European
Mala leads us to the Cosmic Self
0:00 - 0:44 (44 min)

A spiritual discourse on the cosmic significance of the prayer mala (japa mala).
"Each bead of the mala is immense with powers from the cosmic Self."
"In that one thread, all creatures on this earth are bound."
The lecturer addresses a satsang, elaborating on the profound symbolism of the mala beyond its physical form. He explains how the thread represents the unifying force binding all beings and elements, while the beads encompass the diversity of creation. The talk explores the universal spiritual power within all life, the mala as a metaphor for bodily rhythms like breath and heartbeat, and practical guidance for its use in mantra meditation.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Use it, or you will lose it
0:45 - 1:31 (46 min)

An evening satsang discourse on spiritual realization and the nature of existence.
"What we need more is that we have to come to that step which is the highest, meaning to the cosmic."
"Without Guru, we cannot know Brahmā, Viṣṇu, Maheś... Without Guru, we cannot do dhyāna. Without Guru, we cannot do pūjā."
The lecturer speaks on the human journey toward cosmic consciousness, using metaphors of nature's cycles, the elusive horizon, and a parable about hidden treasure to illustrate spiritual truths. He emphasizes the necessity of the guru's grace for meditation and liberation, concluding with a devotional bhajan.
Filming location: Jadan, Rajasthan, India
The attributes of the Sun
1:35 - 2:47 (72 min)

Morning satsang with Vishwaguruji from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. Indra is the God of the rain, and today we got a blessing from him. Principles of nature are present everywhere. The source of our energy and confidence is in the vajra nadi. Chakra means cycle and connected to the Sun, Surya. The explanation of the attributes of the Sun and the fourteen worlds. Explanation of success, development, and falling down.
The Yogic Science
2:55 - 3:54 (59 min)

Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. We want to become one as a human. Quality is one of the best. A good education gives good quality as a nice statue can be formed from a big rock. Energy and the five elements are connecting to the Yogi. We are entering into the oneness when entering into the practice hall. Atma is the pilot or captain of our airplane. If something is not good we can't fly. We have to be alert, the Sadhana is very important, as Holy Guruji wrote in one bhajan.
Only Guru can change our destiny
4:00 - 4:54 (54 min)

Morning satsang with Vishwaguruji from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. Karma is only one. Karma is only there if we give seva. The story of Ravana his daughter and her husband. With negative speaking, we get double of negative karma of the other person. Destiny is coming from karma. We can't change our destiny but Guru can change it. Our destiny is written in our palms and in our soles.
Our children are very spiritual
5:00 - 5:53 (53 min)

Morning satsang with Vishwaguruji from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. Children are very disciplined during the programs because their parents educated them towards spirituality. Vishwaguruji teaches many generations of yoga people. Sri Devpuriji appeared in some places at the same time. Holiguruji told many stories to Visheówaguruji in his childhood about Devpuriji and Mahaprabuji. Vishwaguruji realized the prediction of Devpuriji. We don't know where the seed will grow. Reading holy books every day new knowledge comes. The story of an Indian man who issued a newspaper in India and travelled with Viwshwaguruji in Europe. Knowledge takes the human healthy and happy. We should give further the knowledge of our forefathers to our children. The first university was in India. There were very many books but Muslims burnt them. God gives eating everybody in the world. Little more information about the first university in the world was in India.
Karma and destiny
6:00 - 6:53 (53 min)

A satsang featuring a personal testimony followed by a discourse on divine justice and karma.
"My life has been connected with spirituality since I was 21. At that point, my life changed a lot. I caused an accident while driving to work and ran over a person."
"It is the justice of God. When the soul goes, there are two ways: Svarga or Naraka, heaven or hell. Hell is presided over by Yama, the god of death."
A seeker named Janez shares his spiritual journey, beginning with a traumatic accident that led him to spirituality. Swāmījī then responds by giving him the spiritual name Dharmadrasa and launches into an extensive teaching on the afterlife. He describes the roles of Yamarāja (the lord of death) and Dharmarāja (the lord of righteousness) in judging souls based on their karma, emphasizing the consequences of actions like meat-eating and the importance of kindness. He illustrates these principles with stories, including one from the Mahāśivapurāṇa about Śiva protecting a devotee from Yama.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Proudness
7:00 - 7:52 (52 min)

A spiritual discourse narrating two stories from the Ramayana about divine ego and its cure.
"Sometimes the buddhi, the intellect, can turn for a while in another direction." "Don’t think that through your help, Rāma was victorious... It was a test for you."
The speaker, Swami Avatarpuri, recounts the tale of Garuda losing devotion after rescuing Lord Rama from a snake arrow, and his healing by listening to the satsang of the crow Kakabhushundi. He then tells how Lord Rama cured Hanuman's pride by sending him on a mission to a sage, revealing countless identical rings to demonstrate the cyclical nature of divine incarnations. The talk concludes by relating these themes to the modern discovery of sacred Himalayan caves.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Bathing in the river Alakhnanda
8:00 - 8:51 (51 min)

Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. Alakhpuriji Parampara is from Satyayuga, from Shiva. Bhagirathi and Alaknanda river join at Devpryag and forms Ganga. Story of Nandadevi and Tiger. Explanation of the origin of the Ganga river. For those, who wash themselves in the Ganga or the Alakhnanda all impurities will be cleaned. Don't get stuck in desires, we desire to help everyone.
What Guru Purnima means?
8:55 - 9:45 (50 min)

A discourse on the essence of Guru Pūrṇimā and the guru-disciple tradition.
"Gurur Brahmā, Gurur Viṣṇu, Gurur Devo Maheśvara, Gurur Sākṣāt Parabrahmā."
"A true Satguru will not say, 'I am the Satguru.' The day a Satguru says that, it means he does not truly know."
The lecturer addresses a global audience on the full moon day of Guru Pūrṇimā. He explores the profound meaning of the guru, explaining how the principle of the teacher exists in many forms before describing the supreme Satguru. He shares personal instructions from his own guru, Holī Gurujī, about the duty to serve all, and discusses the life of a sannyāsī, the guru paramparā (lineage), and the symbolism of the full moon.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Do Good
9:50 - 10:39 (49 min)

A spiritual discourse on the nature of the true guru, liberation, and spiritual practice.
"Sometimes it is good if we are running and running and running, and we don’t care about it... Then God said, 'I must give him some knowledge.'"
"Guru Brahmā, Guru Viṣṇu, Guru Devo Maheśvara. So where should we meditate so that we get all these three?"
The lecturer delivers a satsang, beginning with reflections on global challenges and India's cultural response during the pandemic. He critiques inauthentic yoga teachers and discusses the paradoxical path to mokṣa (liberation), explaining it as a state beyond positive and negative dualities. Using parables and teachings, he emphasizes the supreme nature of the true Guru and the importance of sincere, long-term practice over superficial achievements.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
The value of Satsang
10:45 - 11:30 (45 min)

A spiritual discourse exploring the mantra "Hari Om" and sharing Puranic stories.
"Hari is the name of Bhagavān Viṣṇu. And Om, Om is Hari."
"72,000 years of sādhanā and one minute of satsaṅg... For one minute of satsaṅg, the whole earth raised up, and when it was 72,000 sādhanās, that was not moving."
The lecturer explains the divine essence of the "Hari Om" mantra, linking it to Vishnu and the primal sound of creation. He narrates the Puranic story of the earth's origin and the serpent Sheshanaga who supports it. The central teaching is conveyed through a parable where the sage Vishvamitra learns that one minute of true satsang (spiritual gathering) outweighs 72,000 years of solitary penance, highlighting the supreme power of devotion and community. The talk concludes with ethical exhortations for spiritual practice.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Never think that you are a Guru
11:35 - 12:18 (43 min)

A satsang on the sacred practice of Kriyā and the necessity of the guru's grace.
"If I tell them, 'On the day you give up Guru Kṛpā, all sādhanā will be gone,' these people took the Kriyā and after one or two years they were gone."
"To become a disciple is not easy, not easy, not easy... we are also on that path of God, supreme, highest, and we are now walking on that path."
The lecturer addresses the gathering, emphasizing the gravity of Kriyā Anuṣṭhāna practice and the danger of undertaking it without genuine guru grace. Using metaphors of carrying a flame through a storm and walking a knife's edge, he illustrates the spiritual path's difficulty. He warns against students presuming to teach the technique, comparing it to a nurse performing heart surgery, and stresses that authentic practice comes only through the guru paramparā.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
I am one and you are all
12:25 - 13:04 (39 min)

A satsang talk on spiritual practice and community life in an ashram.
"The past is past. Even the very beginning of one second is already gone."
"And we are, as Holī Gurujī said, one in all and all in one."
The lecturer addresses a gathering in the ashram hall, blessing attendees and reflecting on the sanctity of the present moment and the holy site. He discusses the irrelevance of the past, the unity of all beings, and offers practical, often humorous advice for daily ashram life, meditation, and bodily comfort during practice. The talk blends deep spiritual principles with communal warmth and guidance for a successful stay.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Tratak
13:10 - 13:49 (39 min)

Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji on the topic of Hatha Yoga from Summer Yoga Camp, Vep, Hungary. Practising nauli and agnisar kriya is best in the morning. Neti, Dhauti, Bhasti, Nauli, Kapalabhati and Tratak are the six hatha yoga kriyas. Vishwaguruji explains in detail how to practice tratak.
Karma yoga means serving
13:55 - 14:35 (40 min)

A morning satsang on karma yoga, seva, and skillful action.
"In karma yoga, it is easier to progress further in yogic sādhana, to reach the higher consciousness of the yogī."
"Yogaḥ karmasu kauśalam—yoga is skill in action. Yoga will be successful through the sādhana of karma."
Following a group practice in a meadow, the speaker addresses the assembly, describing the four groups present at the ashram. He defines karma yoga as selfless service, illustrating it with examples from Christian charity to simple daily kindnesses. A story about a disciple mistakenly moving a snail teaches that service must be skillful and informed. The talk emphasizes that seva is the foremost practice, accessible to everyone in countless ways.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
The attributes of the Sun
14:40 - 15:52 (72 min)

Morning satsang with Vishwaguruji from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. Indra is the God of the rain, and today we got a blessing from him. Principles of nature are present everywhere. The source of our energy and confidence is in the vajra nadi. Chakra means cycle and connected to the Sun, Surya. The explanation of the attributes of the Sun and the fourteen worlds. Explanation of success, development, and falling down.
Sadhana Guru seva and Guru kripa
16:00 - 16:55 (55 min)

A spiritual discourse on the universal path of sādhanā, or spiritual practice.
"If you have no one day to practice, then you should also not eat for one day. But for eating, we are ready. For half an hour or two hours of practice, it is difficult."
"The cloth is not; if the cloth is dead, then it is your skin. If you do not truly become a sannyāsī, then you go away, and you would have to take your skin off."
A teacher addresses a gathering, challenging the notion that intense sādhanā is only for renunciates (sannyāsīs), whom he criticizes for potential laziness. He explains that true practice, including mantra and selfless service (karma yoga), is essential for all, including householders and farmers. Using metaphors like throwing a stone into a calm pond, he describes meditation and the importance of purifying the inner energies and chakras, regardless of one's external status.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Jyotish is the third eye of God
17:35 - 18:42 (67 min)

A spiritual discourse on tradition, knowledge, and the eternal path.
"Sometimes it is said that something was only in the old times and no longer matters now. But consider this: in the past, when a couple married... That was a marriage. And now? Bye-bye."
"Our lineage is from Satyuga, from Śiva’s time, and that is called Ālak Purījī... There was no duality. There was no name of religion. It was Sanātana. 'San' means all, and all are one."
A spiritual teacher delivers a wide-ranging satsang, contrasting modern life with ancient traditions. He speaks of the timeless Sanātana Dharma, the composition of the Vedas by Vyāsa with Gaṇeśa as scribe, and the importance of respecting parents and teachers. The talk delves into the ancient science of Jyotiṣ (Vedic astrology), illustrating its precision with personal anecdotes, and concludes by framing yoga as more than physical practice.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
What Guru Purnima means?
18:50 - 19:40 (50 min)

A discourse on the essence of Guru Pūrṇimā and the guru-disciple tradition.
"Gurur Brahmā, Gurur Viṣṇu, Gurur Devo Maheśvara, Gurur Sākṣāt Parabrahmā."
"A true Satguru will not say, 'I am the Satguru.' The day a Satguru says that, it means he does not truly know."
The lecturer addresses a global audience on the full moon day of Guru Pūrṇimā. He explores the profound meaning of the guru, explaining how the principle of the teacher exists in many forms before describing the supreme Satguru. He shares personal instructions from his own guru, Holī Gurujī, about the duty to serve all, and discusses the life of a sannyāsī, the guru paramparā (lineage), and the symbolism of the full moon.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Spiritual message of ancient India
19:45 - 20:49 (64 min)

An evening satsang discourse on the Gurukul system and spiritual traditions.
"When I was there before, about 60 years ago, at that time, yoga was very pure, spiritual, healthy, and so on."
"And now also in our, it is male or female. Also, you know that Jainas, we are all more or less the same. Sannyāsa or making trust, and also Buddha."
A speaker reflects on the spiritual purity of past eras, describing the ascetic practices of Jain monks and the origins of Buddhism. The talk transitions to the ancient Indian Gurukul system, defined as a residential school where disciples live with and learn from a master. The essence of Gurukul is presented as the living relationship between master and disciple, which provides a spiritual foundation beyond mere physical yoga practice. The importance of maintaining a positive, compassionate, and neutral mind according to yogic principles is emphasized.
Filming location: Jadan, Rajasthan, India
Webcast from Villach
21:00 - 21:45 (45 min)

Morning satsang with Vishwaguruji from Villach, Austria.
I am one and you are all
21:50 - 22:29 (39 min)

A satsang talk on spiritual practice and community life in an ashram.
"The past is past. Even the very beginning of one second is already gone."
"And we are, as Holī Gurujī said, one in all and all in one."
The lecturer addresses a gathering in the ashram hall, blessing attendees and reflecting on the sanctity of the present moment and the holy site. He discusses the irrelevance of the past, the unity of all beings, and offers practical, often humorous advice for daily ashram life, meditation, and bodily comfort during practice. The talk blends deep spiritual principles with communal warmth and guidance for a successful stay.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
You will be according to what you eat
22:35 - 23:11 (36 min)

A spiritual discourse on nourishment, habits, and holistic well-being.
"If you want to enjoy the taste, then take less into the mouth and chew it well, so the tongue and the whole mouth experience the taste."
"That is why many yogīs, many, many, they said: eat less, drink only as needed, and meditate more."
The speaker addresses an audience after a spiritual retreat, using the example of eating halušky (dumplings) to discuss the principles of mindful eating, digestion, and respect for food preparers. He expands the topic to contrast ordinary food with 'ān' (divine seed or essence), discusses forming harmonious habits, and cautions against the misuse of substances like alcohol. The talk concludes with well-wishes for the journey home and an invitation for future gatherings.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
The effect of the Moon to our life
23:15 - 23:31 (16 min)

Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. This is the day of water and forests and for crops because of the moving of the Moon. Moon is changing very much in our life. It balances the Earth. In a natural way, we can't eat the same fruit for the whole year. Moon has a stronger effect on us like Sun. In this time we can change our feelings and energies. Varaha brought the Earth out from the water. Swami Mataji sang one bhajan about Guru and Guru kripa.
Karma yoga means serving
23:15 - 23:55 (40 min)

A morning satsang on karma yoga, seva, and skillful action.
"In karma yoga, it is easier to progress further in yogic sādhana, to reach the higher consciousness of the yogī."
"Yogaḥ karmasu kauśalam—yoga is skill in action. Yoga will be successful through the sādhana of karma."
Following a group practice in a meadow, the speaker addresses the assembly, describing the four groups present at the ashram. He defines karma yoga as selfless service, illustrating it with examples from Christian charity to simple daily kindnesses. A story about a disciple mistakenly moving a snail teaches that service must be skillful and informed. The talk emphasizes that seva is the foremost practice, accessible to everyone in countless ways.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
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