"Guruji, I am glad to find you alone this morning." I
had just arrived at the Serampore hermitage, carrying a fragrant burden
of fruit and roses. Sri Yukteswar glanced at me meekly.
"What is your question?" Master looked about the room as though
he were seeking escape.
"Guruji, I came to you as a high-school youth; now I am a grown man,
even with a gray hair or two. Though you have showered me with silent
affection from the first hour to this, do you realize that once only, on
the day of meeting, have you ever said, 'I love you'?" I looked at him
pleadingly.
Master lowered his gaze. "Yogananda, must I bring out into the cold
realms of speech the warm sentiments best guarded by the wordless
heart?"
"Guruji, I know you love me, but my mortal ears ache to hear you say
so."
"Be it as you wish. During my married life I often yearned for a son,
to train in the yogic path. But when you came into my life, I was
content; in you I have found my son." Two clear teardrops stood in Sri
Yukteswar's eyes. "Yogananda, I love you always."
"Your answer is my passport to heaven." I felt a weight lift from my
heart, dissolved forever at his words. Often had I wondered at his
silence. Realizing that he was unemotional and self-contained, yet
sometimes I feared I had been unsuccessful in fully satisfying him. His
was a strange nature, never utterly to be known; a nature deep and
still, unfathomable to the outer world, whose values he had long
transcended.
A few days later, when I spoke before a huge audience at Albert Hall
in Calcutta, Sri Yukteswar consented to sit beside me on the platform,
with the Maharaja of Santosh and the Mayor of Calcutta. Though Master
made no remark to me, I glanced at him from time to time during my
address, and thought I detected a pleased twinkle in his eyes.
Then came a talk before the alumni of Serampore College. As I gazed
upon my old classmates, and as they gazed on their own "Mad Monk," tears
of joy showed unashamedly. My silver-tongued professor of philosophy,
Dr. Ghoshal, came forward to greet me, all our past misunderstandings
dissolved by the alchemist Time.
A Winter Solstice Festival was celebrated at the end of
December in the Serampore hermitage. As always, Sri Yukteswar's
disciples gathered from far and near. Devotional sankirtans,
solos in the nectar-sweet voice of Kristo-da, a feast served by young
disciples, Master's profoundly moving discourse under the stars in the
thronged courtyard of the ashrammemories, memories! Joyous festivals of
years long past! Tonight, however, there was to be a new feature.
"Yogananda, please address the assemblagein English." Master's eyes
were twinkling as he made this doubly unusual request; was he thinking
of the shipboard predicament that had preceded my first lecture in
English? I told the story to my audience of brother disciples, ending
with a fervent tribute to our guru.
"His omnipresent guidance was with me not alone on the ocean
steamer," I concluded, "but daily throughout my fifteen years in the
vast and hospitable land of America."
After the guests had departed, Sri Yukteswar called me to the same
bedroom whereonce only, after a festival of my early yearsI had been
permitted to sleep on his wooden bed. Tonight my guru was sitting there
quietly, a semicircle of disciples at his feet. He smiled as I quickly
entered the room.
"Yogananda, are you leaving now for Calcutta? Please return here
tomorrow. I have certain things to tell you."
The next afternoon, with a few simple words of blessing,
Sri Yukteswar bestowed on me the further monastic title of
Paramhansa.1
"It now formally supersedes your former title of
swami," he said as I knelt before him. With a silent chuckle I
thought of the struggle which my American students would undergo over
the pronunciation of Paramhansaji.2
"My task on
earth is now finished; you must carry on." Master spoke quietly, his
eyes calm and gentle. My heart was palpitating in fear.
"Please send someone to take charge of our ashram at Puri," Sri
Yukteswar went on. "I leave everything in your hands. You will be able
to successfully sail the boat of your life and that of the organization
to the divine shores."
In tears, I was embracing his feet; he rose and blessed me
endearingly.
The following day I summoned from Ranchi a disciple,
Swami Sebananda, and sent him to Puri to assume the hermitage duties.3
Later my guru discussed with me the legal details of settling his
estate; he was anxious to prevent the possibility of litigation by
relatives, after his death, for possession of his two hermitages and
other properties, which he wished to be deeded over solely for
charitable purposes.
"Arrangements were recently made for Master to visit
Kidderpore,4
but he failed to go." Amulaya Babu, a brother disciple, made
this remark to me one afternoon; I felt a cold wave of premonition. To
my pressing inquiries, Sri Yukteswar only replied, "I shall go to
Kidderpore no more." For a moment, Master trembled like a frightened
child.
("Attachment to bodily residence, springing up of its
own nature [i.e., arising from immemorial roots, past experiences of
death]," Patanjali wrote,5
"is present in slight degree even in great saints." In some of his
discourses on death, my guru had been wont to add: "Just as a long-caged
bird hesitates to leave its accustomed home when the door is opened.")
"Guruji," I entreated him with a sob, "don't say that! Never utter
those words to me!"
Sri Yukteswar's face relaxed in a peaceful smile. Though nearing his
eighty-first birthday, he looked well and strong.
Basking day by day in the sunshine of my guru's love, unspoken but
keenly felt, I banished from my conscious mind the various hints he had
given of his approaching passing.
"Sir, the Kumbha Mela is convening this month at
Allahabad." I showed Master the mela dates in a Bengali almanac.6
"Do you really want to go?"
Not sensing Sri Yukteswar's reluctance to have me leave
him, I went on, "Once you beheld the blessed sight of Babaji at an
Allahabad kumbha. Perhaps this time I shall be fortunate enough
to see him."
"I do not think you will meet him there." My guru then fell into
silence, not wishing to obstruct my plans.
When I set out for Allahabad the following day with a
small group, Master blessed me quietly in his usual manner. Apparently I
was remaining oblivious to implications in Sri Yukteswar's attitude
because the Lord wished to spare me the experience of being forced,
helplessly, to witness my guru's passing. It has always happened in my
life that, at the death of those dearly beloved by me, God has
compassionately arranged that I be distant from the scene.7
Our party reached the Kumbha Mela on January 23,
1936. The surging crowd of nearly two million persons was an impressive
sight, even an overwhelming one. The peculiar genius of the Indian
people is the reverence innate in even the lowliest peasant for the
worth of the Spirit, and for the monks and sadhus who have forsaken
worldly ties to seek a diviner anchorage. Imposters and hypocrites there
are indeed, but India respects all for the sake of the few who illumine
the whole land with supernal blessings. Westerners who were viewing the
vast spectacle had a unique opportunity to feel the pulse of the land,
the spiritual ardor to which India owes her quenchless vitality before
the blows of time.
The first day was spent by our group in sheer staring. Here were
countless bathers, dipping in the holy river for remission of sins;
there we saw solemn rituals of worship; yonder were devotional offerings
being strewn at the dusty feet of saints; a turn of our heads, and a
line of elephants, caparisoned horses and slow-paced Rajputana camels
filed by, or a quaint religious parade of naked sadhus, waving scepters
of gold and silver, or flags and streamers of silken velvet.
Anchorites wearing only loincloths sat quietly in little groups,
their bodies besmeared with the ashes that protect them from the heat
and cold. The spiritual eye was vividly represented on their foreheads
by a single spot of sandalwood paste. Shaven-headed swamis appeared by
the thousands, ocher-robed and carrying their bamboo staff and begging
bowl. Their faces beamed with the renunciate's peace as they walked
about or held philosophical discussions with disciples.
Here and there under the trees, around huge piles of
burning logs, were picturesque sadhus,8
their hair braided and massed in coils on top of their heads. Some wore
beards several feet in length, curled and tied in a knot. They meditated
quietly, or extended their hands in blessing to the passing
throngbeggars, maharajas on elephants, women in multicolored saris
their bangles and anklets tinkling, fakirs with thin arms held
grotesquely aloft, brahmacharis carrying meditation elbow-props,
humble sages whose solemnity hid an inner bliss. High above the din we
heard the ceaseless summons of the temple bells.
On our second mela day my companions and I
entered various ashrams and temporary huts, offering pronams to
saintly personages. We received the blessing of the leader of the
Giri branch of the Swami Ordera thin, ascetical monk with eyes of
smiling fire. Our next visit took us to a hermitage whose guru had
observed for the past nine years the vows of silence and a strict
fruitarian diet. On the central dais in the ashram hall sat a blind
sadhu, Pragla Chakshu, profoundly learned in the shastras and
highly revered by all sects.
After I had given a brief discourse in Hindi on
Vedanta, our group left the peaceful hermitage to greet a near-by
swami, Krishnananda, a handsome monk with rosy cheeks and impressive
shoulders. Reclining near him was a tame lioness. Succumbing to the
monk's spiritual charmnot, I am sure, to his powerful physique!the
jungle animal refuses all meat in favor of rice and milk. The swami has
taught the tawny-haired beast to utter "Aum" in a deep,
attractive growla cat devotee!
Our next encounter, an interview with a learned young sadhu, is well
described in Mr. Wright's sparkling travel diary.
"We rode in the Ford across the very low Ganges on a creaking pontoon
bridge, crawling snakelike through the crowds and over narrow, twisting
lanes, passing the site on the river bank which Yoganandaji pointed out
to me as the meeting place of Babaji and Sri Yukteswarji. Alighting from
the car a short time later, we walked some distance through the
thickening smoke of the sadhus' fires and over the slippery sands to
reach a cluster of tiny, very modest mud-and-straw huts. We halted in
front of one of these insignificant temporary dwellings, with a pygmy
doorless entrance, the shelter of Kara Patri, a young wandering sadhu
noted for his exceptional intelligence. There he sat, cross-legged on a
pile of straw, his only coveringand incidentally his only
possessionbeing an ocher cloth draped over his shoulders.
"Truly a divine face smiled at us after we had crawled
on all fours into the hut and pronamed at the feet of this
enlightened soul, while the kerosene lantern at the entrance flickered
weird, dancing shadows on the thatched walls. His face, especially his
eyes and perfect teeth, beamed and glistened. Although I was puzzled by
the Hindi, his expressions were very revealing; he was full of
enthusiasm, love, spiritual glory. No one could be mistaken as to his
greatness.
"Imagine the happy life of one unattached to the material world; free
of the clothing problem; free of food craving, never begging, never
touching cooked food except on alternate days, never carrying a begging
bowl; free of all money entanglements, never handling money, never
storing things away, always trusting in God; free of transportation
worries, never riding in vehicles, but always walking on the banks of
the sacred rivers; never remaining in one place longer than a week in
order to avoid any growth of attachment.
"Such a modest soul! unusually learned in the Vedas,
and possessing an M.A. degree and the title of Shastri (master of
scriptures) from Benares University. A sublime feeling pervaded me as I
sat at his feet; it all seemed to be an answer to my desire to see the
real, the ancient India, for he is a true representative of this land of
spiritual giants."
I questioned Kara Patri about his wandering life. "Don't you have any
extra clothes for winter?"
"No, this is enough."
"Do you carry any books?"
"No, I teach from memory those people who wish to hear me."
"What else do you do?"
"I roam by the Ganges."
At these quiet words, I was overpowered by a yearning for the
simplicity of his life. I remembered America, and all the
responsibilities that lay on my shoulders.
"No, Yogananda," I thought, sadly for a moment, "in this life roaming
by the Ganges is not for you."
After the sadhu had told me a few of his spiritual realizations, I
shot an abrupt question.
"Are you giving these descriptions from scriptural lore, or from
inward experience?"
"Half from book learning," he answered with a straightforward smile,
"and half from experience."
We sat happily awhile in meditative silence. After we had left his
sacred presence, I said to Mr. Wright, "He is a king sitting on a throne
of golden straw."
We had our dinner that night on the mela grounds
under the stars, eating from leaf plates pinned together with sticks.
Dishwashings in India are reduced to a minimum!
Two more days of the fascinating kumbha; then
northwest along the Jumna banks to Agra. Once again I gazed on the Taj
Mahal; in memory Jitendra stood by my side, awed by the dream in marble.
Then on to the Brindaban ashram of Swami Keshabananda.
My object in seeking out Keshabananda was connected with this book. I
had never forgotten Sri Yukteswar's request that I write the life of
Lahiri Mahasaya. During my stay in India I was taking every opportunity
of contacting direct disciples and relatives of the Yogavatar. Recording
their conversations in voluminous notes, I verified facts and dates, and
collected photographs, old letters, and documents. My Lahiri Mahasaya
portfolio began to swell; I realized with dismay that ahead of me lay
arduous labors in authorship. I prayed that I might be equal to my role
as biographer of the colossal guru. Several of his disciples feared that
in a written account their master might be belittled or misinterpreted.
"One can hardly do justice in cold words to the life of a divine
incarnation," Panchanon Bhattacharya had once remarked to me.
Other close disciples were similarly satisfied to keep the Yogavatar
hidden in their hearts as the deathless preceptor. Nevertheless, mindful
of Lahiri Mahasaya's prediction about his biography, I spared no effort
to secure and substantiate the facts of his outward life.
Swami Keshabananda greeted our party warmly at Brindaban in his
Katayani Peith Ashram, an imposing brick building with massive black
pillars, set in a beautiful garden. He ushered us at once into a sitting
room adorned with an enlargement of Lahiri Mahasaya's picture. The swami
was approaching the age of ninety, but his muscular body radiated
strength and health. With long hair and a snow-white beard, eyes
twinkling with joy, he was a veritable patriarchal embodiment. I
informed him that I wanted to mention his name in my book on India's
masters.
"Please tell me about your earlier life." I smiled entreatingly;
great yogis are often uncommunicative.
Keshabananda made a gesture of humility. "There is little of external
moment. Practically my whole life has been spent in the Himalayan
solitudes, traveling on foot from one quiet cave to another. For a while
I maintained a small ashram outside Hardwar, surrounded on all sides by
a grove of tall trees. It was a peaceful spot little visited by
travelers, owing to the ubiquitous presence of cobras." Keshabananda
chuckled. "Later a Ganges flood washed away the hermitage and cobras
alike. My disciples then helped me to build this Brindaban ashram."
One of our party asked the swami how he had protected
himself against the Himalayan tigers.9
Keshabananda shook his head. "In those high spiritual altitudes," he
said, "wild beasts seldom molest the yogis. Once in the jungle I
encountered a tiger face-to-face. At my sudden ejaculation, the animal
was transfixed as though turned to stone." Again the swami chuckled at
his memories.
"Occasionally I left my seclusion to visit my guru in Benares. He
used to joke with me over my ceaseless travels in the Himalayan
wilderness.
"'You have the mark of wanderlust on your foot,' he told me once. 'I
am glad that the sacred Himalayas are extensive enough to engross you.'
"Many times," Keshabananda went on, "both before and after his
passing, Lahiri Mahasaya has appeared bodily before me. For him no
Himalayan height is inaccessible!"
Two hours later he led us to a dining patio. I sighed in
silent dismay. Another fifteen-course meal! Less than a year of Indian
hospitality, and I had gained fifty pounds! Yet it would have been
considered the height of rudeness to refuse any of the dishes, carefully
prepared for the endless banquets in my honor. In India (nowhere else,
alas!) a well-padded swami is considered a delightful sight.
10
After dinner, Keshabananda led me to a secluded nook.
"Your arrival is not unexpected," he said. "I have a message for
you."
I was surprised; no one had known of my plan to visit Keshabananda.
"While roaming last year in the northern Himalayas near
Badrinarayan," the swami continued, "I lost my way. Shelter appeared in
a spacious cave, which was empty, though the embers of a fire glowed in
a hole in the rocky floor. Wondering about the occupant of this lonely
retreat, I sat near the fire, my gaze fixed on the sunlit entrance to
the cave.
"'Keshabananda, I am glad you are here.' These words came from behind
me. I turned, startled, and was dazzled to behold Babaji! The great guru
had materialized himself in a recess of the cave. Overjoyed to see him
again after many years, I prostrated myself at his holy feet.
"'I called you here,' Babaji went on. 'That is why you lost your way
and were led to my temporary abode in this cave. It is a long time since
our last meeting; I am pleased to greet you once more.'
"The deathless master blessed me with some words of spiritual help,
then added: 'I give you a message for Yogananda. He will pay you a visit
on his return to India. Many matters connected with his guru and with
the surviving disciples of Lahiri will keep Yogananda fully occupied.
Tell him, then, that I won't see him this time, as he is eagerly hoping;
but I shall see him on some other occasion.'"
I was deeply touched to receive from Keshabananda's lips
this consoling promise from Babaji. A certain hurt in my heart vanished;
I grieved no longer that, even as Sri Yukteswar had hinted, Babaji did
not appear at the Kumbha Mela.
Spending one night as guests of the ashram, our party
set out the following afternoon for Calcutta. Riding over a bridge of
the Jumna River, we enjoyed a magnificent view of the skyline of
Brindaban just as the sun set fire to the skya veritable furnace of
Vulcan in color, reflected below us in the still waters.
The Jumna beach is hallowed by memories of the child Sri
Krishna. Here he engaged with innocent sweetness in his lilas
(plays) with the gopis (maids), exemplifying the supernal love
which ever exists between a divine incarnation and his devotees. The
life of Lord Krishna has been misunderstood by many Western
commentators. Scriptural allegory is baffling to literal minds. A
hilarious blunder by a translator will illustrate this point. The story
concerns an inspired medieval saint, the cobbler Ravidas, who sang in
the simple terms of his own trade of the spiritual glory hidden in all
mankind:
Under the vast vault of blue
Lives the divinity clothed in hide.
One turns aside to hide a smile on hearing the pedestrian
interpretation given to Ravidas' poem by a Western writer:
"He afterwards built a hut, set up in it an idol which he made from a
hide, and applied himself to its worship."
Ravidas was a brother disciple of the great Kabir. One of Ravidas'
exalted chelas was the Rani of Chitor. She invited a large number of
Brahmins to a feast in honor of her teacher, but they refused to eat
with a lowly cobbler. As they sat down in dignified aloofness to eat
their own uncontaminated meal, lo! each Brahmin found at his side the
form of Ravidas. This mass vision accomplished a widespread spiritual
revival in Chitor.
In a few days our little group reached Calcutta. Eager to see Sri
Yukteswar, I was disappointed to hear that he had left Serampore and was
now in Puri, about three hundred miles to the south.
"Come to Puri ashram at once." This telegram was sent on March 8th by
a brother disciple to Atul Chandra Roy Chowdhry, one of Master's chelas
in Calcutta. News of the message reached my ears; anguished at its
implications, I dropped to my knees and implored God that my guru's life
be spared. As I was about to leave Father's home for the train, a divine
voice spoke within.
"Do not go to Puri tonight. Thy prayer cannot he granted."
"Lord," I said, grief-stricken, "Thou dost not wish to engage with me
in a 'tug of war' at Puri, where Thou wilt have to deny my incessant
prayers for Master's life. Must he, then, depart for higher duties at
Thy behest?"
In obedience to the inward command, I did not leave that
night for Puri. The following evening I set out for the train; on the
way, at seven o'clock, a black astral cloud suddenly covered the sky.11
Later, while the train roared toward Puri, a vision of Sri Yukteswar
appeared before me. He was sitting, very grave of countenance, with a
light on each side.
"Is it all over?" I lifted my arms beseechingly.
He nodded, then slowly vanished.
As I stood on the Puri train platform the following morning, still
hoping against hope, an unknown man approached me.
"Have you heard that your Master is gone?" He left me without another
word; I never discovered who he was nor how he had known where to find
me.
Stunned, I swayed against the platform wall, realizing that in
diverse ways my guru was trying to convey to me the devastating news.
Seething with rebellion, my soul was like a volcano. By the time I
reached the Puri hermitage I was nearing collapse. The inner voice was
tenderly repeating: "Collect yourself. Be calm."
I entered the ashram room where Master's body, unimaginably lifelike,
was sitting in the lotus posturea picture of health and loveliness. A
short time before his passing, my guru had been slightly ill with fever,
but before the day of his ascension into the Infinite, his body had
become completely well. No matter how often I looked at his dear form I
could not realize that its life had departed. His skin was smooth and
soft; in his face was a beatific expression of tranquillity. He had
consciously relinquished his body at the hour of mystic summoning.
"The Lion of Bengal is gone!" I cried in a daze.
I conducted the solemn rites on March 10th. Sri
Yukteswar was buried12
with the ancient rituals of the swamis in the garden of his Puri ashram.
His disciples later arrived from far and near to honor their guru at a
vernal equinox memorial service. The Amrita Bazar Patrika,
leading newspaper of Calcutta, carried his picture and the following
report:
The death Bhandara ceremony for Srimat Swami Sri
Yukteswar Giri Maharaj, aged 81, took place at Puri on March 21. Many
disciples came down to Puri for the rites.
One of the greatest expounders of the Bhagavad Gita,
Swami Maharaj was a great disciple of Yogiraj Sri Shyama Charan Lahiri
Mahasaya of Benares. Swami Maharaj was the founder of several Yogoda
Sat-Sanga (Self-Realization Fellowship) centers in India, and was the
great inspiration behind the yoga movement which was carried to the West
by Swami Yogananda, his principal disciple. It was Sri Yukteswarji's
prophetic powers and deep realization that inspired Swami Yogananda to
cross the oceans and spread in America the message of the masters of
India.
His interpretations of the Bhagavad Gita and
other scriptures testify to the depth of Sri Yukteswarji's command of
the philosophy, both Eastern and Western, and remain as an eye-opener
for the unity between Orient and Occident. As he believed in the unity
of all religious faiths, Sri Yukteswar Maharaj established Sadhu
Sabha (Society of Saints) with the cooperation of leaders of various
sects and faiths, for the inculcation of a scientific spirit in
religion. At the time of his demise he nominated Swami Yogananda his
successor as the president of Sadhu Sabha.
India is really poorer today by the passing of such a
great man. May all fortunate enough to have come near him inculcate in
themselves the true spirit of India's culture and sadhana which
was personified in him.
I returned to Calcutta. Not trusting myself as yet to go to the
Serampore hermitage with its sacred memories, I summoned Prafulla, Sri
Yukteswar's little disciple in Serampore, and made arrangements for him
to enter the Ranchi school.
"The morning you left for the Allahabad mela,"
Prafulla told me, "Master dropped heavily on the davenport.
"'Yogananda is gone!' he cried. 'Yogananda is gone!' He added
cryptically, 'I shall have to tell him some other way.' He sat then for
hours in silence."
My days were filled with lectures, classes, interviews, and reunions
with old friends. Beneath a hollow smile and a life of ceaseless
activity, a stream of black brooding polluted the inner river of bliss
which for so many years had meandered under the sands of all my
perceptions.
"Where has that divine sage gone?" I cried silently from the depths
of a tormented spirit.
No answer came.
"It is best that Master has completed his union with the Cosmic
Beloved," my mind assured me. "He is eternally glowing in the dominion
of deathlessness."
"Never again may you see him in the old Serampore
mansion," my heart lamented. "No longer may you bring your friends to
meet him, or proudly say: 'Behold, there sits India's Jnanavatar!'"
Mr. Wright made arrangements for our party to sail from Bombay for
the West in early June. After a fortnight in May of farewell banquets
and speeches at Calcutta, Miss Bletch, Mr. Wright and myself left in the
Ford for Bombay. On our arrival, the ship authorities asked us to cancel
our passage, as no room could be found for the Ford, which we would need
again in Europe.
"Never mind," I said gloomily to Mr. Wright. "I want to return once
more to Puri." I silently added, "Let my tears once again water the
grave of my guru."
1 Literally, param, highest; hansa, swan. The hansa is represented in
scriptural lore as the vehicle of Brahma, Supreme Spirit; as the symbol
of discrimination, the white hansa swan is thought of as able to
separate the true soma nectar from a mixture of milk and water.
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2 Ham-sa (pronounced hong-sau) are two sacred Sanskrit chant words
possessing a vibratory connection with the incoming and outgoing breath.
Aham-Sa is literally "I am He."
They have generally evaded the difficulty by addressing me as sir.
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3 At the Puri ashram, Swami Sebananda is still conducting a small,
flourishing yoga school for boys, and meditation groups for adults.
Meetings of saints and pundits convene there periodically.
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4 A section of Calcutta.
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5 Aphorisms: II:9.
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text
6 Religious melas are mentioned in the ancient Mahabharata. The
Chinese traveler Hieuen Tsiang has left an account of a vast Kumbha Mela
held in A.D. 644 at Allahabad. The largest mela is held every twelfth
year; the next largest (Ardha or half) Kumbha occurs every sixth year.
Smaller melas convene every third year, attracting about a million
devotees. The four sacred mela cities are Allahabad, Hardwar, Nasik, and
Ujjain.
Early Chinese travelers have left us many striking pictures of Indian
society. The Chinese priest, Fa-Hsien, wrote an account of his eleven
years in India during the reign of Chandragupta II (early 4th century).
The Chinese author relates: "Throughout the country no one kills any
living thing, nor drinks wine. . . . They do not keep pigs or fowl;
there are no dealings in cattle, no butchers' shops or distilleries.
Rooms with beds and mattresses, food and clothes, are provided for
resident and traveling priests without fail, and this is the same in all
places. The priests occupy themselves with benevolent ministrations and
with chanting liturgies; or they sit in meditation." Fa-Hsien tells us
the Indian people were happy and honest; capital punishment was unknown.
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7 I was not present at the deaths of my mother, elder brother Ananta,
eldest sister Roma, Master, Father, or of several close disciples.
(Father passed on at Calcutta in 1942, at the age of eighty-nine.)
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8 The hundreds of thousands of Indian sadhus are controlled by an
executive committee of seven leaders, representing seven large sections
of India. The present mahamandaleswar or president is Joyendra Puri.
This saintly man is extremely reserved, often confining his speech to
three words-Truth, Love, and Work. A sufficient conversation!
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9 There are many methods, it appears, for outwitting a tiger. An
Australian explorer, Francis Birtles, has recounted that he found the
Indian jungles "varied, beautiful, and safe." His safety charm was
flypaper. "Every night I spread a quantity of sheets around my camp and
was never disturbed," he explained. "The reason is psychological. The
tiger is an animal of great conscious dignity. He prowls around and
challenges man until he comes to the flypaper; he then slinks away. No
dignified tiger would dare face a human being after squatting down upon
a sticky flypaper!"
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10 After I returned to America I took off sixty-five pounds.
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11 Sri Yukteswar passed at this hour-7:00 P.M., March 9, 1936.
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12 Funeral customs in India require cremation for householders;
swamis and monks of other orders are not cremated, but buried. (There
are occasional exceptions.) The bodies of monks are symbolically
considered to have undergone cremation in the fire of wisdom at the time
of taking the monastic vow.
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