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The
second advent of Baba at Shirdi, around 1858 was interestingly
quite different from the first. This time he accompanied a wedding
procession as guest of honour. On the arrival at Shirdi, he
was immediately recognized by someone as the same anonymous
saintly personality who used to be seated under the neem
tree a few years earlier and, greeted Him as “Ya
Sai” – Welcome Sai.
In the early days of his
stay at Shirdi he spent his time either wandering in the outskirts
of village and neighbouring thorny jungles or sitting under the neem
tree totally self absorbed. The first set of villagers who
regarded this saintly figure were Mhalsapati, Tatya Kote, Bayyaji
Bai and few others. Bayyaji Bai felt deeply motivated by this
Divine Saint, and with her motherly instinct she used to walk
miles on end into the jungles in search of him, carrying food in a
basket on her head. Often she found Sai Baba sitting under some
tree in deep meditation, calm and motionless. She would boldly
approach him, serve the meal and return home.
After sometime as though
out of compassion for her, Sai Baba ceased wandering and moved
into a dilapidated mosque in the outskirts of the village. He
referred to this mosque, where He resided till the end, as
‘Dwarkamai’ (Dwarka was the place where Lord Shri Krishna
stayed to fulfill His divine Advent). This mosque
‘Dwarkamai’ – abode of Sai Baba became Mother of Mercy for
all the time to come.
He had a body of athlete
built and in his earlier days he was fond of wrestling. Another
aspect of Sai Baba’s personality was his love for song and
dance. In those early years of his life he used to go to ‘Takia’
, the public night shelter for moslem visitors to the village.
There in the company of sojourning devotees and fakirs, he used to
dance and sing in divine bliss, with small tinkles tied around his
ankles. The songs he sang were mostly in Persian or Arabic.
Sometimes he sang some popular songs of Kabir.
He donned a long shirt
– ‘Kafni’ and tied a cloth around his head, and
twisted it into a flowing plait like manner behind his left ear.
He used a piece of sackcloth for his seat and slept on it with a
brick as his pillow. He always declared that Fakiri (Holy
poverty) was far superior to worldly richness. He was no ordinary
fakir but an ‘Avatar ’ (incarnation) of a very high
order. But His external appearance was of simple, illiterate,
moody, emphatic – at times fiery and abusive and at times full
of compassion and love.In the moments of towering rage people with
him thought it was ungovernable rage.But his anger never prevented
his compassion dealing with the devotees. His anger was evidently
directed at unseen forces
He enacted all these
simple traits only to hide His real identity as the God incarnate.
Under the cover of simplicity He silently worked for the spiritual
transformation and liberation of innumerable souls – human
beings and animals alike, who were drawn to Him, by an unseen
force.
He begged for alms and
shared what he got with his devotees and all the creatures around
him. He never kept any food in reserve for the next meal.He
maintained the ‘Dhuni’ – the perpetual sacred fire
and distributed its ash – ‘Udi’ as token of His
divine grace to all who came to Him for help.
Baba would ask for ‘Dakshina’
(money offered with reverence to the ‘Guru’ or the master)
from some of those who came to see him. This was not because he
needed their money but for deeper significance, which the devotees
realized at, an appropriate time.
Baba used to freely
distribute all the money that was received in the form of Dakshina
to the destitute, poor, sick and needy the very same day. This
was one of Baba's methods for testing out the devotees attachments
to worthly things and willingness to surrender his ego.
He ploughed up the
village common land and raised a flower garden thereon, he watered
the plants, carrying pots full of water on his shoulders.In the
later years he spent a few hours in this Lendi garden which he
himself had laid out in the early days.
He was every moment
exercising a double consciousness, one actively utilising the
apparent Ego called 'Sai Baba' dealing with other egos in temporal
and spiritual affairs, and the other - entirely superceding all
egos as the Universal Ego or Oversoul.
He was the common
man’s God. He lived with them, he slept and ate with
them.Baba had a keen sense of humour. He shared a ‘chillum’
(clay pipe for smoking) indiscriminately with them to write off
the cast superiority and orthodoxy in their minds. He had no
pretensions of any kind .He was always very playful in the
presence of children. Baba used to feed the fakirs and devotees
and even cook for them.
Saibabas perfect purity,
benevolence, non -attachment, compassion and other virtues evoked
deep reverence in the villagers around him.His divinity could not
conceal itself for long. Initially when people wanted to worship
him formally,Baba protested and dissuaded them. But gradually he
allowed it with the prescience that it would become the means for
temporal and spiritual benefits to millions of individuals for all
time to come.
The Dwarkamai of Sai
Baba was open to all, irrespective of caste, creed and religion.
As the days passed devotees from all walks of life started
streaming into Shirdi. The village Shirdi was fast assuming
prominence. As the gifts and presentations flowed in the pomp and
grandeur of Sai worship also increased. But Baba’s life of a
fakir remained calm, undisturbed, unaltered and there is the
Saint’s spiritual glory.
He lived His divine
mission through His pure self in a human embodiment. The immense
energy that was manifest in the body of Sai was moving in a
mysterious way, creating and recreating itself every where beyond
the comprehension of time and space.
This fountainhead of
unsurpassed spiritual glory shed His gross body on 15th October
1918.Every limb, everybone and pore of his body was permeated with
divine essence. Baba claimed that though one day his physical body
will not exist his remains will communicate with all those who
seek him inner yearnings His self-allotted labour of love in
His physical body was perhaps over. Today He continues to work ever
vigorously as the ‘Sai Spirit’.
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