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Krishnamacharya's Legacy

You may never have heard of him, but Tirumalai Krishnamacharya influenced or perhaps even invented your yoga.

By Fernando Pagés Ruiz

Thus began one of Krishnamacharya's most fertile periods, during which he developed what is now known as Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga. As Krishnamacharya's pupils were primarily active young boys, he drew on many disciplines—including yoga, gymnastics, and Indian wrestling—to develop dynamically-performed asana sequences aimed at building physical fitness. This vinyasa style uses the movements of Surya Namaskar (Sun Salutation) to lead into each asana and then out again. Each movement is coordinated with prescribed breathing and drishti, "gaze points" that focus the eyes and instill meditative concentration. Eventually, Krishnamacharya standardized the pose sequences into three series consisting of primary, intermediate, and advanced asanas. Students were grouped in order of experience and ability, memorizing and mastering each sequence before advancing to the next.

Though Krishnamacharya developed this manner of performing yoga during the 1930s, it remained virtually unknown in the West for almost 40 years. Recently, it's become one of the most popular styles of yoga, mostly due to the work of one of Krishnamacharya's most faithful and famous students, K. Pattabhi Jois.

Pattabhi Jois met Krishnamacharya in the hard times before the Mysore years. As a robust boy of 12, Jois attended one of Krishnamacharya's lectures. Intrigued by the asana demonstration, Jois asked Krishnamacharya to teach him yoga. Lessons started the next day, hours before the school bell rang, and continued every morning for three years until Jois left home to attend the Sanskrit College. When Krishnamacharya received his teaching appointment at the college less than two years later, an overjoyed Pattabhi Jois resumed his yoga lessons.

Jois retained a wealth of detail from his years of study with Krishnamacharya. For decades, he has preserved that work with great devotion, refining and inflecting the asana sequences without significant modification, much as a classical violinist might nuance the phrasing of a Mozart concerto without ever changing a note. Jois has often said that the concept of vinyasa came from an ancient text called the Yoga Kuruntha. Unfortunately, the text has disappeared; no one now living has seen it. So many stories exist of its discovery and content—I've heard at least five conflicting accounts—that some question its authenticity. When I asked Jois if he'd ever read the text, he answered, "No, only Krishnamacharya." Jois then downplayed the importance of this scripture, indicating several other texts that also shaped the yoga he learned from Krishnamacharya, including the Hatha Yoga Pradipika, the Yoga Sutra, and the Bhagavad Gita.

Whatever the roots of Ashtanga Vinyasa, today it's one of the most influential components of Krishnamacharya's legacy. Perhaps this method, originally designed for youngsters, provides our high-energy, outwardly-focused culture with an approachable gateway to a path of deeper spirituality. Over the last three decades a steadily increasing number of yogis have been drawn to its precision and intensity. Many of them have made the pilgrimage to Mysore, where Jois, himself, offered instruction until his death in May, 2009.

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Reader Comments

jane chai

Namaste,

As a yoga practitioner for the last several years I like to seek some definition about the lineage of yoga tradition. Is it mandatory that a student should commit to lineage for the rest of her/his life once he/she is initiated into the tradition/lineage? If yes, how is she/he then knows whether he/she may find other lineage/tradition would perhaps be more suitable for him/her? If no, what are the elements a student should first seek in any particular tradition before she/he is keen to commit to? Is there any specific or general guidelines that a student should find out in a tradition before committing. I used to follow a tradition eversince I started yoga, but due to a bitter experience with some teachers Iast year, I don't feel inspire to learn from them, and thence, left that tradition. Did i do something wrong or I should instead continue despite how I feel? I would be grateful for your advise and comments.
thank you. Namaste, jane

Ranjana Chari Narasiman

I started learning Yoga from Sri Krishnamacharya in the early 1970s. I used to demonstrate for him at his lectures. He used to tell me "You should teach Yoga"; I should have taken his words seriously then. However, I still to this day continue to do Yoga and reap the benefits. I owe my health to my Guru. At the young age of 17, when I was a very thin, he would give me some ayurvedic preparations. Within a year, my health improved significantly and ever since I have enjoyed good health. I hope he forgives me for not having become a teacher. I still would love to do this - maybe one day, who knows. My sincere regards to SRi TKV DEsikachar, my Guru's son and Subha, his daughter. I hope to see them during my visit to Chennai.

Tania

What a wonderful article!

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