Guest guest Posted June 17, 2006 Report Share Posted June 17, 2006 Around Amma Everybody deserves to see her face 14 June 2006 —San Ramon, California, USA Themba first met Amma in the mid-1990s in New York. At that time, he was a troubled spiritual seeker—a young man who was inspired to search for Truth yet who still occasionally found himself in trouble with the law. {read his email from 2002} Though Themba's father had instilled in him a basic spiritual understanding, he seemed unable to transcend the pitfalls associated with young men growing up in America's poorer neighborhoods. He became a gang member, used and sold drugs, and regularly engaged in violence and theft. He even still carries a bullet in his chest from a rival gang member's gun. Themba says that he was inspired by the teachings of the spiritual masters but, at the same time, he was irritated that the proliferation of such teachings seemed limited to America's middle and upper classes. "I felt like, 'If this is so real, how come it ain't reaching the ghetto? Why isn't the universal message coming to the 'hood?" he says. Themba wanted a spiritual teacher who put their words into action, someone who didn't just speak about how every man, woman and child is an embodiment of the divine but who also served his fellow man accordingly. At that New York program Themba leafed through Amma's biography and was bowled over by what he read. Amma said that in her childhood her inner voice had told her, "Your birth is not merely for enjoying the pure bliss of the Self but for comforting suffering humanity." He was further impressed with Amma's response to that inner voice: "Thereafter, I renounced everything but the love of my children." "I had never heard anything from the spiritual masters that was that profound," Themba exclaims. "Amma kept it real: She said, 'Yeah, I renounce everything except y'all.' In that moment, I fell in love. I was blissed out. I was so overwhelmed that I didn't even go for her hug that year. And I had the experience that every time she was hugging someone, she was hugging me." As Themba watched Amma give darshan that day, he heard an inner voice of his own, experienced an inner vision: "I started seeing busloads of homeless people in North America being brought to get Amma's darshan. And I started seeing busloads of African Americans, Latin Americans and all these different cultural persuasions of people just coming to reacquaint themselves with Amma, with their mother." And the next year when Amma came to New York, this is exactly what Themba did. He gathered 15 homeless people in a van and took them for Amma's darshan. "I just believe that everybody deserves to see her face," he says. "I just feel that everybody deserves to know that their mother is here with them." But Themba's story does not end there. "Old habits die hard and I got caught back up in the lifestyle and wounded up locked up again," he says. This time, he was sentenced to stint in Riker's Island, one of New York's most infamous penitentiaries, after being picked up on an old warrant. In retrospect, Themba feels that his prison sentence was, in fact, an opportunity for him to serve "Amma's children in prison." "Through Amma's grace, it ended up being more like a spiritual retreat than anything else," he says. "Prison was my first ashram experience." Soon after his incarceration, Themba asked his father to send him some of Amma's books. He did so, and Themba tore out one of Amma's photos and used it to create a small puja in his dormitory. He began to take happiness from the fact that hundreds of other prisoners were now seeing Amma's face each time they walked past his small shrine. As he puts it, "Even behind bars, Amma was giving me a purpose." Then, Themba says, Amma began to speak to him in his heart. "She said: 'No matter what happens, you just be an example of love. Pray with the Christians, pray with the Muslims, the Bloods, the Crips1, the thugs, the criminals… I don't care if they about to go on death row—you just keep loving them.' And brothers began to gravitate to me. She began to send people to me. They would be like, 'Who is this woman?' And I saw society's so-called 'hardest' just melt at the sight of her face. I never got any disrespect for Amma's picture. They would all just melt and be like, 'Who's that?' I ain't being romantic. I'm being real. "And when I would chant 'Om,' they would tease me, but Amma was like, 'That's all right, let them tease you, because they are learning something new. So it is uncomfortable for them but they are learning something new, so you go ahead.' And soon people were coming up to me and asking, 'Can you teach me a little meditation?'" Themba began to tell his fellow inmates about Amma. He says that many of his fellow African Americans identified with Amma's life story—the fact that Amma, like them, had been subject to persecution due to her dark skin. Soon there were three, then four, then five more altars to Amma set up in Riker's. "Some of these belonged to the so-called 'most threatening' and 'hardest' children of Amma," he says (reminding everyone "she's everybody's momma"). "So these people became like my guardian angels. So then even the people who were teasing me weren't saying anything… because all the hardest people in the dorm were chanting 'Om' with me." "Amma was fulfilling my dreams," he says, "because I always wanted to know that the message of the spiritual masters was for real. I always wanted to know that it was not just a message for certain people. And Amma was proving it to me right behind bars, right in prison." Then in 2004, Themba was released. As a free man, Themba has become a key figure in Circle of Love {news}, the M.A. Center's program that arranges the writing of loving and encouraging letters to people who are lonely, grieving, sick or isolated. With Themba's assistance, the program created a subsidiary branch that focuses specifically on writing letters to prisoners: Circle of Love Inside. "People are really lonely locked up," says Themba. "Many people's families have turned away from them. Actually, for someone in prison, getting a letter is maybe the equivalent of getting darshan for us—that's how serious it is." "Many people who are in prison are dark-skinned like Amma, and they had a lot of abuse, and for them to read how Amma, who is dark and was abused like them, has become a spiritual leader... it really moves them. The life she has lived and the life she lives now are particularly inspiring to this population of people." Today, Circle of Love Inside is active in nine states, with volunteers from around the world participating. So far, the group has also sent more than 200 of Amma's books to various individuals and prison libraries. It also arranges prison visits. Through the Circle of Love, the prisoners have even taught prisoners Amma's "Ma-Om" meditation technique. Aside from Circle of Love Inside, Themba has recently begun a project called "Mother's Murals." Stemming from Themba's desire that everyone have the opportunity to see Amma's face, he is trying to get murals of Amma painted on the walls of poor communities throughout North America. The first one, in Bay Area's Richmond, was recently completed. "I just believe that everybody deserves to see her face. I just believe that everybody deserves to know that they are loved" says Themba. "My main prayer is that this will inspire a wave of devotion and service towards Amma's children in all circumstances—not just the ones we are comfortable with," says Themba. "I hope that we will begin to go into uncomfortable situations with Amma's face and our hearts open." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 2006 Report Share Posted June 18, 2006 What a great article, thanks so much for posting it. Very inspiring! Can anybody tell the address of the Richmond mural? I want to see it. Jai Maa Max -- Max Dashu Art in Goddess Reverence http://www.maxdashu.net Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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