This is the transcript of a talk
delivered by late Prof. Kasturi many years ago. This is being
brought to you from our archives and we regret that we do not
have the exact date of this talk, but we can say with reasonable
surety that it was in the month of October in 1987.
It is a very difficult assignment that has been
given to me to speak on Sai Baba. Because He is a phenomenon that has so
many facets; and that is yet a mystery - though I have been with Him for
over 30 years now. The longer you are with Him, the more mysterious He
becomes. And He Himself has acknowledged and declared that it is very
difficult to understand Him; not just recently when people tried to
investigate Him, but even from His boyhood.
The Landmark Letter
In the spiritual museum that they have in the
college which was opened about 15 days ago (most likely, September 24,
1987), there is a letter - a photocopy of a letter - that Baba wrote to
His elder brother when He was 21 years old. The date is there as 1947,
when there was no post office in Puttaparthi. The nearest post office
was five miles away. As you can see from the note paper, it talks of the
Bukkapatanam post office and not the Puttaparthi or Prashanti Nilayam
post office. It has also got a picture of Baba as He appeared at that
time.
His elder brother was rather disappointed with
Him because he had great hopes that he would pass His university
examinations and get into some cushy job whereas He had given up His
studies and was collecting people around Him, and was being lionized by
all sorts of people. He thought that He had strayed away from the usual
path of educated people in our country.
So he wrote to Him a letter protesting against
His behavior. And this letter was in reply to that. In that letter,
because His elder brother was a Telegu pundit, Baba wanted to go one
step over His elder brother and replied in poetry - His elder brother
also reveled in poetry. And there you will find Baba saying the purpose
of His coming.
He tells him, “You don’t understand Me. You
cannot understand Me.” And He says, “Not only you, but the whole world,
however they may try, whatever they may do, it’s not today, for however
long they may try, they cannot understand Me.”
God with No Name
“I have no name and I have no place
which I must claim as My own. I don’t belong to Puttaparthi, I don’t
belong to this place. I was not a native of this place or that.”
And He says, Ye Perutho Pilachenanu
Palakutunu - “I have no special
name; call Me by any name, I will answer.” Ye Uru
Teskonipoinanu Podhumu - “Which
ever place I am taken to, that is My place.”
Imagine a young man of twenty saying that He has
no name! That He will answer to everywhere. And that whichever place you
belong to now, that is His place. Every place is His place. If we see
the present and what it is becoming - the whole world is His place.
A ‘School Boy’s’ Care for Humanity
There is a poem that He had written there in
Telugu where He says:
“I have got a purpose for which I have
come; I have undertaken a great mission. I have resolved upon one thing
which I will carry out. And that is, I will give Ananda to the
entire mankind and save them through that Ananda.”
Now imagine this for a boy who has lived in
Puttaparthi – somebody has described it as a village which is five
minutes from the Stone Age – born in that village, and in a very poor
family. (Baba did not have money to even purchase buttons for His
shirts. And He used to have thorns collected from thorny plants – long
ones – and used them for His buttons). Imagine a boy born in such
circumstances; studying in a school up to what we call the fourth form
(grade) and leaving school after two months, during his fifth form. I
went to that school and inspected the admissions register and the
furniture. And sat on that same bench in which He was sitting when He
was studying. Think of a boy like that, in fourth form, two months and
into fifth form, talking of mankind?
Edgar Mitchell – the sixth man who walked on the
moon – and now a great follower of yoga, writes in his book that he has
seen earth as a spaceship from the moon. He speaks of the ecstasy that
he felt when he saw the earth from the moon - a beautiful precious blue
gem placed on dark velvet. He gives a beautiful description of the earth
from the moon. And in the next paragraph he writes about the agony that
he felt that man is not able to live upon this beautiful spot in peace!
“He hates and he exploits and he gives full vent to all his base
passions” he writes. Further he asks, “When will man think of mankind?
What we want is to rise from man to mankind.”
And here is a village boy, five minutes from the
Stone Age! Baba was saying that the first jeep that penetrated into
Puttaparthi was such a piece of curiosity that people asked the driver
if they could push it to some distance. And it was considered a great
example of status if you have pushed it a few feet. And even the elders
of the village took the chance to push the jeep a little and they were
very proud of what they had done. That was the type of culture and
development that Puttaparthi had. And a boy who grew in such
circumstances, talking of - “I have come
on a mission to give Ananda to entire mankind?”
“I have come on a Mission …"
And then
the next line in that poem is this:
|
“Those
who stray away from the righteous
path, from the path of dharma, I will
hold them by the hand and save them;
that is My vow. I have come on a
mission that you can’t understand. I
am not your brother; I am not your
Sathya Narayana Raju whom you can say:
‘Why are you throwing away your books?
Pass our B.A. degree examination and
become an officer in the government.’
No! I have no name. I have no native
place; I have come to give Ananda
(bliss) to entire mankind. I have come
to correct people from straying away
from the straight path - wherever they
may be, who ever they may be.”
|
|
And then the third line:
|
“I
have come to spread Love, Prema.”
How? “By removing the great grief of
people who are poor, distressed and
downtrodden. I will remove their grief
and give them what they lack. It may
be material means, or it may be
spiritual strength, whatever they
lack, I will give.”
|
|
You can say, Sai Baba is
famous for this. He will do this; this is His
greatness. But what is His greatness? What is it for
which He says, “I can say that I am even proud?” |
|
|
|
That is:
“Whoever worships Me with niyama
and nishta, with proper conditions; I will save them, I won’t
give them up.”
That is what the Gita says too: “Ananyas
Chintayantomam Ye Janah Paryupasathe, Tesham Nithyabhiyuktanam Yoga
Kshemam Vahamyaham.”
Lord Krishna declares, “Whoever thinks of me
incessantly, I will be always with them and look after their welfare
completely.”
Though, of course, Baba has given another
meaning to it. It is said, in the Gita you find quotes, but if you watch
Sai Baba and His activities and speeches, you will find them to be a
commentary on the Bhagavad Gita. Returning to this statement that
“Whoever worships Me with niyama and nishta under
certain conditions, I will never give them up. I will be always
protecting them, that is my ghanatha (greatness).”
The quote from the Gita says: “Whoever worships
me with single minded devotion; I will always be with them. And I will
give them happiness in this world and joy in the next.”
Now, this particular line has been explained by
Baba in another manner. “Ananyas Chintayantomam…” Ananya chinta
is usually explained as single minded, that is, ‘without any other
thought if they worship Me’; some people interpret it as without loyalty
to anybody else or without any other thought.
“They should not be worried by any other thought.
They must rely entirely on Me, dedicated entirely to Me.” That is the
usual meaning that is given to this quotation.
God and His Devotee are One!
But Baba says:
“No! That is not the meaning. “Ananya
chinta” means the thought that ‘He is different from Me’. That idea
of difference you should not have. If you worship Me, or adore Me, or
revere Me, without this thought: ‘He is different. I am separate. He is
He. I am I. And I am not He, He is not I. ’ If you do not have anya
chinta, the feeling that there is a separation between you and
another person, then I shall support and foster you.”
That is the new interpretation that Baba has
given. “He is another” this feeling you should not have, because there
is no another. We are all One. And if something happens to somebody, it
is as good as or as bad as happening to us.
That apart, what are these niyama and
nishtha? What are these conditions that Baba says, “which alone
will enable you to get My grace.” Of course He has later on explained
that it is not formal worship that He requires.
Purity, not Phalam and
Pushpam
In the Gita it is said: patram, pushpam,
phalam, toyam. Lord Krishna says, “That you can offer Me patram,
some leaf at least (bilva or tulsi); or pushpam,
some flower; or phalam, some fruit; or toyam, some
water for worship – that is enough for Me.”
But Baba says:
“No. Not even that patram, pushpam, phalam, toyam. What is the
use of patram which gets dried; or pushpam that fades;
or phalam that rots or toyam that evaporates? No. What
is wanted is the patram; the leaf that is your heart.”
He gives some meaning for all that and says that
what you must do to worship Him is only Sathya, Dharma, Shanti, and
Prema (Truth, Righteousness, Peace and Love). It is the inner
attitude that is. He doesn’t care whether you address Him as Rama,
Krishna, Shiva or Rajarajeshwari.
Once during the final day of Dasara – the ten
day period of the worship of God as a Mother, we worshipped Him. We made
Him sit and adored Him chanting the Lalitha Sahasranaama (1008
names of Mother Goddess). And He was sitting all the time.
“I have no
name and I have no place which I must claim as My own. I
don’t belong to Puttaparthi, I don’t belong to this place.
I was not a native of this place or that.”
|
|
Imagine, how is it possible for Him to tolerate
being worshipped as Mother Lalitha? Or being praised as God? Anybody’s
head would turn. Imagine if you and I were worshipped as God! I feel
miserable even when I am put on this extra height, and given a soft
cushion and kept at least fifteen feet away from you as if I am a very
important person who should not mix with you, or sit intimately with
you. So, how much more miserable should a man feel if he is not genuine,
and if he is simply made to sit twice a day, and you are praising Him as
Lord Rama, Krishna, Shiva, Mother Gauri and Saraswathi without end;
something must be wrong with his brains if he tolerates all that. But He
is very clear headed and a very competent person, and that itself is an
indication that He must be some phenomenon which you and I cannot
understand.
Coming back to niyama and nishtha,
His conditions for adoration and reverence are quite different. You may
belong to any religion; you may address Him by any name.
Finding a ‘Yogi’
As a matter of fact, some of you must have read
Arnold Schulman’s book. He has written a book called “Baba”. It is an
interesting book in where he says that he came over to India, and like
many tourists, he too had a list of things that he must see in India
like the Tajmahal, a cobra probably, a tiger hunt, and then a yogi.
So he saw everything except the yogi, and he
asked someone where he can find a yogi. And they said: “You go to
Whitefield.” And he came to this ‘yogi’ (Sai Baba). And that ‘yogi’
called him in for an interview. Inside the room there were others too,
and he got His vibhuti and it struck him as rather strange that simply
by a wave of His hand, this ‘yogi’ is able to get some white powder!
Then he heard Him ask somebody: “You’ve got appendicitis?” And then He
gave her some vibhuti. When he came out he asked: “Do you have
appendicitis?” The other person said, “Yes. But I didn’t tell Him!”
He thought it rather strange and he
congratulated himself that he had seen a ‘yogi’. Then he went back. And
he writes: “I went back to the familiar world of mouthwash and
deodorant.” Further he says, “I have been to India and I have seen the
much talked of yogis and I have found them to be a set of exploiters and
the disciples are psychopathic compulsives.” So he dismissed the whole
lot of gurus, teachers and yogis in India as systematic exploiters and
psychopathic compulsives. And then, Baba worked up on him.
Whenever He speaks, you must have observed that
He quotes or sings one poem. Once He started with a song about Himself.
Vishwamellada Vyapiyeevelayuvaadu. Which means, “He who is
present all over the world”. It is not exactly ‘world’, you may say, all
over the cosmos.
Measurements of Cosmic Dimensions
“I
have come to spread Love, Prema.” How? “By
removing the great grief of people who are poor,
distressed and downtrodden. I will remove their grief and
give them what they lack. It may be material means, or it
may be spiritual strength, whatever they lack, I will
give.”
|
|
When Baba went to East Africa and returned,
there was a big meeting to welcome Him home as if He had gone somewhere
across the seas. It was considered a great achievement by His devotees.
People ask me very often, “Has Baba gone to foreign countries?” Because
it is then that we value a person more. And when I say, “Yes, He has
been to Africa”, they rather look with quizzical eyes! Going to Africa
of all places! First, he should go to America and return, because we are
honored there! But Africa! But Baba first goes only to countries that
are just coming out of their colonial rule and are trying to find their
feet and are relatively poor.
To continue the story, at that public meeting, I
was translating His discourse in Telugu into English. The platform was
about thirty feet wide. He was at one end, I was on the other. And then
He started saying, “What is all this function that you have arranged? I
have been only to one of the rooms of My mansion! When the master of the
house comes from the drawing room to the dining room, you don’t make a
big fuss and say, ‘oh He has come from one room to another’ and we have
a meeting and garland Him, and then praise Him that He has come.” In
essence, He was saying all this is nonsense.
|
|
Then He used the word Prapancha mey na illu.
And I translated it. Of course, it is sometimes difficult to get
the right word quickly. So I said, “The world is My mansion.” And I was
rather proud that I used the word ‘mansion’ for ‘illu’. So I
was bucked up with myself and thought everybody will appreciate that
word. I didn’t say ‘house’ or ‘home’ or some of those common place
things, but a much better term - ‘mansion’. So I patted myself on the
back.
But then Baba turned to me and said, ‘No!” It is
difficult to translate Baba. Because He not only speaks in Telugu, but
He watches the English and tries to find out from where all the ideas
have come! You must have seen Dr. Bhagavantam (who used to translate
often in the 1970s) being corrected a number of times.
So, when He turned to me and said, “No!” It gave
me a shiver. “No! Not the world!” He said shaking His finger at me. And
then He proceeded towards me. I thought that was the end of it. I am no
good. He was going to ask me to clear out. Therefore, when He was
proceeding towards me, I also proceeded towards Him, because if He was
going to give me a slap or something it is better to receive it half way
than compel Him and make Him walk the whole distance! So I came right to
the center. And at the center, luckily there was no mike, so only I who
could hear what He said; otherwise the whole audience would have heard
it. But it was worth hearing.
The Master Supreme
He said,
“No! Not the world, but the Universe!” And, of course, I stood
aghast! Imagine a person, a five foot figure, standing before you and
saying, “The Universe is My mansion!” I was, in fact, ‘taller’
and ‘older’ than Him! More ‘educated’ you can say, translating His
speeches. It is something very thrilling that you could have a person of
that human form and size declaring: “No, not the world! The Universe!”
When He corrected me in that fashion, I simply fell at His feet. And
fifty thousand people watched this and wondered ‘What is this man
doing?’ Then He gently pulled me up by the shoulder and directed me
towards the mike and said, “Carry on your work.” Now, that is Baba.
(To be continued…)
Next Part >>