Sathyam Sivam Sundaram Volume 4
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Prof. N. Kasturi, who had the extreme fortune of being close to Bhagawan Baba, has brought out in this volume the life story of the Divine Avatar from 1973 to 1979. For those, who are unaware of Baba’s might, this book will reveal His mahimas and leelas.
Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba
Sri Sathya Sai Baba was born as Sathyanarayana Raju on November 23rd, 1926 in the village of Puttaparthi, in the state of Andhra Pradesh in South India. Even as a child, His spiritual inclination and contemplative nature set Him apart from other children of His age, and He was known as 'Guru' and "Brahmajnani' among His peers and others in the village. On October 20th, 1940, He made the historic declaration of His Avatarhood and the world at large learnt of this divine phenomenon. Today, millions of devotees worship Him as an 'Avatar' and an incarnation of the Sai Baba of Shirdi.Revealing the purpose of His Advent, Sai Baba has said that He has come to re-establish the rhythm of righteousness in the world and repair the ancient highway to God, which over the years has systematically deteriorated.Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba is an integral manifestation who combines two very significant roles. Firstly, He is a great spiritual Master, famed for His simple and sweet exposition of the greatest and most intricate of spiritual truths which form the fundamental teachings of all the religions of the world. His formula for man to lead a meaningful life is the five-fold path of Sathya, Dharma, Shanthi, Prema, and Ahimsa. Love for God, fear of sin and morality in society - these are His prescriptions for our ailing world.Secondly, He is an inexhaustible reservoir of pure love. His numerous service projects, be it free hospitals, free schools and colleges, free drinking water supply or free housing projects, all stand testimony to His selfless love and compassion for the needy and less privileged. True to His declaration - "My Life is My Message", He has inspired and continues to inspire millions of His devotees worldwide by His personal example to live the ideal that service to man is service to God.Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba is a beacon of hope in the world. A devotee said, "Bhagawan Baba is nothing but Love walking on two feet."
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Sathyam Sivam Sundaram Volume 4 - Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba
Sathyam Sivam Sundaram
Volume 4
Life Story Of Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba
1973-1979
By
Prof. N. Kasturi, M.A., B.L.
Sri Sathya Sai Sadhana Trust, Publications Division
Prasanthi Nilayam - 515 134
Anantapur District, Andhra Pradesh, INDIA
STD: 08555 ISD: 91-8555 Phone: 287375 Fax: 287236
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.srisathyasaipublications.org, www.sanathanasarathi.org, www.saireflections.org
© Sri Sathya Sai Sadhana Trust, Publications Division; All rights reserved.
The copyright and the rights of translation in any language are reserved by the Publishers. No part, passage, text or photograph or artwork of this book should be reproduced, transmitted or utilised, in original language or by translation, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photo copying, recording or by any information, storage and retrieval system without the express and prior permission, in writing from the Convener, Sri Sathya Sai Sadhana Trust, Publications Division, Prasanthi Nilayam, Andhra Pradesh India - Pin Code 515134, except for brief passages quoted in book review.
This e-book is commercially licensed for you only. This e-book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
First Edition: 20th October, 2014 (20/10/2014)
ISBN: 978-93-5069-095-6
Paperback ISBN: 978-81-7208-678-7
Published By
The Convener,
Sri Sathya Sai Sadhana Trust, Publications Division
Prasanthi Nilayam, India, Pin Code – 515134
STD : 08555 ISD: 91-8555 Phone: 287375 Fax: 287236
Distributed By Smashwords
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Publisher’s Note
Baba is Himself an open book, with no mystery, pomp, or abstruseness about Him and everyone can approach Him and secure His grace,
says Sri N. Kasturi, author of this series, Sathyam Sivam Sundaram. In this series, which is divided into four parts, the author brings out the life history of the Divine Avatar from His birth in 1926 to 1979. Sri Kasturi, who had the extreme fortune of being close to Baba, shares His mahimas and leelas with the readers. The first part of this book was placed in the hands of the readers in 1961.
The need for the revised and enlarged edition was felt by the publisher for more comfortable reading, especially by the elderly readers. As a result, these volumes are brought out in larger format, with computerised typesetting using larger typeface, better line spacing, and with a number of photographs.
With these changes, it is hoped that all spiritual seekers will benefit and enjoy reading this series.
Convener
Sri Sathya Sai Books & Publications Trust,
Prasanthi Nilayam
Words Of Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba Taken From Biography
My mission is to grant you courage and joy, to drive away weakness and fear. Do not condemn yourselves as sinners; sin is a misnomer for what are really errors, provided you repent sincerely and resolve not to follow evil again. Pray to the Lord to give you the strength, to overcome the habits, which had enticed you when you were ignorant.
****
I have come to guide and bless those, who undergo the discipline and practice leading to Divine union. I am neither man, nor woman, old nor young. I am all these.
****
You may be seeing Me for the first time, today, but you are all old acquaintances for Me. I know you through and through. My task is the spiritual regeneration of Humanity, through truth and love. If you approach one step nearer to Me, I shall advance three steps towards you.
****
I have not started the work, for which I have come, for I am still in the stage of preliminary reconnaissance. When I start my campaign, the whole world will know of it and benefit by it.
He, who understands the significance of My Divine Birth and My Divine deeds, will overcome the cycle of Birth and Death and attain Me.
Gita - IV-9
He is the sub-stratum, the substance; the separate and the sum, the Sat; the SATHYAM.
He is the awareness, the activity, the consciousness, the feeling; the willing and the doing, the Chit; the SIVAM.
He is the light, the splendour; the harmony, the melody, the Ananda; the SUNDARAM.
Contents
Publisher’s Note
Bhagawan’s Words
Between You And Me
The Songs He Sings
1. In Confidence
2. Love On The March
3. The Call And The Echo
4. Words With Wings
5. Moves In His Game
6. Closer And Closer
7. Dabbling And Diving
8. Tomorrow
Between You And Me
I should apologise for allowing ten eventful years to pass by, since placing Volume III of Sathyam Sivam Sundaram in your hands, before doing the same with Volume IV, although Bhagawan has been keeping me alive and attentive beyond my expectations. But, since I have never felt that I am the writer, I plead ‘not guilty’ and desist.
It has become well-nigh impossible to keep pace with the ever-expanding manifoldness of the manifestation of Divinity that is Sai. That almighty Love overwhelms us into blissful silence; the all-encompassing Power that makes us aware of our inadequacies. Nevertheless, the Divinity in us draws us to Him, even while He seeks us, the straying as well as the steady ones, to keep us In His cosy custody.
Lord Krishna describes to Arjuna those, who have received the impact of His grace, thus:
My sweetness has soaked into every level of their consciousness. They live in Me, by Me, for Me. They take delight in narrating stories, centred on My sport and My compassion. They share with others the love, the wisdom, and the power I impart and all reap immense gain, thereby.
I invite you to participate in this holy sharing. Travel from page to page as a pilgrim, with humility, faith, and hope, tarrying at every turn to fill your hearts with visions of the many-turreted Citadel of God and God Himself. With each vision of His glory, we shall gain nearness and dearness to Him, who has come to accept us as His own nearest and dearest.
N.Kasturi
The Songs He Sings
Thirty-five years ago, when Baba was emerging from teenage, He sang this song, while at the Mandir (temple) on the outskirts of the village where He was born. He has been, since childhood, a stream of sweetness, singing His way into the hearts of all around Him. Since He was not of the Earth, but very concerned to transform the Earth into Heaven, His songs then, as now, were designed as a call to man to benefit from the mystery, the majesty, and the magnificence of His incarnation. This song, in Telugu, emerged from Him spontaneously, on the morning of Vaikuntha Ekadasi (the holy day in the Hindu calendar, celebrating the opening of the Doors of Heaven), in 1945, while devotees were busily stringing thick garlands of tulsi (basil) leaves, to worship Him.
I have heard it sung since 1948, by those, to whom He dictated it. It was also printed in 1946, along with other songs sung by Baba in those early days, at Venkatagiri, by the Raja Saheb.
"Chootaamu, Ra Ra," it exhorts us. Come! We shall see! Come! Awake!
it warns. Arise!
it commands. Advance!
it pleads. And through this song, in cosmic compassion, the call comes to each one of us, even today.
Come brothers! Come sisters! We shall go
To holy Puttaparthi now. It seems
He wears a lovely robe of orange silk.
His is heavenly glory; He is the Lord Himself
He calls to give us freedom.
He says, they say, I shall shower grace.
On the Chitravati sands,
In the shadow of the hill,
This Baba, they say, daily reveals
That He is God in human form.
It seems He was at Shirdi last
And is here, for our sake, again.
Come brothers! Come sisters! We shall go.
They say He waves His hands
As He often did, while there.
‘Tis said they offer all you ask of Him.
He is, they say, Siva and Rama,
Krishna and Maruti, too.
All forms of God are one in Him;
You can see Him as such and such,
When you are good and true.
For the darshan of the Lord.
Join us, you uppish pseudo-wise,
And learn a little of His glory.
He digs His fingers into a heap of sand,
With a chuckle on the lip
And a twinkle in the eye;
Wet balls of sand become laddus round!
From far, far away, some dim-eyed dons
Pronounce it magic, mantra, tantra.
Be deaf to them; get up and start.
Don’t reckon hardships; the reward is great.
In Parthi Mandir, now on this Holy day,
Tulsi leaves are strung into garlands galore,
While He sings this song to bless the happy throng.
This call has brought the world to Puttaparthi, where the Third World Conference delegates, numbering about ten thousand, from various units of the Sri Sathya Sai Seva Samiti, are meeting during the Birthday festival, 1980.
This tulsi leaf - Volume IV of Sathyam Sivam
Sundaram - is offered at His Lotus feet by a humble garland stringer.
N. Kasturi
Prasanthi Nilayam
27-7-1980 (Guru Purnima)
Chapter 1
In Confidence
From Baba, His Story
At Ootacamund in the Nilgiri Hills, when the Summer Course on Indian culture and Spirituality for college students came to a close, Baba held an exclusive session with the student participants. He was then in an unusually jovial and reminiscent mood. He desired to thrill the students with an account of His early days at school, so that they might realise that His oft-quoted statement, 'My Life is My Message', was true, even when He was physically emerging into boyhood and even before He had announced His advent as an Avatar.
He related to them how He moved among His cousins and classmates, His teachers and comrades, and also, the villagers of Puttaparthi, Bukkapatnam, Uravakonda, and Kamalapuram. He would exhort them to ponder over this chapter of His story and implant in their hearts the ideals He had placed before Himself, even as a child. When the summer course of 1978, held at Bangalore, concluded, students, who had heard of the Ootacamund discourse, pleaded with Him to disclose to them episodes of His boyhood days, at school and outside, in which He provided glimpses of His Leela (divine play) and Baba graciously revealed to them a few more incidents of the past, which laid bare His mission and His divinity.
In the pages of Volume I of this series, I have mentioned that even as a child of five summers, He had earned the epithets, ‘Guru’ and ‘Brahmagnyani’, because He corrected and counselled the children, who gathered around Him as playmates, and because His conversation and conduct were on a level of consciousness higher than even the adults, who sought to guide Him.
Even as a child and later, at school, He was meek, but morally fearless, abhorred violence, vengefulness, and falsehood, and preferred simple living to gaudiness and ostentation. He could easily sing, dance, and compose hymns and poems, while other children of the same age were still struggling with the first few letters of the alphabet. He also demonstrated ready compassion for birds and animals. He avoided meat and eggs, and shed tears of sympathy, when drought animals, like bullocks, were mercilessly beaten. He stood forth as the leader of a band of children, to whom He taught the ways of God and the means to win His grace.
He stayed most days at the house of the karnam (village accountant), where the mistress, Subbamma, tended Him with maternal care. Baba sought shelter in her affection, in order to avoid the sight of slaughtering fowl in His family home nearby and to watch the puja (worship) conducted by that Brahmin lady, in the room set apart for ceremonial rites. Baba never played truant at school. Rather, He relished the company of children, whom He helped to get the best out of school.
Towards Upper Primary School
At Ootacamund, Baba narrated the story of a journey in a crowded cart, drawn by a pair of bullocks from Puttaparthi to Bukkapatnam and from Bukkapatnam to Penukonda, sixteen miles away. He was then ten years old. He and the other children could scarcely squeeze into the cart; a few spilled over. They were in the lower primary class and could join the upper primary school, only when they had passed an examination which was to be held at Penukonda town. There were eighteen children in all, overcrowding the vehicle. Whenever the road rose to negotiate a bump or a hill, the bullocks could not drag the cart behind them. So, the children were pulled out and made to walk up. There was also no brake to hold the cart in check, as it rolled downhill and, as a consequence, the children had to walk the road downhill, also! The children were sent to the ‘distant, unfamiliar town’ from their homes, after propitiatory prayers to the family deities, prayers that were also meant to help them pass the examination.
At Penukonda, they stayed together and the teachers, who led them, gave last minute lessons. Baba agreed to be in charge of the kitchen. Lunch and dinner for the party were cooked by Him and He did not demand or welcome help from anyone. This arrangement continued on all the three days of the examination. Baba had no time to revise His texts, nor could He attend the special classes held by the teachers. Yet, when the results were announced a few weeks later, He happened to be the only candidate declared fit to proceed to the upper primary school! The good people of Bukkapatnam, the village three miles away, warmly welcomed Baba into the school situated in their village, taking Him through the streets on a chair, placed on a flower-bedecked cart that was drawn by caparisoned bullocks, right up to the door-step of the school. They were all happy, even proud, that the wonder-boy of Puttaparthi, already famous as ‘God’s Son’, was attending classes in their school.
Baba was the cynosure of all eyes, at Bukkapatnam. Though He seldom listened to the lessons and rarely opened His textbooks, He was hailed as the brightest pupil of His class. This drew upon Him the envious looks of the ones, who trudged along with Him every day, from Puttaparthi. They often overpowered Him physically, while on the Chitravati sands and dragged Him along, ruffling His shirt and knickers, and damaging them out of shape. When the Chitravati was flowing, they dowsed Him with gusto. Baba said that, He neither protested, nor complained, but bore all this as the pardonable sport of ignorant youngsters. He refused to name any of the tormentors, nor did He bear any ill-will against them.
As Monitor
In those days, every classroom echoed with the swish of the teacher’s cane, which was busy falling on the backs or palms of the luckless, little brats. When the teacher got too exhausted to inflict the punishment, this privilege was transferred to the brightest boy in the class. Baba said that, one day, the question presented before the pupils was, Describe the glory of India.
The answer had to be in English. The other boys knew little of India and less of English. Baba, however, tersely, but confidently replied, Consisting of high mountains, large rivers with many branches, and many plains, India is beautiful with all these grand contents.
Baba, then, related to us details of the rest of this episode, "The punishment the others deserved, according to the teacher, was My slapping them on their cheeks. I was to hold their noses tight with the left hand and then, give them the resounding slaps. There were about thirty students in the class, some far taller than me, and I had to climb upon a bench to fulfil My most unpleasant and unpopular duty. But, I could not bring Myself to slap them as forcibly as the teacher wanted and My blows fell softly on their cheeks. So, the teacher was angered. He called Me near and shouted, ‘Did I want You to apply haldi (turmeric, used as a cosmetic) to their cheeks? I asked You to beat them. I shall show You how.’ He held My nose and counted the slaps he gave Me, about thirty or so, before he stopped. I bore it all in silence, for a teacher should not be insulted or let down. It was My fault for having annulled, by softness, the purpose of the punishment he desired to inflict, however absurd the prize for My superior knowledge of Indian geography and history."
Baba disclosed that, being the monitor of the class, He was burdened with duties and clothed in authority. I undertook to show the students and the monitors of other classes, how a monitor should conduct himself. I would reach school a few minutes earlier than the rest. I cleaned the blackboard before the class commenced and often, had to clean even the benches and desks,
Baba explained. "Rama sat at the feet of Vashishta and attended class with other boys. Krishna, too, had Sandeepani as His guru, while Sudama and others were His classmates. When the formless, attribute-less Divine Principle takes human form and appears among men, It has to conduct Itself as an agreeable companion and as an understandable example to contemporaries."
In His discourses, Baba confirmed that He had ‘willed’ the incident at the Bukkapatnam school, when the chair stuck to the posterior of Kondappa, one of His teachers. He confessed that His intention in reducing him to a ridiculous figure, was not to avenge His having been made to stand up on the bench for hours. He had designed it only to reveal a little of His uniqueness, give a glimpse of His divinity, and to make the world around Him sit up and ask, Who is this boy?
When Kondappa’s hour of teaching was over, he naturally had to vacate the chair for Mehboob Khan, who was to take the next class, but he could not get up, because the chair stuck to him. The boys suggested that the calamity had happened, because Sathya was punished. Then, Mehboob Khan, who loved and adored Baba and who had glimpses of His Divinity, revealed to Kondappa, You do not understand. Raju is not an ordinary person; He is a divine boy and I have seen divine brilliance in Him, many times. Withdraw the punishment you have given Him, immediately and your own punishment will disappear.
Then, Mehboob Khan asked Baba to step down from the bench and Kondappa too could get up and walk away.
The Classmates
Swami narrated the events at Uravakonda (about thirty miles away from Anantapur), where He spent about two years with His elder brother, who was a teacher of the Telugu language in the high school there. I myself visited Uravakonda, a year and a half ago. There, I walked along the long, broad verandas of the high school, hallowed by His footprints. I spent some time in the room, which was once His classroom and sat on the same desk that had been used by Him as a student - a bench cum-writing desk, with a makeshift shelf underneath the incline of the top. Three pupils could sit on each bench with their books in the bottom shelf. I sat on the bench and imagined little Baba seated next