A Perfect Disciple
The story of Dr. John S. Hislop 

July 2nd is the holy festival of Guru Purnima. A day when homage is paid to the 
Guru. A day on which all of us across the world express gratitude to Bhagavan, 
the Universal teacher, for guiding us on the path to lasting peace. Yes, that 
is a good thing-to be grateful to one's Guru. But what does Bhagavan himself 
want? Praises , we know, mean nothing to Him. What really matters to Him is how 
much we walk along the path shown by Him. That He says is the greatest way to 
pay Him a tribute. A Teacher is known by His students, a painter by His art, 
and a sculptor by his sculptures. A Guru is known by His disciples and an 
Avatar by his devotees. The perfect devotee who surrenders to the Lord, the 
Guru, and practises His teachings is the one in whom the Glory of the Lord is 
reflected most. He becomes a cause, an instrument in bringing several others 
into the orbit of the Transforming Love of God. He is the one who pays real 
homage to His Guru. One such devotee of Bhagwan was John S Hislop.

Dr. John S Hislop was one of the fine instruments used by Bhagavan Baba to 
spread His Message across the continents. Hislop to Swami came via the 
Theosophy/Meditation route. It all started when as a young man of eighteen he 
had gone to Taihiti in the Pacific in search of adventure. There he met a 
priest who told him about Theosophy. As soon as Hislop returned to Los Angeles, 
he joined the Theosophical Society because he wanted to serve humanity. Soon he 
became actively involved with the establishment set up in Ojai, California, by 
Dr. Annie Besant, a pillar of the Theosophy movement.

It was in Ojai that Hislop came into contact with J.Krishnamurthi [from India] 
who was being projected by Annie Besant as a `World Teacher'. About this 
experience, Hislop says, "Krishnamurthi and Besant were giant figures who 
filled the horizon, and it seemed to me that they and only they had found the 
truth of life. I feel eternally grateful to Dr. Besant and Krishnamurthi for 
their great kindness and great patience with an undisciplined man. But wisdom 
was not born in me as a follower of Krishnamurthi."

In between, Hislop went through higher education, finally receiving his 
doctorate in the School of Education in the University of California, Los 
Angeles Campus [UCLA]. Thereafter he taught for a while and later switched to 
business, where he was quite successful. He also got married to Victoria, who 
shared his passion for philosophical enlightenment. Together, Hislop and 
Victoria drifted from one Guru to another, ending up in the fifties with 
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi who by then had hit the headlines in the West. Twenty 
five years of search for that `something' had passed but that `something' was 
still not in sight.

The year is 1958. Hislop comes to India to help Mahesh Yogi in setting up an 
Academy for Meditation in the Himalayas. Being an American, he is at first 
mistaken to be a CIA agent (!) but later allowed to do his work. At this stage 
Hislop takes a break and goes to Burma to learnVipassana Meditation practised 
by Buddhists. Hislop finds that the Buddhist style of meditation is fascinating 
and wonderful but, in his words,

The Buddhist way was a way of the intellect and the mind. And despite my great 
appreciation and gratitude for having found the discipline, I felt that my 
heart was dry; it was a Western heart with very little love left in it. We 
[Hislop and his wife] had begun to realise that the Vipassana discipline could 
be dangerous for a life in the world and that to pursue it properly one should 
become a monk...

Around this time, Burma had begun to look inwards, closing its borders to 
foreigners. So, it did not seem possible to stay back in Burma and become a 
monk. Yet, Hislop clung to Vipassana, lacking an alternative. A few more years 
passed, and then..

My wife and I first heard of Baba in 1968 through a description of Him given to 
a friend of mine by a lady who had visited India. She had brought back some 
sacred ash [Vibhuti], a beautiful ring as a gift to her from the miraculous 
nature of Baba, and she had many fascinating stories to tell. One special 
remark struck fire. The lady said that she felt a change in her character while 
with Baba, and the change persisted even after she returned home. This 
statement had a strong impact on my mind. Could there be a man, was there a man 
living today whose being was so subtle, so powerful, so mysterious, so Divine, 
that He could change a human Heart?

If it were indeed true that such a man lived in today's world, then nothing 
else in my life could equal the urgency of seeking Him out. I prayed that 
through His Grace and kindness, He might touch my dry Heart and make it alive 
and vibrant.

My wife and I heard the story of Baba on a Monday, and the same week we were 
aboard a plane to India. ..

Hislop continues:

Upon meeting Baba, I knew at once, without doubt, that for me, here was the 
true source of Wisdom. ...It is difficult and probably impossible to express in 
words the effect upon myself of that first meeting with Baba. My entire being 
was profoundly affected and changed. Immediately, Baba became the centre of my 
life, and has remained so. In His presence at that first meeting, the world 
fell away from me, my entire consciousness was drawn inward and, at a most 
subtle level of awareness, Baba appeared in my Heart as Love. Love was 
unmistakable and that Baba was this Love was equally unmistakable. It seemed to 
me that only God Himself could enter my Heart as Love and, since then, this 
feeling of Divine Presence has never changed. ..I found to my great surprise 
that although I had always used an intellectual approach to spiritual life, the 
devotional path became very natural to me as soon as I encountered Baba.

Swami gave Hislop innumerable experiences so that the latter could get a feel 
for all aspects of Divinity. Baba also granted Hislop any number of Interviews, 
answered his questions in detail, came to his rescue during illness, saved him 
from disaster, created unusual objects for him and once even blessed him with a 
vision of Krishna. A sample now of a few these, in Hislop's own words. We start 
with the famous episode dealing with the creation by Baba of a crucifix for 
Hislop. Interestingly, the crucifix was created on Mahasivarathri Day in the 
year 1973, deep in the forest! This holy festival was celebrated by Baba in the 
company of a small group almost in privacy, and not before massive crowds as 
normally happens. Let us hear Hislop recall the event:

The crucifix was created by Baba on a most auspicious day, Mahasivarathri. 
..The evening before, we were told to be ready in the early morning for a trip; 
and that when the cars were loaded and ready we would know the destination. 
Swami had decided that only a handful of people would be with Him..

Our destination was the Bandipur Game Sanctuary in Bandipur Forest, several 
hours away from the city of Mysore. We arrived at the Forest rest-house in the 
early afternoon. Later we took various winding roads hoping to come upon one of 
the Forest's wild elephant herds. ... the elephants remained in their secret 
places and not even one was seen. But the drive through the hills had another 
and more important objective..

As we crossed a bridge above a sandy, dry riverbed, Baba indicated that this 
would be the place. . The cars halted at the side of the road, and we started 
to climb down the bank to the sandy river bottom. I was beside Baba. As we 
passed a bush, Swami broke off two twigs, placed them together and asked me, 
"What is this, Hislop?"

"Well Swami, it is a cross," I answered. Baba then closed His fingers over the 
twigs and directed three somewhat slow breaths into His fist, between thumb and 
forefinger. Then He opened His hand to reveal a Christ figure on a Cross, and 
He gave it to me.

He said, "This shows Christ as he really was at the time he left his body, not 
as artists have imagined him. His stomach is pulled in and his ribs are all 
showing. He had no food for eight days."

I looked at the crucifix but found no words. Baba then continued: "The cross is 
made of wood from the actual cross on which Christ was crucified. To find some 
of the wood after 2000 years took a little time! The image is of Christ after 
he died. It is a dead face."
I noticed something odd and asked, "Swami, what is that hole at the top of the 
cross?" Baba replied that the cross had been originally hung from a standard.

A little while after the materialisation of the cross, Sivarathri was 
celebrated on the sandy river bed with devotees singing Bhajan and Baba 
bringing out a Lingam to mark the holy day and the significance of Creation - 
quite a change from the normal circumstances under which Sivarathri is 
celebrated.

A couple of years later, some American devotees asked Swami about the cross 
materialised for Hislop. Baba replied:

Yes, I made it for him. When I went to look for the wood, every particle of the 
cross had disintegrated and returned to the elements. I reached out to the 
elements and reconstitutedsufficient material for a small cross. Very seldom 
does Swami interfere with Nature, but occasionally, for a devotee, it will be 
done."

The story of the cross does not quite end with its physical materialisation. 
Hislop had a strange experience a few months later, when the cross was being 
shown to a few friends. This is what he says:

Within a few weeks we were back in our home in Mexico and were soon to witness 
an amazing series of events in relation to the crucifix. ... [One day] the time 
was about 5 P.M. On this afternoon, the sky along the Mexican coast was clear 
and peaceful. But suddenly without warning, there was a loud crash of thunder 
and as our eyes turned towards the windows, lightning flashed from a dark cloud 
where a moment before there had been only clear sky. A violent wind rushed 
through the house, causing windows and doors to open and shut with such force 
that the glass was in danger of shattering. The curtains were flying in all 
directions. We were much startled by this turn of events, but my wife at once 
said, "It is 5 P.M., the time Christ died on the cross, and what is now 
happening is described in the Bible." She later brought a Bible and we looked 
though until we found the pertinent paragraph, which said that at the moment 
Christ gave up His life, a violent storm arose with lightning and thunder, and 
winds rent the curtains of the temple. We concluded that we had witnessed a 
wonder totally beyond our power of imagination. Before our eyes had occurred 
nothing less than a recapitulation of events related to crucifixion. The 
following day, newspapers in San Diego carried a brief story commenting on the 
sudden and mysterious storm that had arisen without warning on the Mexican 
coast, near Ensenada. ..A year or so alter, I sent a description of the event 
to Dr. Eruch B. Fanibanda for his book, Vision of the Divine. He showed the 
memo to Baba. After reading the memo, Baba said that the event had occurred as 
described and that the significance attributed to it was correct.

Bhagavan Baba has saved innumerable devotees from danger and imminent disaster, 
when they appealed to Him. Swami saved Hislop also, but Hislop's experience was 
one with a big difference.

One evening in 1973, we left Brindavan at about 8 P.M. to return to Bangalore. 
There were five of us in the taxi, plus the driver. The Bangalore road is only 
two lanes. Some miles from Brindavan, we overtook a bus. Although the driver of 
our taxi saw some lights ahead, he estimated that there was plenty of time to 
pass the bus. He could not have been more mistaken - the lights ahead were that 
of a car moving at a very high speed towards us. ..

In this particular area, the layout of the road was also deadly. The road was 
under repair, and there was a high bank of dirt and rocks covering the side of 
the road. Thus, there was no possibility of the oncoming car beingable to 
swerve off the road. We, too, could not take evasive action, for the bus was on 
our left and the road-repair material on the right, and by this time the 
oncoming car was directly in front of us. A foolish driver in that car and an 
equally foolish driver in our taxi! .. The lights of the oncoming car now 
struck directly into the windscreen of our taxi. The cars could not have been 
more than a second or so apart. We were stunned. Not one of us remembered Baba 
or called out to Him. We felt we were as good as dead, and we instinctively 
tensed for the crash. But at that very moment something happened that was 
without any rational explanation. At one moment the two cars were upon each 
other, about to be smashed in a fatal head-on collision. The very next moment, 
the oncoming car was behind us, and we were continuing to pass the bus with a 
clear road ahead. Looking back, we could see the red tail-lamp of the other 
car. There was no crash. ..

The next day we drove out to Brindavan as usual at 8 A.M. so as to be waiting 
near the veranda for Baba to appear for morning Darshan. As soon as He came 
into the room, I touched the Lotus feet and said, "We want to thank Baba for 
saving our lives last night."

Baba smiled and said, "Yes, that was a close one. You were so shocked that not 
even one of you called out for Swami! But Swami saved you anyway." Then He 
turned to a group of men and in Telugu told them the entire story of the 
incident.

I then said, "Swami, You must have altered time and space in order to save us." 
Baba just smiled and did not answer.

>From time to time, Swami has orchestrated situations wherein devotees have 
>been blessed to see Him in some of the other forms He is worshipped in. Hislop 
>was among the lucky few to get a glimpse of Baba as Sri Krishna. That story 
>follows, in Hislop's own words:

A number of years ago I was in Baba's car. He was in the rear seat with two 
other persons. I was in the front seat with the driver. We were on our way to 
Puttaparthi. Driving in the car with Baba is a fascinating experience ...

At some point in the journey, perhaps about half-way, Baba was talking and I 
turned to look. My breathing stopped and was transfixed. I could not credit my 
eyes. ..

What transfixed my movement and stopped my breathing now, was His face ...The 
Baba I knew was not there! Instead, there was a face of the most extra-ordinary 
beauty - quite different in shape and cast from the features of our beloved 
Sai. The charm was so great, so poignant, that my heart seemed to twist, almost 
as though it were in pain. Never in my life, not in photos, nor in paintings by 
great artists have I seen a face of such exquisite beauty. It was beyond 
imagination and concept, totally beyond experience.

And His colour was blue. Not just blue, not the blue with which artists paint 
Sri Krishna, but a deep blue like the velvet blue that can sometimes be seen in 
a dark sky, like a blue that I have, at times, seen from the deck of a ship 
thousands of miles from the shores of the Pacific Ocean. I do not know how else 
to describe it.

I could not take my eyes from Baba's face. .. The two men sitting with Baba 
were beginning to look at me with somewhat puzzled expressions..

After a few miles, Sri Vittal Rao (on Baba's left) asked me, "Hislop, why were 
you staring at Swami like that?"

Instead of answering, I directed a question to Baba, "Swami, what was that blue 
colour?"
He replied, "Oh! That? Whenever there is something of unfathomable depth, it 
appears deep blue."

That was the end of the conversation about the incident. Naturally, the thought 
had come to mind that maybe this was Lord Krishna, but neither then, nor at any 
time in connection with this experience, did I ever mention Krishna to Baba.

There the matter rested until November, 1975. ..

One day, shortly before Birthday, Swami called a family for Interview. Hislop 
also was called. Swami spent some time talking to the family ad then turned to 
Hislop. Over now to Hislop for that part of the story:

After a while, Baba said to me, "Hislop, tell them about your experiences."

I complied and, after mentioning some incidents, I told them the same story 
[about seeing a deep blue face]. . The man was deeply impressed and words broke 
from his lips, "Oh! That had to be Lord Krishna!"

Baba smiled and said, "Yes, that was Krishna; not the Krishna pictured by 
artists and imagined by writers. I showed Hislop the REAL KRISHNA."

Hislop was clearly a specially chosen one for he had many wonderful experiences 
like few have been blessed to have. Here is Hislop's description of one of them 
that helped him to eventually see Swami everywhere.

After I had been going to Prasanti Nilayam for about three years, coming back 
to America, as I got off the plane, I felt that Swami's head and shoulders were 
superimposed on mine. I felt that way. I was aware of the hair. So I said, 
"Well, welcome to America, Swami!" That feeling lasted for three years. Every 
place I would go, there would be Swami standing in the room. When I would talk 
to people at the Centre, Swami would be standing behind every person in that 
room! Behind every person would be Swami's head. When I look at the wall there 
would be a row of Swamis standing along the wall. That vision finally came to 
an end, and I told Swami, "Swami, that phenomenon has come to an end now." 
Swami said, "Hislop, don't you know that all phenomena come to an end?" He 
added, "You have had that vision of Swami without any effort on your part 
whatsoever. Now you have to deliberately see Swami wherever you look!" So I do 
that.

Here is another of those unique Hislop-experiences:

One time, Swami went to Madras and arrived unexpectedly at the house of His 
hostess. You know, when the Avatar come to visit your house, I am sure you 
would want to have something with which to greet Him - some flowers or a tray 
of food or something to the welcome the Lord to your house. That was the case 
with this hostess too.

Swami came to the door and knocked. The hostess answered, saw Swami standing 
there, and exclaimed, Oh Swami, Swami, I am so happy to see You. But Swami, You 
didn't tell me that you were coming, and I don't have anything to welcome you 
with. I don't have flowers or fruit. I don't have anything." The poor lady was 
quite distraught. So Swami said, "Don't worry, don't worry." Then He turned 
around and beckoned at the car.

Out of the car came two angels with wings, carrying a big silver tray, loaded 
with fruit and flowers and everything the hostess would need to welcome Swami. 
The angels brought this tray up to the house and gave it to the hostess. Then 
Swami turned to the angels and waved them back to the car. They floated back to 
the car, folded their wings, got into the car, and disappeared!

Later on, as the years went by, Swami acquired another vehicle. He had a bus, 
and He would take the students for excursions in the bus. One time. He took 
them on an excursion to Madras.

First, He went to the house of the hostess, where He would be staying; the 
students would be staying someplace else. When the hostess came to the door and 
saw the busload of students, she went back inside her house and brought out the 
silver tray. It was still there, and she told the students the story of the 
angels with wings ...

After many years of wandering and unfulfilled yearning, Swami finally drew 
Hislop to Himself, granting him the blessing of Divine proximity. Hislop, for 
his part, took full advantage of the opportunity given, not for himself but for 
the sake of humanity. He became a roving ambassador, and through his talks as 
well his books [widely known justifiably], Hislop did yeoman service in 
spreading Sai's Message far and wide. Even when afflicted by cancer, he did not 
hesitate to travel and speak about the Lord he had discovered. He says:

In this modern society, a dry and joyless life is the general experience. 
Witness the frantic search for distraction and pleasure the world over. An 
almost universal prayer springs up from adult persons caught up in today's 
culture: O Lord, may there be a new season of Spring in my heart. May the river 
of Love flow deep and strong again in my heart!"

Here, to me, is one of the most wonderful miracles of Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai 
Baba. The fettered heart, turning to Baba, can break free from all bondage. 
Seeing Him, being sure that He will never abandon, is a most wonderful feeling. 
With joy, the heart responds to this trust. With each day, love for Baba grows 
stronger and stronger. He is the Divine Mother and the Divine Father to His 
devotee. One may love Him without reserve, without guard, without fear ...

Hislop constantly chanted Baba's Name, right till the very end. As he gave up 
the mortal coil, friends gathered around him kept chanting the sacred OM, even 
as the soul journeyed to its eternal resting-place, the Divine Lotus Feet. Some 
time later, Swami asked an American devotee on the veranda, "Where is Hislop?" 
The devotee looked up, as if to signify that Hislop was in heaven. Baba then 
said, "He has come to Me. Good man; always thinking of and working for Swami." 
There cannot be a better eulogy.

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