Guest guest Posted November 22, 2005 Report Share Posted November 22, 2005 talking about?" Devotees who received vibhuti from Sai Baba or made eye-contact with him say the experience changed them for ever. The boy was unlike anybody his age. He rambled into verse, prompting his family to believe he had demonic powers. He sat villagers around him and launched into monologues. He produced ash out of thin air. But planes? That was a far cry. More than half a century later, his village, Puttaparthi, can land a Boeing-747. Presidents, Prime Ministers, Governors, chief ministers, judges, scientists, academicians and cricket and movie stars touch his feet. Foreigners thirsting for Indian spirituality make a beeline for a glance of the man who, they believe, is an avatar of God. Sathyanarayana Raju, the village preacher, became Sathya Sai Baba. Sathyanarayana was born on November 23, 1926, to Pedda Venkama Raju and Eshwaramma, who belonged to the Bhatta Raju caste. In recent times, his devotees claim that he was born of immaculate conception. The boy had an inclination for the spiritual. He dropped out of school in the eighth standard. At 13, he declared that he was the reincarnation of Sai Baba of Shirdi, a revered sage in Maharashtra, who died in 1918. He announced that he had a mission in life; he did not belong to family. Known as Sai Baba, Baba or Swami, he charmed people with his talk. He performed 'miracles' to support his claims of divinity. With a wave of his hand, he could produce vibhuti (sacred ash) and other presents for his admirers: acts that earned him as many critics as devotees. All roads lead to Puttaparthi: Devotees from Indonesia A story told by his followers in Puttaparthi goes like this: as a child, Baba would pluck any fruit that his friends wanted from a tamarind tree on a hill near the Chitravathi river. Today, the hill is a pilgrim spot. Visitors write their wish on a piece of paper and string it to a branch of the tree, now called the Kalpavruksha. They believe Baba would make those wishes come true. Besides the miracles—he is said to have brought two dead people back to life—Baba preached love, peace, selflessness, service and other universal truisms like "Help Ever, Hurt Never" and "Love All, Serve All". News of an orange-robed god with a Jimi Hendrix hair-do spread to the west. Westerners—disillusioned by an overdose of dollars, relationships and drugs—sought Prashanthi Nilayam (Baba's ashram in Puttaparthi) to rediscover the basics. One of Sai Baba's early followers, Dr John S. Hislop, wrote in his book My Baba and I (Sri Sathya Sai Books and Publications Trust): "I prayed that through his grace and kindness, he might touch my dry heart and make it alive and vibrant again." Hislop, a teacher in Mexico, became one of the closest inner-circle devotees of Sai Baba. Devotees claim that Baba's mere presence changes one's personality. Those who received vibhuti or made eye-contact with him say that they changed for ever. Hislop narrates in his book that, in 1973, Baba 'materialised' a figure of Christ on a wooden cross. Giving it to Hislop, Baba claimed that the wood was from the cross on which Jesus was crucified. When another devotee asked Baba about the crucifix, he said: "Yes, I made it for him [Hislop]. And when I went to look for the wood, every particle of the cross had disintegrated and had returned to the elements. I reached out to the elements and reconstituted sufficient material for a small cross. Very seldom does Swami interfere with nature, but occasionally, for a devotee, it will be done." It is said that Baba produced such a crucifix for Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York, as well. With Baba's meteoric rise in the 1970s, rationalists called him a trickster and challenged him to produce larger presents. Late Dr H. Narasimhaiah, former vice-chancellor of Bangalore University, opened a debate by asking Baba to produce a melon instead of a ring. He constituted a fact-finding committee to investigate Baba, and sought an interview with him. The late Dr Abraham Kovoor, who was president of the International Rationalists Association, was invited to Bangalore, where he produced ash with the wave of his hand. "We went to schools and colleges and demonstrated all the miracles that Sai Baba performed," recalled Dr A. Ramalingam, retired head of botany department, Dharwad University, who was member of the association. "Devotees claimed that ash was dropping from Sai Baba's photographs. We showed that when mercuric chloride is applied on the aluminium frame of any portrait, ash-like residue starts falling from it." From a handful in the 1960s, Sai Baba's following today is anywhere between one crore and five crore. ================================================================ For more detailed articles pls see : http://www.the-week.com/25nov27/currentevents_article10.htm Ram RAM RAM Thank you & God bless. Om Sri Sai Ram Sarvathah paanipaadam Tat sarvatokshi siromukham Sarvathah sruthimalloke Sarvamavritya thishthathi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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