Guest guest Posted July 5, 2005 Report Share Posted July 5, 2005 Vijayananda duly commenced reading of The Bhagawata in the solitude of Lendi. After two readings he was exhausted, returned to the wada and on the third day he passed away, resting on Bade Baba’s lap! Baba then told the people to preserve the body for one day before performing the last rites. And he proved wise. For the next day the police turned up and after enquiry into the death found nothing amiss and allowed the people to bury the body. In retrospect, we have to note that the thief that Baba mentioned to Vijayananda was death: the senses and the nine openings of man’s body are the doors which Baba asked him to close either through yoga or devotion. For, it is said in The Bhagavadgita and other scriptures that a departing soul would attain that about which it thinks at the moment of death. So Baba, prepared his soul to leave the body with its attention focused on the Lord. Else Vijayananda would have died a lost soul, his heart fallen off from the ideal and duty of sannyasi namely dispassion, and plunged in attachment to his mother and grief at her death. Further, Vijayananda died in the blessed presence of Sai Baba which is incomparably better than dying at his home. Lala Lakshmichand, a clerk in a Bombay office, had a strange dream on one night in October 1910. He saw an old bearded man standing, surrounded by his devotees in a part of the Santa Cruz area. Later at Das Ganu’s devotional singing at his friend’s house, he recognized in Baba’s portrait displayed there, the saint that appeared to him in his dream! Hearing about Baba’s powers, he decided to visit Shirdi at the earliest. At 8 p.m. the same day, his friend Shankar Rao called on him and asked him if he would accompany him to Shirdi. His joy knew no bounds. He at once borrowed Rs. 15/- from his cousin and started for Shirdi. Along the way the two pilgrims did bhajan for sometime and then, meeting some Moslems that lived near Shirdi, enquired of them about Baba. They told the two friends that Baba was really a great saint. When they arrived at Kopergaon, Lakshmichand wanted to purchase some guavas for Baba but soon forgot to take them. When their tonga was nearing Shirdi he remembered that he failed to buy guavas. In a few moments, he saw an old woman carrying guavas in basket on her head and she came running after the tonga. When he stopped the tonga and purchased some of the fruits the woman gave him the rest of them and said, “Offer them to Baba on my behalf.” They found her gesture a bit odd and thought that she was probably related to the old fakir. (To be contd....) Source http://www.saibharadwaja.org) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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