Kvetoslav Minarik

Květoslav Minařík (1908–1974) was a Czech yogi and mystic.

Life

He was born 21 February 1908 in Litvínov, former Czechoslovakia. His interest of yoga started at 1925 and after one and half year he recognized and to the deepest details personally realized the highest ideals of the Orient, without losing contact with his civic life.[1] Later he formulated his direct experience as an original (not learned from books) spiritual teaching which is based on the psychology and mentality of a contemporary European. The teaching he formulated guides its followers through their life improving their whole being; it does not deal with just the physical, moral or mental component but it harmoniously develops all of them at once. In view of the world's foremost religions his teaching is closest to the Mahayana Buddhism. In his books Kvetoslav Minarik explains the spiritual teachings from a different viewpoint to make them comprehensible to a broad range of readers. Almost entire life opus has already been published by CANOPUS[2] - The Kvetoslav Minarik's foundation (in Czech, English and German).

Books of Kvetoslav Minarik, however, have not yet been published systematically in any other language, only in Czech. There are two books published in German - The Direct Path and The Inner meaning of the New Testament and one in English - Yoga and Buddhism in the life of a contemporary person.

Books

His writings were organized into the following books:

Edition Direct Path

Edition Gems

A short example of his writings

...We can feel happy or unhappy without an external reason, only by the power of our own will. The possibility of this is indirectly confirmed, for example by a well known fact that, when someone has some sorrow, they forget about it, if their attention is caught by something else. Based on this very piece of knowledge, a system can be created. By the power of our will, we can turn our attention away from the situations which brought us to suffering, and simply change the whole situation by focusing our attention on things that evoke good feelings in us... Excerpt from Why to develop joyful mood, Yoga and Buddhism in the life of a contemporary person

See also

References

  1. Autobiography "Kechara, the Sky Wanderer",
  2. Květoslav Minařík
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