--- In [email protected], "sparaig" <lengli...@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "do.rflex" <do.rflex@> wrote:
> >
> > --- In [email protected], I am the eternal <L.Shaddai@> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 5:05 PM, nablusoss1008 <[email protected]> 
> > > wrote:
> > > > During Guru Purnimah we were asked to write down our wishes for the 
> > > > future and put it in a box for Guru Dev and for Him to read.
> > > >
> > > > One fellow wrote in his plea to Guru Dev: "I wish Germany to be united".
> > > > Maharishi commented; "It is going to happen".
> > > > Scarce are the fortunate souls that believed a word of what Maharishi 
> > > > uttered at the time.
> > > > This was in 1982, and we now know what happened.
> > > >
> > > > Jai Guru Dev
> > > >
> > > 
> > > Sorry I missed that.  I would have written Guru Dev a very large check
> > > and thrown it into the box in thanks for Guru Dev's work on Earth.
> > 
> > 
> > Guru Dev never accepted money.
> >
> 
> Did MMY when he was running the ashram?
> 
> How do you know?
> 
> L.



Guru Dev was known for his self-sufficiency and would not accept donations from 
anyone, whether rich or poor. In fact, a sign was erected at his ashram which 
said,

"Worthy of Worship, Infinitely Bestowed, The Universal
Guru Shankaracharya Jyotirmath, Swami Brahmananda
Saraswati Maharaj prohibits any offerings of wealth."

Among the sages of India, the concept of self-sufficiency has a special 
meaning. First, it means one who is filled with love of the Divine and beyond 
personal human relationships. Second, it means one who is beyond personal 
attachments and cannot be swayed from right action. And third, it means one who 
lives without any earthly means of support.

Often people tried to curry favor with Guru Dev by offering money or other 
valuable goods, but he maintained his independence and never accepted gifts. On 
one occasion, a merchant confided to Guru Dev that he was involved in a legal 
problem and was being sued. Guru Dev listened to his story without making any 
comment.

During the next few days, the law suit was settled in the man's favor. Assuming 
that Guru Dev had mysteriously helped in some way, he returned to the ashram 
bearing an offering of gold coins. When Guru Dev learned of the offering, he 
said to the man,

"You offer me money but you don't offer it to those
poor who ask you for it. To those who need it, you
offer nothing. You offer it to me? Do I have a son
or daughter I need to marry off? Take the money and
go. Give it to those who need it.

If you want to give me something, give me your greed,
your lusts, your weaknesses. That is what you really
hold dear above all else. Give me everything that
stands between you and God."

As Shankaracharya of Jyotirmath, Guru Dev took on the responsibility of 
restoring the Shankaracharya tradition throughout Northern India. This was a 
huge task involving many tours as well as the acquisition of property and 
reconstruction of temples and monasteries, with costs running into the millions 
of rupees. 

Several times large fund raising campaigns were planned but Guru Dev
always vetoed these proposals. In mysterious ways, sufficient resources always
appeared, when and as needed, to accomplish the projects at hand. The question 
foremost on everyone's mind, "How does Guru Dev accomplish this? He seems to 
have no access to money and as a Dandi Swami, he doesn't even touch money. 

How can a person who has been a renunciate from the age of 9 and who never 
accepts donations, arrange for these expensive transactions?" When pressed for 
an answer, Guru Dev simply said, "No human being has been involved in these 
things". When begged by his followers to elaborate, he went on to say,

"During the time of the Mahabharat, when the Kauravas
unabashedly tried to strip Draupadi naked, wherefrom
did come yard upon yard of the sari she was wearing??
And it was of the same color and pattern, thousands of
yards. Not a different color. Not a different pattern.
Same color and pattern, yard upon yard. When God gives,
He gives all that is required: the whole thingÂ…the real
thing. What could happen at the time of the Mahabharat,
can take place now. God has not changed. He is ever the
same."

On at least one occasion, Guru Dev spoke openly about his ability for 
attracting resources. It was in December 1952, that Guru Dev was visited by 
then President of India, Dr. Rajendra Prasad. When making a point about the 
master/disciple relationship, Guru Dev related one of his own experiences as a 
disciple of Swami Krishnanand.

"When I first met Guruji in Uttar-Kashi, my first request
was, 'Please give me that knowledge which will make me
self sufficient so that I do not have to beg anything from
anyone.' It is my Guru's grace that to this day I have
never had to stretch my hands before anyone."

Thus, by the grace of his guru, he fulfilled the promise he had made to his 
mother many years earlier when he left home [that he would never beg].

http://srigurudev.net/gurudev/biography.html





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