Guest guest Posted August 29, 2004 Report Share Posted August 29, 2004 Om Sri Sai Ram Ganesha Mantra: AUM Gung Ganapathaye Namah Ganesh Gayatri Tat purushaaya vidmahe Vakratundaaya dheemahi Tanno dhanti prachodayaat SRI SAI SATCHARITA and SATHYAM SIVAM SUNDARAM The Life Stories of the Two Avatars of the Age – [54] KHAPARDE DIARY 1st January 1912 I got up very early in the morning, went to the Chawadi for Kakad Aarathi. I saw Sai Maharaj's face as the first thing and it was full of sweet grace. I was very much delighted. After we returned to the Wada, I saw Upasani's brother. He has come from Dhulia. I saw him at Poona and normal">Amravati before. He went to see Sai Maharaj and was told about people bringing ties with them from a former birth and meeting now in consequence of them. He told the story of a former birth in which he, Bapusahib Jog, Dada Kelkar, Madhavrao Deshpande, Dixit, and myself were associated and lived in a blind alley. There was his Murshad there. He has now brought us together again I saw him go out and then sat reading Ramayana. I saw him again at midday Aarathi, and was very kind to me. Dixit gave a "Naivedya" today and we had all our meals with him. I sat with Vaidya, Nanasahib Chandorkar, Mr. Deo Mamledar of Dahanu, and others. I sat reading again and then went to see Sai Maharaj at the Musjid. He first dismissed me along with the rest, but called me again, saying that I was anxious to run away. In the evening we saw him opposite the Chawadi and had at night the Bhajan of Bhishma and Dixit's Ramayana. Bala Shimpi came to the Bhajan. 2nd January 1912 I got up very early morning. Upasani's brother who came yesterday went away before daybreak. After I finished y prayer Kaka Mahajani, Atre, and others went. More went later on. C. V. Vaidya went after midday Aarathi with three other gentlemen. Nanasaheb chandorkar held a Dhanurmas and all were invited. After meals it was that C. V. Vaiday went; Manker, Mamledar of Kopargaon and Dev, Mamledar of Dahanu also went then. Later on after sunset Nanasahib Chandorkar went with all his family. So the Wada, which during these few days used to look full and very pleasant, is comparatively empty now and we miss company. We saw Sai Maharaj when he came out for a stroll and again at Shej-Aarthi. My son Baba and Gopalrao Dorle came this morning to take me to Amravati. I said my departure depended on the permission of Sai Maharaj. They saw Sai Maharaj and said there was no difficulty about the permission. Bhishma is not well today, so there was no Bhajan. Ram Maruti wished to go away today but Sai Baba detained him. There was Ramayan and Bhagvat read at night. 3rd January 1912 In the morning I got up early, attended the Kakad Aarathi and finished my prayer. My son Baba and Gopalrao Dorle went to Sai Maharaj and asked for permission to return to Amravati. Sai Maharaj replied that all might return. So my son and Gopalrao dorle returned in great joy. They told me so I went with Madhavrao Deshpande and Sai Maharaj confirmed the permission; but as we were returning he overtook us near khind and said that we may start tomorrow. I saw him when he was going out and again after he returned to the Masjid. Madhavrao started the subject about my departure and Sai Maharaj replied that I had my house both here and at Amravati. And I may stay where I like and I may never return to Amravati. That settled the matter, so it appeared to me, and I told my son Baba and Gopalrao Dorle to return to Amravati. So they made ready and went to say "Good Bye" and received the blessings of Sai Maharaj when the latter told them to go tomorrow. In the afternoon he said he would give all of my family permission to return tomorrow. Megh fed some Brahmins today in completion of his Anusthan of a Gayathri Purascharana. We had our meal with him. The meal was served in Sathe's Wada. In the afternoon I saw Sai Maharaj both at the Masjid and when he came out for his usual stroll. He was in a very pleased mood and laughted and abused in one and the same breath. At night there was the Bhajan of Bhishma and Dixit's Ramayana of which two chapters were read. Tatya Patil's father died in the evening. 4th January 1912 I got up early in the morning. Prayed and wished my son Baba and Gopalrao Dorle to go to Sai Maharaj and obtain permission to return to Amravati, but my wife intervened saying it was Pausha Paurnima and therefore a day sacred to our family deity, so no endeavor was made to obtain the permission required. I saw him go out as usual and went to the Masjid after he returned, spending the interval in reading Ramayana. We returned after the midday Aarathi, and after meals I sat talking with Bapusahib Jog and then resumed Ramayan. After 5 p.m. I went to Sai Maharaj in the Masjid and found him walking about in the compound. My wife also came there. After a time he took his usual seat and we sat near him. Dixit and his wife also came. Sai Maharaj then told a story. He said there was a princess living in a palace. A "Mang" sought shelter with her. Her sister-in-law, who was there also, refused it to the mang. So the mang with his wife was returning disconsolate to his village when he met Alla-Minya in the way and told his story, how, stricken with poverty, he sought shelter and was refused. Alla-Minya in the way and told his story, how, stricken with poverty, he sought shelter and was refused. Alla-Minya advised him to return with his wife and seek shelter once more with the same princess. He did so and was admitted and treated like a member of the family. The mang stayed enjoying all the comforts for six months and then coveting gold murdered the princess with an axe. The people round about assembled in large numbers and held a Panchayat. The mang admitted the offence, when the matter went to the king in due course. Alla-Minya advised him to let the mang go. The king obeyed. The princess murdered by the mang came to be born of him as his daughter and he came once more to the palace and was permitted to stay there in affluence and ease for twelve years. Then Alla-Minya inclined the king to avenge the murdered princess and the mang was killed in the same way in which he had killed the princess. The manga's widow returned to her village accepting the mang's fate as just. The princess, who was born as daughter to the mang came to the place, took possession of what belonged to her the former reincarnation and lived happily after wards. There was the work of God done and the justice vindicated. There was Shej-Aarthi at night, Bhishma'a Bhajan, and Dixit's Ramayana. Ram Maruti today embraced Sai Maharaj when the latter was going in procession to Chawadi for the Shej-Aarthi. 5th January 1912 In the morning I got up early though I did not sleep well at night. I attended the Kakad Aarathi. Sai Maharaj was in a pleased mood. My son Baba and Gopalrao dorle went to him. On seeing them he said, "go". Taking this as permission to return they hired Bala Bahoo's tanga and went away. I prayed and saw Sai Maharaj go out and again after he returned. He was in very good mood. Many people came. After the midday Aarathi, and after the usual meal, I lay down for a while and then sat listening to Ramayan read by Dixit. Upasani, Bhishma and Madhavrao were also present. Then about 5 p.m., I went to see Sai Maharaj with Bhishma and my son Balwant. He told how he was not well and humorously described his ailments. Balabhaoo Joshi brought parched gram. Sai Maharaj ate a few and distributed the rest. Then we stood near the Chawadi when he came out for his stroll, and then we had the usual Aarathi in the Wada, Bhishma's Bhajan and Dixit's Ramayan of which two chapters were read. Today some people from Dhulia came and went. 6th January 1912 I got up in the morning a little before daybreak and finished my prayer as usual and saw Sai Maharaj go out. After he passed on I went to Balasaheb Bhate and borrowed from him his copy or Rangnath Swami's Yoga Vasishtha in Marathi and returned to my lodgings, but resumed the reading of Ramayana. We all there attended the midday Aarathi and had our meals as usual. I did not wish to lie down but somehow sleep overcame me Ramayana and later on I went to the Masjid and saw Sai Maharaj. He was in a pleased mood and there was talk. In the evening there was the usual Wada Aarathi and later on we attended the Shej-Aarthi at the Chawadi. Sai Maharaj was in an exceptionally pleased mood, made mystic signs to Megha, and did what are known as "Drishti pata" in Yoga. An astrologer has come from Dhulia and is a guest of Upasani and is staying in the Wada. At night there was Bhajan of Bhishma and Ramayan of Dixit. 7th January 1912 In the morning I got up early and attended the Kakad Aarathi. Sai Maharaj looked exceedingly pleased and gave yogic glances. I passed the whole day in a sort of ecstasy. After morning, Bapu Saheb Jog, Upasani, and I commenced Ranganath's Yoga Vasishtha. Then we saw Sai Maharaj go out and in the interval sat talking with the young Mohammedan that came to the Masjid. One of them recited some verses. The midday Aarathi was late. Sai Baba commenced a very good tale. He said he had a very good well. The water in it was sky-blue, and its supply was inexhaustible. Four months could not empty it, and the fruit grown with the water was inordinately pure and tasteful. He did not continue the story beyond this point. In the afternoon Dixit read two chapters of Ramayan. Upasani, Ram Maruti, Dixit, and myself were present. Then we went to Sai Baba and attended his stroll. As it was getting dark he got or rather showed, as if he got angry with the woodcutter women. At night there was Bhishma's Bhajan and Dixit's Ramayan. 8th January 1912 I got up in the morning and feeling it too early went again to sleep and then overslept my usual moment of leaving bed. So things got set forward and in that way affected the routine of the whole day. After prayer I sat reading Yoga Vishishta of Ranganath with Bapu Saheb Jog, Upasani, Ram Maruti and Madhavrao Deshpande. We saw Sai Maharaj go out and again saw him after he returned. During the midday service after the Aarathi, Sai Maharaj exhibited sudden and great anger and abused violently. It appears as if plague is likely to reappear here and Sai Maharaj is endeavoring to prevent its re-appearance. After meals we sat talking. I read a little of Ramayana and then arrived Mr. Sane, Mamledar of Kopargaon with Mr. Joshi who is a Deputy Collector of Dhulia. Later on we went to Sai Maharaj after reading a chapter of Ramayana. We waited there long enough to see him at and after his usual stroll and then attended the Shej-Aarthi. At night there was usual Bhajan and Ramayana. 10th January 1912 I got up very early in the morning and finished my prayer and all before daybreak and later on I went to see Sai Maharaj both when he went out of -and after he returned to - the Masjid. A marwadi came there and told his dream. He said he received a lot of silver and finally got bars of gold and woke up woke up while he was in the act of counting them. Sai Maharaj said that the dream indicated the death of some great man. 12th January 1912 I got up early in the morning, said my prayers, and began the usual routine of the day when Narayan Rao's son Govind and brother Bahoosaheb came. They arrived at Amravati from Hushangabad some time ago but not finding me and my wife there came here to see us. We were naturally very glad to see each other and sat talking. We began out Yoga Vasishtha somewhat late, as Bapusaheb Jog was busy. We saw Sai Maharaj go out and again after he returned to Masjid. He was very gracious and repeatedly gave me smoke out of his pipe. It solved many of my doubts and I felt delighted. After the midday Aarathi we had our meals and I had a few minutes rest. Dixit was delayed longer than usual at the Masjid. So he began Ramayan later than usual and we could not finish a chapter, as it was both long and difficult. Then we saw Sai Maharaj at the Masjid. He had music. There were two dancing girls who sang and danced. Later on there was the Shej-Aarthi. Sai Maharaj was very kind to Balwant, sent for him and let him spend the whole of the afternoon with him. 13th January 1912 I got up early in the morning and attended Kakad Aarathi. Sai Maharaj did not say a word today and did not even throw the glances, which he usually does. The tahasildar of khandwa has come here. We saw him when we were reading Ranganath's Yoga Vasishtha. We saw Sai Maharaj go out and again after he returned. Yesterday's singing women were there. They sang a bit, got sweetmeats for their reward and then went away. The midday Aarathi passed very pleasantly. Megha is not yet quite well. Bapaji, brother of Madhavrao Deshpande was invited to breakfast with his wife. Tahasildar of Khandwa appears to be a cultured man has read Yoga Vasishtha. He says he has been brought to brief by designing persons for his devotional tendencies. After a little afternoon rest Dixit read Bhavartha Ramayana. The Chapter (11th of Balkand) is a summary of Yoga Vasishtha and is very interesting. We saw Sai Maharaj again as he strolled out. His mood was changed and one would think that he was angry which he really was not. At night Bhajan and Ramayan as usual. 14th January 1912 I got up early in the morning, finished my prayer and sat to read Ranganathi Yoga Vasishtha with Bapu Saheb Jog and Ram Maruti. We continued it, after seeing Sai Maharaj go out. I went to the Musjid after he returned and found that he was arranging for a bath. So I returned and wrote two letters and went again. He was very kind to me and gave Til Gul brought for him by Bapu Saheb Jog. He gave it to Balvant also. The midday Aarathi was a little late as Megha was not well and it being Til Sankrant, the Paros was late. By the time we returned and had our midday meal, it was 4 p.m. then Dixit read Ramayana but we did not make much progress. In the afternoon when I went Sai Maharaj did not admit anybody. So I took a turn by Bapusaheb Jog's quarters and went in time for evening Namaskar. The Tahasildar of Khandwa is still here and gradually falling into the routine of the place. One Mr. Gupte of Thana. I sat talking with him. In the evening there was Shej-Aarthi, Bhishma's Bhajan and Dixit's Ramayana. We all celebrated the Sankranti thought on a small scale. 15th January 1912 I got up early in the morning, prayed and attended the Kakad Aarathi which was a little later than usual as Megha having been unwell could not get up in time to blow the conch she. Sai Maharaj did not say a word as he got up and left the Chawadi. Upasani Shastri and Bapu Sahib Jog did not come soon. So I sat writing letters. When Sai Maharaj went out he asked me how I spent the morning which was a mild rebuke for not having read and contemplated. I went to see him again when he returned and he was very kind. He commenced a long story and kept on as if speaking to me, but I felt sleepy all the time and did not understand anything of the story. I was told afterwards that the story was a very thinly veiled recital of the events that actually happened in the life of Gupte. So he said, the midday Aarti was late and it was 3 p.m. by the time we returned and had our meals. I lay down a bit and then attended Dixit's Puran. Later on we went to the Masjid but were told to salute from a distance, which we accordingly did. Sai Baba came for his stroll and we saluted as usual. Dixit had an illumination of the Masjid yesterday and repeated it to day also. At night there was the usual Bhajan of Bhishma and Puran of Dixit. BOW TO SHRI SAI - PEACE BE TO ALL ***** SATHYAM SIVAM SUNDARAM - PART IV The Life of the Divine Avatar Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba - [1973-1979] N. Kasturi M.A., B.L. WALTER COWAN BLOCK On 28th April, the Cowan Block of the hostel at the Brindavan campus was inaugurated by the President of India, Sri B.D. Jatti, himself an ardent devotee of Bhagawan ever since the days when he was in the ministerial cabinet of Karnataka. The hostel was built within the campus itself, because Bhagawan could not deny the students of His College the proximity to Him that they ardently prayed for. Elsie Cowan was present at the function and expressed her immense joy at the name, which Baba had given to the hermitage of Saraswathi (the goddess of learning), to commemorate her husband, Walter Cowan, whom He Himself had resurrected. "We, too, who reside in this hostel, are awaiting resurrection," said a student in his exaltation that day. The President was elated at the increasing pace of the Sai era in education. He welcomed the Sai colleges, which emphasise moral and spiritual progress, highlight a variety of skills and promote projects of social service. He praised all those students who had won high academic distinctions and, at the same time, mastered with equal enthusiasm the techniques of farming, animal husbandry, dairying and canteen management, besides Yogasanas, elocution, music, nursing, histrionics and photography. Architecture is said to be the art of perpetuating song in stone; the Cowan Block is indeed a Bhajan in brick and mortar. One cannot but sense the presence of both, penitence and grace in the dormitories, corridors and halls. "Fill your heads and hearts with light and love, rather than mere facts and figures," says Baba. The hostel is reservoir of both, the light of knowledge and the delight of Seva. Since some years, the sixth of May, the day the mother of the Avatar bade farewell to the world, is known the world over as Eswaramma Day, and is dedicated to the service of children by children. It has grown into a week-long festival, with the children from Bal Vikas groups chumming with children from the slums in games and play, visiting children's wards in hospitals and singing Bhajans in homes meant for retarded, ailing and delinquent children. Like rays of light, they carry the sparkle of joy into others gloom. They also offer to the elders, and present to toddlers, the pictures they paint, the models they make, the pets they play with and the floral designs they assemble. They sing and dance; they mimic, recite and enjoy themselves. THE RAMAYANA The summer course in 1977 was based on the Ramayana, the epic reservoir of Dharma. The first seven days were devoted to an intensive study of various versions of the Ramayana in the languages of India as well as those of nations to the south and southeast of India. Bhagawan discoursed on the ideals embodied in the heroic personalities described in the Ramayana. Over 40 students from Sai colleges spoke to the large concourse of participants, with a large sprinkling of learners from overseas, on the saints and the philosophers of the world. For thirty days the students, boys and girls from colleges of India and abroad, lived in the Brindavan campus, away from the noisy and polluting distractions of the city, in an atmosphere of devotion and dedication, of prayer and meditation, of love and service, of mutual help and encouragement. Bhagawan would be amidst them in the lecture hall, at lunch and at dinner, during their hours of service in the villages around Brindavan and during the elocution and quiz competitions on Sundays. As many students confessed, they experienced both, "Immensity and Eternity." On the final day, when the students were sobbing in sorrow, Baba comforted and consoled them with gifts of grace, assuring them that since they had installed Him in their hearts, He would ever be with them, guarding and guiding, wherever they may be. "Never forget God... Never believe the world as reality... Never be afraid of death," He told them at the valedictory session. During the ten days of Dasara 1977, Bhagawan elaborated on Shanthi (inner peace) and the means of getting established in it. His discourses traced the faults and failings that foul the body, the mind and the faculty of reason in man. He analysed the habits and traits that disturbed and depressed the emotions of man and prescribed the exercises by which physical, mental, emotional and occupational equipoise could be gained. He also referred to the conflicts created by ethical and philosophical schools, as well as by fanatical loyalty to particular forms and names of the one, omnipresent God. Sri Govinda Narain, the Governor of Karnataka, inaugurated the seven-day Vedic rite of Jnana Yajna, which forms an important part of the Dasara festival. An indication of the surge of devotion to the Avatar, which binds human hearts 'though they come from the ends of the earth' was the joint recital of songs on Baba, both in English and Sanskrit, by Ida Marion St. John from California and Gita Orescan from Germany. On Vijayadashami, the tenth day of victory (Dasara), Bhagawan allowed a few poets to recite their verses composed in various languages. Mrs. Zeba Bashiruddin, a professor of English from Hyderabad, sang a few of her mellifluous Urdu poems on Baba. Mention must also be made here of the announcement that was made that day about Bhagawan taking under His benign guardianship a number of educational institutions of the Loka Seva Vrinda in Karnataka, to be run on patriotic and spiritual lines by a band of His own devoted teachers. The Vrinda was orphaned by the death, in a car accident, of its founder and promoter, Sri Madiyala Narayana Bhat, an educationalist who had sought to reinforce the secularist curriculum laid down by the State with the spiritual ideals of duty, devotion and discipline. THE WEDDING KNOT Dasara at Prashanthi Nilayam fills devotees with reverence for the heritage they live in. The Birthday inspires them to reshape their lives as desired by the Divine incarnation. The week was ushered in with a big bang of blessedness. Baba had made it known that indigent parents from the villages around Prashanthi Nilayam could celebrate the weddings of their children without incurring any expense. He would be the priest, parent and Providence. Parents of all castes, who had been knocking at the doors of astrologers and moneylenders, heard the call. When Baba Himself was the High Priest, no astrologer need be consulted about the future of the wedded couples. When He Himself was Providence, no moneylender need be approached to get the funds needed for celebrating the wedding. Hearing this, young men hurried to the homes of prospective brides and saw to it that their parents did not let go this miraculous chance to have the marriages celebrated in Baba's presence. One hundred and thirty four couples were registered at Prashanthi Nilayam in a few days. Baba gifted a wedding sari each to all the brides, much to their surprise at receiving this costly present. The grooms got Dhotis (men's wear) and Angavastrams (cloths slung over the shoulder) with borders of Zari (brocade). They were also given silk shirts stitched to size by tailors brought to the Nilayam for this very purpose. They were then taken to the Kalyana Mantap (a structure raised for the purpose of auspicious events or functions) on the outskirts of Puttaparthi village and seated in rows under a decorated Pandal. Girl students from the Sathya Sai College in Anantapur acted as 'ladies-in-waiting' for the brides, and boys from the Sathya Sai College in Bangalore FONT-SIZE: 10pt"> were the 'best men', for the grooms. Brahmin priests recited Vedic hymns during the wedding rite. The couples garlanded each other, symbolic of union in wedlock. Baba gave each groom a gold Mangalsutra (auspicious thread worn by married women), and as it was put around the neck of the bride and knotted, He sprinkled on the heads of the couple, grains of rice. Bhagawan gave each bride another sari, besides bangles, Kumkum and Haldi, which are all a must for her in wedded life. He also gave each couple plates and cups for their new home. Then they poured handfuls of rice on each other's heads - a rite to ensure prosperity. The sari and Angavastram ends were knotted together to symbolise the union of hearts for the joint pilgrimage ahead. The 134 couples then slowly made their way in procession to the Mandir, with folk dance, pipe, tom-tom and Bhajan parties in the lead. Later, along with their kinsfolk, they all had a wedding feast at the Nilayam itself, oblivious of any differences of caste or economic or educational backgrounds. It was a heartening experience for all those who have the welfare of mankind at heart. It was a festival of love, an object lesson for all those who have faith in the overpowering impact of love. Now a large number of Seva Samithis are arranging, under their own auspices, simple weddings for poor villagers. FURY OF WIND AND WATER Another event that preceded the birthday was the 8th All India Conference of the Sai Seva Organisations. While the celebrations were in progress, it became known that a terrific cyclone had hit the Andhra 10pt">Coast. A tidal wave over 20 feet high had swept over the coast and spent itself about thirty to forty miles inland. The devastation inflicted by both wind and water, was enormous. Tens of thousands died, caught by the waves. A large number of cattle lost their lives, and coconut groves over several square miles were toppled. Scores of villages were washed off the face of earth. The few who survived were confronted by disease, despair and decimation. Bhagawan directed the Sevadal from Andhra to rush to the area, even while the festival was progressing at the Nilayam. Truckloads of cloth, rugs, garments and whatever could be laid hold of, were got ready to be transported by devotees to the affected areas. More than eight Lakh rupees poured into the bank for relief work. Four relief camps were quickly established in the afflicted areas, along with a complement of trained Seva Dal members, both men and women, including teams of doctors. Remote spots, which had been isolated by the floods, were selected. I witnessed a massive transport of provisions and materials, in the form of head-loads, by devotees. They had to wade through slush and mire, braving the stench of rotting corpses and carcasses. Indeed the first task was to bury or burn the dead, lying in heaps on the ground and caught in trees and bushes. Kitchens which provided food for over five thousand forlorn victims, kept working for more than a month in four strategic centers - Kattamajeru Gudapalem, Adavuladeevu, Ganapavaram and Barrankula - in the region lashed by the furious elements. From some kitchens, cooked food was taken to even more remote places, and the victims fed wherever they were found. Children were given milk and special foods. Besides these, the Sevadal erected hundreds of hutments to enable people to continue their normal occupations of fishing and farming. They were given sets of kitchen utensils and cooking vessels, as well as garments, reed mats and rugs. Bhagawan assured the children who were orphaned by the calamity that He would be their guardian. When the relief centers were closed, the exhausted Sevadal workers gladly noted that the faces of the village folk around them were lit with gratitude, contentment and devotion towards Bhagawan. In order to avoid such colossal loss of life in future, Bhagawan directed the Seva Organisations to build at each place where they served, a community hall for the people, which would serve as a shelter whenever wind and wave rushed furiously onto land. When the holy day of Shivarathri approached in 1978, the people remembered the previous year's announcement by Bhagawan regarding the cancellation of the ceremony. But the prospect of such deprivation was so painful that thousands would not at first believe it. So they continued to stream into Prashanthi Nilayam in time for the occasion. Rumors were afloat that Bhagawan would be at Brindavan that day. May be Shivarathri would be celebrated at Brindavan? Or would it be at Hyderabad? So thousands also gathered at Hyderabad and at Brindavan in Whitefield. But Bhagawan did not oblige. He was in the Nilgiri Hills, and returned only two days later. COLLEGE CAMPUS Bhagawan opened the magnificent row of buildings, which comprise the Sri Sathya Sai College near Brindavan, at a joyous and colorful function on 19th of May 1978. The Karnataka Minister for Education, Sri Subbaya Shetty, inaugurated the library building with the Prajnana Pradarsan on the first floor. The Pradarsan contains an impressive collection of charts, drawings and pictures showing phases of Japa, Dhyana, Yoga and Pooja. It has photographs and models of the holy places of India. Books of all major religions and portraits of saints, mystics and thinkers of all faiths adorn the place. The sayings and teachings of Bhagawan, explained and illustrated, find a place of prominence. To be among these records means being reminded of the inevitable journey to God - that oft-forgotten goal becomes clear once again. Srimati Govinda Narain inaugurated the auditorium, while Sri Govinda Narain, the Governor of Karnataka, inaugurated the Summer Course in Indian Culture and Spirituality which commenced on the same day. The discourses during the first week were all on the Bhagavatha Purana, which is about the former avatars of the Lord, including Krishna. Bhagawan said that the youth of the country suffered the imposition of pointless and purposeless curricula. They were being shaped in colleges, into recalcitrant unemployables and sent out into the world with begging bowls called 'degrees' & 'diplomas'. They saw through foreign eyes, thought along borrowed concepts and held only film stars as their ideals. They had become rootless saplings, drifting with every whiff of wind. Their patriotism was not even skin-deep, for they had no knowledge of, or love for, their traditions and culture, their poets and saints, their fellow men and homeland. Dr. Benito Reyes, President of the World University in Ojai, California, who attended the course and stayed with the participants, commented in high appreciation on the benefits derived from it by Westerners who had no knowledge of the depth and vastness, the value and validity of the spiritual message of India, so vividly perceptible in Bhagawan, He quoted T.S. Eliot and asked, "Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge? Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?" and answered, "It is here." THE 665 No sooner had the summer course ended then the organisers were persuaded to accept another assignment which was more spectacular and more fundamental - managing at Brindavan a ten-day orientation course on spiritual education for 665 teachers from the elementary schools of Andhra Pradesh, deputed for training by the State government. The government had planned a well-nigh revolutionary project of recasting the elementary schools (for children between the ages of six and twelve years) in the entire state, providing special emphasis on prayer, music, dance, painting, modeling, and parent co-operation with the teacher, so that the school house became a house of work, worship and wisdom, of love and service, of spiritual discipline and Yoga. Dr. Chenna Reddy, first as Governor of Uttar Pradesh and later as Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, knew about the Bal Vikas classes conducted by trained gurus of the Sri Sathya Sai Seva Organisations, and had watched the children grow into self-reliant, co-operative and service-minded youth, revering parents, elders, and teachers. So he prayed to Baba to give the 665 teachers an orientation course, holding the camp in the college campus at Brindavan itself, so that they may benefit by the impact of His grace and from exposure to the simple, unaffected band of students whom He had trained as examples of His message. The teachers were chosen at random from the outlying villages of every district. They had no time to prepare for the journey into a vastly different linguistic and climatic region, the state of Karnataka, nor were they aware of the discipline, the do's and don'ts, spontaneously honoured at the Brindavan campus. But the ten-day stay was amazingly alchemic. Baba entered their hearts and made them soft and pure. Several deep-rooted habits such as smoking, eating harmful foods and arguing aloud were jettisoned without a tear, while a sense of dedication was added to their professional skills. They began to feel like patriotic warriors who were engaged in driving away the demons of sloth and selfishness from schools, restoring to children their heritage that they had been denied so long. Bhagawan had planned lectures by devoted teachers in the morning hours. He formed ten groups of thirty teachers each, who met on alternate days to discuss among themselves the feasibility and necessity of the suggestions that arose in these lectures. The reports of these discussions were placed before Bhagawan in the evening and Bhagawan would choose some outstanding conundrum that required further analysis and clarification by Him. Bhagawan also personally supervised the teachers' boarding and lodging and enquired about their health and requirements. He gave woollen rugs to those who had not brought any with them, sets of books to some, and cassettes of His Bhajans and discourses to others who had access to cassette players in their villages. He posed for photographs along with teachers and trainees from each district, and also arranged for each one of them to receive a free copy on the day the camp ended. Most of the teachers desired to visit Mysore and Puttaparthi, besides going round Bangalore itself, but they could not afford the cost. So they appealed to the Government of Andhra Pradesh to loan them the money, which they all agreed to repay out of their salaries. When He learned of this, Baba Himself arranged for buses, and saw to it that they were loaded with hampers of food and plenty of fruit with which the teachers could regale themselves while on the road. The teachers were filled with admiration at the intelligent and hearty response they received from the student volunteers deputed to attend to their needs. They concluded that it was the love that Bhagawan embodied and showered on those whom He chose, that had molded the students in His college into young men of whom the nation could be proud. When the teachers left the campus and the presence of Baba, they were all in tears. THE FACE OF DIVINITY Towards the end of the course, on the eighth day, the trainees had the singular good fortune of listening to a talk given by Dr. Frank G. Baronowski of Arizona University, on the uniqueness of Bhagawan’s aura. This speech equipped them with faith in the divinity of Baba - a precious possession that would fortify them throughout their lives. Dr. Baronowski said, "I was not brought up in any belief, thought I am a Christian by birth and a Roman Catholic. The scientific community in my country finds it difficult to accept God. "It is not scientific," they assert. The aura that Swami projects are not that of a man. The white was more than twice the size of any man's, the blue was practically limitless and then there were gold and silver bands beyond even these, far beyond the building, right up to the horizon! I am risking my reputation when I make this statement. Two days ago, right outside this hall, I looked into His eyes. They had a glow in them. It was clear to me that I had looked into the face of Divinity. If ever I can use the phrase, 'I have seen Love walking on two feet', it is here." On 14th August 1978, Bhagawan formed the Loka Seva Institution into a new Trust, the Sri Sathya Sai Loka Seva Trust, of which He agreed to be the President. This He did at Muddenahalli where, too, there are schools and hostels maintained as part of the Loka Seva complex. Bhagawan concluded the formalities of the transfer and change of name. He later addressed the members of the Trust, teachers and students: "This holy institution was established by Narayana Bhat quite early in his life. He was ever eager to offer pure and unselfish service, so he planted the seed, which has now grown into this tree. We have arrived at the stage when we can eat the ripe fruit, but this tree has also to be well cared for by us." THE MOSQUE The Muslim festival of Ramzan in 1978 was a landmark in the history of Puttaparthi, for the Muslims of that village celebrated Id in the mosque that Bhagawan had built for them. It is a simple and spacious mosque, with an ambience of spiritual fragrance. Professor Bashiruddin of Osmania University expressed the gratitude of the Muslims of the region and described to the vast gathering how the impact of Bhagawan’s teachings had made him a more understanding practitioner of the message of the Holy Koran. Janab Fakhruddin, convenor of the Village Muslim Committee, offered thanks to Bhagawan for this gift of love, saying "We had earlier to walk four miles to Bukkapatnam, through sun and rain, slush and sandy river bed, to recite our prayers." Bhagawan told the Muslims that the real significance of the Ramzan fast was "to be near God and detached from sensual desires. He also said that the Ramzan month was one during which the Holy Koran was communicated to Mohammed. The message of Bhagawan is that the truly religious will neither deny the validity of any particular religion or group of religions, nor declare that salvation can be secured through one path only. So He encourages all those who have faith to march forward along their chosen paths, whichever religion they may follow or be born in, since all spiritual paths lead to the same goal. Baba's grace is boundless and universal. So people from all lands and followers of all creeds gather at His feet. Several sects and communities of India, who have special festivals to commemorate their regional deities, also discard age-old boundaries and conventions and gather in thousands wherever Baba may happen to be, feeling such celebration to be truly meaningful in His presence. The Onam festival of the Malayalam-speaking Keralites - Hindus and Christians - is held by thousands year after year with all the orthodox observances. Bhagawan has thrown new light on the legend which forms the background of Onam. What was for long a season of folk play and dance, has now taken on the habiliment of a spiritually elevating Sadhana week. PROLONG YOUR LIFE SPAN Dasara 1978 began as usual with the hoisting of the Prashanthi flag over Prashanthi Mandir and the celebration of the Annual Day of the Sri Sathya Sai Hospital in the evening that same day. Bhagawan touched the hearts of the massive gathering of devotees present when He gave them the most worthwhile reason for preserving and promoting their health. "The one grand reason for maintaining health, which I am urging you to do, is that you have yet to witness and delight over many more Leelas and Mahimas (expressions and manifestations of divine qualities) far surpassing those you have witnessed so far, and many more wonders, victories and triumphs. You can thrill with ecstatic delight when you witness these. So guard yourselves carefully. Maintain good health and keep your hearts ever filled with joy," He said. During the discourses related to the Vedic Yajna, which lasted for a full week, Baba expounded the meanings of various scriptural passages. The verses from the Gita which He prescribed for repetition while saying grace before every meal, were given special emphasis by Him, for they remind one of the immanence of God in the food made ready, in the fire that was used for cooking it, in the cook, in the one who ate it and in the activities which the eater could fulfill as a result of the strength that the food conferred on both, his body and brain. Dasara is an occasion when thousands from all over the country and abroad see for themselves the triple ideal of Sai education - Duty, Devotion and Discipline - practiced by the boys and girls of Bhagawan’s colleges. They can listen to these students speak profoundly on a variety of topics and share their own intimate experiences of love and service towards Sai and towards all those upon whom He bestows His grace. They can also be audience to plays, choirs and orchestral music by students from all parts of India and from places as different and far apart as Hawaii, Fiji, Sri Lanka, Tanzania normal"> and Libya. Integration of mankind is no more an armchair dream; it is being realised here. SAVE VILLAGES FROM CITIES Twenty-five thousand people gathered at Prashanthi Nilayam for the Birthday festival in 1978. Bhagawan emphasised that it was not because of the Birthday that so many people had assembled, but it was because they assembled that the Birthday was celebrated! "I have no interest in publicising the date on which this body, which I willed for a purpose, appeared among mankind. I want each of you to celebrate the day I am enshrined in your hearts as My birthday," He said. To those who wished Him a 'Happy Birthday', He replied, "this is a superfluous wish, for I am always happy." The festival included a musical recitation by students, with the college orchestra providing excellent accompaniment to a narration of the story of the Sai Avatar. Baba exhorted every one to transform 'daily living' into 'truly living', visualising God as the very breath of life. Bhagawan had called delegations of Seva Dal units (comprising men and women living on Sai ideals and trained for service to the distressed, the disabled and the diseased) from all over India green; FONT-SIZE: 10pt">. He directed them to engage themselves more in rural areas, where the evils of city life were becoming rampant. Villagers are misled; they imagine the city-dwellers to be more happy amidst cinema houses and cars, immersed in exotic and intoxicating life styles. They do not realise that gambling and drinking, by noise and slogans are corroding their physical moral and economic stamina, and by the rowdiness that thrives on such life patterns. "Save them from moral and physical pollution," He commanded. When one of the district Convenors suggested that each Sevadal member should always carry with him a mini first-aid box so that he could serve people more often, Baba modified the contents of the box, saying, "Carry in it a few tablets of discrimination and detachment, an ounce or two of sense-control, a packet of love and a bandage strip of fortitude. Only then can you effectively render first aid to people suffering from a stroke of ego or a bout of greed, a jaundiced vision or an allergy to serving others." On 28th November 1978, Baba laid the foundation stone of the College of Arts, Science and Commerce at Prashanthi Nilayam. In the north-east corner Bhagawan laid the first line of stones after sanctifying the spot and placing there nine precious gems created by Him in the palm of His hand. Baba wills that every college must have an auditorium as magnificent as the college itself, and also a special building, as impressive as the rest, for the library. He considers the library to be a fundamental part of every educational institution. He selected Sri Ramanathan Chettiar of Madurai and the Rajamatha of Navanagar for laying the foundation stones of these two allied constructions. ISA-SAI Christmas brings thousands into the presence of Baba, for they find in him the teacher who can reveal the true glory of Jesus and lead them along the path illumined by the Son of God. Baba told them that day, "Carols and candles, readings from the Bible and staging plays about the incidents from the life of Jesus are not enough. When Jesus declared that the bread of the Last Supper was His flesh and the wine His blood, what did He really mean? He meant that every being alive with flesh and blood was He Himself and ought to be treated so. That is to say, every living being is Divine. Therefore no distinction should be made between separate physical bodies as good or bad, friend or foe, we or they. Baba also revealed that Jesus' actual name assigned to Him by His parents was Isa. And Isa, when constantly repeated, echoes Sai! Both words mean Iswara (God). Baba said, "In the Tibetan monastery where Jesus spent many years, His name is recorded as Isa, which means 'Lord of all living beings.' " The Tamils celebrated their New Year on 14th January, so Baba flew to Madras to bless them on that holy day and to inaugurate the construction of a Dharmakshetra (an arena of righteousness) in that city, which was to be called 'Sundaram', to complete the series which had started with 'Sathyam' in Bombay and continued with 'Sivam' in Hyderabad. The festival also has the overtone of a harvest celebration as the farmers of Tamil Nadu offer gratitude to the bullocks that helped them grow grain and the cows that gave them milk. They boil the milk on ceremonial hearths and allow it to boil and spill over as a symbol of abundance and happy sharing. The Telugu New Year Day was celebrated in March, and Baba heightened the joy of the celebration by being present at Hyderabad for a full week. He called upon the city-dwellers to serve the villages, to which they owed much, by helping the farmers and artisans to combat poverty, disease and exploitation. Meanwhile, on 30th January 1979, Swami entered the west coast harbor town of Mangalore in Karnataka State, to proceed to Alike, the headquarters of the Sri Sathya Sai Loka Seva Trust, which runs two huge educational complexes for children, mostly from rural regions. One complex is at Alike itself in the midst of the valley, nestling among the spurs of the Western Ghats. The other one is at Muddenahalli, on the foothills of the mountain range around the 10pt">Nandi Peak, in the plains to the east. Alike is a dream come true, a vision vivified by faith and hope, as if Divine grace had shaped itself into its dormitories, playgrounds, libraries, classrooms and gardens - a hermitage where the heart of the late Madiyala Narayana Bhat throbs in the activity of the increasing band of devoted teachers, an academy with palm groves whispering 'Sai Ram' to every breath of wind. LED INTO THE LIGHT Baba's discourses dispelled the gloom that had descended upon the district when its patron, Narayana Bhat, was killed in a car accident. He restored joy in the hearts of the students (numbering over a thousand), the more than sixty teachers, several well-wishers of the project (who had co-operated with Narayana Bhat, its founder, and stood by him through thick and thin), the grateful parents and guardians of the thousands of boys and girls whose careers had been shaped by the Loka Seva institutions, the old students who were rendering service in various fields of activity, and the farmers, traders and workers from the village and plantations lying in the region. Baba likened Alike to a place of pilgrimage, when He noted that "you pay sincere attention to the development of the children under your care and transmute them into worthy children of India." Before returning to Brindavan, Baba visited Puttur and Chokkadi villages near Alike, Mangalore and Manipal, in the same coastal district. At Manipal, the centre of a popular educational complex built around well-equipped medical and engineering colleges, Baba found at 11 p.m. at night a gathering of at least fifteen thousand people waiting for Darshan. Such was their longing to have a glimpse of the Lord and listen to His voice. The Summer Course in Indian Culture and Spirituality in 1979, laid emphasis on the Bhagavad Gita. For one full week attention was concentrated on this universal scripture which propounds and elaborates upon the three paths of Karma (action), Bhakti (devotion), Jnana (knowledge). Bhagawan’s daily discourse provided simple and satisfying commentaries on the philosophical principles underlying the teachings of Lord Krishna to His diffident and deluded warrior-friend, Arjuna. Swami, like Krishna Himself, exhorted the student participants to do their best, without calculating the odds, and leave the rest to God. He declared, as Krishna had done on the battlefield, that victory is the reward for the brave and that bravery is drawn from the Atman, the Inner Spring. Justice V. R. Krishna Iyer of the Supreme Court of India, while inaugurating the month-long course in the presence of Bhagawan, said, "It is time that we wean our colleges from becoming houses of vice and violence, with students getting addicted to drugs and cultivating only materialistic desires. Baba's balm of Prema must penetrate Karma, kindle Jnana and sublimate into Dharma." He spoke on the inadequacy of science and its inability to restore peace, morality and brotherhood. He stressed that FONT-SIZE: 10pt">India must discover her soul and listen to the voice of the sages. Bhagawan pointed out that leaders of today had no will to promote moral and spiritual excellence in their people, while the people themselves had no urge to warn their leaders of the disasters that lay ahead when this foremost duty was neglected. CONTINUED… With Sai love from Sai brother M. Palaniswamy / New and Improved Mail - Send 10MB messages! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.