How Bhagwanji Called Me
Back To His Fold
by S. N. Bakshi
It
was in January, 1997 that, having had darshan of Satya Sain Baba at Putaparti
when I was accompanied by a party of 22 karsevaks from Jammu, 8 ladies and the
rest male devotees, I came to Bangalore, where I stayed with my son (employed
with HMT Factory) until the 20th of January, 1997.
There in Bangalore my
grand-daughter, doing her B. Pharmacy course in a local college, and her two
female cousins attended the prayer meetings devoted to Bhagawanji held regularly
in the evenings on Sundays at the residence of a lady, who too is an employee of
the H.M.T. Factory. She has kept a room for being exclusively used for
devotional prayers offered to the Bhagawan. My son too attends these prayers
whenever he is free from other preoccupations. Turmeric-red cooked rice (tahar)
and cheese (mixed with pieces of potatoes) are distributed as prasad among the
devotees after the arti is over.
Not long after my return
from Bangalore it was actually in mid-March-my grand daughter wrote to her
father here (my elder son) that Bhagawanji had appeared in her dream and asked
her, "Why don't your parents visit the Ashram at Bohri, Jammu and offer
turmeric-red cooked rice and charwan (cooked pieces of liver) there, to be
distributed as prasad among the devotees ?" My son and daughter-in-law,
joined by my grandson, lost no time in doing Bhagawanji's bidding : they visited
the Ashram at Bohri, Janunu, on Sunday, 3 March, 1997 carrying with them two
varieties of cooked rice, one variety mixed with pieces of liver and the other
with pieces of cheese (meant for vegetarian devotees like me). When they
returned home after having attended the Arti, all the members of my family,
including me and my children/grandchildren, partook of the prashad and the
vibhuti brought from the Ashram. During the next week I too had a dream, someone
asking me therein, "Why don't you come to Bohri Ashram for a darshan of
Bhagawanji I felt shaken, realizing that having had a long and deep association
with Bhagawanji going as far back as 1947, it was a pity that I had paid my
obeisance at the Bohri Ashram only three or four times since 1990. So I decided
to go to the Ashram with some halwa as prasad on the coming Sunday, 4th Sunday
of March, 1997. Since the ingredients of halwa were not available from the
market on account of the day being a Sunday, I had to postpone my visit to the
next Sunday, when I did carry halwa to the Ashram (in place of cooked rice).
Since then I have been attending the evening Arti at the Bohri Ashram on all
Sundays.
At the Ashram, Shri
Shibanji Turki Sahib, who has known me as a fellow-devotee for many years past,
asked me to contribute an article for the forthcoming issue of the 'Patrika', on
the theme of how I came to Bhagawanji and about all that I owned to Him
spiritually. Initially, I felt hesitant to write on the subject, for two reasons
(i) I cannot recapitulate all that is worth recording in view of the long lapse
of time since I met Bhagawanji many years ago, (ii) I felt that a humble person
like me could not conceive of the greatness of, and write about, Bhagawan
Himself. And so I did not make an attempt at writing a piece. Since Turki Sahib
would not let me go and persuaded me insistently on the next two Sundays at the
Ashram not to disappoint him I realized that I could not shirk the
responsibility. I took the prompting of my friend (Turki Sahib) as a direct
command from Bhagawanji that had to be complied with. What follows is a truthful
account of my experiences bearin on my contact with Bhagawanji. Wherever I
inadvertently go wrong or deviate a little from the truth, I hope He will make
allowance for human error imperfection and forgive me.
It was way back in
1938-39, when I was a student of the 9th Class, studying in the C.M.S. High
School, Srinagar that I had to migrate to the National High School, Baramulla in
view of my father's transfer from Doda Forest Division to the J. V. Forest
Division, Baramulla. As employees of the Forest Department, my father and his
colleague (in fact his assistant) late Shri Shankar Nath Zadoo, lived as close
neighbours, occupying the residential quarters allotted to them by the
Department. Shri Zadoo's first daughter, who was bom in Baramulla, was less than
a year old when my father took over in that Division. Both Shri Zadoo and his
wife came to love me very much as a young boy. After finishing my studies in
1944, as my good luck would have it, I secured the job of a senior clerk in the
Chief Conservator's office (through my father's influence).
From my early childhood, I
had intense devotion for the divine Mother and was, therefore, drawn to the feet
of the Goddess Ashta Dashbuji whose peeth is at Hari Parbat. I maintained the
habit of going every morning to Hari Parbat during my college days and even
later, after joining Govt. service, I paid my obeisance to the Mother Sharika
every morning without fail. Since Shri Shankar Nath Zadoo too (then working as a
Head Clerk in one ofthe divisions, of the Forest Department in Srinagar) also
visited Hariparbat daily in the mornings, I was able to revive my contact with
him at the feet of the Great Mother. It was one day during the year 1946/47 that
Shri Zadoo just asked me, "Why don't you come to Babji, a saint of a very
high calibre ?" I readily expressed my willingness to see the saint in view
of my reverence for saints in general such as Sam Baba, Grata Bab and others.
So, one lucky Sunday, I
was accompanied by Zadoo Sahib to the house at Rishi Mohalla in which Bhagawanji
lived then (that actually belonged to his sister). As I came near the lotus feet
of Bhagawanji , he asked Shri Zadoo who I was. After introducing me, Zadoo Sahib
informed Bhagawanji that I could recite verses from the Panchastavi tunefully.
Bhagawanji responded by asking me "pur" (which means recite in
Kashmiri). I reverentially enquired of Bhagawanji which tav I should read (Panchastvi
has five tavs or sections). His holiness asked me to recite the 4th tav (Ambas
tav-that glorifies the Mother), which I did. In fact, I must express my
gratitude to the late Shri Lala Kaul Ji (Shoda) of Karfali Mohalla, Srinagar
front whom I had picked up the bhang (the right tune) in which the verses of the
Panchastavi should be sung. Whenever later I paid my obeisance to the lotus feet
of Bhagawanji, I recited the 4th tav for the Bhagawan in the tune I had become
proficient in through practice. With the passage of time, I got familiar with
Bhagawanji and naturally gathered courage to press his feet and even his legs.
When for the first time I introduced my hands inside his feran (outer garment)
to press his legs, I could feel that there was virtually no flesh on them-the
large legs, when touched, were felt to be simple splinters. So instead of
pressing them. I would massage them. Whenever I went to pay homage to Bhagawanji,
I invariably found Shri Shankar Nath Zadoo in the house. During those days Shri
Shankar Nath Fotedar and others were not to be seen there. This continued to be
the position till October, 1947 when Qabailis and plain-clothed Pakistani
soldiers invaded Kashmir. When the news that the raiders had reached Shalteng
spread to Srinagar, panic gripped the city. In the evening, in great distress, I
went to Bhagawanji's and saw Shri Shankar Nath Zadoo as usual there. There were
only we two of us besides Bhagawanji (and the other inmates of the house). I
found Shri Zadoo entreating the Bhagawan to save the Kashmiri Pandits.
Bhagawanji remained silent for a long time and made no response to Shri Zadoo's
request. I left the house and the next day, on my return from Hari Parbat, I
enquired of Shri Shankar Nath Zadoo as to what had been bhagawanji's response to
his request, He replied that Bhagawani had asked him if there was really a bata
there (implying that no Kashmiri Pandit was really a Pandit as he should be).
Being very close to Bhagawanji, Shri Zadoo would not relent and persisted in his
request. Thereupon Bhagawanji had asked him "Will you sacrifice yourself
for the Pandits (tcha lagakha balayi batan)? " Shri Zadoo, in his
simplicity, replied, "Yes Maharaj (Ahanmara)". Then Bhagawanji asked
him to thrust the fore-fingers of his two hands into the holes of the pinjara
(Kashmiri word for a window with numerous holes) that served as the window of
the room in which Bhagawanji was seated. After an hour or so Shri Zadoo was
allowed to go home by Bhagawanji. Thereafter, I noticed that Zadoo Sahib did not
behave like a normal person and sometimes talked irrelevant. He did not look
100% sane and became abnormal. I did ask him what the matter was and why he did
not behave as he used to. To this he replied that he had sacrificed himself for
the Pandits (bu chusna batan logmut balayi). Later he was posted as a Head Clerk
in the Direction Office of the Forest Department in the C.C.'s office in which I
too worked. He did regain his normalcy in two or three years, but continued to
have a touch of abnormality, behaving like a mastana (inebriate) at times.
I continued to visit
Bhagawanji's abode on Sundays for paying him my obeisance. One Sunday it so
happened that a Kashmiri Pandit lady came to see Bhagawanji from Karan Nagar,
Srinagar, accompanied by a servant, a Muslim, who was carrying a bag-ful of
yellow pears (goshibob variety). The bag of pears was placed as an offering at
the feet of Bhagawanji. He asked the 'everpresent'. Shankar Nath Zadoo to
distribute the pears as prasad among all the devotees present. Shri Zadoo
started distributing the pears from the devotee who was sitting next to
Bhagawanji. But Bhagawanji made a nod and desired that the fruit be distributed
starting from the servant (who had carried the bag). After Shri Zadoo gave him a
pear, Bhagawanji asked him to give another and then another (nodding several
times) till the servant got five pears. At this the servant got up trembling in
obeisance, telling Bhagawanji that he had got enough. The rest of the devotees
were given one pear each. That shows how kind and considerate the Bhagawan was
to the poor and underprivileged. The inquisitive Zadoo Sahib, however, enquired
of the servant what must have made Bhagawanji specially bountiful to him in
having him given five pears instead of one. The servant revealed that at the
time of purchasing the pears, he had felt tempted to eat them. He had further
thought to himself, "I do not know for whom Mataji is purchasing the fruit
; at any rate, she is not going to offer me any pear to eat". Obviously,
Bhagawanji being ananterymi had read what thoughts had occupied the servant's
mind and so he asked Shri Zadoo to feed him to his fill.
That very summer, I
witnessed another miracle. My sister had appeared in her B. A. Examination and
she was very keen to pursue higher studies. A class-mate of hers, who was the
daughter of a cousin of Shri Shankar Nath Zadoo, had also appeared in B. A.
Examination. Being close to her as a friend, my sister had asked her to inform
her when applications would be invited by the State Govt. from the aspiring
students for admission to the B. T. Course. The girls's father functioned as an
auditor in the A.G.'s office, Srinagar. One day that year, on the 3rd of July (I
don't remember the year precisely) I could lay my hands on the Govt. gazette
which carried the advertisement in question (regarding admission to the B. T.
Course). It said that the candidates whose B. A. result had not been declared
yet could also apply. Unfortunately, the closing date for entertaining the
applications was mentioned as 30th June, which had already expired. I took the
relevant leaf of the Gazette and enquired of my sister if she had been informed
by her friend, Miss Zadoo, about the advertisement. She was taken aback and at
once ran to the friend's house at Khardouri, Srinagar. She came back in tears
and told me that her friend had hidden herself and not come forward to see her.
Depressed and dejected, my sister did not take her meal that evening and she
wept bitterly. On the following morning (when it was Sunday) I, as usual, went
to Hari Parbat. It was there, at the feet of the Mother Sharika, that it
occurred to my mind that I should approach Bhagawanji and urge him to help my
sister. As I reached home, I advised my sister not to feel depressed and
frustrated. I asked her to accompany me to Bhagawanji's house at Reshi Mohalla,
Srinagar. I bowed to Bhagawanji (who sat facing the door), and took my seat
close to his feet. My, sister sat on the other side, against the wall.
Bhagawanji observed her sobbing, with her head bent on her knees. He wanted to
know who the girl was and why she was weeping. I made bold to tell him that she
was my sister and had been cheated by the daughter of Shri S. N. Zadoo, who was
very much present there. Feeling abashed at the mention of his name, he asked
"My daughter ?" I replied back saying "yes please, actually your
cousin's daughter". I first narrated the whole story to Shri Zadoo and then
to Bhagawanji particularly, who was outwardly inattentive but heard every bit of
what I said with rapt attention. He pondered for a while and then said to my
sister, "Ma vad (don't weep). Chanyi jayi tamis ta tamsanz jayi ceh (your
place will go to her and hers to you)". None could understand the actual
import of this cryptic remark. We left after receiving Bhagawanji's blessings.
While proceeding towards our home, I consoled my sister, reassuring her that
Bhagawanji's words would bear some fruit. On the next day (Monday, 5 July) my
father, by chance, met one of his former class-fellows, Dr. B...... who was
working then as a Professor in the S. P. College, Seeing my father gloomy, he
said to him "Manakaka, why are you looking sad today ?" My father
explained to him at length what had made him feel depressed and helpless. The
Professor, in a heartening tone, asked him to furnish him an undated application
from my sister, which he promised to get entertained in the Education Department
by the officer concerned who happened to have been his pupil (whom he had
taught). It so happened that when the B. A. result was declared, my sister's
friend, Miss Zadoo, was placed in the compartment category (she had not cleared
all the subjects) whereas my sister passed in the second division. Through
Bhagawanji grace, she was selected for the B.T. Course. Was it not a divine
miracle wrought by our Bhagwawan ? My sister not only passed her B. T.
Examination but also got the M. A. degree in two subjects and was appointed a
teacher in a Government School; she rose to the position of Head Mistress in a
High School. The reader can now appreciate the meaning of Bhagawanji's cryptic
statement as I too did when my sister was admitted to the B. T. Course and her
friend had to lag behind her.
Finally, I recount the
miracle connected with Thakur Harnam Singh Pathania, who was the Chief
Conservator of Forests in whose office I worked. There was a colleague of mine
in that office, Shri Neelkanth Kalla, who functioned as the Steno-cum-P.A. of
Shri Pathania. Shri Kalla too had turned into a devotee of Bhagwaanji through my
association with him. One Saturday he had gone to Bhagawanji's to pay his homage
to him. Bhagawanji asked him, "Is your officer (Afsar) well?"
"The officer with whom you, are working", Bhagawaiiji continued. Shri
Kalla replied back saying "Yes, Shri Pathania is fine" "Has he to
go to Jammu ?" Bhagawanji asked next. Actually Shri Pathania was scheduled
to leave on tour for Jammu on the approaching Monday. So Shri Kalla replied to
Bhagawanji in the affirmative. Thereupon Bhagawanji took out a piece of candy
sugar and asked Shri Kalla to give it to Shri Pathania before he would leave for
Jammu. Shri Kalla met Shri Pathania well in time and delivered the piece to him,
narrating to him all that Bhagawanji had enquired of him. Shri Pathania went to
Jammu in his official Land Rover jeep, which he drew himself, and he was
accompanied by two peons in the jeep besides his driver, Madhov Ram, on whom he
did not depend much since he found him unfit. Shri Pathania was a dauntless
driver and as such he was on the steering, Madho Ram being seated to his left.
They left Srinagar at 7.30 a.m. and halted at Qazigund where Mr. M. I. Beg,
D.F.O. Anantnag, was waiting to receive them. On resuming the journey, Shri
Pathania was again on the steering. About 200 yards away, the jeep had to cross
a bridge built across a small canal. It so happened that an army truck coming
from the other side was followed by a Jonga jeep driven by an army officer who
wanted to overtake the truck. This jeep somehow struck the Land Rover of
Pathania Sahib. As narrated by the peon, Sadhu Singh, it seemed to him as if the
Land Rover driven by Pathania Sahib was lifted by some one and placed harmlessly
in the Nallah below without getting overturned. Shri Pathania got a small
scratch on one of his ears and sustained one or two light bruises and the others
too suffered no serious injuries. When the Army officer (whose fast driving led
to the accident) came to know of Shri Pathania's official status and of his
being a brother of Major General A. S. Pathania he got an Army Rescuer and thus
Shri Pathania's jeep was rescued. He was offered another jeep which he declined.
Instead, a jeep was arranged for him by the D.F.O. So Pathania Sahib managed to
reach Jammu safe in the evening. On his return, he was accompanied by Shri
Neelkanth Kalla to Bhagawanji's residence at Reshi Mohalla, Srinagar. Shri
Pathania conveyed his gratitude to Bhagawanji who responded by blessing him with
a smile!
[The author is a senior
devotee of Bhagawanji, living at Karan Nagar, Jammu]
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