Shirdi Baba's Childhood

topic posted Sat, September 24, 2005 - 3:42 AM by  Alx
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(this is from Kaleshwar.org)

Baba’s birth name and the names of his parents are undocumented. Baba’s parents were simple villagers—his father was a boatman and his mother, a devoted housewife. She was also known to be a great devotee of Shiva, praying that He would grant her wish and be born as her child. Even though the couple remained childless after many years of marriage, her devotion never waivered, and she persisted in her prayers for a divine son.

An Incarnation of Shiva
One day, while her husband was ferrying passengers across the river, a huge storm came. It was clear to the wife that her husband was in mortal danger. As she stood watching with tears in her eyes, Shiva appeared and asked, “What do you want?” She said, “You have to come in my life as my son.” Shiva gave her a fruit and told her to eat it. At the same time her husband returned safely to shore. She told him of her divine experience showing him Shiva’s fingerprints on the fruit as proof. The husband became jealous, his jealousy increasing when his wife became pregnant. Determined that he, too, should have direct experience of the Lord, he decided to leave his wife and go to the forest to live and meditate. However, his wife did not want to be separated from him. Leaving the child in their hut, she went with her husband into the forest where they lived out the remainder of their lives, “receiving enlightenment from Shiva”, Swami Kaleshwar said.


A Muslim couple from a nearby village found the child and adopted him. One day, the boy was playing with the son of the local Hindu priest. As part of their game, the priest’s son brought a Shiva Lingam from the temple. Upon seeing it the boy immediately put it in his mouth and gleefully swallowed it. All the Muslims were outraged at his actions, which they felt were blasphemy. The Hindus as well were so deeply upset at the loss of the lingam, their sacred symbol, that they were determined to cut open the boy’s stomach and retrieve it.

Eventually everyone calmed down when the parents reminded them that he was adopted: they didn’t even know his birth name or whether he was actually a Hindu or a Muslim. Throughout the incident, the boy remained unconcerned. Soon after, he left home, taken by a fakir, who eventually brought the boy to the saint, Venkusa, who would become his master. In later years, Baba would freely quote from the sacred scriptures of both Islam and Hinduism. When asked whether he was in fact a Hindu or a Muslim he would reply, “The ways to God are many but God is one. Serve God. Serve each other. Love each other. This is God’s Way.” His life, from the very beginning, was a message to the world about the unity of all religions.

Baba stayed with Venkusa for 12 years. Because he received more attention from his master than the other disciples, the disciples became jealous and attempted to kill him by pummeling him with a brick. As the brick flew towards his head, Baba called out his master’s name and the brick miraculously stopped in mid-air thus Baba’s life was saved. Afterwards, the brick was given to Baba as a gift by Venkusa.

It became Baba’s power object, which he used as a pillow and kept with him until the last days of his life.
posted by:
Alx
offline Alx
SF Bay Area
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  • Re: Shirdi Baba's Childhood

    Sun, September 25, 2005 - 3:03 AM
    ohh thank you Alx for posting that!
    i knew about His brick and that he was
    very fond of it, but i had never heard
    any stories about where it came from and
    WHY he was so fond of it :)
    • Re: Shirdi Baba's Childhood

      Mon, September 26, 2005 - 9:16 PM
      Jamie --

      that's just the tip of the iceberg about his brick. you know that he used it as a pillow, his whole life.

      because the process of making a brick is involving all of the 5 elements -- clay (earth) and water mixed together, baked in the sun, dried in the air -- and his master did a supernatural thing with it, ie, elevating it in the air and preventing it from hitting Shirdi Baba again -- the sky element (or ether) is implicated in that supernatural activity.

      Baba's brick balanced the elements in his being. that's one major part of why he had to sleep on it.

      can you guess the other reason?

      Alx
      • Re: Shirdi Baba's Childhood

        Fri, September 30, 2005 - 6:24 AM
        Alx

        was it so that He had to at hand and ready to throw at people? :)
        • Re: Shirdi Baba's Childhood

          Tue, October 4, 2005 - 2:06 PM
          First, let me introduce myself a bit saying that I've studied, too, under Swami Kaleshwar. Not to the extent that Alx has, for sure, but she introduced me to him.

          Anyway, the other reason why Sai Baba had the brick to sleep on, was that it was a power object, given to him by his master, Venkusa. That brick was his connection to him. If the brick is gone, Baba's gone. And this, was in fact the case. Just a couple of days before his death, one of his desciples accidently dropped and broke the brick in two, while he was cleaning. When, later, Baba saw that, he was extremely sad and prophecized his maha samadhi. The breaking of the brick broke the master-disciple connection between Baba and Venkusa. In that brick, Venkusa infused all his spiritual energy when he gave it to Baba.

          That brick was Baba's only power object.

          George
          • Re: Shirdi Baba's Childhood

            Thu, October 6, 2005 - 4:57 PM
            hi, George -- I don't think the broken brick severed Baba's relationship with Venkusa -- just meant that his physical life dharma was ending. the master-student relationship never ends, not even between lifetimes -- it goes on and on and on. it is immortal.

            about the power object -- the important thing about Baba's brick was that it contained ALL of his channels, to his entire guru paramapara, his entire guru lineage. it means, not only Venkusa, but also HIS master, and HIS master, and so on, all the way back to Dattatreya, the original spiritual teacher on this planet. adi-guru, they call him. first guru. some even say that Datta was Shiva's guru. yipes.

            Baba -- despite being MADE, from his guru, to spend his entire life in Shirdi (without leaving, which he only did once, in his late teens, and that was also on Venkusa's orders) -- talked with his guru, after a certain point in his development, every day. they were in communion daily -- through the brick.

            it represented his 'soul object' -- containing his entire lineage's channels. it took Shirdi Baba some ten or twelve years, after receiving the brick and being sent to the town of Shirdi (where, ironically, the village people were suspicious of him and wouldn't even let him IN the town for more than a decade!!!!!!! or feed him, though he was a beggar!!!!), to learn how to operate the brick and his soul channels of energy, to the cosmic.

            btw -- the brick wasn't Baba's only power object. he had a couple more hanging around.

            Alx

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