| Abbreviation | IRM |
|---|---|
| Predecessor | International Society for Krishna Consciousness |
| Type | religious movement |
| Purpose | Restoring the original Hare Krishna movement worldwide |
Area served | worldwide |
| Affiliations | Gaudiya Vaishnavism |
| Website | iskconirm |
TheISKCON Revival Movement (IRM) was formed as apressure group in 2000 to revive and reformISKCON on the basis of the directives for succession given bySrila Prabhupada, the founder of ISKCON.[1] IRM opposes both the zonal guru system and its replacement multiple-guru system as unauthorized innovations.[2]
The IRM’s followers consist of both current and former ISKCON members, ISKCON Life Members, and members of theHindu community at large. The IRM’s ultimate goal is to rebuild an ISKCON movement operating as Srila Prabhupada intended, with him as the sole guru and authority.[2]
Srila Prabhupada issued, on July 9, 1977, a signed directive appointing 11 of his senior managers to act asritviks (officiating priests) to initiate new recruits into the ISKCON movement on his behalf. According to the IRM (and its philosophical treatise “The Final Order”[3]), all future disciples within ISKCON were supposed to revere Srila Prabhupada as theirguru in accordance with this directive, not any successor. However, shortly after Srila Prabhupada’s departure on November 14, 1977, theseritviks ignored the directive; instead, they divided the world into 11 zones, each claiming to be the guru or spiritual successor in a different area. By early 1978, the 11ritviks had begun to initiate disciples on their own behalf, acting as gurus for the movement.[4][2]
Over time, a number of the gurus suffered lawsuits, suicide, and other problems. The movement was plunged into confusion and acrimony. By the mid-1980s the Governing Body Commission (GBC), which managed ISKCON, issued a new interpretation of Srila Prabhupada's directive. What he had really wanted, it said, was for all disciples to becomeinitiating gurus, not just the 11ritviks. Today new gurus are added to the roster via a majority vote by the GBC at its annual meetings inMayapur. Currently ISKCON gurus number around 80.[2]
IRM contends that both the zonal guru system and its replacement multiple-guru system are unauthorized innovations. Citing GBC resolutions and management directives approved by Srila Prabhupada, the IRM insists that ISKCON will continue to flounder as long as it fails to comply with the orders of Srila Prabhupada.[2]
The IRM publishes a free international magazine,Back to Prabhupada. They have met with considerable opposition from those supporting the current multiple-guru system in ISKCON.[2] According to the scholar, Jan Brzezinski, theritvik model of the movement opens the door on an organization with no need for any charismatic leadership.[5]
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