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Guruji
Sri
Krishna Pattabhi Jois was born on the full moon day of
July, 1915, Guru Purnima day. His ancestral
village, Kowshika, near Hassan in Karnataka State, is
inhabited by maybe 500 people and has one main street. At
one end of the street is a Vishnu temple, just next to
Pattabhi Jois' home. At the far end of the street, just
100 yards away, lies a small Ganapati temple, and just
opposite, a Siva temple. Both are several hundreds years
old, and are the focus of the village.
Pattabhi
Jois's father was an astrologer and a priest, who acted as
the pujari for many of the families in the village.
From an early age, as most brahmin boys, Pattabhi Jois was
taught the Vedas and Hindu rituals. |
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| When
Guruji was 12 years old, he attended a yoga demonstration
at his middle school in Hassan. The next day he went to
meet the great yogi who had given the demonstration, a man
by the name of Sri T. Krishnamacharya, who had learned
yoga for nearly eight years from his Guru, Rama Mohan
Brahmachari in a cave in Tibet. For the next two years,
Guruji learned from his Guru every day. When Guruji turned
14, he had his brahmin thread ceremony. Krishnamacharya
left Hassan to travel and teach, and Guruji left his
village to go to Mysore. |
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| Guruji
wished to attend the Sanskrit University of Mysore. With
two rupees in his pocket, he left with two friends. They
traveled the 100 plus kilometers by bike, over dirt roads.
For the first year or two, life was very difficult. With
very little money, he begged for his food from some of the
brahmin houses. Guruji attended classes and did his
studies. Then, around 1930, he went to a yoga
demonstration and saw that it was his Guru. He came
forward and prostrated, and they recommenced their
relationship, and Guruji his yoga studies. |
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| The Maharaja
of Mysore, Krishna Rajendra Wodeyar, had fallen ill. He
learned that there was a great yogi who had come to Mysore.
Krishnamacharya was called to him, and duly cured him. The
Maharaja became a great patron of his and built him a yogashala
(school of yoga) on the grounds of the Palace Art Gallery.
Guruji was also beckoned to teach the Maharaja on
occasion, and was called upon several times to give yoga
demonstrations. The Maharaja, who had taken a liking for
Guruji, told him, "I want you to teach yoga at the
Sanskrit College. You teach. I will give you a scholarship
to go to school, free food in my mess hall and a
salary." Guruji, very happy, asked permission from
his Guru. Krishnamacharya approved, and the Yoga
Department of the Sanskrit College began on March 1, 1937.
He continued as the head until his retirement in 1973. |

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| From
1937 until 1973, Guruji earned his professorship at the
University, granting him the title of Vidvan. He married,
in a love marriage, Savitramma, who came from a long line
of Sanskrit scholars. Her grandfather was the
Sanskrit and philosophy teacher to the last
Shankaracharya of Kanchi, Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswati.
They had three children, Manju, Ramesh, and Saraswati.
Saraswati is the mother of Sharath, born in 1971, who is
now Guruji's co-director of their school in Mysore. |
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In 1964, Andre Van Lysbeth
bacame the first Westener to study with Guruji. Soon after
that, more Europeans came. Around 1972, the first
Americans came, after meeting Manju at Swami Gitananda's ashram
in Pondicherri. It was at that point that ashtanga yoga
began spreading in America, starting in California, and
then later emerging in Hawaii. In 1975, Guruji and Manju
made their first trip to America. Over the next 25 years,
the practice spread through the United States, France,
Germany, Russia, Japan, Israel, Chile, England, Italy,
Spain, Switzerland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, etc.
Guruji has, for 63 years, been teaching uninterruptedly
this same method that he learned from Krishnamacharya in
1927. |
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