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Touching thousands of hearts in
thousand different ways - Part I
Right
from the time He was a little boy, serving others was a passion
with Swami. After He declared His Avatarhood, service continued to
be high on His priority list. In this way, Baba not only
emphasised the importance of service but also affirmed that even
for the Avatar, the first priority is service to mankind. Indeed,
it should be so for all of us, which is why, times without number,
Bhagavan Baba stresses that 'Service to man is service to God'.
While others merely preach and teach, Swami leads by setting an
example - not just a small or trivial example, but one of
monumental proportions that will inspire for all times to come.
The Seva Organisations, the chain of educational institutions, the
different hospitals, the homes for the aged, and the various
drinking water projects, all drive in the lesson of service.
Shortly before the Seventy-fifth Birthday, Swami added yet another
dimension to that lesson and gave it an expression, more eloquent
than His own saying: "Hands that serve are holier than lips that
pray."
Gandhi
often remarked that India lives in the villages. Indeed. Not only
does eighty percent of the country's population still live in the
villages, but, more importantly, as Baba Himself stresses, it is
the villages of India that have kept alive the country's ancient
traditions and sustained Sathya, Dharma, Shanti, Prema, and Ahimsa.
However, most of the politicians, businessmen, administrators,
financiers, IT experts, etc., do not really bother about the
country's villages. For people belonging to the upper strata,
India is largely a conglomeration of advanced scientific
laboratories, modern factories, business concerns, five-star
hotels, thriving shopping centres, luxury tourist spots, etc.,
trying to crash into the Twenty-first century and take its place
among the so-called 'Developed Countries'. All these symbols of
modernism no doubt exist but behind this illusory façade lies
hidden the real India, not visible to those who do not wish to see
poverty and suffering.
The
village representative of real India has no decent roads, hardly
any school, not even an apology for a dispensary, no sanitary
facilities worth the name, and no safe drinking water. The term
village is just a name for a cluster of dilapidated huts in which
are huddled people, a good fraction of whom exist not by eating
food but on sheer hope, hope that God above would in some manner
take care of them. Others may forget but God does not ever abandon,
never.
God who has come in human form in the present age chose to be born
in one such village, possibly in order to draw attention to the
importance of villages. While today many people leave the village
of their birth to seek their fortune in big cities or even a
different country, Baba stayed put in His native village and
showed how, with determination and love, even a very backward
village can be improved beyond recognition. Most people praise
Swami to the skies but do precious little for rural uplift. And
so, even as the Seventy-fifth Birthday was approaching and
devotees were making great plans for a glittering and gala
celebration, Bhagavan launched a service project that would direct
attention to where it was needed.
It
all happened rather suddenly, at least so it seemed. In October,
2000, the Yajna was duly performed and the Navarathri Festival was
celebrated with the usual enthusiasm. After this came the
Deepavali festival, and with it a dazzling fireworks display in
the lawn facing the Poornachandra Hall. It was the 26th of October
but even then one did not have much of an idea of what was going
to follow pretty soon. Here and there, especially to students,
Swami was dropping hints about village service, but no one knew
what exactly Baba was going to do. But this much one was sure of;
whatever it was, it would be breath-taking.
And then, just a couple days before the month ended Baba lifted
the veil. Every year on 18th November, there is a massive programme [Narayana Seva] to distribute food and clothes to the
poor and the destitute, in the Hill View Stadium. This year, Swami
decided to go the poor instead of calling them over. He asked the
students to get organised and be prepared to distribute food and
clothes in hundreds of surrounding villages and hamlets. Actually,
the most difficult part of the planning was being quietly done
behind the scenes by Baba Himself, unknown to most people,
including the staff and the students of the Institute.
The background planning included
(1) the ground work for making over half a million food packets
and laddus [a sweet dish], and
(2) the procurement of about a hundred thousand sarees and dhotis.
Two
days before action started, Swami came early for Darshan in the
afternoon. All the teachers of the Institute were called into the
Mandir Hall for an Interview, and in moving terms, Baba explained
the genesis of the project. He said that despite so-called
progress in urban areas, people in the villages lived in abject
poverty. Recently, a mother, unable to feed her children, gave
them poison instead, after which she ended her life by consuming
poison herself. As Swami recalled this tragic incident, His eyes
became misty and His voice trembled with emotion. He who was above
all worldly feelings, was nevertheless moved. He showed how our
hearts ought to melt, instead of being like stone. He then asked:
"Are all of you prepared to go from village to village, from house
to house, to distribute food and clothing? I want you to speak to
people in a loving voice and make them all happy. You must become
the instruments through which they experience Swami's Love. Are
you ready?" In one voice the teachers replied, "Of course Swami!"
Baba smiled sweetly and said, "Good! You have My Blessings. No
matter how gigantic the task, you will succeed for I shall be with
you all the way!" After this, Swami reeled out a long list of
names of villages to be visited, and also the names of hamlets
surrounding them, where tribals lived. Nobody has seen Swami go
these places at least in recent decades, but He knew everything
about them. When the teachers came out, no one had the slightest
doubt about the execution.
They all were beaming with confidence
and full of spirit. A Silent Revolution was taking shape.
Part 2
Source:
Radio Sai E-Magazine,
September 15, 2003
http://media.radiosai.org/Journals/Vol_01/02SEPT15/SaiSeva/Touch.htm
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