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Yogaville:
A Living Yoga Community

Swami Satchidananda
The Yogaville community
(also known as Satchidananda Ashram), just south of Charlottesville,
Virginia, USA, consists of people from all stations of life who have
gathered together to experience a yogic lifestyle and support one
another on the spiritual path. Residents include monastics, married
couples, families with children, single adults, and senior citizens.
This community consists of some of the most loving and diverse
people you could ever meet. They have come together from a wide
range of different faiths, backgrounds, and nationalities to live
the simple yet profound teachings of Yoga, as taught by Sri Swami
Satchidananda. Their goal is to realize the spiritual unity behind
all the diversity in the world and to live harmoniously as one
Universal family while enjoying and honoring the differences.
The founder of Yogaville
and of Integral Yoga, Sri Swami Satchidananda, came to the West in
1966. All who met him were attracted to his simple words of wisdom
and understanding. He taught the ancient science of Yoga, embracing
no one particular religion. All faiths, all religions are good and
valid according to Sri Swami Satchidananda. Individuals choose their
own path according to their own temperament. Yoga offers techniques
to calm the mind and the emotions, open the heart, and make the body
healthy, which can in turn be used by spiritual aspirants to go
deeper into their own faiths. The "flower generation" flocked around
him and begged him to stay in the West. Under his influence,
thousands of these young hippies (and many others over the years)
stopped using recreational drugs, alcohol and tobacco. Many more
people acquired better health by adopting a vegetarian diet and a
yogic lifestyle. Under his direction, Dean Ornish spearheaded his
famous program to reverse heart disease by using Yoga and a low-fat
vegetarian diet and Michael Lerner founded the Commonweal Cancer
Programs. Among the many honours that Sri Swami Satchidananda
received for his untiring pubic service are the Albert Schweitzer
Humanitarian Award, the Anti-Defamation League's Humanitarian Award,
the Juliet Hollister Interfaith Award and the U Thant Peace Award.
At the heart of
Yogaville is the Light of Truth Universal Shrine, LOTUS. This shrine
is dedicated to the universal teaching that "Truth is One, Paths are
Many." Opened in July 1986, the LOTUS honours the Divine Light, the
One Truth, that is behind all the world's faiths along with all the
diverse paths that humankind has taken to reach that One Truth. It
embodies Sri Swami Satchidananda's efforts to foster peace and
religious harmony throughout the world. Built in the shape of a
lotus blossom-the symbol for the spiritual enfoldment of the
soul-the Shrine has a central ascending column of light that
represents the one Truth. This central light divides into twelve
rays that illuminate altars for all the major and minor world
religions. A sanctuary for silent meditation, contemplation, and
prayer, the LOTUS is a place where people of all backgrounds and
faiths can come together under one roof to honour individual
traditions while realizing the ultimate spiritual unity of all.
The monastics, like
their Christian and Buddhist counterpart, take vows of renunciation
and dedicate their lives to serving others. They belong to an order
founded in India in 9AD by the great Indian saint and philosopher
Shankaracharya. They serve the Yogaville and also the greater
international yogic community in whatever way they possibly can:
primarily as teachers, administrators, and religious celebrants, but
also, as maintenance people, cooks, medical practitioners, and more.
A number of single
adults and a few married couples also live at the Satchidananda
Ashram-Yogaville as so-called "Karma Yogis" and "Living Yoga
Trainees," those who have dedicated a portion of their lives (one
month to several years) to serving others and living a yogic
lifestyle. The Karma Yogis commit to stay for at least a year and
form a part of the workforce at the Ashram in exchange for room and
board, yoga classes and lifestyle, and a small allowance. Living
Yoga Trainees come for 1-6 months. They join in the daily schedule
of hatha yoga classes, meditation, and service, and attend special
lecture and discussion classes designed especially for their
program.
The rest of the
Yogaville community consists of the so-called "householders." They
are single individuals, married couples and families that live on or
near Yogaville and maintain separate households. They earn their
living through outside employment or as employees of the Ashram or
Ashram businesses. Like the other community members, householders
are free to join in the daily schedule of group meditations, Hatha
Yoga classes, and evening programs as their schedule permits. Their
children attend an Integral Yoga school called the Yogaville
Vidyalayam (Temple of Learning) where they study yoga and ecumenism
along with a regular grade-school curriculum.
There is also a constant
flow of overnight and day guests and program participants. Many come
to attend residential teacher training programs, retreats, and
workshops on Yoga and health; others to rest and relax in the
country, to visit the LOTUS Shrine, or to attend the Saturday night
public program.

by Lakshmi Barsel,
Ph.D. |