Legend has it that the remote parts of the
Himalayas are home to many rishis,
tapasvis and siddhayogis—Eternal
Masters engaged in singular methods of
sadhana or disciplined practice
dedicated to cosmic exploration and in
guiding the destiny of humanity through the
ages. They live in rough-hewn natural caves
under glacial conditions. Some have ashrams
amidst verdant greenery, located at a
vibrational frequency at variance with the
'normal' three-dimensional one to keep
intruders at bay. Their abode has been
verily named
Shambala, Gyan Ganj, or
Siddha Loka.
In this phantasmagorical world of
accomplished yogis, anything is possible. A
siddha sadhak (realized master) may
simply choose to take the form of an ancient
tree to meditate undisturbed for hundreds of
years. Others, when they venture beyond the
confines of their rarefied sanctuaries, may
fly through the air as themselves, or change
into swans, geese, eagles, or even into
animals, fish and insects. There are many
creative ideas for teleportation, with some
just traveling on beams of light from one
place to another!
Exalted as these beings are, a distinct
feature common to all is their complete
identification with India and her Vedic
heritage. When people attain a certain level
in their sadhana, they automatically
lose their narrow personal bonds of family,
language, caste or province. Then the old
terrain of the Motherland takes over, so
that it matters not whether it is
Kabir,
Lahiri Mahasaya,
Shirdi Sai Baba or
Ramana Maharshi, they all belong to
India. And they converse with each other
using an argot common to the wandering
sadhus (monks).
Thus it is that the venerable heritage of
Gorakhnath and Machhindranath is claimed for
its own by Garhwal, Konkan, Bundelkhand,
Mewar and Coorg, and many a little girl in
the remotest village of India is put to
sleep to the refrain of "Chalo Machhinder,
Gorakh Aaya...."
With his lithe and youthful figure,
Mahavatar Babaji (whose feats have been
reported by Paramahansa Yogananda in his
Autobiography of a Yogi) is one
such eternal master. He is the man with the
1,800-year-old immortal body. He's also the
founder of kriya yoga, a
discipline involving purification of the
body-mind organism through breath control
techniques to aid longevity and spiritual
evolution. 'Mahavatar' means 'great
incarnation'. He is also known as Mahakaya
Babaji, the word 'Mahakaya'
describing his immortal body. In some
circles the Hare Khan Baba being referred to
sounds suspiciously similar to Mahavatar
Baba's persona.
TAMIL INCARNATION
Babaji
comes with sanitized packaging
shorn of ash, rudraksha or kumkum
tilak. Of course, there have been many
Babajis over the decades claiming to be the
Mahavatar. There's a free-for-all on
the Internet with the various Babaji Web
pages multiplying rapidly to a current count
of several thousand. Yet, the
Self-Realization Fellowship established
by Yogananda in California almost
sounds as if it holds patent rights over the
'Babaji lineage'.
After conquering the West within decades,
it's time for Babaji to return home to
capture the interest of Indians who are
still obsessed with pot-bellied gurus. A new
international group called the Babaji's
Kriya Yoga Order of Acharyas with a base of
sorts in Pondicherry recently held kriya
yoga seminars in major metropolitan
cities across India. The Babaji they're
selling is the same kriya yogi, but
he's now positioned in a new Tamil
incarnation as Babaji Nagaraj and never mind
that he's been a permanent resident of the
Himalayas for 1,800 years.
A book claiming to present new information
about Babaji, written by the Canadian
guru and chief of the Kriya Yoga Order,
Marshall Govindan, presents startling claims
about the Tamil origins of many ancient
rishis and siddhas, including Macchindranath
and Gorakhnath. Welcome to the club! Tibet
too claims them for its own, and the Gorkhas
of Nepal and India claim to be the original
descendants of Gorakhnath.
The seminar is a casual affair, particularly
since the group of two conducting it has no
organizational set up. There is very little
planning. In two days, you are to learn 144
kriyas or breathing techniques,
18
yogasanas and numerous chants.
That's instant
evolution. Devote 20 minutes daily to
this and you zip past 50 lives' worth of
karmic atonement and time! Or so claims the
venerable lady acharya from California. The
60 participants in Mumbai are administered a
battery of short written assignments, duly
checked by the acharya, or head, in
the course of the seminar. Gleanings of
wisdom pepper the proceedings. Participants
are told that
Sri Aurobindo was close to attaining an
immortal body during his lifetime, but for
the fact that he did not practice
yogasanas.
The acharya presents charts on the
macrobiotic diet, the staple no-nos of which
are chocolates and meat. All this and more
is discussed over a period of two days,
inaugurating the advent of yet another
New Age cult in India.
MASTER OF MASTERS
Thankfully, there's a lot more than that to
Mahavatar Baba, who never left the
shores of India and who's way beyond the
reach of puny intellectual property rights.
He's a patriotic yogi and keeper of ancient
faith, whose mission for ages has been to
stem the tide of barbaric conquerors
overrunning India. He has often changed the
course of Indian history, guided by
otherwise immortal rishis, working way above
insidious parochial divisions.
Babaji's influence as a guru is said
to have prevailed over the ages from Adi
Shankaracharya and Kabir to more recent
saints like Sai Baba of Shirdi, Gajanan
Maharaj of Shegaon and Swami Samartha of
Akkalkot. The last three were reportedly
firebrand revolutionaries who were given up
for dead in the First War of Indian
Independence in 1857. It is said that the
first was a
Muslim, while the other two were
Hindus. They escaped to the Himalayas
for sanctuary and were later given a
spiritual initiation by Babaji. They
eventually returned as illumined leaders of
humanity.
Babaji mostly works in obscurity,
even while serving as a spiritual mentor to
scores of masters. He has guided the destiny
of India and her people, yet he is perhaps
one of the most accessible of siddhayogis
to walk in our midst in recent times. Over
two millennia, Babaji has continued
to nurture hundreds of accomplished
disciples.
One such disciple is an ageing healer, Dr
Ram Bhosle, who lives and works in Mumbai.
He is a world-renowned massage therapist who
has treated illustrious patients like
Mahatma Gandhi and Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru,
among others. He has witnessed almost the
entire 20th century, traveling abroad 160
times. A freedom fighter, he had several
arrest warrants issued against him by the
British during Mahatma Gandhi's Quit India
Movement and was forced to flee to the
Himalayas. His escape route cut a long
swathe across Maharashtra, Gujarat,
Saurashtra, Sindh, Baluchistan, Afghanistan
and the Hindu Kush mountains, before he
finally reached the Himalayas.
MAN OF MIRACLES
It was there that he chanced upon
Mahavatar Babaji. He ended up giving
massage to Babaji, the latter
offering him safe house initially for three
months, and ultimately for a period of
nearly six years to-date, spread over the
intervening period. Dr Bhosle's stories
throw considerable light on the immortal
master.
Once, when the two had taken shelter in a
cave for the night, Babaji asked him
to go and fetch milk. A fierce snowstorm was
raging outside and Dr Bhosle thought the
sage had gone mad. But when he gingerly
walked a few paces beyond the cave's
entrance, merely out of deference to his
host, he was surprised to find a pitcher of
fresh milk, still warm to the touch,
positioned on a ledge!
On another occasion, Babaji
solicitously asked if he wanted a book to
read. Unbelieving, Dr Bhosle asked for
Bharatmuni's ancient opus on dance,
Natyashastra, which was procured for him.
Babaji remarked that deep within the
womb of the Himalayas was an unimaginable
storehouse of ancient texts. He also
revealed that four rooms in that great
edifice were entirely devoted to astrology.
Babaji also predicted that from 2001
onwards India would gradually return to
supremacy in world affairs. Several decades
ago, he had also forecast the end of all the
political isms of the 20th century.
Like great yogis, Babaji can
supposedly materialize, dematerialize and
take on any form at will. He may choose to
present himself as an old man, an animal or
a bird. He once promised a devotee that he
would attend a feast at the man's house, but
seemingly did not. When the man later
questioned him, Babaji replied: "I was
there. I was the dog whom you fed the
leftovers."
Babaji can
travel anywhere in the universe. When he
is too busy to do so, he sends specific
instructions to his chosen disciples through
birds. He's taught a chosen few how to
discern birdcalls, and it may well be that
the pigeon stridently cooing at your window
is actually a messenger from the great seer!
WANDERING SOUL
The Mahayogi can be stern when the situation
so demands, even while displaying a great
sense of humor and rare devilry at other
times. He once instructed Dr Bhosle to
perform underwater meditation at midnight in
the sea off the Mumbai coastline to purify
his healing energy. Often, Babaji
walked by to supervise his disciple's work,
treading on the waves. He would chat for a
while, and then walk away nonchalantly.
Babaji sometimes greeted his disciple
with an unprintable epithet, as is often the
custom in youth subcultures around the
world. At one time, the ageing Dr Bhosle
reacted with considerable anger,
remonstrating that such swear words did not
befit his status as a mahayogi. Babaji
replied: "These words are just creations of
grammar." Mostly, the language spoken by the
Master is incredibly creative, drawing from
a fount of inspiring, lyrical Sanskrit words
lending themselves beautifully to new
improvisations in Hindi.
Interestingly, Babaji's entourage of
enlightened and immortal disciples includes
yoginis who are over 600 years old.
Babaji conveys the impression that he
cherishes individuality and thoughtful
dissension, rather than servile obedience.
The sage with the immortal body has walked
the length and breadth of India and is
inured to the ways of the seemingly berserk
lone ascetics that are a law unto
themselves. There is no field of knowledge
that is beyond him and the transmutation of
atoms is simply an entertaining pastime. One
day, Babaji took his entourage to a
crematorium. There, he picked up a skull and
placing some faeces in it, he offered them
to his disciples, ordering them to eat. All
of them declined, except Dr Bhosle, who
gingerly touched it with his tongue. To his
amazement, the revolting stuff had
transformed into the most delectable dish.
In the 1950s, Babaji had set up an
ashram in the Himalayan heights above
Badrinath. He eventually closed it down. A
true wanderer, he is not to be found in any
one place, whether in the Himalayas or
elsewhere. Yet he is very much amongst us,
in Mumbai or Delhi, as much as he is in
Badrikashram. He encourages disciples to
strive for their highest destiny. Neither
God nor an angel, Babaji is more like
the atmik guru, or the inner light.
Dr Bhosle sounds a note of caution—the
masters are suprahuman, beyond the frailties
of emotion, and they demand total commitment
to the chosen path. It is of greatest
importance to follow the light with
determination, discernment and detachment.
The wise doctor concludes: "There is no such
thing in this world as miracles. Everything
happens through science. Only a person who
doesn't understand science calls it a
miracle."
A special message
from the author of this article (Amodini Gaganavir)
Dear Francisco,
Came across your
interesting site today, and I haven't finished
browsing through it yet. First of all, thank
you for reproducing my article on Babaji.
Unfortunately, the editor of Life Positive chose
to add his own interpolation, that 'Hare Khan
Baba' sounds suspiciously similar to Babaji. I
took serious objection, because they are 2
entirely different beings; moreover Babaji is
immortal because he did not die, but instead
transmuted his physical body into a light form
that continues to this day, while Hare Khan Baba
died quite a while back. They did publish a
correction towards the end of the April 2000
print issue of Life Positive.
Many foreigners are confused about Babaji,
because in India, every revered person,
especially a Saint is addressed as 'Baba',
meaning father, and the honorific ji is
added, mostly in N. India. Thus every Guru may
be rightfullty addressed as Baba or Babaji! On
the other hand, every Guru is not Mahavatar
Babaji, who is one of a kind in the entire
universe! He has at least hundreds of disciples
all over the world and beyond, and continues to
guide people in his own inimitable way, of his
own choosing. The commonly available head and
shoulders print by Eric Estep is an uncanny
likeness, and there must be a great story
waiting to be told, about how he did the
painting, if only the man could be traced. It
is more like Babaji than even the picture in
Yogananda's Autobiography, which was a painting
executed by the latter's brother, based on his
description.
Secondly, in
Indian mythology, Sanat Kumar is one name of
Kartikeya - Murugan- Skanda - Subrahmanyam etc.,
who is the second son of Shiva (Kumara Guru),
who leads the army of the Gods as Senapati! The
correct way to write the names in Sanskrit is as
follows: (You can try these names, esp. Murugan
on the Search engine also, and there is
intereesting material on the Kataragama Murugan
temple; this village in South Sri Lanka also
includes a separate shrine to Mahavatar Baba.
In His Love,
Amodini Gaganavir
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