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"Sir,
please do not leave India without a glimpse of Nirmala Devi. Her
sanctity is intense; she is known far and wide as Ananda Moyi Ma
(Joy-Permeated Mother)." My niece, Amiyo Bose, gazed at me
earnestly.
"Of course! I want very much to see the woman saint."
I added, "I have read of her advanced state of God-realization. A
little article about her appeared years ago in East-West."
"I have met her," Amiyo went on. "She recently visited my own
little town of Jamshedpur. At the entreaty of a disciple, Ananda
Moyi Ma went to the home of a dying man. She stood by his bedside;
as her hand touched his forehead, his death-rattle ceased. The
disease vanished at once; to the man's glad astonishment, he was
well."
A few days later I heard that the Blissful Mother was staying at
the home of a disciple in the Bhowanipur section of Calcutta. Mr.
Wright and I set out immediately from my father's Calcutta home. As
the Ford neared the Bhowanipur house, my companion and I observed an
unusual street scene.
Ananda Moyi Ma was standing in an open-topped automobile,
blessing a throng of about one hundred disciples. She was evidently
on the point of departure. Mr. Wright parked the Ford some distance
away, and accompanied me on foot toward the quiet assemblage. The
woman saint glanced in our direction; she alit from her car and
walked toward us.
"Father, you have come!" With these fervent words she put her arm
around my neck and her head on my shoulder. Mr. Wright, to whom I
had just remarked that I did not know the saint, was hugely enjoying
this extraordinary demonstration of welcome. The eyes of the one
hundred chelas were also fixed with some surprise on the
affectionate tableau.
I had instantly seen that the saint was in a high
state of samadhi. Utterly oblivious to her outward garb as a
woman, she knew herself as the changeless soul; from that plane she
was joyously greeting another devotee of God. She led me by the hand
into her automobile.
"Ananda Moyi Ma, I am delaying your journey!" I protested.
"Father, I am meeting you for the first time in this life, after
ages!" she said. "Please do not leave yet."
We sat together in the rear seats of the car. The Blissful Mother
soon entered the immobile ecstatic state. Her beautiful eyes glanced
heavenward and, half-opened, became stilled, gazing into the
near-far inner Elysium. The disciples chanted gently: "Victory to
Mother Divine!"
I had found many men of God-realization in India, but never
before had I met such an exalted woman saint. Her gentle face was
burnished with the ineffable joy that had given her the name of
Blissful Mother. Long black tresses lay loosely behind her unveiled
head. A red dot of sandalwood paste on her forehead symbolized the
spiritual eye, ever open within her. Tiny face, tiny hands, tiny
feet—a contrast to her spiritual magnitude!
I put some questions to a near-by woman chela while Ananda Moyi
Ma remained entranced.
"The Blissful Mother travels widely in
India; in many parts she has hundreds of disciples," the chela told
me. "Her courageous efforts have brought about many desirable social
reforms. Although a Brahmin, the saint recognizes no caste
distinctions. 1
A group of us always travel with her, looking after her comforts. We
have to mother her; she takes no notice of her body. If no one gave
her food, she would not eat, or make any inquiries. Even when meals
are placed before her, she does not touch them. To prevent her
disappearance from this world, we disciples feed her with our own
hands. For days together she often stays in the divine trance,
scarcely breathing, her eyes unwinking. One of her chief disciples
is her husband. Many years ago, soon after their marriage, he took
the vow of silence."
The chela pointed to a broad-shouldered, fine-featured man with
long hair and hoary beard. He was standing quietly in the midst of
the gathering, his hands folded in a disciple's reverential
attitude.
Refreshed by her dip in the Infinite, Ananda Moyi Ma was now
focusing her consciousness on the material world.
"Father, please tell me where you stay." Her voice was clear and
melodious.
"At present, in Calcutta or Ranchi; but soon I shall be returning
to America."
"America?"
"Yes. An Indian woman saint would be sincerely appreciated there
by spiritual seekers. Would you like to go?"
"If Father can take me, I will go."
This reply caused her near-by disciples to start in alarm.
"Twenty or more of us always travel with the Blissful Mother,"
one of them told me firmly. "We could not live without her. Wherever
she goes, we must go."
Reluctantly I abandoned the plan, as possessing an impractical
feature of spontaneous enlargement!
"Please come at least to Ranchi, with your disciples," I said on
taking leave of the saint. "As a divine child yourself, you will
enjoy the little ones in my school."
"Whenever Father takes me, I will gladly go."
A short time later the Ranchi Vidyalaya was in
gala array for the saint's promised visit. The youngsters looked
forward to any day of festivity—no lessons, hours of music, and a
feast for the climax!
"Victory! Ananda Moyi Ma, ki jai!" This reiterated
chant from scores of enthusiastic little throats greeted the saint's
party as it entered the school gates. Showers of marigolds, tinkle
of cymbals, lusty blowing of conch shells and beat of the
mridanga drum! The Blissful Mother wandered smilingly over the
sunny Vidyalaya grounds, ever carrying within her the
portable paradise.
"It is beautiful here," Ananda Moyi Ma said graciously as I led
her into the main building. She seated herself with a childlike
smile by my side. The closest of dear friends, she made one feel,
yet an aura of remoteness was ever around her—the paradoxical
isolation of Omnipresence.
"Please tell me something of your life."
"Father knows all about it; why repeat it?" She evidently felt
that the factual history of one short incarnation was beneath
notice.
I laughed, gently repeating my question.
"Father, there is little to tell." She spread her graceful hands
in a deprecatory gesture. "My consciousness has never associated
itself with this temporary body. Before I came on this earth,
Father, 'I was the same.' As a little girl, 'I was the same.' I grew
into womanhood, but still 'I was the same.' When the family in which
I had been born made arrangements to have this body married, 'I was
the same.' And when, passion-drunk, my husband came to me and
murmured endearing words, lightly touching my body, he received a
violent shock, as if struck by lightning, for even then 'I was the
same.'
"My husband knelt before me, folded his hands, and implored my
pardon.
"'Mother,' he said, 'because I have desecrated your bodily temple
by touching it with the thought of lust—not knowing that within it
dwelt not my wife but the Divine Mother—I take this solemn vow: I
shall be your disciple, a celibate follower, ever caring for you in
silence as a servant, never speaking to anyone again as long as I
live. May I thus atone for the sin I have today committed against
you, my guru.'
"Even when I quietly accepted this proposal of my husband's, 'I
was the same.' And, Father, in front of you now, 'I am the same.'
Ever afterward, though the dance of creation change around me in the
hall of eternity, 'I shall be the same.'"
Ananda Moyi Ma sank into a deep meditative state. Her form was
statue-still; she had fled to her ever-calling kingdom. The dark
pools of her eyes appeared lifeless and glassy. This expression is
often present when saints remove their consciousness from the
physical body, which is then hardly more than a piece of soulless
clay. We sat together for an hour in the ecstatic trance. She
returned to this world with a gay little laugh.
"Please, Ananda Moyi Ma," I said, "come with me to the garden.
Mr. Wright will take some pictures."
"Of course, Father. Your will is my will." Her glorious eyes
retained the unchanging divine luster as she posed for many
photographs.
Time for the feast! Ananda Moyi Ma squatted on her blanket-seat,
a disciple at her elbow to feed her. Like an infant, the saint
obediently swallowed the food after the chela had brought it to her
lips. It was plain that the Blissful Mother did not recognize any
difference between curries and sweetmeats!
As dusk approached, the saint left with her party
amidst a shower of rose petals, her hands raised in blessing on the
little lads. Their faces shone with the affection she had
effortlessly awakened.
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart,
and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy
strength:" Christ has proclaimed, "this is the first
commandment." 2
Casting aside every inferior attachment, Ananda Moyi Ma offers
her sole allegiance to the Lord. Not by the hairsplitting
distinctions of scholars but by the sure logic of faith, the
childlike saint has solved the only problem in human
life—establishment of unity with God. Man has forgotten this stark
simplicity, now befogged by a million issues. Refusing a
monotheistic love to God, the nations disguise their infidelity by
punctilious respect before the outward shrines of charity. These
humanitarian gestures are virtuous, because for a moment they divert
man's attention from himself, but they do not free him from his
single responsibility in life, referred to by Jesus as the first
commandment. The uplifting obligation to love God is assumed with
man's first breath of an air freely bestowed by his only Benefactor.
On one other occasion after her Ranchi visit I had opportunity to
see Ananda Moyi Ma. She stood among her disciples some months later
on the Serampore station platform, waiting for the train.
"Father, I am going to the Himalayas," she told me. "Generous
disciples have built me a hermitage in Dehra Dun."
As she boarded the train, I marveled to see that whether amidst a
crowd, on a train, feasting, or sitting in silence, her eyes never
looked away from God. Within me I still hear her voice, an echo of
measureless sweetness:
"Behold, now and always one with the Eternal, 'I am ever the
same.'"
Chapter
46
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