KGB Story
This story has appeared elsewhere, but it belongs here as well.
First, HG Kirtiraja das's comments on it:
".....It's just really amazing to read them and to know that the hair-brained program I had in Scandinavia of going to Soviet ships and placing books throughout the ship while being given a tour, really worked. I always counted on people getting the books and then wanting to keep them. It worked. I guess it was just knowing human nature and the sweet taste of forbidden fruit. And certainly, this was the sweetest forbidden fruit. It's nice to hear about it from "that side" and after so many years......"
Now the story...
KGB Speaks Out,
HG Karma-jna Das
I was working in the Soviet army. I spend quite some years also in the
Afghanistan war. It was so nasty experience that I wanted to orient myself to
more peaceful atmosphere. So I joined the Moscow Institute that trains KGB
staff. Of course it is not publicly known to be in that function. I chose the
justice line, for to become some spy in the foreign countries did
not fit with my mind either.
Once I had a discussion with one of my friends. He was a son of a highly placed
KGB man. His father was a captain for a boat that was 'exporting goods'.
Actually they were transporting weapons. My friend's father was involved in
bringing weapons to Vietnam and also participated in the conflicts in Egypt and
in Greece.
So we were discussing once about religious movements. My friend said his father
embarked on one occasion at some Western harbor. He went to visit the Soviet
embassy near the harbor to do some visa-things. He was away only half an hour.
But when he came back a few members from the crew showed him some "indian
books". And he became so furious. More books were found. Altogether 27 or 28
books. They were falling from everywhere. They were placed on the doorways, in
the shelves. In the cabins. One was under the captain's bridge on the deck. My
friend related how his father commented afterwards to him, being very irritated:
"I really chastised all the men. I'm hardly away from the boat for one moment -
and immediately the whole
boat becomes totally flooded and 'radioactive' from those books. That lazy guard
fall asleep somewhere. I yelled at him that everyone should know that our enemy
is watching and is always ready!"
In due course I started to prepare my diploma. It was about narcomania. But
there was no public statistics about that. Everything was secret, in the Moscow
KGB library. So I complained about this to my tutor. That man was also a big
shot in KGB. So he gave me access to secondary level of confidential department
in the library. I was namely fascinated by occultism and thought that now I have
my chance to read all the forbidden literature. And indeed - there was tons and
tons of stuff, right from the beginning of tsar's time.
I became friends with the fellow who was in charge of the library. Really a
fanatic communist. He at one point showed me different religious departments in
the library. Islam had their own room. Christianity it's own. Also Buddhism. And
ISKCON! A whole department just about us. The man showed various life stories
that were collected about different ISKCON gurus. There
was a videofilm about famous "Riga-evening", where Harikesa Maharaja was caught.
Even some KGB man managed to film how an ISKCON devotee was beaten up on the
street in Pakistan. He said: "These Krsna fanatics are so crazy... look! They
just beat him up but this fellow just continues to say his mantra. These people
are so dangerous. They are so determined. And their
books... don't touch them! So many of our agents have burned themselves."
We were already sitting behind our coffee-table... but this KGB fellow was just
speaking about ISKCON and was becoming more and more agitated. And I couldn't
figure out why. This man bit his teeth together and shook his finger in disgust:
"Those hooligans! They are such HOOLIGANS! They are shaking the whole basis of
our system. So clever! Those people are so sharp!
Everywhere they sneak in with their books. We check the boats that come from
Germany for example. And Scandinavia. The books are found in the most incredible
places - from the cupboards in cabins, even some were lying in the kitchen on
the cook's recipe-shelf. We even opened the ventilation-system and THERE were
these damn books and brochures! What damn American brain is behind all this?
Hooligans! We are not able to figure out what to do..."
Then this man proceeded to explain that the biggest problem for KGB was that
most people refused to give the books away. They usually hid them. Once they got
to know that one KGB security man on one cargo managed to find two books. But
when they went to him to inquire about them, he denied that he had any books.
One man went to sleep in his cabin, locked the door, and in the morning he woke
up and saw a Bhagavad-Gita on his table! Probably some devotee had opened the
window from the street-level cabin during midnight. But for a KGB all these
things was such a puzzle! They were so disturbed and fearful of the activities
of ISKCON. They thought "there must be some high-level intelligence planning
these actions". Of course I became quite curious. So I took Srila Prabhupada's
Gita from there, against all the warnings. And indeed! It totally smashed all of
my ideas for life. Within a very short period I became a devotee and went to
join the Begovaya temple in Moscow!
But before that one day I was sitting together with my teacher in his room. He
had spent over ten years abroad where he was engaged in his "confidential
service". Afterwards he settled down in Moscow in a more convenient engagement.
That's what most of KGB men used to do at some point.
We were discussing about this and that. Then one of my fellow students entered
the room. He sat down, and for a while he and my teacher talked. I noticed, that
the student had some book with him. I thought it was some studying material.
After a short time the student excused himself and left the room. I was about to
continue our conversation, when my teacher made a smile and inquired from me,
whether I noticed which book the fellow student had with him. I said no.
"It was a book from Hare Krishnas." Then the teacher proceeded to tell how he
had sometimes observed devotees while he still was serving in the West. I knew
very little about devotees at that time. So I asked what are these people
actually about. My teacher seemed to be quite indifferent to Krishna
consciousness; but he definitely showed some appreciation for certain qualities
of the devotees: "Hare Krishna are very smart people. Really smart. Sometimes
they are penetrating - like water going in holes. There is practically speaking
no place that they cannot sell their items. But such fanatics they are. And they
have their music-sessions on the streets often. Joyous people... probably they
don't have so much problems. I have looked through some of their books. It's
nothing for me, that I can say. But something mystical there must be in those
books. Some of our men really got into these books. We once had one agent in the
West, for example..."
Then the man related quite a story. He did not mention where it took place.
Neither he mentioned any names. And I knew the subtle etiquette that if someone
tells you things like that, you don't ask any questions. But just for the sake
of convenience for the readers we can name the central figure of the story
"Leonid".
My teacher had never met Leonid. He himself got the story from the KGB man who
had been assisting Leonid. So one time Leonid was on the way to meet certain
contact person. And those meetings were always strictly timed. A slight
discrepancy and you were supposed to be dismissed. Leonid's assistant was
walking nearby; his duty was to make sure, that nobody followed Leonid.
Everything seemed to proceed according to the plan. But then the men noticed
that there was some fight on the street. Two devotees were attacked by some
group of "big rowdies" (we call them of course by much more suitable name:
demons). And it was not just some innocent teasing. They really were beating
severely two young devotees. There was a heavy rule for agents that they should
never get involved in anything, specifically to avoid unnecessary contact with
the police.
Leonid, however, stopped and looked at the scene. Suddenly he rushed forward and
attacked the fellows, who were harassing the devotees. His assistant was
shocked. "What is this? This is forbidden! We are in a hurry for a meeting...
and here he is just clashing with these guys." Leonid quite quickly managed to
make a mush out of those fellows. I was not told too many details about the
ghastly scene; but I know what our trained people are able to do - teeth are
flying, heads are smashing against the wall, blood...
After Leonid protected the devotees he was in a hurry to get to his meeting. But
the devotees were following him. They wanted him to take a book. Finally, just
to get rid of the boys, he took one and threw some money to them. He was on time
to his meeting. His assistant inquired later on, why he partook in a fight. It
was totally against the rules. Leonid had answered that he could not stand to
see those young fellows being beaten like that. And there was something inside
him, he said, that impelled him to act...
Two months later Leonid informed his assistant that somebody was after him. KGB
men have this intuition. He was very depressed and frustrated. His assistant
replied that he himself hadn't noticed anything special. But Leonid was
continuously disturbed. The assistant described: "One day we were in our villa.
I did my cooking in the kitchen. Then I went to the corridor.
There was a glass door leading to the TV room. And I saw Leonid on his knees in
front of a sofa. And he had that Hare Krishna book placed on the sofa. His palms
were folded together and he was murmuring something his eyes tightly closed. I
thought, "My goodness! What's happening? Has he gone mad? Or is there some
microphone within the book, and he is reporting? They never instructed us to do
like that! Maybe the opposite party has already got him to work for them? Or...
maybe he does like this in a case 'they' come, find him like that, and think
he's a Krishnaite. He was murmuring some help... that he cannot take this any
longer..."
"I contacted Moscow and said that now he's getting crazy. Interests in
Krishnaism. And that I think that soon they might catch him. But Moscow replied
that this is true. They already knew from at least six different sources that
local security was following him. I got the order to immediately leave Leonid
and go."
"However, almost six months went. They asked from Moscow, what's happening with
our Leonid. I said that I don't know. There was even nothing in the newspapers.
Maybe they did not capture him. I was instructed to check the situation. But I
could not find Leonid in the house. For two months I tried to locate him. I made
friends with the neighbors. It took another three
months to gradually hear about him. The neighbors said Leonid had changed
suddenly. He still visited them occasionally but did not accept alcohol anymore.
He also criticized that they were offering him meat. He had accepted only apple.
Once police came to his house and went away. Leonid explained that they were
after somebody who had stolen a car and looked like him. Then they realized the
mistake. I think there must have been something else going on. Perhaps they came
after him and saw he is into Krishnaism... I don't know. The last thing the
neighbors knew was one day he shaved his head. And after that no one heard about
him..."
This was all that my teacher had heard from Leonid's assistant. Of course, as
devotees we might guess what had happened. Krishna obviously reciprocated with
the KGB agent after his helpful act for the sake of the devotees. And Srila
Prabhupada's books took care of the rest. Probably he is now somewhere happily
engaged in Krishna's service.