The Mother as an Apprentice…

How dearly the simple village woman in The Chosen Mother, Easwaramma, loved her 
‘Bundle Of Joy”, often failing to grasp the Truth that He was verily the source 
and sustenance of the world and beyond. Unassuming and full of motherly love, 
Easwaramma, the Mother who cradled Him… nursed Him – Who was verily Her 
delight, would often worry about the safety and security of Her Avataric Son 
when He often crossed the borders of Prasanthi. Read on how the Mother cared 
for ‘Her Love and Light and Delight’…from Kasturi’s Pen…

Prasanthi Nilayam was inaugurated on Swami’s Birthday in 1950. The Birthday 
until that year had been rather informal. Swami delighted the Mother and the 
Father and their sons and daughters by visiting their home and going through 
the ritual of lunch in their company. After the parents had placed a few drops 
of oil on His cluster of hair, the ceremonial bath was gone through and Swami 
fulfilled the longing of some devotee by accepting the robe and dhoti he placed 
at His feet. All those present then touched His feet praying for boons and 
blessings.

Prasanthi Nilayam, however, challenged the devotees to inaugurate a more 
impressive although still intimate celebration of the Birthday of their dear 
Lord. Elderly women gathered at the Nilayam in the early hours of the 
twenty-third day of November. Each one had a plate on which were piles of 
flowers, fruits, sweets, coconuts, turmeric, kumkum, rice grains, betel leaves 
and areca, sandal paste, blocks of jaggery, glass bangles and other auspicious 
materials. Shining pots filled with consecrated water were carried on their 
hips. One of the groups bore a silver plate with a silk sari upon it. A few 
elderly men joined them with a silk dhoti for the father and they proceeded to 
Puttaparthi village preceded by pipers and drummers. When they reached the 
Ratnakaram home, they announced to the parents that it was the Birthday of 
Bhagawan and invited them to Prasanthi Nilayam. One could sense a feeling of 
awkwardness and unpreparedness that dimmed their eyes, for, both of them would 
rather be left alone than be placed before the flood lights on the centre of 
the stage. Nevertheless the Mother and Pedda Venkama Raju did fulfill the 
wishes of the thousands. They were overwhelmed with gratitude for the 
opportunity given to them by Swami.

As soon as they stood before Him they lost all sense of time and space. 
Easwaramma placed flowers on Swami’s feet and stood up to dip a rose in oil. 
When she lifted her palm to drop the oil on the Son’s hair, He bent low so that 
the head would be within reach. The father too did the same and as both of them 
descended from the dais, the devotees hailed the occasion expressing their joy 
in loud acclaim. It was only then that Easwaramma became aware of the Hall and 
the crowd, the Nilayam and the village. It was an embarrassing moment for her. 
But she was soon relieved, for she found another wedded couple climbing the 
steps to place flowers at Swami’s feet and apply oil on His hair. Swami 
selected about eight others to share in the joyous ceremony. They come from 
different linguistic and geographical regions and are invariably old in age and 
rooted in faith. Easwaramma shunned publicity and prominence and loved to lose 
her identity in a group of devotees but on the Birthday she had to submit to 
what she dreaded most a pre-eminent love.

During Swami’s discourses, she stood for a few minutes somewhere on the 
circumference of the audience, thrilled by the free flow of His silver voice. 
And when the applause sounded in the auditorium she wondered what He had said 
that could evoke such spontaneous acclamation. When she next passed by my 
residence she would ask me in confidence, “Was what Swami spoke so profound? 
Where does He gather all these mantras?” By ‘mantras’ she meant the Sanskrit 
verses, the Upanishadic lines, the Vedic hymns that Swami quoted. When the 
monthly magazine, Sanathana Sarathi, was inaugurated, she could not suppress 
her curiosity to know the number of people to whom it was sent. When I informed 
her that devotees not merely demanded it but actually adored the issues as they 
arrived by post considering them ‘Prasad’ granted by Swami Himself, I found her 
not quite happy. She could not forget the fact that Sathya had left school too 
early and that He was venturing into depths that no one, known to her, would 
dare plumb.

Easwaramma found that doctors and lawyers, monks and merchants, Rajas and 
Princes were coming to Puttaparthi and, sitting around Swami, pleading for 
answers and solutions to the doubts and questions they placed before Him. She 
herself only understood conversational Telugu but she could see the relief and 
rejoicing that settled on their distracted faces when they heard Swami’s words 
in reply. She gasped when Swami gave them His assurance, “Don’t worry. I will 
be with you… Why bother? I am yours.” He was promising too much to too many, 
she felt in alarm, and it took years for her to get rid of this fear. She had 
no knowledge that Avatars could address gatherings and transform base metal 
into gold through the alchemy of speech. The Rama and Krishna she knew had been 
householders who had themselves learnt from sages. Krishna inspired and 
instructed others to obey Him and be saved. Rama had no time or inclination to 
give discourses on Dharma; He just lived it and people learnt it. Easwaramma 
feared that some day some old pundit would arrive and silence her Son. It took 
some years before her heart was set at rest. Meanwhile, people of all races and 
all levels of civilisation were arriving with hope and departing with faith 
after hearing Swami’s intimate instructions imparted in confidence in their own 
native dialects and languages.

Mother was happy when Swami was before her eyes. She grew nervous whenever He 
proposed to leave Puttaparthi on a visit to distant villages and towns. She was 
afraid that He would stay on indefinitely or go on from there to other places 
nearby. She had heard that there was a wave of atheism and religious 
irreverence invading village after village in the southern parts of the country 
and so, when a group of elders from V. arrived and prayed that Swami accompany 
them to their town she resolved to countermand the visit at all costs.

Srimathi Susheelamma, who witnessed her frantic efforts, gives this description 
of her agitation: “They do not know the real situation in that place, or if 
they do, they don’t care what happens to Swami or themselves. It is sheer 
bravado”, Easwaramma told herself as she hurried to the Nilayam in hot haste. 
Swami was in the dining room and at the table, ready to go through the rite 
called lunch when Easwaramma came in gasping for breath, for she had climbed 
the steps at one stretch, “Why this excitement? What has happened?” Swami 
asked, pretending to be ignorant of her mission. The mother said, “I have heard 
some news. Is it true?” “First tell me what they have told you” Swami replied. 
“I won’t tell You until You give me Your word that You won’t go now to any 
town”, she insisted. Swami had a hearty laugh at her anxiety. “How can I stick 
to this one room all the time? I have come from where I was in order to go to 
places near and far”, He said. “That is not the point. Have You agreed to go 
with these people to V., tell me,” the Mother asked, her voice shaking with 
trepidation. “Promise me that You won’t go to that place. That is all I ask. 
Listen to me. Heed my prayer. They say it is a centre of wickedness and 
cruelty. When I say don’t, don’t” she pleaded. “That is the very reason I have 
agreed to go there. The doctor visits only the sick. How can people who are 
seriously ill harm the doctor? I do not hate them, so, they will not hate Me. I 
am not angry with them; so, they won’t be angry with Me,” He replied. But the 
mother’s fears held on. She shed tears and looking straight into Swami’s eyes 
said, “What more can I say? Bangaroo. Send these people away. Give me this one 
boon”. Swami rose and holding both her hands in His soft grasp, He wiped her 
tears and spoke so sweetly that she left the room greatly relieved.

Yet, she met the group of hosts and requested them to be ever vigilant of who 
approached Swami and when. She was lost in prayer all the days that Baba was 
away, and she was right there at the door when He returned. As soon as He 
spotted her, Swami said, “Do you care to know what happened there? I plucked 
the fangs of every serpent!”

II Samasta Lokah Sukhino Bhavantu II

-- 

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"saimsg" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to