Sai Baba
Sai Baba of Shirdi, also known as Shirdi Sai Baba, was an
Indian guru, yogi, and fakir who is regarded by his Hindu and Muslim devotees
as a saint. Many Hindu devotees - including Hemadpant, who wrote the famous
Shri Sai Satcharitra - consider him an incarnation of Lord Krishna while other
devotees consider him as an incarnation of Lord Dattatreya. Many devotees
believe that he was a Satguru, an enlightened Sufi Pir, or a Qutub. No
verifiable information is available regarding Sai Baba's birth and place of birth.
Sai Baba's real name is unknown. The name "Sai"
was given to him upon his arrival at Shirdi, a town in the west-Indian state of
Maharashtra. Mahalsapati, a local temple priest, recognized him as a muslim
saint and greeted him with the words 'Ya Sai!', meaning 'Welcome Sai!'. Sai or
Sayi is a Persian title given to Sufi saints, meaning 'poor one'. However Sai
may also refer to the Sanskrit term "Sakshat Eshwar" or the divine.
The honorific "Baba" means "father; grandfather; old man;
sir" in Indo-Aryan languages. Thus Sai Baba denotes "holy
father", "saintly father" or "poor old man".
Sai Baba remains a very popular saint, especially in India,
and is worshipped by people around the world. He is claimed to have had no love
for perishable things and his sole concern was self-realization. He taught a
moral code of love, forgiveness, helping others, charity, contentment, inner
peace, and devotion to God and guru. Sai Baba's teaching combined elements of
Hinduism and Islam: he gave the Hindu name Dwarakamayi to the mosque he lived
in, practiced Hindu and Muslim rituals, taught using words and figures that
drew from both traditions, and was buried in Shirdi. One of his well known
epigrams, "Sabka Malik Ek " ("One God governs all"), is
associated with Islam and Sufism. He always uttered "Allah Malik"
("God is King").
Some of Sai Baba's disciples became famous as spiritual
figures and saints, such as Mhalsapati, a priest of the Khandoba temple in
Shirdi, and Upasni Maharaj. He was revered by other saints, such as Saint
Bidkar Maharaj, Saint Gangagir, Saint Janakidas Maharaj, and Sati Godavari
Mataji. Sai Baba referred to several saints as 'my brothers', especially the
disciples of Swami Samartha of Akkalkot.
Historians and devotees agree that there is no reliable evidence
for a particular birthplace or date of birth. Various communities have claimed
that he belongs to them, but nothing has been substantiated. It is known that
he spent considerable periods with fakirs, and his attire resembled that of a
Muslim fakir.
Little has been officially documented on the early life of
Shirdi Sai Baba. An account of Shirdi Sai's missing childhood years has been
reconstructed by his disciple Das Ganu, after researching in the area around
the village of Pathri. He collected this story in four chapters on Sai Baba,
later also called the Sri Sai Gurucharitra. Das Ganu states that Sai Baba grew
up in Pathri, with a fakir and his wife. At the age of five, says Das Ganu, the
fakir's wife put him in the care of the saintly desmukh Venkusha, where the boy
stayed several years. Dasganu calls the young Sai Baba the reincarnation of
Kabir. Because Das Ganu was known to take poetic liberties when telling stories
about Sai Baba, and as there are no other sources to corroborate this story, it
usually is left out of biographies of Sai Baba of Shirdi.
The above mentioned account is largely overlapped by the
narration by Sathya Sai Baba, although Sathya Sai Baba states that the fakir
and his wife adopted the baby that was to become Sai Baba shortly after his
birth. However, Sathya Sai Baba's stories are not considered credible by most
of Shirdi Sai Baba's biographers.
According to the book Sai Satcharita, Sai Baba arrived at
the village of Shirdi in the Ahmednagar district of Maharashtra, British India,
when he was about 16 years old. He led an ascetic life, sitting motionless
under a neem tree and meditating while sitting in an asana. The Shri Sai
Satcharita recounts the reaction of the villagers:
The people of the village were wonder-struck to see such a
young lad practicing hard penance, not minding heat or cold. By day he
associated with no one, by night he was afraid of nobody.
His presence attracted the curiosity of the villagers, and
he was regularly visited by the religiously inclined, including Mhalsapati,
Appa Jogle and Kashinatha. Some considered him mad and threw stones at him. Sai
Baba left the village, and little is known about him after that. However, there
are some indications that he met with many saints and fakirs, and worked as a
weaver. He claimed to have fought with the army of Rani Lakshmibai of Jhansi
during the Indian Rebellion of 1857. It is generally accepted that Sai Baba
stayed in Shirdi for three years, disappeared for a year, and returned
permanently around 1858, which suggests a birth year of 1838.
In 1858 Sai Baba returned to Shirdi. Around this time he
adopted his famous style of dress consisting of a knee-length one-piece robe
(kafni) and a cloth cap. Ramgir Bua, a devotee, testified that Sai Baba was
dressed like an athlete and sported 'long hair flowing down to the end of his
spine' when he arrived in Shirdi, and that he never had his head shaved. It was
only after Baba forfeited a wrestling match with one Mohdin Tamboli that he
took up the kafni and cloth cap, articles of typical Sufi clothing. This attire
contributed to Baba's identification as a Muslim fakir, and was a reason for
initial indifference and hostility against him in a predominantly Hindu
village. According to B.V. Narasimhaswami, a posthumous follower who was widely
praised as Sai Baba's "apostle", this attitude was prevalent up to
1854 even among some of his devotees in Shirdi.
For four to five years Baba lived under a neem tree, and
often wandered for long periods in the jungle around Shirdi. His manner was
said to be withdrawn and uncommunicative as he undertook long periods of
meditation. He was eventually persuaded to take up residence in an old and
dilapidated mosque and lived a solitary life there, surviving by begging for
alms, and receiving itinerant Hindu or Muslim visitors. In the mosque he
maintained a sacred fire which is referred to as a dhuni, from which he gave
sacred ashes ('Udhi') to his guests before they left. The ash was believed to
have healing and apotropaic powers. He performed the function of a local hakim,
and treated the sick by application of ashes. Sai Baba also delivered spiritual
teachings to his visitors, recommending the reading of sacred Hindu texts along
with the Qur'an. He insisted on the indispensability of the unbroken
remembrance of God's name (dhikr, japa), and often expressed himself in a
cryptic manner with the use of parables, symbols and allegories.
Sai Baba participated in religious festivals and was also in the habit of preparing food for his visitors, which he distributed to them as prasad. Sai Baba's entertainment was dancing and singing religious songs.
After 1910 Sai Baba's fame began to spread in Mumbai.
Numerous people started visiting him, because they regarded him as a saint with
the power of performing miracles, or even as an Avatar. They built his first
temple at Bhivpuri, Karjat.
Sai Baba encouraged his devotees to pray, chant God's name,
and read holy scriptures. He told Muslims to study the Qur'an, and Hindus to
study texts such as the Ramayana, Bhagavad Gita, and Yoga Vasistha. He advised
his devotees and followers to lead a moral life, help others, love every living
being without any discrimination, and develop two important features of
character: faith (Shraddha) and patience (Sabr). He criticized atheism. In his
teachings, Sai Baba emphasized the importance of performing one's duties
without attachment to earthly matters, and of being content regardless of the
situation.
Sai Baba encouraged charity, and stressed the importance of sharing. He said: "Unless there is some relationship or connection, nobody goes anywhere. If any men or creatures come to you, do not discourteously drive them away, but receive them well and treat them with due respect. Shri Hari (God) will certainly be pleased if you give water to the thirsty, bread to the hungry, clothes to the naked, and your verandah to strangers for sitting and resting. If anybody wants any money from you and you are not inclined to give, do not give, but do not bark at him like a dog." Other favorite sayings of his were: "Why do you fear when I am here", and "He has no beginning... He has no end."
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