*Gods on Earth: Shankaracharya says no to worship of Sai Baba*

*Ram Puniyani*



The phenomenon of God is probably the most complex one in the World. For
believers there is a range of belief system about the supernatural powers.
For agnostics it is ‘I don’t know’ and for atheists there is no
supernatural power. The systems of thought relevant to the topic range from
Animists (nature worshippers), polytheists (multiple gods/goddesses),
tri-theists (Brahma-Vishnu-Mahesh or Father, Son and the Holy spirit),
Monotheists (single Universal God) to Atheists. In the concept of God we
have ‘god as a physical being’ to formless the God. Adivasis are animists,
worshipping the nature and spirits of their ancestors. In different
religions the concept is very different, including the fact that some
religions do not have the concept of God like Buddhism and Jainism.
Polytheism prevailed in Greek society, with different Gods and Goddesses
endowed with special virtues. Ancient Aryans also had polytheism, with
multitude of Gods and Goddesses looking after different virtues and aspects
of the life on Earth. We have a Goddess each for wealth (Laxmi) knowledge
(Sarswati) and Power (Durga) We also have a God each for lightening (Indra)
air (Marut) sex (Kamdevta) liquor (Som devta) amongst the plethora of the
divine powers. Hindu mythology is a rainbow exposition of the diversity and
complexity of the lives of Gods and Goddesses.



There is no fixed timeline of the phenomenon of God. Diverse concepts begin
in different time periods.  From animism, the most ancient concept to
polytheism-monotheism and atheism come up over a period of time but not in
a sequential fashion. Simultaneously, there come up the traditions of
Charvak, Buddhism and Jainism which either do not talk about God or deny
the existence of God. While today the prophet based religions like
Christianity and Islam have a definitive concept, the Hindu religion has
plethora of divine powers, Hinduism also has assimilated the diverse
concepts, which merrily co-exist. That’s how in my childhood while reciting
Hanuman Chalisa and reading Ramayan, (Lord Ram) I could reverentially go
through the text of Mahabharata, with many Gods playing their different
interesting roles. My family-community, worshipped Banyan tree on one hand
and on the other had parallel worship of bullocks, of snakes and what have
you. I vividly remember taking the wooden bullocks to neighbors and getting
some sweets or small change as a reward. Every Saturday, mendicants with a
vessel filled with oil used to come and my grandfather used to slip some
coins in to the vessel, while at the same time performing the puja of Lord
Ram.



Last three decades in particular while on one hand one saw the plethora of
Godmen like Mahesh Yogi, Rajneesh, J.Krishnamurthy, Asaram Bapu, Satya Sai
baba (Bhagwan) coming to the fore, the popularity of Sai Baba of Shirdi and
Mata Vaishno Devi has gone up exponentially. Bhagwan Satya Sai, who died
few years ago, had vast following and he was regarded as the reincarnation
of Shirdi Sai baba. At the same time Shirdi Sai pilgrimage became very
popular and his temples came up in most cities. Sai Baba of Shirdi has a
beautiful syncretic background. While he was born in a Muslim family he
came up more in Sufi tradition and intermingled with equal affection
amongst Hindus as well as Muslims. His major focus was bringing Hindus and
Muslims together. One major landmark in his life will give the essence of
his efforts. In 1896 he instituted the annual Sufi ‘urs' festival with the
explicit purpose of bringing these two communities together. In 1912 he
combined this Urs with Hindu Ram navami festival. This effort of his
strengthened his Sufi initiative of co-operation, symbiosis and tolerance.
During the festival Hindus would worship in the mosque along with Muslims,
each community following their own rituals. The Baba would put the
sandalwood paste on the forehead of Mlahspati, the priest of local Khandoba
temple, who in turn would reciprocate the gesture. Baba was deeply steeped
in humanism, the core of all religions, and so initially Muslims as well as
Hindus started respecting him.



By and by more and more of Hindus started worshipping him and today he is
more of a Hindu deity than a Muslim one. In Hinduism as such there is a
scope for new Gods and Goddesses also (e.g. Santoshi Ma, Satyanarayan).
Apart from Sai Baba; Swami Parmhans is another one who has been raised to
the level of divinity, and his more famous disciple Swami Vivekananda, also
started a mission in his name.



The controversy around worshipping of Sai Baba was raised by Shankaracharya
Swami Swaroopanand (June 2014) who described Shirdi Sai baba as a Muslim
ascetic, and proclaimed that he cannot be worshipped like a Hindu deity. He
also said that his campaign is to protect the Hindu religion and that he
will continue irrespective. Sadhvi Uma bharti currently Union Minister of
Water Resources, who was one of the prominent figures in Ram Temple
agitation, leading to demolition of Babri masjid and deepening the communal
divides, is also worshipper of Sai baba. In a letter to Swami Swaroopanand
she explained the rationale behind her statement where she had said that
looking upon someone as a god was people's personal choice.



While Sai Baba has been accepted as God by large sections of Hindus, it is
probably for the first time that someone, Shankaracharya, has objected to
this popular trend. As such Hinduism is a collation of multiple traditions.
The clerical Brahminical tradition to which Shankracharya belongs is rigid
and orthodox, while the other traditions of Nath, Tantra, Siddhanta and
Bhakti are more flexible and adapt to the situation very easily. The Hindu
practices have evolved continuously. On one hand the clerical ones
emphasize on the status quo, the non Brahminical traditions have
flexibility and fluidity. It will require a deeper study to understand as
to why the worship of Jai Mata Di, Sai Baba, Santoshi Maa has become more
popular during last few decades, surely it is part of broader inclusive
Hindu practice as well. One needs to realize that the religious practices
of different religions are not uniform. Even in the Universal, Prophet
based religions; there are sects, Catholic-Protestants, Shia-Sunni,
Hinayan-Mahayan, Digambar-Shetambar, to name the few. The orthodox versions
of religions have been used as the base of politics within every religion.
South Asia is today in the grip of rising religiosity on the one hand and
growing assertion of politics in the name of religion on the other. The
more conservative orthodox versions are picked up for political abuse,
Wahabi version from Islam, Brahminical version from Hinduism, and similar
conservative version from Buddhism in Myanmar-Sri Lanka-Thailand in
particular.



People should be left to their own wisdom and choice in matters of the
faith. Imposing, asserting a particular version from the interpretation of
the texts does complicate the matters and creates strife, the way the
controversy raised by Shankaracharya is doing.



While on the topic of God, recently a book has come out, “Why Atheism will
replace religion: The triumph of earthly pleasures over pie in the sky”
written by Nigel Barber. This book predicts that religions, believers, will
become a minority Vis a Vis the practice of secularism in the decade of
2040s. This book relates the rise/fall of the religion with economic power
and makes an observation that atheists are much more in number in developed
countries. This book is based on the study of 137 nations conducted by the
author who concludes that in the countries; more developed the welfare
system; higher is the number of atheists. The book’s crunch line is, in
countries where distribution of income is even, lesser is the number of
religious people. The author is a prominent psychologist. He makes a
prediction that people will feel lesser need of supernatural beliefs when
the tangible world is providing them for their real needs. Also in a survey
conducted in America 20% people identified themselves as Atheists.



While we wait for the realisability of such prediction, we should respect
the people’s choices about their faith, this is a message loud and clear
given by the followers of Sai baba in response to what Shankaracharya said.

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