The story of how Krishna’s name became recognizable in the West often begins with a voyage. In 1965, a 69-year-old monk named A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada left Kolkata aboard a cargo ship bound for New York. He arrived with little money, a crate of translated scriptures, and a conviction that the message of Krishna consciousness — bhakti, or loving devotion to God — could take root in the West.
