Sri Sri Radha Govinda

 

In the northern part of Koladvipa is the village Campahaṭṭa. which always adorns the land of Navadvipa. This enchanting holy abode is where the poet Jayadeva worshiped Gauranga. Here in the home of Vaninatha, the Lord and His associates performed a great festival of nama-sankirtana. Gauranga showed the glories of His prema in that house. Also in Campahatta village is a campaka forest from which the gopi Campakalata gathers flowers to make garlands for Radha and Kṛṣṇa. This place is nondifferent from Khadiravana of Vraja, where Kṛṣṇa and Balarama take rest.
(Sri Navadvipa Bhava-taranga)

The seventy-eighth branch of the original tree was Jagannātha Tīrtha, the seventy-ninth was the brāhmaṇa Śrī Jānakīnātha, the eightieth was Gopāla Ācārya, and the eighty-first was the brāhmaṇa Vāṇīnātha.
PURPORT
Śrīla Bhaktisiddhānta Sarasvatī Ṭhākura writes in his Anubhāṣya, “Jagannātha Tīrtha was one of the nine principal sannyāsīs who were Lord Caitanya’s associates. Vāṇīnātha Vipra was a resident of Cāṅpāhāṭi, a village in the district of Burdwan near the town of Navadvīpa, the police station of Pūrvasthalī and the post office of Samudragaḍa. The temple there was very much neglected, but it was renovated in the Bengali year 1328 [A.D. 1921] by Śrī Paramānanda Brahmacārī [one of Śrī Bhaktisiddhānta Sarasvatī Ṭhākura’s disciples], who reorganized the sevā-pūjā (worship in the temple) and placed the temple under the management of the Śrī Caitanya Maṭha of Śrī Māyāpur. In the temple as it now exists, the Deity of Śrī Gaura-Gadādhara is worshiped strictly according to the principles of the revealed scriptures. Cāṅpāhāṭi is two miles away from both Samudragarh and the Navadvīpa station of the Eastern Railway.”
(CC Adi 10.114 purport)