India would have been a better place without Sathya Sai Baba
Sanal Edamaruku
President
Indian Rationalist Association & Rationalist International
When Sathya Sai Baba died this morning (24 April 2011) at the age of 85 years, 
he proved once again that miracles and predictions fail. He had predicted at a 
public gathering at his head quarters in Puttaparthy, in 2000, and repeatedly 
many times, that he would die at the age of 96 only. And till the last moment, 
many of his devotees clung to his word and waited for a miracle. May it be an 
eye opener for the millions of gullible people whom he misguided and deluded. 
De mortuis nihil nisi bene, they say, say nothing but good of the dead. But I 
think Sathya Sai Baba’s case qualifies for an exception. Too great is the 
damage that he did to India. His devastating influence on reason and scientific 
temper caused huge setback to the country. At a time, when scientific progress 
led to great social and economic leaps and scientific awakening started 
spreading all over India, Sathya Sai Baba launched a “counter revolution” of 
superstition, supported by irresponsible politicians and other public figures 
who should have known better. In my judgment, this is his greatest crime. I 
have succeeded again and again to expose him publicly as a fraud, so did some 
other rationalists. But due to his political protectors he was never held 
responsible for his crimes against public reason. Nor was he ever booked for 
any other crime he was accused of. Numerous cases of alleged sexual abuse and 
murder are yet to be investigated, not to
 mention the financial secrets of his empire. 
Sathya Sai Baba insisted in all seriousness that he was god, the creator of the 
universe, and “proved” his divinity with a couple of small “miracles”. As son 
of a village tantric he was familiar with the hand sleights and tricks of the 
trade. However, he did not only fascinate poor and uneducated villagers with 
his fraudulent performances. Over the years, he managed to attract a galaxy of 
India’s rich and powerful, among them ministers, prime ministers, presidents, 
chief justices, top industrialists and superstars. 
Sathya Sai Baba had a special modus operandi that was the key for his 
astonishing success and the root of his enormous clout. Many of his high 
society devotees came to serve their own vested interests. Some came to rub 
shoulders with the prominent. Many joined the club because it was working as a 
powerful syndicate spreading its tentacles all over the political system. It 
was a way to the top jobs and a way to get things done. Others were seeking 
financial support or wanted to get rid of ill-gotten black money: The empire, 
it is alleged, was based on money laundering, using foreign devotees and 
branches. In fact, the huge foreign donations to Sai Baba stood in contrast to 
the comparatively modest number of active foreign devotees and the sometimes 
quite weak foreign branches, some of them residing in private homes. That is no 
great surprise, when one considers that Sai Baba did not speak any other 
language than Telugu and traveled only once in his whole
 life abroad – to visit his friend Idi Amin in Uganda.
On his 80th birthday, Sai Baba’s supporters announced that he would turn from a 
miracle man to a philanthropist. That was, after I had demonstrated his 
miracles so often in TV shows that many kids in the streets could imitate them. 
That he since spent a part of the great fortunes, swindled out of the gullible, 
for social development around his ancestral village, is highlighted now to 
present him as a saint. But as useful and welcome hospitals, schools and 
drinking water projects for the poor always may be: this kind of 
alibi-philanthropy is well known even from mafia-bosses. It cannot be weighed 
against his crimes and the damage he has done to the Indian society. 
In December 2005, I wrote a letter to then President Dr. Abdul Kalam, one of 
Sai Baba’s ardent supporters, which was never answered. I demanded criminal 
investigations against Sai Baba. If his social development projects are meant 
to be indulgence to nullify his crimes, this procedure is unprecedented and 
unacceptable, I wrote. It is a shame for India that well-founded accusations 
and numerous reputed witnesses against Sai Baba are ignored without any 
investigation. Do saffron clothes make an offender untouchable for the law? Do 
we have to tolerate that political protectionism raises its head so boldly, 
mocking India's democracy? 
Sathya Sai Baba caused great damage to India. His irresponsible political 
patrons corrupted the political culture of India. Encouraged by the clout of 
Sathya sai Baba, a new clan of miracle mongers imitated him. India would have 
been a better place without Sathya Sai Baba.
(This or other articles from the  Rationalist International Bulletin may be 
reproduced by journals, blogs or web sites without change or alteration in its 
content, and with due acknowledgment.)
Rationalist International: [email protected]
 
 

 

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