by Swami Nikhilananda
Reprinted with permission from Living Wisdom: Vedanta in
the West edited by Pravrajika Vrajaprana, published by Vedanta
Press: Hollywood, 1994, pages 252-258.
HOLY MOTHER, in a unique way,
fulfilled the duties of wife, mother, and nun. There have been before in the
world the ideal wife, the ideal mother, and the ideal nun, but a combination of
the three in one person is rare indeed. Holy Mother was wedded to Sri
Ramakrishna at the age of five, lived with him as long as he lived, and
ministered to his physical needs in the best tradition of a Hindu wife. She was
his companion in spiritual life. She demonstrated that wifely devotion and love
are possible without demanding physical satisfaction from one's mate. In spire
of her marriage she remained a nun, pure in body and mind, and in uninterrupted
communion with God. Though she had no children of the flesh, she had many of
the spirit. Like an earthly mother she looked after her disciples' physical
comfort. But unlike an earthly mother she was totally unattached in her love
and expected no return from it. Truly Sister Nivedita declared that Holy Mother
was Sri Ramakrishna's last word on the ideal of Indian womanhood. But why of
Indian womanhood alone? She can very well represent the universal ideal of
womanhood.
Holy Mother's immaculate purity, her
unceasing meditation and prayer, her all-embracing compassion and utter
selflessness, endowed her with the delicacy and tenderness of a maiden, a
subtle grace and quiet dignity, and with all guilelessness and simplicity.
Her innate motherliness put visitors
at ease. To a person coming to her for the first time, she conveyed the feeling
that she had been eagerly waiting for him. Holy Mother always inspired
reverence but never a feeling of remoteness...
Sri Ramakrishna used to speak of two
kinds of illumined persons. One consists of ordinary human beings who through
the practice of spiritual disciplines attain the knowledge of Brahman and merge
in the Supreme Spirit. They are no longer concerned with the activities of the
transitory phenomenal world. The others are God-men, born perfect, who have a
special message for humanity. After the realization of their true nature, they
remain at the phenomenal level, working for the spiritual regeneration of their
fellow creatures. God becomes manifest through God-men. The Infinite sings its
melody through their finite minds and bodies. Hence the sport of God as man,
the naralila, is so appealing. Reason cannot unravel this mystery, but
the heart may enjoy it.
It is extremely difficult for
ordinary men to recognize God when he is embodied as man. An apparent victim of
hunger and thirst, pain and pleasure, hope and despair, sickness and fear, he
weeps, laughs, and suffers without really losing awareness of his divine
nature. In the God-man humanity blends with divinity. When living at the
phenomenal level the God-man is alert about human affairs, possesses practical
knowledge and realism, and observes the conventions of society. Side by side
with divine ecstasies, he cultivates humility, magnanimity, ethical
sensitivity, love, the spirit of service, modesty, and other similar traits in
order to set a model for others. He also shows how one living in the world can
rise above it and enjoy inner peace in the midst of life's turmoil and worry.
The life of Holy Mother is a
demonstration of these facts. Though an embodiment of divinity, she identified
herself of her own accord with the lives of her relatives, the people of her
village, and her devotees. She rejoiced at the happiness of others and wept at
their suffering. Purposely she often suppressed her true nature, because, as
she said, "The excessive manifestation of divinity creates fear in the
minds of devotees; they cannot feel intimate." Once a disciple spoke of
her being the Divine Mother, and she said, "You always harp on that one
theme. I say that I am your mother, and that does not satisfy you." Her
language was simple and natural, and her conduct spontaneous and
unostentatious. She never lost these characteristics, even while giving
initiation or spiritual instruction. In her conduct she was always alert,
remembering that in the future people would regard her as an ideal to follow...
Her brothers regarded her as their
affectionate big sister, her nieces and nephews as their indulgent aunt, and
her disciples as their mother. Many ladies, after visiting her, said that she
was just like one of them. Yet she said to a disciple that, even in the midst
of all her activities, by a mere wish she could remember her divine nature in a
flash, and realize the world to be the playground of maya. If she was
constantly conscious of her true self, how could she fulfill her mission?
How humble she was! Once when she
was ill an ordinary priest was called in to perform some special worship for
her recovery. After the ceremony she took the dust of his feet. When someone
told her of his having a loose character, she remarked, "That may be. One
must show respect for the brahminical garb. The Master was not born to break
traditions."
Often she said to her disciples that
she constantly prayed for the total effacement of her ego. And yet she once
said openly: "I am the Primordial Power, the Mother of the Universe. I
have assumed this body out of compassion for the world. I have been born in
every epoch in the past; I shall be born, too, in the future."
She respected the traditions and
norms of society. One notices here a difference between Holy Mother and Buddha
and Shankara. Buddha repudiated the gods, religious rituals, the scriptures,
and the caste system as obstacles to attaining the freedom of nirvana. Shankara
accepted all these as preparatory disciplines for the knowledge of Brahman,
which he said could be attained only by monks who renounced the world and went
beyond rituals, worship, and social convention. Holy Mother, however, though
practicing true renunciation, remained a householder and till the end of her
life respected the gods, rituals, and social proprieties. She performed
religious rites and showed veneration even to a minor deity such as the village
goddess Simhavahini. Someone said to her, "Mother, why do you do that?
Everything happens by your will alone." The Mother replied, "If you
vow to worship gods and goddesses at the time of illness, you can be cured by
their grace. Besides, everyone should get his due." Before she started on a
trip she consulted the almanac for the auspicious day, according to the Hindu
belief. She enjoyed listening to the reading of Hindu religious books.
Generally Holy Mother obeyed caste
rules; but she often made exceptions in the case of her disciples, especially
about food restrictions. In her opinion devotees of God belonged to a single
caste, a spiritual family. About other social matters she used her
discrimination and common sense and did not wantonly violate social standards.
In most respects Holy Mother lived as a Hindu widow of the brahmin caste,
though Sri Ramakrishna had assured her that he was not really dead.
An orthodox Hindu widow is not
permitted to remarry and thus leads the austere life of a nun. This austerity
is all the more rigorous in the case of a brahmin widow. She avoids such food,
clothes, and ornaments that may stimulate her physical desires. Thus she is
permitted to eat a full vegetarian meal at midday, but takes only fruit and
milk at night. She cannot eat certain foods, such as onions or garlic. A widow
in Bengal uses a white sari without a border, cuts her hair short, and gives
up. all ornaments. Through these strict disciplines imposed on widows, the
Hindu lawgivers constantly reminded them of the ideal of chastity, which is deeply
ingrained in the Indian mind. They wanted widows to be living examples of
simplicity, nonattachment, and the spirit of unselfish service...
Holy Mother observed some of these
rules. Like a Hindu widow, she was a vegetarian, but again, unlike a Hindu widow,
she did not cut her hair, wore gold bracelets, put on a sari with a narrow red
border, and ate a light supper at night. On many occasions she did nor observe
the pollution of food by touch, especially when some of her nonbrahmin women
disciples touched her plate. She regarded all her disciples as her own
children... For some young widows who were her disciples she relaxed the strict
rules about food, saying to one of them, "What good will it do to torture
the soul?" To another she said, "If the soul's craving for food is
not satisfied, one commits an offense."
Holy Mother condemned the morbid
passion for purity, especially regarding pollution by touch, that people show
in the name of religious orthodoxy. But she never encouraged or condoned
carelessness, and she disapproved of vanity.
Holy Mother was practical and
realistic about mundane affairs. She learned to be so from Sri Ramakrishna at
Kamarpukur after her marriage, and later at Dakshineswar. For example, she
scolded some of her disciples for going on foot to Jayrambati from Koalpara on
a stormy night and said, "This kind of rashness is not right." ...
One day Swami Vivekananda dismissed
a servant for stealing money. The servant went to Holy Mother at the Udbodhan
and said to her with tears in his eyes, "Mother, I am very poor and cannot
manage my expenses with my small salary. I have a big family. That is why I
acted that way. In the afternoon Swami Premananda came to her house, and the
Mother said to him, "Look here, Baburam, this man is very poor. Being
harassed by want he stole the money. But why should Naren scold him and send
him away? You are all monks and do not realize the afflictions of householders.
Take this servant back." When told that this might annoy Swami
Vivekananda, she said with firmness: "Take him back; I am asking you to do
so.
When Swami Premananda returned to
the Belur Math with the servant, Swami Vivekananda said, "See what Baburam
has done; he has brought back that fellow." But when he heard what the
Mother had said, the Swami did nor utter another word and took him back.
Holy Mother highly disapproved of
carelessness and waste. Once, after sweeping the courtyard at Jayrambati,
someone threw the broom aside carelessly. She reprimanded the person, saying
that the broom could have been treated a little more gently. Everything should
be shown Proper respect. On another occasion, at the Udbodhan, she expressed
her displeasure because an empty basket was thrown away by one of the inmates.
She said to the monks that, being world-renouncers, they might not care for a
trivial thing like a basket, but nevertheless it could have been preserved for
some other useful purpose. One day she gave a disciple a special dish of food
that she had prepared. The quantity was too great. He are what he could and was
about to throw away the rest when the Mother asked him to give it to a poor
neighbor. Afterwards she said to the disciple, "We should give everyone
his due. What is nor edible for man, give to a cow; what is not edible for a
cow, give to a dog; what is nor edible for a dog, throw into a lake for fish to
eat. But never waste."
Holy Mother urged the monks to shun
idleness, and she herself was intensely active both in Calcutta and at
Jayrambati. Her life in both places generally followed the same pattern. She
always got up at three in the morning, as was her habit during the Dakshineswar
days, and did not retire before eleven o'clock at night. . . . At Jayrambati,
where she was mistress of the house, she busied herself with various household
activities and at the same time talked to her intimate attendants. When she was
in good health she also took part in the more strenuous household duties, like
scouring utensils, carrying water from the rank, or husking paddy. The Mother
herself made the arrangements for the daily worship, such as gathering flowers,
at which she was sometimes assisted by her nieces or devotees. After the
worship she went into the kitchen and relieved the cook, who would then go out
for her refreshment or to attend to any other personal needs. She herself
cooked most of the food to be offered to the Master in the shrine. . . . In
earlier days Holy Mother with her own hands served all the devotees their
meals, and she herself ate only after they had finished eating. Sometimes she
worked in the kitchen in the evening in order to relieve the cook from
overwork.
One evening an attendant was reading
a letter from a disciple to Holy Mother. It was full of eulogy and adoration..
After listening to it she remarked "Often I say to myself, I am but the
daughter of Ram Mukherjee. Many of my contemporaries are still alive at
Jayrambati. In what respect do I differ from them? Devotees come from unknown
places and prostrate themselves before me. J am told that some of them are
judges and some lawyers. Why should they come to me in this way?"
The answer to her query was given by
herseif. Sne once said: "People call me the Divine Mother. I think, maybe
they are right. How otherwise can one explain the strange things that have
happened in my life?. . . If I say to myself that a certain thing should
happen, the wish is always fulfilled."
There existed an extraordinary
relationship between Sri Ramakrishna and Holy Mother. She often spoke of
herself as his handmaid and instrument, as one of the many seekers who found
refuge at his feet. When a devotee asked her advice she said, "I do not
know anything. I repeat only what I have heard from the Master. Read The Gospel
of Sri Ramakrishna and you will know all you need." To another who asked
her blessing she said, "The Master will bless you."
How often she asked her disciples to
pray for her so that she might not have a trace of vanity! She repeatedly asked
the devotees to cling to Sri Ramakrishna in order to avoid the pitfalls of
life. One day a disciple, asked about his welfare, said that through her
blessing he was well. "You all make the same mistake," she rebuked
him. "Why do you bring me into everything? Can't you speak of the Master?
Don't you see that everything happens by his will?" Regarding the Master
she stated, "He is the Supreme God and the Supreme Goddess. He is the
essence of all mantras and the embodiment of all deities." She carried Sri
Ramakrishna's picture everywhere and worshiped it daily, seeing in it his
living presence. Often she remarked that one should not make a distinction
between the physical body and its shadow in a picture. She talked intimately
with the Master and fed him in the picture. And yet she did not conceal the
fact that she and the Master were identical and that there was no difference
between them except in outer form.
Sri Ramakrishna, too, knew Holy
Mother's nature. He spoke of her as the bestower of wisdom, as his own Shakti.
Once, seeing Latu meditating in the Panchavati, he said to him, "You fool,
the deity whom you are contemplating is working herself to death by scouring
pots and pans." Here are a few other statements of his about her:
"The Mother who is in the temple is the same as the mother who dwells in
the nahabat [the small music tower where Holy Mother lived at the Dakshineswar
temple]." "If she is displeased with a person, it is beyond even my
power to protect him." "If she is angry she can destroy
everything." "If anyone gives me an offering, I send it to the nahabat;
otherwise, how will the giver attain liberation?" As the culmination of
his spiritual practices, the Master formally worshiped Holy Mother as the
Divine Mother of the universe.
Holy Mother has been described by
such epithets as the Divine Mother, the Mother of the universe, Prakriti,
Shakti or Power, Mahashakti or the Great Power, and Mahamaya or the Great
Deluder. These epithets are not sentimental expressions but have a noetic
meaning.... Like modern science, Hinduism describes Shakti or Energy as the
creator of physical objects and the source of the universe. But according to
science this inert and nonintelligent energy is a self-creating,
self-preserving, and self-dissolving category. It does nor need extraneous help
to project phenomena.
According to Hinduism, Shakti is the
potency of Brahman and inseparable from it, like fire and its power to burn.
The potency is unable to function by itself. Brahman which is existence,
consciousness, and bliss, by irs mere presence impregnates Shakti, as it were.
Thus names and forms are evolved. The why and wherefore of the infinite
Brahman's becoming the manifold creation, or the One's becoming the many, or
the Absolutes appearing as the relative, is a profound mystery which cannot be
solved by the human mind. After projecting the universe, Shakti casts a spell
on the creatures in order to perpetuate the creation. Hence she is called
Mahamaya, the Great Deluder. The Creative Energy contains in her womb the seeds
of creation and nourishes the creatures after giving birth to them. Finally, at
the end of a cosmic cycle, she withdraws the universe into herself.
All women, in a sense, function as
the Divine Energy. But her fullest manifestation is seen through the body and
mind of a woman of unblemished character. Holy Mother was such a woman. Hence
she is regarded as the Supreme Goddess or Great Power, a special manifestation
of the Divine Energy. Once a devotee said to her that after her no one would
worship the minor goddesses of the Hindu religion. She replied, "Why, they
too are parts of me." Conscious of her divine nature, she kindled the
sparks of spirituality in her disciples, accepted their worship, and gave them
assurance of liberation.
Swami Nikhilananda, a disciple of
Sri Sarada Devi, founded the Ramakinishna-Vivekananda Center of New York in
1933, and remained its head until his death in 1973. Swami Nikhilananda
translated the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita and other scriptures, and also
wrote biographies of Sri Ramakrishna, Sri Sarada Devi, and Swami Vivekananda.
The author of Hinduism: Its Meaning for the Liberation of the Spirit, and Man
in Search of Immortality, Swami Nikhilananda also compiled Vivekananda: The
Yogas and Other Works. His greatest literary contribution was his translation
from the original Bengali into English of The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna.
"Sarada Devi: the Holy
Mother" is an excerpt from the Vedanta and the West article, "Some Glimpses
of Holy Mother" which appeared in the September-Octobers 1962 edition of
Vedanta and the West.
Copyright © 1994 by Vedanta Press
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