A LSO A BOUT N EEM K AROLI BABA:
B OOKS
By His Grace: A Devotees Story, by Dada Mukerjee
The Near & The Dear, by Dada Mukerjee
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Text copyright (c) 1979, 1995 by Ram Dass
Stories copyright (c) 1979, 1995 by Hanuman Foundation
Photographs copyright (c) 1979, 1995 by Rameshwar Das,
Balaram Das, Krishna Dass (Roy Bonney), Chaitanya and Hanuman Foundation
All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A.
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Originally Published by E.P. Dutton, NY, NY (1979)
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Ram Dass.
Miracle of Love.
Neem Karoli Baba. 2. Hindus in India
Biography. 1.Title.
BL1175.N43R35 1979 294.5610924 79-10745
ISBN-13: 978-0-9906314-7-7 (ebook)
Production & Design: Jai Lakshman
Typesetting by Robert L. Hutwohl
Cover Design: Michael Motley
For Maharajji
Whose presence reveals how subtle is the path of Love.
Photo: Roy Bonney
Contents
Introduction
When the Flower Blooms
I N 1967 I met my guru. That meeting changed the course of my life, for through him I came to perceive my life in spiritual terms. In him I found new depths of compassion, love, wisdom, humor, and power, and his actions stretched my understanding of the human possibility. I recognized in him an alliance of the human and the divine.
After our initial meeting I remained in India, as close to him as I was allowed to be, for five more months before returning to America. Before leaving India I had received his ashirbad (blessing) for a book, which until that moment I had had no thought of writing. Back in the West, I found many kindred souls open and ready to share what I had received; and his blessing and their thirst gave rise to Be Here Now.
In 1970 I returned to India and remained with him, off and on, from February 1971 until March 1972 when my visa expired and I was evicted from the country. However, with him or away from him, he remained the source and impetus for my spiritual awakening.
From the beginning, I had wanted to share him with others, but initially he forbade me bringing people directly to him. A relatively few (several hundred) Westerners nevertheless found their way to him and were touched at the core of their beings as I had been. On September 11, 1973, he died, or, as the Indians would say, he left his body.
In the succeeding years, I have found that the absence of his body has not diminished his influence upon my life. To the contrary, with each passing year I have increasingly experienced his presence, his guidance, his love, and, each time I have taken myself too seriously, his cosmic giggle. This suggested the possibility that others who had never met him in the body could similarly be touched by him. This suspicion has been confirmed by a surprisingly large number of people who have reported that through books, lectures, tapes, and personal contact with devotees, they have experienced him in a way that has graced their lives.
I speak of him as my guru, but in fact I never think of him or our relationship in such a formal way. For me, he is very simply Maharajji, a nickname (which means great king) so commonplace in India that one can often hear a tea vendor addressed thus.
Those of us who were with Maharajji meet again frequently in India or in the West. The conversation invariably turns to recollections of him. Story after story pours forth, and each story is punctuated with silence, laughter, or expostulations as we savor its depth and elegance. In those moments the space becomes rich with the living spirit and we know that he is among us.
In my travels I have now met thousands of awakening beings whose open-hearted receptivity makes me want to share the intimacy with Maharajji to which stories about him give rise. And yet thus far only a very few stories about him, primarily concerning my personal experiences with him, have appeared in print. It was in order to rectify this situation that the present book was undertaken.
Immediately after his death, I encouraged several Westerners in their plan to travel throughout India collecting stories. They were able to obtain some four hundred anecdotes, but, at the time, they found many of the Indian devotees reticent to speak about him. He had always frowned upon their talking much about him, and they were still feeling that restriction. In 1976 two of us were again in India and found, to our delight, that many of the Indian devotees, who of course, had known him far more extensively and over the course of many more years than we had, were now willing to freely share their treasure of stories. At that time we collected twelve hundred stories. Since then, with the help of another Westerner, we have added an additional four hundred stories gathered from East and West, thus bringing the total number of stories, anecdotes, and quotations to over two thousand, all based on interviews with over a hundred devotees.
Of course, even a hundred devotees are altogether but a fraction of the thousands who were touched by Maharajji in the course of his life, each of whom holds some precious memory and piece of the puzzle. But lest we would drown in such an ocean of recollection, at a certain point I made an arbitrary decision to stop gathering and begin to organize what we already had.
The devotees whose stories are included are from a wide range of social and cultural positions. Interviews were gathered from important officials in their offices and from sweepers on the streets. We taped discussions of women from the Himalayan hill villages as they squatted warming their hands around a coal brazier in the late afternoon. We listened to reminiscences in living rooms, streets, temple compounds, while sitting around fires under the stars, in cars, hot tubs, airplanes, and on long walks. Stories were offered by Hindu priests as they puffed on their chillums (hashish pipes), by professors, police officials, farmers, industrialists, by children and their mothers, who spoke while stirring their bubbling pots over wood and charcoal fires. Always there was the same feeling of shy joy at sharing such a private, precious memory with another. These gatherings to speak about him were indescribably graceful.
Having gathered these stories, our next question was how to present this formidable body of material. For three years I had been working with this problem, writing and rewriting. My initial effort was more in the way of a personal chronology, but I found that such a structure did not easily include all the material, and, additionally, it demanded the inclusion of much that seemed irrelevant. So I started again, this time incorporating my personal experiences as merely additional stories and grouping selected stories around various topical headings. The result is the present compilation.
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