Small Addendum to Sanjay Dadlani’s Exciting Revelations!
Date, 7 July 2002
From: Brian Steel
Email:
ompukalani@hotmail.com
Website:
Sathya Sai Baba - Claims and realities
THIS is what is needed! Well-researched FACTS and an
intelligent analysis and reporting of them! Thanks, Sanjay
Dadlani! This meticulous piece of detective work and gripping
presentation tells us quite a lot and raises other important
questions which will eventually be answered (by Sanjay or others).
I do hope that Sanjay Dadlani will publish more - and SOON. For
example, another important piece of the SB jigsaw, which has
not attracted the attention it deserves, and for which Sanjay
seems qualified to illuminate, is the FULL story and EXPLANATION
of the ‘scorpion’ incident and the ensuing several weeks of
illness and trauma in 1943, just prior to the 2 'Declarations' (reincarnation
and Mission).
Having said that, may
I offer one or two extra points to Sanjay's narrative. Because
of what he has unearthed, the references I am about to make have
a double significance, so they enhance the value of what he has
offered us, as you will see.
The points which follow are all taken (quoted or paraphrased)
from the indispensable Love Is My Form, Vol. 1 (LIMF).
Many of them are the result of the LIMF team's interviews
of surviving devotees. The whole of page 237 refers to the
"hills" episode. Before giving the details, it is very
significant to note that although the 700 pages of LIMF
give minute details about the years 1926 [?] to 1950, on this
particularly revealing and important page, there is NOTHING
specific about what SB was DOING in the caves during those 6
months (just a vague rumour, in fact). This is precisely what
Sanjay Dadlani has patiently pieced together and revealed! So
the reader of LIMF is left wondering WHY the book omits
these relevant details of SB's development. The answer is
obvious since LIMF, despite all its invaluable
contributions of priceless new facts, is written by devotees.
Therefore, history will rely on pieces like Sanjay's to fill in
these almost certainly deliberate gaps in the official
literature.
The details:
The LIMF account (p. 237) suggests that, following his
Declaration and return from Uravakonda, SB had been living in
the house of his wealthy Brahmin sponsor, Karnam Subbamma (one
of two wives of the deceased Karnam). However, there was village
opposition to his activities and especially to his non-Brahmin
caste status, and to the number of people visiting SB at that
house. Subbamma was therefore being subjected to strong
criticism by villagers. To the extent of SB having to stop
entering her kitchen and to speak to Subbamma outside the house.
The resentment against SB’s presence in Subbamma's house grew
and there was an attempt to ‘exile’ him to Bukkapatnam but the
villagers there were also opposed to his presence and
activities.
LIMF
continues: "Turned out by the rustic people, Baba moved away to
some caves in a hill, located on the other side of the
Chitravathi river, near Janakampalli." [interview] "He stayed
there for some time - probably six months with short breaks for
outstation visits in between. Years later, Baba would confide
that Subbamma’s relatives made His stay at the Karnam house
intolerable ... He even wrote to his Bangalore devotees, Madhava
Rao and Sankaramma, "I am staying on the hill. Not yet gone to
the village." [private archival letter]
"When the villagers
found out where SB was, they thought that he was performing some
austerities to obtain powers [N.B. the shortest possible
reference!].Whenever they approached these caves Baba appeared
as snakes to drive them away." [interview]
In this tense
situation, a local (Kothacheruvu) Swami asked SB's family if he
could take the lad as a ward and future successor, but
Easwaramma refused permission. This was when Subbamma intervened
once more to allow SB to reside in a hut on an isolated piece of
land of hers. This, incidentally, must be the hut about which SB
himself has told the story of almost being burnt alive by a
cowardly arson attack by villagers. (From recollection, I think
SB more or less plays this serious incident down as a prank by
naughty local boys!) It merely underlines the fact that in
Puttaparthi resentment against SB was still so strong. (LIMF
, p. 241) [interview with Karnam Kamalamma, 21 April 1998.
Kamalamma was the other widow of the late Karnam.]
(For those interested,
I would point out that I introduced some of the interesting
facts concerning the village opposition to the young SB (and
other facts which appear to reveal his self-doubts at that time)
in Chapter 7 of my Sathya Sai Baba: God or Guru?
(November 2001) but the revised version of that chapter has not
yet been published on my website.)
In that same interview, we are told that in another incident
"Baba was bound to a boulder and thrown down a hill." Also,
Kamalamma reveals all these years later, that it was she who
then persuaded the ailing Subbamma - the other widow - to donate
a piece of land for SB’s use. This land was immediately
registered on 21 Jul 1945 - this gives us a valuable date to
work with - and with enthusiastic work by SB’s devotees,
including some from Bangalore, and the generosity of a Bangalore
builder benefactor, the first mandir was built and
inaugurated only 5 months later (15 December 1945), but by then
Subbamma had died (25 November 1945).
A fascinating story.
(See the whole chapter in LIMF, pp. 237-265.) To be
continued, I hope, by someone.