kamalÄkara pippalÄi — alaukika rÄ«ta
alaukika prema tÄá¹…ra bhuvane vidita
kamalÄkara pippalÄi - KamalÄkara PippalÄi; alaukika - uncommon; rÄ«ta - behavior or pastime; alaukika - uncommon; prema - love of Godhead; tÄá¹…ra - his; bhuvane - in the world; vidita - celebrated.
ÅšrÄ«la BhaktisiddhÄnta SarasvatÄ« ṬhÄkura writes in his AnubhÄá¹£ya, “In the Gaura-gaṇoddeÅ›a-dÄ«pikÄ (128) KamalÄkara PippalÄi is described as the third gopÄla. His former name was MahÄbala. The JagannÄtha Deity at MÄheÅ›a in ÅšrÄ« RÄmapura was installed by KamalÄkara PippalÄi. This village of MÄheÅ›a is situated about two and a half miles from the ÅšrÄ« RÄmapura railway station. The genealogy of the family of KamalÄkara PippalÄi is given as follows. KamalÄkara PippalÄi had a son named Caturbhuja, who had two sons named NÄrÄyaṇa and JagannÄtha. NÄrÄyaṇa had one son named JagadÄnanda, and his son’s name was RÄjÄ«valocana. During the time of RÄjÄ«valocana, there was a scarcity of finances for the worship of the JagannÄtha Deity, and it is said that the Nawab of Dacca, whose name was Shah SujÄ, donated 1,185 bighÄs of land [about 395 acres] in the Bengali year 1060 [A.D. 1653]. The land being the possession of JagannÄtha, the village was named JagannÄtha-pura. It is said that when KamalÄkara PippalÄi left home his younger brother Nidhipati PippalÄi searched for him and in due course of time found him in the village of MÄheÅ›a. Nidhipati PippalÄi tried his best to bring his elder brother home, but he would not return. Under these circumstances, Nidhipati PippalÄi, with all his family members, came to MÄheÅ›a to reside. The members of this family still reside in the vicinity of the MÄheÅ›a village. Their family name is AdhikÄrÄ«, and they are a brÄhmaṇa family.
“The history of the JagannÄtha temple in MÄheÅ›a is as follows. One devotee of the name DhruvÄnanda went to see Lord JagannÄtha, BalarÄma and SubhadrÄ at JagannÄtha PurÄ«, wanting to offer food to JagannÄthajÄ« that he had cooked with his own hands. This being his desire, one night JagannÄthajÄ« appeared to him in a dream and asked him to go to MÄheÅ›a on the bank of the Ganges and there start worship of Him in a temple. Thus DhruvÄnanda went to MÄheÅ›a, where he saw the three deities — JagannÄtha, BalarÄma and SubhadrÄ â€” floating in the Ganges. He picked up all those deities and installed them in a small cottage, and with great satisfaction he executed the worship of Lord JagannÄtha. When he became old, he was very anxious to hand over the worship to the charge of someone reliable, and in a dream he got permission from JagannÄtha Prabhu to hand it over to a person whom he would meet the next morning. The next morning he met KamalÄkara PippalÄi, who was formerly an inhabitant of the village KhÄlijuli in the Sundaravana forest area of Bengal and was a pure Vaiṣṇava, a great devotee of Lord JagannÄtha; thus he immediately gave him charge of the worship. In this way, KamalÄkara PippalÄi became the worshiper of Lord JagannÄtha, and since then his family members have been designated as AdhikÄrÄ«, which means ‘one who is empowered to worship the Lord.’ These AdhikÄrÄ«s belong to a respectable brÄhmaṇa family. Five types of upper-class brÄhmaṇas are recognized by the surname PippalÄi.â€