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by Paramhansa Yogananda CHAPTER 46 The Woman Yogi Who Never Eats |
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"Sir, whither are we bound this morning?" Mr. Wright was driving the Ford; he took his eyes off the road long enough to gaze at me with a questioning twinkle. From day to day he seldom knew what part of Bengal he would be discovering next. "God willing," I replied devoutly, "we are on our way to see an eighth wonder of the world÷a woman saint whose diet is thin air!" "Repetition of wonders÷after Therese Neumann." But Mr. Wright laughed eagerly just the same; he even accelerated the speed of the car. More extraordinary grist for his travel diary! Not one of an average tourist, that! The Ranchi school had just been left behind us; we had risen before the sun. Besides my secretary and myself, three Bengali friends were in the party. We drank in the exhilarating air, the natural wine of the morning. Our driver guided the car warily among the early peasants and the two-wheeled carts, slowly drawn by yoked, hump-shouldered bullocks, inclined to dispute the road with a honking interloper. "Sir, we would like to know more of the fasting saint." "Her name is Giri Bala," I informed my companions. "I first heard about her years ago from a scholarly gentleman, Sthiti Lal Nundy. He often came to the Gurpar Road home to tutor my brother Bishnu." "'I know Giri Bala well,' Sthiti Babu told me. 'She employs a certain yoga technique which enables her to live without eating. I was her close neighbor in Nawabganj near Ichapur.1 I made it a point to watch her closely; never did I find evidence that she was taking either food or drink. My interest finally mounted so high that I approached the Maharaja of Burdwan2 and asked him to conduct an investigation. Astounded at the story, he invited her to his palace. She agreed to a test and lived for two months locked up in a small section of his home. Later she returned for a palace visit of twenty days; and then for a third test of fifteen days. The Maharaja himself told me that these three rigorous scrutinies had convinced him beyond doubt of her non-eating state.' "This
story of Sthiti Babu's has remained in my mind for over twenty-five years,"
I concluded. "Sometimes in America I wondered if the river of time
would not swallow the yogini3
before I could
meet her. She must be quite aged now. I do not even know where, or if,
she lives. But in a few hours we shall reach Purulia; her brother has
a home there."
By ten-thirty our
little group was conversing with the brother, Lambadar Dey, a lawyer of
Purulia.
"Yes, my sister
is living. She sometimes stays with me here, but at present she is at
our family home in Biur." Lambadar Babu glanced doubtfully at the
Ford. "I hardly think, Swamiji, that any automobile has ever penetrated
into the interior as far as Biur. It might be best if you all resign yourselves
to the ancient jolt of the bullock cart!"
As
one voice our party pledged loyalty to the Pride of Detroit.
"The Ford comes
from America," I told the lawyer. "It would be a shame to deprive
it of an opportunity to get acquainted with the heart of Bengal!"
"May
Ganesh4
go with you!" Lambadar Babu said, laughing. He added courteously,
"If you ever get there, I am sure Giri Bala will be glad to see you.
She is approaching her seventies, but continues in excellent health."
"Please tell
me, sir, if it is absolutely true that she eats nothing?" I looked
directly into his eyes, those telltale windows of the mind.
"It is true."
His gaze was open and honorable. "In more than five decades I have
never seen her eat a morsel. If the world suddenly came to an end, I could
not be more astonished than by the sight of my sister's taking food!"
We chuckled together
over the improbability of these two cosmic events.
"Giri Bala has
never sought an inaccessible solitude for her yoga practices," Lambadar
Babu went on. "She has lived her entire life surrounded by her family
and friends. They are all well accustomed now to her strange state. Not
one of them who would not be stupefied if Giri Bala suddenly decided to
eat anything! Sister is naturally retiring, as befits a Hindu widow, but
our little circle in Purulia and in Biur all know that she is literally
an 'exceptional' woman."
The
brother's sincerity was manifest. Our little party thanked him warmly
and set out toward Biur. We stopped at a street shop for curry and
luchis, attracting a swarm of urchins who gathered round to watch
Mr. Wright eating with his fingers in the simple Hindu manner.5
Hearty appetites caused us to fortify ourselves against an afternoon which,
unknown at the moment, was to prove fairly laborious.
Our way
now led east through sun-baked rice fields into the Burdwan section of
Bengal. On through roads lined with dense vegetation; the songs of the
maynas and the stripe-throated bulbuls streamed out from trees
with huge, umbrellalike branches. A bullock cart now and then, the
rini, rini, manju, manju squeak of its axle and iron-shod wooden wheels
contrasting sharply in mind with the swish, swish of auto tires
over the aristocratic asphalt of the cities.
"Dick, halt!"
My sudden request brought a jolting protest from the Ford. "That
overburdened mango tree is fairly shouting an invitation!"
The five of us dashed
like children to the mango-strewn earth; the tree had benevolently shed
its fruits as they had ripened.
"Full many a
mango is born to lie unseen," I paraphrased, "and waste its
sweetness on the stony ground."
"Nothing like
this in America, Swamiji, eh?" laughed Sailesh Mazumdar, one of my
Bengali students.
"No," I
admitted, covered with mango juice and contentment. "How I have missed
this fruit in the West! A Hindu's heaven without mangoes is inconceivable!"
I picked up a rock
and downed a proud beauty hidden on the highest limb.
"Dick,"
I asked between bites of ambrosia, warm with the tropical sun, "are
all the cameras in the car?"
"Yes, sir; in
the baggage compartment."
"If
Giri Bala proves to be a true saint, I want to write about her in the
West. A Hindu yogini with such inspiring powers should not live
and die unknown÷like most of these mangoes."
Half an hour later
I was still strolling in the sylvan peace.
"Sir," Mr.
Wright remarked, "we should reach Giri Bala before the sun sets,
to have enough light for photographs." He added with a grin, "The
Westerners are a skeptical lot; we can't expect them to believe in the
lady without any pictures!"
This bit of wisdom
was indisputable; I turned my back on temptation and reentered the car.
"You are right,
Dick," I sighed as we sped along, "I sacrifice the mango paradise
on the altar of Western realism. Photographs we must have!"
The road became more
and more sickly: wrinkles of ruts, boils of hardened clay, the sad infirmities
of old age! Our group dismounted occasionally to allow Mr. Wright to more
easily maneuver the Ford, which the four of us pushed from behind.
"Lambadar Babu
spoke truly," Sailesh acknowledged. "The car is not carrying
us; we are carrying the car!"
Our climb-in, climb-out
auto tedium was beguiled ever and anon by the appearance of a village,
each one a scene of quaint simplicity. "Our way twisted
and turned through groves of palms among ancient, unspoiled villages nestling
in the forest shade," Mr. Wright has recorded in his travel diary,
under date of May 5, 1936. "Very fascinating are these clusters of
thatched mud huts, decorated with one of the names of God on the door;
many small, naked children innocently playing about, pausing to stare
or run wildly from this big, black, bullockless carriage tearing madly
through their village. The women merely peep from the shadows, while the
men lazily loll beneath the trees along the roadside, curious beneath
their nonchalance. In one place, all the villagers were gaily bathing
in the large tank (in their garments, changing by draping dry cloths around
their bodies, dropping the wet ones). Women bearing water to their homes,
in huge brass jars.
"The road led
us a merry chase over mount and ridge; we bounced and tossed, dipped into
small streams, detoured around an unfinished causeway, slithered across
dry, sandy river beds and finally, about 5:00 P.M., we were close to our
destination, Biur. This minute village in the interior of Bankura District,
hidden in the protection of dense foliage, is unapproachable by travelers
during the rainy season, when the streams are raging torrents and the
roads serpentlike spit the mud-venom.
"Asking for a
guide among a group of worshipers on their way home from a temple prayer
(out in the lonely field), we were besieged by a dozen scantily clad lads
who clambered on the sides of the car, eager to conduct us to Giri Bala.
"The road led
toward a grove of date palms sheltering a group of mud huts, but before
we had reached it, the Ford was momentarily tipped at a dangerous angle,
tossed up and dropped down. The narrow trail led around trees and tank,
over ridges, into holes and deep ruts. The car became anchored on a clump
of bushes, then grounded on a hillock, requiring a lift of earth clods;
on we proceeded, slowly and carefully; suddenly the way was stopped by
a mass of brush in the middle of the cart track, necessitating a detour
down a precipitous ledge into a dry tank, rescue from which demanded some
scraping, adzing, and shoveling. Again and again the road seemed impassable,
but the pilgrimage must go on; obliging lads fetched spades and demolished
the obstacles (shades of Ganesh!) while hundreds of children and parents
stared.
"Soon we were
threading our way along the two ruts of antiquity, women gazing wide-eyed
from their hut doors, men trailing alongside and behind us, children scampering
to swell the procession. Ours was perhaps the first auto to traverse these
roads; the 'bullock cart union' must be omnipotent here! What a sensation
we created÷a group piloted by an American and pioneering in a snorting
car right into their hamlet fastness, invading the ancient privacy and
sanctity!
"Halting by a
narrow lane we found ourselves within a hundred feet of Giri Bala's ancestral
home. We felt the thrill of fulfillment after the long road struggle crowned
by a rough finish. We approached a large, two-storied building of brick
and plaster, dominating the surrounding adobe huts; the house was under
the process of repair, for around it was the characteristically tropical
framework of bamboos.
"With feverish
anticipation and suppressed rejoicing we stood before the open doors of
the one blessed by the Lord's 'hungerless' touch. Constantly agape were
the villagers, young and old, bare and dressed, women aloof somewhat but
inquisitive too, men and boys unabashedly at our heels as they gazed on
this unprecedented spectacle.
"Soon
a short figure came into view in the doorway÷Giri Bala! She was swathed
in a cloth of dull, goldish silk; in typically Indian fashion, she drew
forward modestly and hesitatingly, peering slightly from beneath the upper
fold of her swadeshi cloth. Her eyes glistened like smouldering
embers in the shadow of her head piece; we were enamored
by a most benevolent and kindly face, a face of realization and understanding,
free from the taint of earthly attachment.
"Meekly
she approached and silently assented to our snapping a number of pictures
with our 'still' and 'movie' cameras.6
Patiently and shyly
she endured our photo techniques of posture adjustment and light arrangement.
Finally we had recorded for posterity many photographs of the only woman
in the world who is known to have lived without food or drink for over
fifty years. (Therese Neumann, of course, has fasted since 1923.) Most
motherly was Giri Bala's expression as she stood before us, completely
covered in the loose-flowing cloth, nothing of her body visible but her
face with its downcast eyes, her hands, and her tiny feet. A face of rare
peace and innocent poise÷a wide, childlike, quivering lip, a feminine
nose, narrow, sparkling eyes, and a wistful smile." Mr. Wright's
impression of Giri Bala was shared by myself; spirituality enfolded her
like her gently shining veil. She pronamed before me in the customary
gesture of greeting from a householder to a monk. Her simple charm and
quiet smile gave us a welcome beyond that of honeyed oratory; forgotten
was our difficult, dusty trip.
The little saint seated
herself cross-legged on the verandah. Though bearing the scars of age,
she was not emaciated; her olive-colored skin had remained clear and healthy
in tone.
"Mother,"
I said in Bengali, "for over twenty-five years I have thought eagerly
of this very pilgrimage! I heard about your sacred life from Sthiti Lal
Nundy Babu."
She nodded in acknowledgment.
"Yes, my good neighbor in Nawabganj."
"During those
years I have crossed the oceans, but I never forgot my early plan to someday
see you. The sublime drama that you are here playing so inconspicuously
should be blazoned before a world that has long forgotten the inner food
divine."
The saint lifted her
eyes for a minute, smiling with serene interest.
"Baba (honored
father) knows best," she answered meekly.
I was happy that she
had taken no offense; one never knows how great yogis or yoginis will
react to the thought of publicity. They shun it, as a rule, wishing to
pursue in silence the profound soul research. An inner sanction comes
to them when the proper time arrives to display their lives openly for
the benefit of seeking minds.
"Mother,"
I went on, "please forgive me, then, for burdening you with many
questions. Kindly answer only those that please you; I shall understand
your silence, also."
She spread her hands
in a gracious gesture. "I am glad to reply, insofar as an insignificant
person like myself can give satisfactory answers."
"Oh, no, not
insignificant!" I protested sincerely. "You are a great soul."
"I am the humble
servant of all." She added quaintly, "I love to cook and feed
people."
A strange pastime,
I thought, for a non-eating saint!
"Tell me, Mother,
from your own lips÷do you live without food?"
"That is true."
She was silent for a few moments; her next remark showed that she had
been struggling with mental arithmetic. "From the age of twelve years
four months down to my present age of sixty-eight÷a period of over fifty-six
years÷I have not eaten food or taken liquids."
"Are you never
tempted to eat?"
"If I felt a
craving for food, I would have to eat." Simply yet regally she stated
this axiomatic truth, one known too well by a world revolving around three
meals a day!
"But
you do eat something!" My tone held a note of remonstrance.
"Of course!"
She smiled in swift understanding.
"Your
nourishment derives from the finer energies of the air and sunlight,7
and from the cosmic
power which recharges your body through the medulla oblongata."
"Baba knows."
Again she acquiesced, her manner soothing and unemphatic.
"Mother, please
tell me about your early life. It holds a deep interest for all of India,
and even for our brothers and sisters beyond the seas."
Giri Bala put aside
her habitual reserve, relaxing into a conversational mood.
"So be it."
Her voice was low and firm. "I was born in these forest regions.
My childhood was unremarkable save that I was possessed by an insatiable
appetite. I had been betrothed in early years.
"'Child,' my
mother often warned me, 'try to control your greed. When the time comes
for you to live among strangers in your husband's family, what will they
think of you if your days are spent in nothing but eating?'
"The calamity
she had foreseen came to pass. I was only twelve when I joined my husband's
people in Nawabganj. My mother-in-law shamed me morning, noon, and night
about my gluttonous habits. Her scoldings were a blessing in disguise,
however; they roused my dormant spiritual tendencies. One morning her
ridicule was merciless.
"'I shall soon
prove to you,' I said, stung to the quick, 'that I shall never touch food
again as long as I live.'
"My mother-in-law
laughed in derision. 'So!' she said, 'how can you live without eating,
when you cannot live without overeating?'
"This remark
was unanswerable! Yet an iron resolution scaffolded my spirit. In a secluded
spot I sought my Heavenly Father.
"'Lord,' I prayed
incessantly, 'please send me a guru, one who can teach me to live by Thy
light and not by food.'
"A
divine ecstasy fell over me. Led by a beatific spell, I set out for the
Nawabganj ghat on the Ganges. On the way I encountered the priest
of my husband's family.
"'Venerable
sir,' I said trustingly, 'kindly tell me how to live without eating.'
"He
stared at me without reply. Finally he spoke in a consoling manner. 'Child,'
he said, 'come to the temple this evening; I will conduct a special
Vedic ceremony for you.'
"This
vague answer was not the one I was seeking; I continued toward the
ghat. The morning sun pierced the waters; I purified myself in the
Ganges, as though for a sacred initiation. As I left the river bank, my
wet cloth around me, in the broad glare of day my master materialized
himself before me!
"'Dear little
one,' he said in a voice of loving compassion, 'I am the guru sent here
by God to fulfill your urgent prayer. He was deeply touched by its very
unusual nature! From today you shall live by the astral light, your bodily
atoms fed from the infinite current.'"
Giri Bala fell into
silence. I took Mr. Wright's pencil and pad and translated into English
a few items for his information.
The saint resumed the tale, her gentle
voice barely audible. "The ghat was deserted, but my guru
cast round us an aura of guarding light, that no stray bathers later disturb
us. He initiated me into a kria technique which frees the body
from dependence on the gross food of mortals. The technique includes the
use of a certain mantra8
and a breathing exercise
more difficult than the average person could perform. No medicine or magic
is involved; nothing beyond the kria."
In the manner of the
American newspaper reporter, who had unknowingly taught me his procedure,
I questioned Giri Bala on many matters which I thought would be of interest
to the world. She gave me, bit by bit, the following information:
"I have never
had any children; many years ago I became a widow. I sleep very little,
as sleep and waking are the same to me. I meditate at night, attending
to my domestic duties in the daytime. I slightly feel the change in climate
from season to season. I have never been sick or experienced any disease.
I feel only slight pain when accidentally injured. I have no bodily excretions.
I can control my heart and breathing. I often see my guru as well as other
great souls, in vision."
"Mother,"
I asked, "why don't you teach others the method of living without
food?"
My ambitious hopes
for the world's starving millions were nipped in the bud.
"No." She
shook her head. "I was strictly commanded by my guru not to divulge
the secret. It is not his wish to tamper with God's drama of creation.
The farmers would not thank me if I taught many people to live without
eating! The luscious fruits would lie uselessly on the ground. It appears
that misery, starvation, and disease are whips of our karma which ultimately
drive us to seek the true meaning of life."
"Mother,"
I said slowly, "what is the use of your having been singled out to
live without eating?"
"To prove that
man is Spirit." Her face lit with wisdom. "To demonstrate that
by divine advancement he can gradually learn to live by the Eternal Light
and not by food."
The saint sank into
a deep meditative state. Her gaze was directed inward; the gentle depths
of her eyes became expressionless. She gave a certain sigh, the prelude
to the ecstatic breathless trance. For a time she had fled to the questionless
realm, the heaven of inner joy.
The tropical darkness
had fallen. The light of a small kerosene lamp flickered fitfully over
the faces of a score of villagers squatting silently in the shadows. The
darting glowworms and distant oil lanterns of the huts wove bright eerie
patterns into the velvet night. It was the painful hour of parting; a
slow, tedious journey lay before our little party.
"Giri
Bala," I said as the saint opened her eyes, "please give me
a keepsake÷a strip of one of your saris."
She soon returned
with a piece of Benares silk, extending it in her hand as she suddenly
prostrated herself on the ground.
"Mother,"
I said reverently, "rather let me touch your own blessed feet!"
1 In northern Bengal. 2
H. H. Sir Bijay Chand Mahtab, now dead. His family doubtless possesses
some record of the Maharaja's three investigations of Giri Bala. 3
Woman yogi. 4
"Remover of Obstacles," the god of good fortune. 5
Sri Yukteswar used to say: "The Lord has given us the fruits of the
good earth. We like to see our food, to smell it, to taste it-the Hindu
likes also to touch it!" One does not mind hearing it, either, if
no one else is present at the meal! 6
Mr. Wright also took moving pictures of Sri Yukteswar during his last
Winter Solstice Festival in Serampore. 7
"What we eat is radiation; our food is so much quanta of energy,"
Dr. George W. Crile of Cleveland told a gathering of medical men on May
17, 1933 in Memphis. "This all-important radiation, which releases
electrical currents for the body's electrical circuit, the nervous system,
is given to food by the sun's rays. Atoms, Dr. Crile says, are solar systems.
Atoms are the vehicles that are filled with solar radiance as so many
coiled springs. These countless atomfuls of energy are taken in as food.
Once in the human body, these tense vehicles, the atoms, are discharged
in the body's protoplasm, the radiance furnishing new chemical energy,
new electrical currents. 'Your body is made up of such atoms,' Dr. Crile
said. 'They are your muscles, brains, and sensory organs, such as the
eyes and ears.'"
Someday scientists will discover how man can live directly
on solar energy. "Chlorophyll is the only substance known in nature
that somehow possesses the power to act as a 'sunlight trap,'" William
L. Laurence writes in the New York Times. "It 'catches' the energy
of sunlight and stores it in the plant. Without this no life could exist.
We obtain the energy we need for living from the solar energy stored in
the plant-food we eat or in the flesh of the animals that eat the plants.
The energy we obtain from coal or oil is solar energy trapped by the chlorophyll
in plant life millions of years ago. We live by the sun through the agency
of chlorophyll." 8 Potent vibratory chant. The literal translation of Sanskrit
mantra is "instrument of thought," signifying the ideal, inaudible
sounds which represent one aspect of creation; when vocalized as syllables,
a mantra constitutes a universal terminology. The infinite powers of sound
derive from AUM, the "Word" or creative hum of the Cosmic Motor. |
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