"Return to india. I have waited for you patiently for
fifteen years. Soon I shall swim out of the body and on to the Shining
Abode. Yogananda, come!"
Sri Yukteswar's voice sounded startlingly in my inner ear as I
sat in meditation at my Mt. Washington headquarters. Traversing ten
thousand miles in the twinkling of an eye, his message penetrated my
being like a flash of lightning.
Fifteen years! Yes, I realized, now it is 1935; I have spent fifteen
years in spreading my guru's teachings in America. Now he recalls me.
That afternoon I recounted my experience to a visiting
disciple. His spiritual development under Kriya Yoga was so
remarkable that I often called him "saint," remembering Babaji's
prophecy that America too would produce men and women of divine
realization through the ancient yogic path.
This disciple and a number of others generously insisted on making a
donation for my travels. The financial problem thus solved, I made
arrangements to sail, via Europe, for India. Busy weeks of preparations
at Mount Washington! In March, 1935 I had the Self-Realization
Fellowship chartered under the laws of the State of California as a
non-profit corporation. To this educational institution go all public
donations as well as the revenue from the sale of my books, magazine,
written courses, class tuition, and every other source of income.
"I shall be back," I told my students. "Never shall I forget
America."
At a farewell banquet given to me in Los Angeles by loving friends, I
looked long at their faces and thought gratefully, "Lord, he who
remembers Thee as the Sole Giver will never lack the sweetness of
friendship among mortals."
I sailed from New York on June 9, 19351
in the Europa. Two students accompanied me: my secretary, Mr. C.
Richard Wright, and an elderly lady from Cincinnati, Miss Ettie Bletch.
We enjoyed the days of ocean peace, a welcome contrast to the past
hurried weeks. Our period of leisure was short-lived; the speed of
modern boats has some regrettable features!
Like any
other group of inquisitive tourists, we walked around the huge and
ancient city of London. The following day I was invited to address a
large meeting in Caxton Hall, at which I was introduced to the London
audience by Sir Francis Younghusband. Our party spent a pleasant day as
guests of Sir Harry Lauder at his estate in Scotland. We soon crossed
the English Channel to the continent, for I wanted to make a special
pilgrimage to Bavaria. This would be my only chance, I felt, to visit
the great Catholic mystic, Therese Neumann of Konnersreuth.
Years earlier I had read an amazing account of Therese. Information
given in the article was as follows:
(1) Therese, born in 1898, had been injured in an accident at the age
of twenty; she became blind and paralyzed.
(2) She miraculously regained her sight in 1923 through prayers to
St. Teresa, "The Little Flower." Later Therese Neumann's limbs were
instantaneously healed.
(3) From 1923 onward, Therese has abstained completely from food and
drink, except for the daily swallowing of one small consecrated wafer.
(4) The stigmata, or sacred wounds of Christ, appeared in 1926 on
Therese's head, breast, hands, and feet. On Friday of every week
thereafter, she has passed through the Passion of Christ, suffering in
her own body all his historic agonies.
(5) Knowing ordinarily only the simple German of her village, during
her Friday trances Therese utters phrases which scholars have identified
as ancient Aramaic. At appropriate times in her vision, she speaks
Hebrew or Greek.
(6) By ecclesiastical permission, Therese has several
times been under close scientific observation. Dr. Fritz Gerlick, editor
of a Protestant German newspaper, went to Konnersreuth to "expose the
Catholic fraud," but ended up by reverently writing her biography.2
As always, whether in East or West, I was eager to meet a saint. I
rejoiced as our little party entered, on July 16th, the quaint village
of Konnersreuth. The Bavarian peasants exhibited lively interest in our
Ford automobile (brought with us from America) and its assorted groupan
American young man, an elderly lady, and an olive-hued Oriental with
long hair tucked under his coat collar.
Therese's little cottage, clean and neat, with geraniums blooming by
a primitive well, was alas! silently closed. The neighbors, and even the
village postman who passed by, could give us no information. Rain began
to fall; my companions suggested that we leave.
"No," I said stubbornly, "I will stay here until I find some clue
leading to Therese."
Two hours later we were still sitting in our car amidst the dismal
rain. "Lord," I sighed complainingly, "why didst Thou lead me here if
she has disappeared?"
An English-speaking man halted beside us, politely offering his aid.
"I don't know for certain where Therese is," he said, "but she often
visits at the home of Professor Wurz, a seminary master of Eichstatt,
eighty miles from here."
The following morning our party motored to the quiet village of
Eichstatt, narrowly lined with cobblestoned streets. Dr. Wurz greeted us
cordially at his home; "Yes, Therese is here." He sent her word of the
visitors. A messenger soon appeared with her reply.
"Though the bishop has asked me to see no one without his permission,
I will receive the man of God from India."
Deeply touched at these words, I followed Dr. Wurz upstairs to the
sitting room. Therese entered immediately, radiating an aura of peace
and joy. She wore a black gown and spotless white head dress. Although
her age was thirty-seven at this time, she seemed much younger,
possessing indeed a childlike freshness and charm. Healthy, well-formed,
rosy-cheeked, and cheerful, this is the saint that does not eat!
Therese greeted me with a very gentle handshaking. We both beamed in
silent communion, each knowing the other to be a lover of God.
Dr. Wurz kindly offered to serve as interpreter. As we seated
ourselves, I noticed that Therese was glancing at me with naive
curiosity; evidently Hindus had been rare in Bavaria.
"Don't you eat anything?" I wanted to hear the answer from her own
lips.
"No, except a consecrated rice-flour wafer, once every morning at six
o'clock."
"How large is the wafer?"
"It is paper-thin, the size of a small coin." She added, "I take it
for sacramental reasons; if it is unconsecrated, I am unable to swallow
it."
"Certainly you could not have lived on that, for twelve whole years?"
"I live by God's light." How simple her reply, how Einsteinian!
"I see you realize that energy flows to your body from the ether,
sun, and air."
A swift smile broke over her face. "I am so happy to know you
understand how I live."
"Your sacred life is a daily demonstration of the truth
uttered by Christ: 'Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word
that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.'"3
Again she showed joy at my explanation. "It is indeed so. One of the
reasons I am here on earth today is to prove that man can live by God's
invisible light, and not by food only."
"Can you teach others how to live without food?"
She appeared a trifle shocked. "I cannot do that; God does not wish
it."
As my gaze fell on her strong, graceful hands, Therese showed me a
little, square, freshly healed wound on each of her palms. On the back
of each hand, she pointed out a smaller, crescent-shaped wound, freshly
healed. Each wound went straight through the hand. The sight brought to
my mind distinct recollection of the large square iron nails with
crescent-tipped ends, still used in the Orient, but which I do not
recall having seen in the West.
The saint told me something of her weekly trances. "As a helpless
onlooker, I observe the whole Passion of Christ." Each week, from
Thursday midnight until Friday afternoon at one o'clock, her wounds open
and bleed; she loses ten pounds of her ordinary 121-pound weight.
Suffering intensely in her sympathetic love, Therese yet looks forward
joyously to these weekly visions of her Lord.
I realized at once that her strange life is intended by God to
reassure all Christians of the historical authenticity of Jesus' life
and crucifixion as recorded in the New Testament, and to dramatically
display the ever-living bond between the Galilean Master and his
devotees.
Professor Wurz related some of his experiences with the saint.
"Several of us, including Therese, often travel for days on
sight-seeing trips throughout Germany," he told me. "It is a striking
contrastwhile we have three meals a day, Therese eats nothing. She
remains as fresh as a rose, untouched by the fatigue which the trips
cause us. As we grow hungry and hunt for wayside inns, she laughs
merrily."
The professor added some interesting physiological details: "Because
Therese takes no food, her stomach has shrunk. She has no excretions,
but her perspiration glands function; her skin is always soft and firm."
At the time of parting, I expressed to Therese my desire to be
present at her trance.
"Yes, please come to Konnersreuth next Friday," she said graciously.
"The bishop will give you a permit. I am very happy you sought me out in
Eichstatt."
Therese shook hands gently, many times, and walked with our party to
the gate. Mr. Wright turned on the automobile radio; the saint examined
it with little enthusiastic chuckles. Such a large crowd of youngsters
gathered that Therese retreated into the house. We saw her at a window,
where she peered at us, childlike, waving her hand.
From a conversation the next day with two of Therese's brothers, very
kind and amiable, we learned that the saint sleeps only one or two hours
at night. In spite of the many wounds in her body, she is active and
full of energy. She loves birds, looks after an aquarium of fish, and
works often in her garden. Her correspondence is large; Catholic
devotees write her for prayers and healing blessings. Many seekers have
been cured through her of serious diseases.
Her brother Ferdinand, about twenty-three, explained that Therese has
the power, through prayer, of working out on her own body the ailments
of others. The saint's abstinence from food dates from a time when she
prayed that the throat disease of a young man of her parish, then
preparing to enter holy orders, be transferred to her own throat.
On Thursday afternoon our party drove to the home of the bishop, who
looked at my flowing locks with some surprise. He readily wrote out the
necessary permit. There was no fee; the rule made by the Church is
simply to protect Therese from the onrush of casual tourists, who in
previous years had flocked on Fridays by the thousands.
We arrived Friday morning about nine-thirty in Konnersreuth. I
noticed that Therese's little cottage possesses a special glass-roofed
section to afford her plenty of light. We were glad to see the doors no
longer closed, but wide-open in hospitable cheer. There was a line of
about twenty visitors, armed with their permits. Many had come from
great distances to view the mystic trance.
Therese had passed my first test at the professor's house by her
intuitive knowledge that I wanted to see her for spiritual reasons, and
not just to satisfy a passing curiosity.
My second test was connected with the fact that, just before I went
upstairs to her room, I put myself into a yogic trance state in order to
be one with her in telepathic and televisic rapport. I entered her
chamber, filled with visitors; she was lying in a white robe on the bed.
With Mr. Wright following closely behind me, I halted just inside the
threshold, awestruck at a strange and most frightful spectacle.
Blood flowed thinly and continuously in an inch-wide stream from
Therese's lower eyelids. Her gaze was focused upward on the spiritual
eye within the central forehead. The cloth wrapped around her head was
drenched in blood from the stigmata wounds of the crown of thorns. The
white garment was redly splotched over her heart from the wound in her
side at the spot where Christ's body, long ages ago, had suffered the
final indignity of the soldier's spear-thrust.
Therese's hands were extended in a gesture maternal, pleading; her
face wore an expression both tortured and divine. She appeared thinner,
changed in many subtle as well as outward ways. Murmuring words in a
foreign tongue, she spoke with slightly quivering lips to persons
visible before her inner sight.
As I was in attunement with her, I began to see the
scenes of her vision. She was watching Jesus as he carried the cross
amidst the jeering multitude.
4 Suddenly she lifted her head in consternation: the
Lord had fallen under the cruel weight. The vision disappeared. In the
exhaustion of fervid pity, Therese sank heavily against her pillow.
At this moment I heard a loud thud behind me. Turning my head for a
second, I saw two men carrying out a prostrate body. But because I was
coming out of the deep superconscious state, I did not immediately
recognize the fallen person. Again I fixed my eyes on Therese's face,
deathly pale under the rivulets of blood, but now calm, radiating purity
and holiness. I glanced behind me later and saw Mr. Wright standing with
his hand against his cheek, from which blood was trickling.
"Dick," I inquired anxiously, "were you the one who fell?"
"Yes, I fainted at the terrifying spectacle."
"Well," I said consolingly, "you are brave to return and look upon
the sight again."
Remembering the patiently waiting line of pilgrims, Mr.
Wright and I silently bade farewell to Therese and left her sacred
presence.5
The following day our little group motored south,
thankful that we were not dependent on trains, but could stop the Ford
wherever we chose throughout the countryside. We enjoyed every minute of
a tour through Germany, Holland, France, and the Swiss Alps. In Italy we
made a special trip to Assisi to honor the apostle of humility, St.
Francis. The European tour ended in Greece, where we viewed the Athenian
temples, and saw the prison in which the gentle Socrates6
had drunk his death potion. One is filled with admiration for the
artistry with which the Greeks have everywhere wrought their very
fancies in alabaster.
We took ship over the sunny Mediterranean, disembarking at Palestine.
Wandering day after day over the Holy Land, I was more than ever
convinced of the value of pilgrimage. The spirit of Christ is
all-pervasive in Palestine; I walked reverently by his side at
Bethlehem, Gethsemane, Calvary, the holy Mount of Olives, and by the
River Jordan and the Sea of Galilee.
Our little party visited the Birth Manger, Joseph's carpenter shop,
the tomb of Lazarus, the house of Martha and Mary, the hall of the Last
Supper. Antiquity unfolded; scene by scene, I saw the divine drama that
Christ once played for the ages.
On to Egypt, with its modern Cairo and ancient pyramids. Then a boat
down the narrow Red Sea, over the vasty Arabian Sea; lo, India!
1 The remarkable inclusion here of a complete date is due to the fact
that my secretary, Mr. Wright, kept a travel diary.
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2 Other books on her life are Therese Neumann: A Stigmatist of Our
Day, and Further Chronicles of Therese Neumann, both by Friedrich Ritter
von Lama (Milwaukee: Bruce Pub. Co.).
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3 Matthew 4:4. Man's body battery is not sustained by gross food
(bread) alone, but by the vibratory cosmic energy (word, or AUM). The
invisible power flows into the human body through the gate of the
medulla oblongata. This sixth bodily center is located at the back of
the neck at the top of the five spinal chakras (Sanskrit for "wheels" or
centers of radiating force). The medulla is the principal entrance for
the body's supply of universal life force (AUM), and is directly
connected with man's power of will, concentrated in the seventh or
Christ Consciousness center (Kutastha) in the third eye between the
eyebrows. Cosmic energy is then stored up in the brain as a reservoir of
infinite potentialities, poetically mentioned in the Vedas as the
"thousand-petaled lotus of light." The Bible invariably refers to AUM as
the "Holy Ghost" or invisible life force which divinely upholds all
creation. "What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy
Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own?"-I
Corinthians 6:19.
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4 During the hours preceding my arrival, Therese had already passed
through many visions of the closing days in Christ's life. Her
entrancement usually starts with scenes of the events which followed the
Last Supper. Her visions end with Jesus' death on the cross or,
occasionally, with his entombment.
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5 Therese has survived the Nazi persecution, and is still present in
Konnersreuth, according to 1945 American news dispatches from Germany.
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6 A passage in Eusebius relates an interesting encounter between
Socrates and a Hindu sage. The passage runs: "Aristoxenus, the musician,
tells the following story about the Indians. One of these men met
Socrates at Athens, and asked him what was the scope of his philosophy.
'An inquiry into human phenomena,' replied Socrates. At this the Indian
burst out laughing. 'How can a man inquire into human phenomena,' he
said, 'when he is ignorant of divine ones?'" The Aristoxenus mentioned
was a pupil of Aristotle, and a noted writer on harmonics. His date is
330 B.C.
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