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Sai Satcharitra
Sai Satchritra - Chapter I
Salutations -- The Story of Grinding
Wheat and Its Philosophical Significance.
According to the ancient and revered custom, Hemadpant begins
the work, Sai Satcharitra, with various salutations.
First, he makes obeisance to the God Ganesha
to remove all obstacles and make the work a success and says that
Shri Sai is the God Ganesha.
Then, to the Goddess Saraswati to inspire him
to write out the work and says that Shri Sai is one with this
Goddess and that He is Himself singing His own life.
Then, to the Gods; Brahma, Vishnu and Shankar
- the Creating, Preserving and Destroying Deities respectively;
and says that Sainath is one with them and He as the great Teacher,
will carry us across the River of Worldly Existence.
Then, to his tutelary Deity Narayan Adinath who
manifested himself in Konkan - the land reclaimed by Parashurama,
(Rama in the Hindi version) from the sea; and to the Adi (Original)
Purusha of the family.
Then, to the Bharadwaja Muni, into whose gotra (clan) he was born
and also to various Rishis, Yagyavalakya, Bhrigu, Parashara, Narad,
Vedavyasa, Sanak, Sanandan, Sanatkumar, Shuka. Shounak, Vishwamitra,
Vasistha, Valmiki, Vamadeva, Jaimini, Vaishampayan, Nava Yogindra
etc, and also modern Saints such as Nivritti, Jnanadev, Sopan,
Muktabai, Janardan, Ekanath, Namdev, Tukaram, Kanha, and Narahari
etc.
Then, to his grandfather Sadashiv, father Raghunath,
his mother, who left him in his infancy, to his paternal aunt,
who brought him up, and to his loving elder brother.
Then, to the readers and prays them to give their
whole and undivided attention to his work. And lastly, to his
Guru Shri Sainath - an Incarnation of Shri Dattatreya, Who is
his sole Refuge and Who will make him realize that Brahman is
the Reality and the world an illusion; and incidentally, to all
the Beings in whom the Lord God dwells.
After describing in brief the various modes of
devotion according to Parashara, Vyasa and Shandilya etc., the
author goes on to relate the following story:
"It was sometime after 1910 A.D. that I
went, one fine morning, to the Masjid in Shirdi for getting a
darshan of Sai Baba. I was wonder-struck to see the following
phenomenon. After washing His mouth and face, Sai Baba began to
make preparations for grinding wheat. He spread a sack on the
floor; and thereon set a hand-mill. He took some quantity of wheat
in a winnowing fan, and then drawing up the sleeves of His Kafni
(robe); and taking hold of the peg of the hand-mill, started grinding
the wheat by putting a few handfuls of wheat in the upper opening
of the mill and rotated it. I thought ‘what business Baba
had with the grinding of wheat, when He possessed nothing and
stored nothing, and as He lived on alms!’ Some people who
had come there thought likewise, but none had the courage to ask
baba what He was doing. Immediately, this news of Baba's grinding
wheat spread into the village, and at once men and women ran to
the Masjid and flocked there to see Baba's act. Four bold women,
from the crowd, forced their way up and pushing Baba aside, took
forcibly the peg or handle into their hands, and, singing Baba's
Leelas, started grinding. At first Baba was enraged, but on seeing
the women's love and devotion, He was much pleased and began to
smile. While they were grinding, they began to think that Baba
had no house, no property, no children, none to look after, and
He lived on alms, He did not require any wheat-flour for making
bread or roti, what will He do with this big quantity of flour?
Perhaps as Baba is very kind, He will distribute the flour amongst
us. Thinking in this way while singing, they finished the grinding
and after putting the hand-mill aside, they divided the flour
into four portions and began to remove them one per head. Baba,
Who was calm and quiet up till now, got wild and started abusing
them saying, "Ladies, are you gone mad? Whose father's property
are you looting away? Have I borrowed any wheat from you, so that
you can safely take the flour? Now please do this. Take the flour
and throw it on the village border limits." On hearing this,
the women felt abashed and whispering amongst them, went away
to the outskirts of the village and spread the flour as directed
by Baba.
I asked the Shirdi people - "What was this
that Baba did?" They replied that as the Cholera Epidemic
was spreading in the village and this was Baba's remedy against
the same; it was not wheat that was ground but the Cholera itself
was ground to pieces and pushed out of the village. From this
time onward, the Cholera Epidemic subsided and the people of the
village were happy. I was much pleased to know all this; but at
the same time my curiosity was also aroused. I began to ask myself
- What earthly connection was there between wheat flour and Cholera?
What was the casual relation between the two? And how to reconcile
them? The incident seems to be inexplicable. I should write something
on this and sing to my heart's content Baba's sweet Leelas. Thinking
in this way about this Leela, my heart was filled with joy and
I was thus inspired to write Baba's Life - The Satcharita.
And as we know, with Baba's grace and blessing
this work was successfully accomplished.
Philosophical Significance of Grinding
Apart from the meaning that the people of Shirdi put on this incident
of grinding wheat, there is, we think, a philosophical significance
too. Sai Baba lived in Shirdi for about sixty years and during
this long period; He did the business of grinding almost every
day - not, however, the wheat alone; but the sins, the mental
and physical afflictions and the miseries of His innumerable devotees.
The two stones of His mill consisted of Karma and Bhakti, the
former being the lower and the latter the upper one. The handle
with which Baba worked the mill consisted of Jnana. It was the
firm conviction of Baba that Knowledge or Self-realization is
not possible, unless there is the prior act of grinding of all
our impulses, desires, sins; and of the three gunas, viz. Sattva,
Raja and Tama; and the Ahamkara, which is so subtle and therefore
so difficult to be got rid of.
This reminds us of a similar story of Kabir who
seeing a woman grinding corn said to his Guru, Nipathiranjana,
"I am weeping because I feel the agony of being crushed in
this wheel of worldly existence like the corn in the hand-mill."
Nipathiranjana replied, "Do not be afraid; hold fast to the
handle of knowledge of this mill, as I do, and do not wander far
away from the same but turn inward to the Center, and you are
sure to be saved."
Bow to Shri Sai -- Peace be to all
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