Agehananda Bharati was born Leopold Fischer in Vienna, Austria on April 20, 1923. His parents' names were Hans and Margarete Fischer. Leopold Fischer spent his childhood in Vienna where he learned how to speak Hindi and began his studies of classical Sanskrit. He became a member of Hitler's “Free India” Legion during World War Two and was often mistaken as a real Indian by his own and opponents alike. His expeditions during war gave him a taste for traveling, and his desire to travel brought him to India; where he became a novice in a Hindu monastery. In time, he was consecrated by the Dasanami Sannyasi order of Hindu monks. It was on the banks of Ganges between funeral pyres that he was donned the ochre robe. (New York Times, 1991) Now a monk, Leopold Fischer changed his name to Agehananda Bharati. Next, he started a journey across the 1,500 miles of India on foot as a mendicant monk with a beggar's bowl.
Although he attended the University of Vienna, Bharati kept up his studies as a monk and took up teaching as well. Agehananda Bharati's travels were as extensive as his teachings were impressive. He was a professional expert in Cultural Anthropology, South Asian Studies, Linguistics, and Comparative Philosophy. Most of these subjects he taught in Delhi University, Banaras Hindu University, and Nalanda Institute in India. He also taught in a Buddhist Academy in Bangkok, Thailand where he first began his teachings on Comparative Religion. Bharati became a visiting professor on Indian philosophy in the University of Tokyo and Kyoto. In 1956 Bharati came to the U.S. as a research associate for Washington University. A year later he transferred to Syracuse and joined the anthropology faculty. He settled down in Syracuse and became Ford-Maxwell Professor of South Asian Studies. It wasn't long before he became the chairman of his department. He was granted U.S. citizenship in 1968. Although he lived in Syracuse that didn't mean that he stopped traveling. He managed to go to Hawaii, Britain, Michigan, Russia, Germany, and Ireland for research and as a visiting professor.
Bharati had become a member of numerous organizations including: American Association of University Professors, American Anthropological Association(fellow), Association for Applied Anthropology(fellow), American Linguistic Society, International Association for General Semantics, Mensa International, Mind Association, Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Royal Philosophical Society, Royal Siam Society, International Academy of Human Rights, and New York Academy of Sciences. (Contemporary Authors, 2003) Agehananda Bharati died on May 14, 1991 in a friend's house in Pittsford, New York. He died of cancer at the age of 68.
In his life, Agehananda Bharati was a warrior, a monk, a student, a teacher, an author, and a traveler. By the time of his death Bharati had over 500 published works, including an autobiography called; The Ochre Robe.
References
Narvaez, Alfonso. The New York Times: A Monk Who Served On Syracuse Faculty Pg. 481,1991
Former link, http://web2.infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/438/838/34749297w2/purl=rc2_CA_au_Agehananda+Bharati&dyn=sig!2?sw_aep=mnamsumank (March, 2003)
Written By: Shauna Arth, 2003