In a country that has never been short of self-proclaimed godmen peddling 
spiritual succour with commercial motive, Sri Sathya Sai Baba, who passed away 
at the age of 84 at Puttaparthi in Andhra Pradesh on April 24, 2011, stands out 
as a rare phenomenon - a spiritual leader whose mass following transcended 
linguistic, national, and religious boundaries, who channelised the fervour and 
quest of millions of devotees into giving and sharing, who steered clear of 
divisive political and communal activities all his life.


In the complex spiritual spectrum of modern-day India, Sai Baba may not have 
been associated with a metaphysical and transcendent philosophy like Sri 
Aurobindo, or the fervent devotion to the divine that often sent Sri 
Ramakrishna Paramahamsa into a trance, or the self-enquiry and non-dualism that 
made Sri Ramana Maharishi a silent, yet eloquent preceptor. 


Yet Sai Baba's simple message of love and harmony - mostly soaked in the 
language of Hindu philosophy, but often in a universal strain - was enough to 
draw the masses towards him. Among those who sought his guidance were the 
harried and the content businessperson, the troubled and the sated householder, 
politicians in search of peace, and the more humble seekers of solace from the 
rigours of life. 


His early reputation was built on a series of miracles such as producing 
vibhuthi (holy ash) or rings or miniature shivalings out of thin air, which 
invited disdain from rationalists who saw these as nothing more than sleight of 
hand; there were other controversies as well. His ardent devotees, on the other 
hand, saw the miracles as mere expressions of his divine powers, and his 
teachings and the manner in which he touched their lives as far more important.


Sai Baba's phenomenal mass appeal lay in his unswerving commitment to communal 
harmony, his encouragement of charitable activity and public-spiritedness, and 
his own example in building educational and health care institutions that 
focussed on meeting basic needs on a large scale. 


Among the projects executed by his Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust, the drinking 
water supply projects for Ananthapur district and Chennai city stand out. The 
latter effort, a Rs.200 crore project to strengthen the Kandaleru-Poondi canal 
through which waters of the Krishna reached the metropolis, earned the 
admiration of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi, a non-believer who went 
so far as to describe Sai Baba as "one equivalent to God." 


His devotees may or may not be on the lookout for a reincarnation in some 
remote place but for society at large, his legacy will be the message of love 
and harmony and the altruistic activities of his cash-rich trust that, without 
his guiding hand, needs to resist temptation and carry on with integrity, 
transparency, and imagination.


Source: The Hindu dated 26.04.2011

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