Meditation Tree @ 54

he spiritually potent, significant and blessed Banyan Tree in Prasanthi 
Nilayam, popularly known as Meditation Tree, turned 54 today. Commemorating the 
occasion a brief programme was organized at the venue this morning. The 
programme commenced with Veda chanting followed by 108 Ashtothara of Bhagawan, 
concluding with a brief spell of Bhajans and Mangala Arathi at 10:30 a.m. 
Sizeable number of devotees attended the 45 minute function.




Mentioning the significance of the Meditation Tree, Prof. Kasturi wrote in 
Sathyam Sivam Sundaram thus:

The Banyan Tree that is growing in the grove has a peculiar sanctity of its 
own. In April of 1959, while talking one evening on the sands of the 
Chitravathi River to a gathering of devotees, Baba spoke of Buddha and the 
Bodhi tree, the "Tree of Wisdom," and of the Sadhakas (spiritual aspirants) 
seeking some specially favorable spots for their austerities. Even as He was 
speaking thus, He "took" out from the sands a thick copper plate about fifteen 
inches by ten inches in size which contained mystic markings and letters of 
many known and unknown alphabets! He said that such mystic plates, cryptograms 
written on copper or stone, are planted under trees where aspirants engage in 
austerities so that they may be helped to develop concentration of mind and 
control of the senses. He announced that He would be placing the copper plate 
under a Banyan tree that He proposed to plant in the grove. This was actually 
done on the twenty-ninth of June, 1959, and Sai Baba declared that Yogis who 
have reached a certain stage of spiritual progress will automatically come to 
know of this tree and this mystic plate, and they will be drawn by the 
mysterious force of these toward the meditation grove which will then fully 
justify its name!

.And here comes the Spiritual significance of the Tree, in Prof. Kasturi's own 
words:

The Banyan tree, known as Nyagrodha, "down-grown," and Vatavriksha, "enclosure 
tree," is famous in Indian sacred literature and history. Lord Maha Vishnu, the 
great God of Preservation, or Siva, God in the Form of the Guru, is described 
as sitting under a Banyan tree, and expounding by His very silence all 
knowledge to His disciple. This tree may be said to symbolize Sanathana Dharma, 
the Eternal Wisdom, for its branches reach out in all directions and draw 
sustenance from every type of faith and spiritual striving. It is also called 
Rahupada, "many-footed" in Sanskrit, for the series of roots that its branches 
send down toward the earth strike the ground and seek food therein and make the 
branches independent even of the parent trunk. The tree is therefore immortal. 
There are in India Banyan trees that have been worshipped for thousands of 
years, such as the one at Triveni at Prayag, Allahabad, or the one called 
Akshaya-vat, the "Indestructible," at Gaya.

II Samastha Lokah Sukhino Bhavantu II

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