The characteristic features of Indian culture have
long been a search for ultimate verities and the concomitant
disciple-guru1
relationship. My own path led me to a Christlike sage whose beautiful
life was chiseled for the ages. He was one of the great masters who are
India's sole remaining wealth. Emerging in every generation, they have
bulwarked their land against the fate of Babylon and Egypt.
I find my earliest memories covering the anachronistic
features of a previous incarnation. Clear recollections came to me of a
distant life, a yogi2
amidst the Himalayan snows. These glimpses of the past, by some
dimensionless link, also afforded me a glimpse of the future.
The helpless humiliations of infancy are not banished from my mind. I
was resentfully conscious of not being able to walk or express myself
freely. Prayerful surges arose within me as I realized my bodily
impotence. My strong emotional life took silent form as words in many
languages. Among the inward confusion of tongues, my ear gradually
accustomed itself to the circumambient Bengali syllables of my people.
The beguiling scope of an infant's mind! adultly considered limited to
toys and toes.
Psychological ferment and my unresponsive body brought me to many
obstinate crying-spells. I recall the general family bewilderment at my
distress. Happier memories, too, crowd in on me: my mother's caresses,
and my first attempts at lisping phrase and toddling step. These early
triumphs, usually forgotten quickly, are yet a natural basis of
self-confidence.
My far-reaching memories are not unique. Many yogis are known to have
retained their self-consciousness without interruption by the dramatic
transition to and from "life" and "death." If man be solely a body, its
loss indeed places the final period to identity. But if prophets down
the millenniums spake with truth, man is essentially of incorporeal
nature. The persistent core of human egoity is only temporarily allied
with sense perception.
Although odd, clear memories of infancy are not extremely rare.
During travels in numerous lands, I have listened to early recollections
from the lips of veracious men and women.
I was born in the last decade of the nineteenth century,
and passed my first eight years at Gorakhpur. This was my birthplace in
the United Provinces of northeastern India. We were eight children: four
boys and four girls. I, Mukunda Lal Ghosh3
, was the second son and the fourth child.
Father and Mother were Bengalis, of the Kshatriya
caste.4
Both were blessed with saintly nature. Their mutual love, tranquil and
dignified, never expressed itself frivolously. A perfect parental
harmony was the calm center for the revolving tumult of eight young
lives.
Father, Bhagabati Charan Ghosh, was kind, grave, at times stern.
Loving him dearly, we children yet observed a certain reverential
distance. An outstanding mathematician and logician, he was guided
principally by his intellect. But Mother was a queen of hearts, and
taught us only through love. After her death, Father displayed more of
his inner tenderness. I noticed then that his gaze often metamorphosed
into my mother's.
In Mother's presence we tasted our earliest bitter-sweet
acquaintance with the scriptures. Tales from the Mahabharata and
Ramayana
5 were resourcefully summoned to meet the exigencies of
discipline. Instruction and chastisement went hand in hand.
A daily gesture of respect to Father was given by Mother's dressing
us carefully in the afternoons to welcome him home from the office. His
position was similar to that of a vice-president, in the Bengal-Nagpur
Railway, one of India's large companies. His work involved traveling,
and our family lived in several cities during my childhood.
Mother held an open hand toward the needy. Father was also kindly
disposed, but his respect for law and order extended to the budget. One
fortnight Mother spent, in feeding the poor, more than Father's monthly
income.
"All I ask, please, is to keep your charities within a reasonable
limit." Even a gentle rebuke from her husband was grievous to Mother.
She ordered a hackney carriage, not hinting to the children at any
disagreement.
"Good-by; I am going away to my mother's home." Ancient ultimatum!
We broke into astounded lamentations. Our maternal uncle arrived
opportunely; he whispered to Father some sage counsel, garnered no doubt
from the ages. After Father had made a few conciliatory remarks, Mother
happily dismissed the cab. Thus ended the only trouble I ever noticed
between my parents. But I recall a characteristic discussion.
"Please give me ten rupees for a hapless woman who has just arrived
at the house." Mother's smile had its own persuasion.
"Why ten rupees? One is enough." Father added a justification: "When
my father and grandparents died suddenly, I had my first taste of
poverty. My only breakfast, before walking miles to my school, was a
small banana. Later, at the university, I was in such need that I
applied to a wealthy judge for aid of one rupee per month. He declined,
remarking that even a rupee is important."
"How bitterly you recall the denial of that rupee!" Mother's heart
had an instant logic. "Do you want this woman also to remember painfully
your refusal of ten rupees which she needs urgently?"
"You win!" With the immemorial gesture of vanquished husbands, he
opened his wallet. "Here is a ten-rupee note. Give it to her with my
good will."
Father tended to first say "No" to any new proposal. His attitude
toward the strange woman who so readily enlisted Mother's sympathy was
an example of his customary caution. Aversion to instant
acceptancetypical of the French mind in the Westis really only honoring
the principle of "due reflection." I always found Father reasonable and
evenly balanced in his judgments. If I could bolster up my numerous
requests with one or two good arguments, he invariably put the coveted
goal within my reach, whether it were a vacation trip or a new
motorcycle.
Father was a strict disciplinarian to his children in
their early years, but his attitude toward himself was truly Spartan. He
never visited the theater, for instance, but sought his recreation in
various spiritual practices and in reading the Bhagavad Gita.6
Shunning all luxuries, he would cling to one old pair of shoes until
they were useless. His sons bought automobiles after they came into
popular use, but Father was always content with the trolley car for his
daily ride to the office. The accumulation of money for the sake of
power was alien to his nature. Once, after organizing the Calcutta Urban
Bank, he refused to benefit himself by holding any of its shares. He had
simply wished to perform a civic duty in his spare time.
Several years after Father had retired on a pension, an English
accountant arrived to examine the books of the Bengal-Nagpur Railway
Company. The amazed investigator discovered that Father had never
applied for overdue bonuses.
"He did the work of three men!" the accountant told the company. "He
has rupees 125,000 (about $41,250.) owing to him as back compensation."
The officials presented Father with a check for this amount. He thought
so little about it that he overlooked any mention to the family. Much
later he was questioned by my youngest brother Bishnu, who noticed the
large deposit on a bank statement.
"Why be elated by material profit?" Father replied. "The one who
pursues a goal of evenmindedness is neither jubilant with gain nor
depressed by loss. He knows that man arrives penniless in this world,
and departs without a single rupee."
Early in their married life, my parents became disciples of a great
master, Lahiri Mahasaya of Benares. This contact strengthened Father's
naturally ascetical temperament. Mother made a remarkable admission to
my eldest sister Roma: "Your father and myself live together as man and
wife only once a year, for the purpose of having children."
Father first met Lahiri Mahasaya through Abinash Babu,7
an employee in the Gorakhpur office of the Bengal-Nagpur Railway.
Abinash instructed my young ears with engrossing tales of many Indian
saints. He invariably concluded with a tribute to the superior glories
of his own guru.
"Did you ever hear of the extraordinary circumstances under which
your father became a disciple of Lahiri Mahasaya?"
It was on a lazy summer afternoon, as Abinash and I sat together in
the compound of my home, that he put this intriguing question. I shook
my head with a smile of anticipation.
"Years ago, before you were born, I asked my superior officeryour
fatherto give me a week's leave from my Gorakhpur duties in order to
visit my guru in Benares. Your father ridiculed my plan.
"'Are you going to become a religious fanatic?' he inquired.
'Concentrate on your office work if you want to forge ahead.'
"Sadly walking home along a woodland path that day, I met your father
in a palanquin. He dismissed his servants and conveyance, and fell into
step beside me. Seeking to console me, he pointed out the advantages of
striving for worldly success. But I heard him listlessly. My heart was
repeating: 'Lahiri Mahasaya! I cannot live without seeing you!'
"Our path took us to the edge of a tranquil field, where
the rays of the late afternoon sun were still crowning the tall ripple
of the wild grass. We paused in admiration. There in the field, only a
few yards from us, the form of my great guru suddenly appeared!8
"'Bhagabati, you are too hard on your employee!' His voice was
resonant in our astounded ears. He vanished as mysteriously as he had
come. On my knees I was exclaiming, 'Lahiri Mahasaya! Lahiri Mahasaya!'
Your father was motionless with stupefaction for a few moments.
"'Abinash, not only do I give you leave, but I
give myself leave to start for Benares tomorrow. I must know this
great Lahiri Mahasaya, who is able to materialize himself at will in
order to intercede for you! I will take my wife and ask this master to
initiate us in his spiritual path. Will you guide us to him?'
"'Of course.' Joy filled me at the miraculous answer to my prayer,
and the quick, favorable turn of events.
"The next evening your parents and I entrained for Benares. We took a
horse cart the following day, and then had to walk through narrow lanes
to my guru's secluded home. Entering his little parlor, we bowed before
the master, enlocked in his habitual lotus posture. He blinked his
piercing eyes and leveled them on your father.
"'Bhagabati, you are too hard on your employee!' His words were the
same as those he had used two days before in the Gorakhpur field. He
added, 'I am glad that you have allowed Abinash to visit me, and that
you and your wife have accompanied him.'
"To their joy, he initiated your parents in the
spiritual practice of Kriya Yoga.9
Your father and I, as brother disciples, have been close friends since
the memorable day of the vision. Lahiri Mahasaya took a definite
interest in your own birth. Your life shall surely be linked with his
own: the master's blessing never fails."
Lahiri Mahasaya left this world shortly after I had entered it. His
picture, in an ornate frame, always graced our family altar in the
various cities to which Father was transferred by his office. Many a
morning and evening found Mother and me meditating before an improvised
shrine, offering flowers dipped in fragrant sandalwood paste. With
frankincense and myrrh as well as our united devotions, we honored the
divinity which had found full expression in Lahiri Mahasaya.
His picture had a surpassing influence over my life. As
I grew, the thought of the master grew with me. In meditation I would
often see his photographic image emerge from its small frame and, taking
a living form, sit before me. When I attempted to touch the feet of his
luminous body, it would change and again become the picture. As
childhood slipped into boyhood, I found Lahiri Mahasaya transformed in
my mind from a little image, cribbed in a frame, to a living,
enlightening presence. I frequently prayed to him in moments of trial or
confusion, finding within me his solacing direction. At first I grieved
because he was no longer physically living. As I began to discover his
secret omnipresence, I lamented no more. He had often written to those
of his disciples who were over-anxious to see him: "Why come to view my
bones and flesh, when I am ever within range of your kutastha
(spiritual sight)?"
I was blessed about the age of eight with a wonderful healing through
the photograph of Lahiri Mahasaya. This experience gave intensification
to my love. While at our family estate in Ichapur, Bengal, I was
stricken with Asiatic cholera. My life was despaired of; the doctors
could do nothing. At my bedside, Mother frantically motioned me to look
at Lahiri Mahasaya's picture on the wall above my head.
"Bow to him mentally!" She knew I was too feeble even to lift my
hands in salutation. "If you really show your devotion and inwardly
kneel before him, your life will be spared!"
I gazed at his photograph and saw there a blinding light, enveloping
my body and the entire room. My nausea and other uncontrollable symptoms
disappeared; I was well. At once I felt strong enough to bend over and
touch Mother's feet in appreciation of her immeasurable faith in her
guru. Mother pressed her head repeatedly against the little picture.
"O Omnipresent Master, I thank thee that thy light hath healed my
son!"
I realized that she too had witnessed the luminous blaze through
which I had instantly recovered from a usually fatal disease.
One of my most precious possessions is that same photograph. Given to
Father by Lahiri Mahasaya himself, it carries a holy vibration. The
picture had a miraculous origin. I heard the story from Father's brother
disciple, Kali Kumar Roy.
It appears that the master had an aversion to being photographed.
Over his protest, a group picture was once taken of him and a cluster of
devotees, including Kali Kumar Roy. It was an amazed photographer who
discovered that the plate which had clear images of all the disciples,
revealed nothing more than a blank space in the center where he had
reasonably expected to find the outlines of Lahiri Mahasaya. The
phenomenon was widely discussed.
A certain student and expert photographer, Ganga Dhar Babu, boasted
that the fugitive figure would not escape him. The next morning, as the
guru sat in lotus posture on a wooden bench with a screen behind him,
Ganga Dhar Babu arrived with his equipment. Taking every precaution for
success, he greedily exposed twelve plates. On each one he soon found
the imprint of the wooden bench and screen, but once again the master's
form was missing.
With tears and shattered pride, Ganga Dhar Babu sought out his guru.
It was many hours before Lahiri Mahasaya broke his silence with a
pregnant comment:
"I am Spirit. Can your camera reflect the omnipresent Invisible?"
"I see it cannot! But, Holy Sir, I lovingly desire a picture of the
bodily temple where alone, to my narrow vision, that Spirit appears
fully to dwell."
"Come, then, tomorrow morning. I will pose for you."
Again the photographer focused his camera. This time the sacred
figure, not cloaked with mysterious imperceptibility, was sharp on the
plate. The master never posed for another picture; at least, I have seen
none.
The photograph is reproduced in this book. Lahiri Mahasaya's fair
features, of a universal cast, hardly suggest to what race he belonged.
His intense joy of God-communion is slightly revealed in a somewhat
enigmatic smile. His eyes, half open to denote a nominal direction on
the outer world, are half closed also. Completely oblivious to the poor
lures of the earth, he was fully awake at all times to the spiritual
problems of seekers who approached for his bounty.
Shortly after my healing through the potency of the guru's picture, I
had an influential spiritual vision. Sitting on my bed one morning, I
fell into a deep reverie.
"What is behind the darkness of closed eyes?" This probing thought
came powerfully into my mind. An immense flash of light at once
manifested to my inward gaze. Divine shapes of saints, sitting in
meditation posture in mountain caves, formed like miniature cinema
pictures on the large screen of radiance within my forehead.
"Who are you?" I spoke aloud.
"We are the Himalayan yogis." The celestial response is difficult to
describe; my heart was thrilled.
"Ah, I long to go to the Himalayas and become like you!" The vision
vanished, but the silvery beams expanded in ever-widening circles to
infinity.
"What is this wondrous glow?"
"I am Iswara.10
I am Light." The voice was as murmuring clouds.
"I want to be one with Thee!"
Out of the slow dwindling of my divine ecstasy, I salvaged a
permanent legacy of inspiration to seek God. "He is eternal, ever-new
Joy!" This memory persisted long after the day of rapture.
Another early recollection is outstanding; and literally
so, for I bear the scar to this day. My elder sister Uma and I were
seated in the early morning under a neem tree in our Gorakhpur
compound. She was helping me with a Bengali primer, what time I could
spare my gaze from the near-by parrots eating ripe margosa fruit. Uma
complained of a boil on her leg, and fetched a jar of ointment. I
smeared a bit of the salve on my forearm.
"Why do you use medicine on a healthy arm?"
"Well, Sis, I feel I am going to have a boil tomorrow. I am testing
your ointment on the spot where the boil will appear."
"You little liar!"
"Sis, don't call me a liar until you see what happens in the
morning." Indignation filled me.
Uma was unimpressed, and thrice repeated her taunt. An adamant
resolution sounded in my voice as I made slow reply.
"By the power of will in me, I say that tomorrow I shall
have a fairly large boil in this exact place on my arm; and your
boil shall swell to twice its present size!"
Morning found me with a stalwart boil on the indicated spot; the
dimensions of Uma's boil had doubled. With a shriek, my sister rushed to
Mother. "Mukunda has become a necromancer!" Gravely, Mother instructed
me never to use the power of words for doing harm. I have always
remembered her counsel, and followed it.
My boil was surgically treated. A noticeable scar, left by the
doctor's incision, is present today. On my right forearm is a constant
reminder of the power in man's sheer word.
Those simple and apparently harmless phrases to Uma,
spoken with deep concentration, had possessed sufficient hidden force to
explode like bombs and produce definite, though injurious, effects. I
understood, later, that the explosive vibratory power in speech could be
wisely directed to free one's life from difficulties, and thus operate
without scar or rebuke.11
Our family moved to Lahore in the Punjab. There I
acquired a picture of the Divine Mother in the form of the Goddess Kali.12
It sanctified a small informal shrine on the balcony of our home. An
unequivocal conviction came over me that fulfillment would crown any of
my prayers uttered in that sacred spot. Standing there with Uma one day,
I watched two kites flying over the roofs of the buildings on the
opposite side of the very narrow lane.
"Why are you so quiet?" Uma pushed me playfully.
"I am just thinking how wonderful it is that Divine Mother gives me
whatever I ask."
"I suppose She would give you those two kites!" My sister laughed
derisively.
"Why not?" I began silent prayers for their possession.
Matches are played in India with kites whose strings are covered with
glue and ground glass. Each player attempts to sever the string of his
opponent. A freed kite sails over the roofs; there is great fun in
catching it. Inasmuch as Uma and I were on the balcony, it seemed
impossible that any loosed kite could come into our hands; its string
would naturally dangle over the roofs.
The players across the lane began their match. One string was cut;
immediately the kite floated in my direction. It was stationary for a
moment, through sudden abatement of breeze, which sufficed to firmly
entangle the string with a cactus plant on top of the opposite house. A
perfect loop was formed for my seizure. I handed the prize to Uma.
"It was just an extraordinary accident, and not an answer to your
prayer. If the other kite comes to you, then I shall believe." Sister's
dark eyes conveyed more amazement than her words.
I continued my prayers with a crescendo intensity. A forcible tug by
the other player resulted in the abrupt loss of his kite. It headed
toward me, dancing in the wind. My helpful assistant, the cactus plant,
again secured the kite string in the necessary loop by which I could
grasp it. I presented my second trophy to Uma.
"Indeed, Divine Mother listens to you! This is all too uncanny for
me!" Sister bolted away like a frightened fawn.
1 Spiritual teacher; from Sanskrit root gur, to raise, to uplift.
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2 Spiritual teacher; from Sanskrit root gur, to raise, to uplift.
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3 My name was changed to Yogananda when I entered the ancient
monastic Swami Order in 1914. My guru bestowed the religious title of
Paramhansa on me in 1935 (see chapters 24 and 42).
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4 Traditionally, the second caste of warriors and rulers.
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5 These ancient epics are the hoard of India's history, mythology,
and philosophy. An "Everyman's Library" volume, Ramayana and
Mahabharata, is a condensation in English verse by Romesh Dutt (New
York: E. P. Dutton).
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6 This noble Sanskrit poem, which occurs as part of the Mahabharata
epic, is the Hindu Bible. The most poetical English translation is Edwin
Arnold's The Song Celestial (Philadelphia: David McKay, 75?). One of the
best translations with detailed commentary is Sri Aurobindo's Message of
the Gita (Jupiter Press, 16 Semudoss St., Madras, India, $3.50).
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7 Babu (Mister) is placed in Bengali names at the end.
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8 The phenomenal powers possessed by great masters are explained in
chapter 30, "The Law of Miracles."
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9 A yogic technique whereby the sensory tumult is stilled, permitting
man to achieve an ever-increasing identity with cosmic consciousness.
(See p. 243.)
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10 A Sanskrit name for God as Ruler of the universe; from the root
is, to rule. There are 108 names for God in the Hindu scriptures, each
one carrying a different shade of philosophical meaning.
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11 The infinite potencies of sound derive from the Creative Word, Aum,
the cosmic vibratory power behind all atomic energies. Any word spoken
with clear realization and deep concentration has a materializing value.
Loud or silent repetition of inspiring words has been found effective in
Coueism and similar systems of psychotherapy; the secret lies in the
stepping-up of the mind's vibratory rate. The poet Tennyson has left us,
in his Memoirs, an account of his repetitious device for passing beyond
the conscious mind into superconsciousness:
"A kind of waking trance-this for lack of a better word-I have
frequently had, quite up from boyhood, when I have been all alone,"
Tennyson wrote. "This has come upon me through repeating my own name to
myself silently, till all at once, as it were out of the intensity of
the consciousness of individuality, individuality itself seemed to
dissolve and fade away into boundless being, and this not a confused
state but the clearest, the surest of the surest, utterly beyond
words-where death was an almost laughable impossibility-the loss of
personality (if so it were) seeming no extinction, but the only true
life." He wrote further: "It is no nebulous ecstasy, but a state of
transcendent wonder, associated with absolute clearness of mind."
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12 Kali is a symbol of God in the aspect of eternal Mother Nature.
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