The son of an attorney, Mozumdar was born in a small village about twenty miles north of
Calcutta, India. He was the youngest child, with eight older brothers and one sister. The Mozumdars were a high
caste family. Mozumdar's mother was very devout and named him Akhay Kumar, meaning "Son of God." Mozumdar was a teacher, lecturer, and writer of the
New Thought Movement in the United States during the first half of 20th century. He exhibited a deep knowledge of God and taught what he called, the "
Creative Principle." After leaving his family home, he spent time traveling throughout India, and said that he traveled to
Bethlehem to learn about Christianity. He spent several years in China and Japan and decided to teach in America. Mozumdar immigrated to the United States, arriving in
Seattle, Washington, in 1904. In 1905 Jennie and Charles Clark, leaders in Seattle's Queen City
Theosophical Society, reported in the
Theosophical Quarterly Magazine that Mozumdar, 'a Hindu Brother ... has spoken for us for several weeks to full houses.' The Clarks wrote that Mozumdar "calls his teachings 'universal truth. Mozumdar delivered lectures primarily in Washington, Oregon, and California, based on his teachings that combined Christianity, Hinduism which he referred to as "Christian yoga." ==United States immigration law==