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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

Devi added a devotional aspect to her work, which she calls Sai Yoga. The main pose of each class includes an invocation, so that the fulcrum of each practice involves a meditation in the form of an ecumenical prayer. Although she developed this concept on her own, it may have been present in embryonic form in the teachings she received from Krishnamacharya. In his later life, Krishnamacharya also recommended devotional chanting within asana practice.

Though Devi died in April, 2002 at the age of 102, her six yoga schools are still active in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Until three years ago, she still taught asanas. Well into her nineties, she continued touring the world, bringing Krishnamacharya's influence to a large following throughout North and South America. Her impact in the United States waned when she moved to Argentina in 1985, but her prestige in Latin America extends well beyond the yoga community.

You might be hard-pressed to find someone in Buenos Aires who doesn't know of her. She's touched every level of Latin society: The taxi driver who brought me to her house for an interview described her as "a very wise woman"; the next day, Argentina's President Menem came for her blessings and advice. Devi's six yoga schools deliver 15 asana classes daily, and graduates from the four-year teacher-training program receive an internationally recognized college-level degree.

Instructing Iyengar

During the period when he was instructing Devi and Jois, Krishnamacharya also briefly taught a boy named B.K.S. Iyengar, who would grow up to play perhaps the most significant role of anyone in bringing hatha yoga to the West. It's hard to imagine how our yoga would look without Iyengar's contributions, especially his precisely detailed, systematic articulation of each asana, his research into therapeutic applications, and his multi-tiered, rigorous training system which has produced so many influential teachers.

It's also hard to know just how much Krishnamacharya's training affected Iyengar's later development. Though intense, Iyengar's tenure with his teacher lasted barely a year. Along with the burning devotion to yoga he evoked in Iyengar, perhaps Krishnamacharya planted the seeds which were later to germinate into Iyengar's mature yoga. (Some of the characteristics for which Iyengar's yoga is noted—particularly, pose modifications and using yoga to heal—are quite similar to those Krishnamacharya developed in his later work.) Perhaps any deep inquiry into hatha yoga tends to produce parallel results. At any rate, Iyengar has always revered his childhood guru. He still says, "I'm a small model in yoga; my guruji was a great man."

Iyengar's destiny wasn't apparent at first. When Krishnamacharya invited Iyengar into his household—Krishnamacharya's wife was Iyengar's sister—he predicted the stiff, sickly teenager would achieve no success in yoga. In fact, Iyengar's account

of his life with Krishnamacharya sounds like a Dickens novel. Krishnamacharya could be an extremely harsh taskmaster. At first, he barely bothered to teach Iyengar, who spent his days watering the gardens and performing other chores. Iyengar's only friendship came from his roommate, a boy named Keshavamurthy, who happened to be Krishnamacharya's favorite protégé. In a strange twist of fate, Keshavamurthy disappeared one morning and never returned. Krishnamacharya was only days away from an important demonstration at the yogashala and was relying

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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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