Mahavatar Babaji
Mahavatar Babaji
Mahavatar Babaji
Mahavatar Babaji (IAST: Mahvatr Bbj) is the name given to an Indian saint by Shymacharan Lahir and
several of his disciples
who met Mahavatar Babaji between 1861 and 1935. Some of these meetings were
described by Paramahansa Yogananda in his book Autobiography of a Yogi, including a first hand telling of
Yogananda's own meeting with Mahavatar Babaji.
Another first hand account was given by Yukteswar Giri in his
book The Holy Science. All of these accounts, along with additional meetings with Mahavatar Babaji, are
described in various biographies
of those mentioned by Yogananda.
Mahavatar Babaji's given name is unknown, so those who met him during that period all called him by the title
first given to him by Lahir.
"Mahavatar" means "great avatar", and "Babaji" simply means "revered father". Some
of the encounters included two or more witnessesdiscussions between those who met Mahavatar Babaji
indicate that they all met the same person.
Childhood
There are very few accounts of Babaji's childhood, one source of information is the book Babaji and the 18
Siddha Kriya Yoga tradition byMarshall Govindan. According to Govindan, Babaji was named Nagarajan (king of
serpents) by his parents. V.T. Neelakantan and S.A.A. Ramaiah founded on 17 October 1952, (they claim at
the request of Babaji) a new organisation, "Kriya Babaji Sangah," dedicated to the teaching of Babaji's Kriya
Yoga. They claim that in 1953 Mahavatar Babaji told them that he had been born on 30 November 203 CE in a
small coastal village now known as Parangipettai, in Tamil Nadu, India.
Babaji's Kriya Yoga Order of Acharyas
Trust (Kriya Babaji Sangah) and their branch organisations claim his place and date of birth.
He was a disciple
of Bogar and his birth name is Nagarajan.
In the writings of Paramahansa Yogananda in his Autobiography of a Yogi, many references were made to
Mahavatar Babaji including from Lahir and Yukteshwar.
In his book The Second Coming of Christ, Yogananda
states that Jesus Christ went to India and conferred with Mahavatar Babaji. This would make Babaji at least
2000 years old.
According to Govindan's book, Babaji Nagaraj's father was the priest of the village's temple.
Babaji revealed only those details which he believed to be formative as well as potentially instructive to his
disciples. Govindan mentioned one incident like this: "One time Nagaraj's mother had got one rare jackfruit for a
family feast and put it aside. Babaji was only 4 years old at that time. He found the jackfruit when his mother was
not around and ate it all. When his mother came to know about it, she flew in blind rage and stuffed a cloth
inside Babaji's mouth, nearly suffocating him, but he survived. Later on he thanked God for showing him that she
was to be loved without attachment or illusion. His Love for his mother became unconditional and detached."
When Nagaraj was about 5 years old, someone kidnapped him and sold him as a slave at Calcutta
(Now Kolkata). His new owner however was a kind man and he freed Nagaraj shortly thereafter. Nagaraj then
joined a small group of wandering sannysin due to their radiant faces and love for God. During the next few
years, he wandered from place to place, studying holy scriptures like
the Vedas, Upanishad,Mahabharata, Ramayana, Bhagavad Gita.
Quest for self realisation
According to Marshall Govindan's book, at the age of eleven, he made a difficult journey by foot and boat with a
group of ascetics toKataragama, Sri Lanka. Nagaraj met Siddha Bhogarnathar and became his disciple. Nagaraj
performed intensive yogic sadhana for a long time with him. Bhogarnather inspired Nagaraj to seek his initiation
into Kriya Kundalini Pranayam from Siddha Agastya. Babaji became a disciple of Siddha Agastya. Nagaraj was
initiated into the secrets of Kriya Kundalini Pranayama or "Vasi Yogam". Babaji made a long pilgrimage
to Badrinath and spent eighteen months practising yogic kriya taught to him by Siddha Agastya and
Bhogarnathar. Babaji attained self-realization shortly thereafter.
They (who?) also claim that these revelations were made by Babaji himself to S.A.A. Ramaiah, a young
graduate student in geology at the University of Madras and V.T. Neelakantan, a famous journalist, and close
student of Annie Besant, President of the Theosophical Society and mentor of Krishnamurti. Babaji was said to
have appeared to each of them independently and then brought them together to work for his Mission in 1942.
Reports of meetings, 18611966
Shymacharan Lahir
The first reported encounter with Mahavatar Babaji was in 1861, when Shymacharan Lahir (called "Mahsaya"
by disciples, devotees, and admirers) was posted to Ranikhet in his work as an accountant for the British
government. One day while walking in the hills of Dunagiriabove Ranikhet, he heard a voice calling his name.
Following the voice up the mountain, he met a "tall, divinely radiant sadhu."
He was amazed to find that the
sadhu knew his name.
This sadhu was Mahavatar Babaji.
Mahavatar Babaji told Lahir that he was his guru from the past, then initiated him into Kriya Yoga and instructed
Lahiri to initiate others. Lahiri wanted to remain with Mahavatar Babaji, who told him instead that he must return
to the world to teach Kriya Yoga and that "Kriya Yoga sadhana would spread through the people of the world
through his (Lahiri's) presence in the world."
Lahir reported that Mahavatar Babaji did not give his name or background, so Lahiri gave him the title
"Mahavatar Babaji." Many sadhus in India are called Babaji, and sometimes even "Babaji Maharaj", which has
caused confusion between Mahavatar Babaji and other sadhus with similar names.
Lahir had many meetings with Mahavatar Babaji, recounted in several books, including Paramhansa
Yogananda's Autobiography of a Yogi, Yogiraj Shyama Charan Lahiri Mahasaya (Lahiri's biography),
and Purana Purusha: Yogiraj Sri Shama Churn Lahiri, among others.
The references of Sri Lahiri mahasaya in Sampoorna sri pada vallabha charitam, as the guru of Sri Shirdi sai
baba and initiating him to kriya yoga.
Disciples of Shymacharan Lahir
Several disciples of Shymacharan Lahir also said that they had met Babaji. Through discussion with each
other, and the fact that some of these encounters included two or more witnesses, they confirmed that the
person they saw was the same sadhu that Lahir called Mahavatar Babaji.
In 1894, at the Kumbha Mela in Allahabad, Yukteswar Giri, a disciple of Lahir, met Mahavatar Babaji. He was
surprised by the striking resemblance between Lahir and Mahavatar Babaji.
Others who met Babaji also
commented on the resemblance.
It was at this meeting that Mahavatar Babaji instructed Sri Yukteswar to write
the book that was to become Kaivalya Darshanam, or The Holy Science. Yukteswar had two more meetings with
Mahavatar Babaji, including one in the presence of Lahiri Mahasaya.
Pranabananda Giri, another disciple of Lahir, also met Mahavatar Babaji in the presence of Lahir, at Lahir's
home. Pranavananda asked Mahavatar Babaji his age. Mahavatar Babaji responded that he was about 500
years old at that time.
Keshabananda, a disciple of Lahir, tells of meeting Mahavatar Babaji in the mountains near Badrinath around
1935, after he became lost wandering in the mountains.
At that meeting, Pranabananda reported that Babaji
gave him a message for Paramahansa Yogananda, that "I won't see him this time, as he is eagerly hoping; but I
shall see him on some other occasion."
In his book Autobiography of a Yogi, Paramahansa Yogananda wrote
that Mahavatar Babaji visited him before his journey to America and addressed him saying, "You are the one I
have chosen to spread the message of Kriya Yoga in the West."
Other disciples of Lahir who reported meetings with Mahavatar Babaji include Kebalananda Giri
and Ram
Gopal Muzumdar, who recounted meeting Mahavatar Babaji and his sister, whom he called Mataji.
In addition, a
disciple of Trailanga Swami, Shankari Mata (also called Shankari Mai Jiew) met Mahavatar Babaji while visiting
Lahiri Mahasaya.
Traditional legends
Puja is being conducted to the idol of Babaji Mahavatar
Legendary powers and age have been attributed to Mahavatar Babaji by the disciples of Lahir. These stories
have led many to believe that Mahavatar Babaji is a legendary person, rather than a real sadhu that was seen
by numerous witnesses from 1861 to 1935.
Paramahansa Yogananda, in his Autobiography, described Mahavatar Babaji's role on earth:
The Mahavatar is in constant communion with Christ; together they send out vibrations of redemption, and have
planned the spiritual technique of salvation for this age. The work of these two fully-illumined mastersone with
the body, and one without itis to inspire the nations to forsake suicidal wars, race hatreds, religious
sectarianism, and the boomerang-evils of materialism. Babaji is well aware of the trend of modern times,
especially of the influence and complexities of Western civilization, and realizes the necessity of spreading the
self-liberations of yoga equally in the West and in the East.
In addition, Babaji is reputed to be ageless, according to some accounts, and about 500 years old around the
late 1800s, according to Pranabananda.
Yogananda reports that, according to the disciples of Lahir, nobody
knows Babaji's age, family, place of birth, true name, or other details "dear to the annalist's heart."
According to Yogananda's autobiography, he has a sister called Mataji (meaning "Holy Mother") who also has
lived throughout the centuries. Her level of spiritual attainment is comparable to her brother's, and she lives in a
state of spiritual ecstasy in an underground cave. Although only three pages in the book are dedicated to her,
she is described by Ram Gopal as "young and surpassingly lovely" as well as a "glorious woman."
Yogananda frequently prayed out loud to "Babaji-Krishna."
Modern claims and popular references
Mahavatar Babaji was one of the many people featured on the cover of The Beatles' 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band.
In Book 3 of Conversations with God (1998), by Neale Donald Walsch, it is suggested that Babaji may at one
time have resurrected himself from the dead.
In the Book Ultimate Journey (1994), by Robert Monroe Monroe visits a person through his astral projection
(although no name is mentioned) who turns out to have lived one single life for 1800 years, which would suggest
that he was born around 203 CE.
The 2002 Tamil film Baba written by Rajinikanth was based on Babaji. Swami Maheshwarananda writes in his
book The hidden power in humans, that the Guru of the legendary Babaji is Sri Alakh Puriji.
In his autobiography Apprenticed to a Himalayan master: a yogi's autobiography (2010), Sri M (Mumtaz Ali)
narrates his meeting with Babaji near Neelkant hill.
In his book, Sri M gave description of Babaji as golden
complexioned, bare-bodied, except for a shinning white loin cloth that barely reached the knees, and flowing
brown hair that fell to his shoulders. He mentioned that a lovely scent emanated from Babaji and he looked
divine.
The rock band Supertramp composed a song called "Babaji" in reference to Mahavatar Babaji.