's composition (scholars disagree by roughly 3,000 years), to Prabhupada's commentary as a modern example of the commentarial tradition, and to the double meaning of the name "Vasudeva" that quietly ties the whole chapter to Krishna.This episode covers Canto 1, Chapter 2 of the Srimad Bhagavatam.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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    1.1 Where Do You Begin With 18,000 Verses? | Bhagavata Podcast with Shaunaka Rishi Das

    What do you do when a text of 18,000 verses refuses to be read as a simple rulebook, and instead keeps turning your assumptions upside down?In the very first episode of the Bhagavata Podcast, host Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Måns Broo) sits down with Shaunaka Rishi Das, Director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, who first encountered the Bhagavatam as an 18-year-old Irishman walking into an ashram in 1979. What drew him in then, and what still holds him after decades, opens up one of the most important questions the text raises in its very first verses: what kind of religion is this, and what is it actually asking of us?Together they explore the remarkable opening of Canto 1, Chapter 1 of the Srimad Bhagavatam: its rejection of materially motivated religion, its lineage from Vishnu to Brahma to Narada to Vyasa to Shukadeva Goswami, and the six deceptively simple questions posed by the sages at Naimisharanya. They also discuss why Parikshit's death (which frames the entire text) makes every question in it feel urgent rather than academic, how the Bhagavatam quietly subverts social hierarchy through its choice of storyteller, and what it means that the text begins and ends with the same recommendation: chant the Name.Send us Fan MailThe Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Bhagavata Podcast invites listeners on an engaging journey through the Bhagavata Purana, more commonly known as the Srimad Bhagavatam. Each episode features conversations between scholars, many of whom are also practitioners, as they reflect on and analyze a chapter of this text together. The podcast offers a unique blend of academic rigor and personal insight, providing fresh perspectives that illuminate the beauty and uniqueness of the Bhagavatam.In each episode, host Dr. Måns Broo, an esteemed scholar and Gaudiya Vaishnava practitioner, invites expert guests to reflect on a chapter of the Bhagavata Purana. Following a linear progression through the text, the discussions explore the philosophical, theological, and literary dimensions of the Bhagavatam, offering both traditional insights and modern academic interpretations. This thoughtful approach enables listeners to journey through the Bhagavata Purana chapter by chapter, uncoveri

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