Visit the Ashram of Ramana Maharhshi and experience his living energy in the meditation room on the Energy Enhancement Tour of India..
Ramana Maharhshi was a guru of international renown from southern India who
taught Meditation during the first half of the twentieth century. He was born in 1879 near
Madurai, Tamilnadu. His father was a farmer. He was the second of three sons.
The family was religious, giving ritual offerings to the family deity and
visiting temples. One unusual aspect of his family history was a curse that was
put on the family by a wandering monk who was refused food by a family member.
The monk decreed that in every generation, one child in the family would
renounce the world to lead a religious life.
Ramana was largely disinterested in school and absent-minded during work. He had
a marked inclination towards introspection and self-analysis. He used to ask
fundamental questions about identity, such as the question "who am I?". He was
always seeking to find the answer to the mystery of his own identity and
origins.
One peculiar aspect of Ramana's personality was his ability to sleep soundly. He
could be beaten or carried from one place to another while asleep, and would not
wake up. He was sometimes jokingly called "Kumbhakarna" after a figure in the
Ramayana who slept soundly for months.
In the summer of 1896, Ramana went into an altered state of consciousness which
had a profound effect on him. He experienced what he understood to be his own
death, and later returned to life. Satchidanand had the
same experience when he was 14 and it was after this he started to practise yoga
as a preparation for Meditation, meeting his spiritual masters and Enlightenment
He also had spontaneous flashes of insight where he perceived himself as an
essence independent of the body. During these events, he felt himself to be an
eternal entity, existing without reliance on the physical body or material
world.
Along with these intuitions came a fascination with the word "Arunachala" which
carried associations of deep reverence and a sense that his destiny was closely
intertwined with this unique sound. At the age of sixteen, Ramana heard that a
place called Arunachala actually existed (the modern town's name is
Tiruvannamalai) and this brought him great happiness.
Ramana was nearing the end of high school when a careless criticism describing
him as a person not fit to be a student jarred him into making a final decision
to leave school. He had been reading a book on famous Tamil saints and resolved
to leave home and lead the life of a religious seeker. Naturally, he planned to
go to Arunachala, the place which was the focal point of all his religious
ideals.
When he was seventeen years old, Ramama left for Arunachala, arriving after four
days of mostly train travel. He went directly to the central shrine at the
temple and addressed the Shiva symbol (linga) stating he had given up everything
and come to Arunachala in response to the god's call.
Ramana spent ten years living in temples and caves meditating, and pursuing
spiritual purification, keeping the disciplines of silence and non-attachment.
At this point, his reputation as a serious teacher (he was called Brahma Swami)
began to grow and other seekers began to visit him. His disciples, some of whom
were learned individuals, began to bring him sacred books. He became conversant
with the religious traditions of South India written in the different regional
languages.
Early disciples had a difficult time learning about Ramana's background and even
his native language because he was silent and refused to speak. As time passed
he ceased his ascetic phase and began to live a more normal life in an ashram
setting. Many people came to visit him with a variety of problems, from both
India and abroad.
Ramana's disciples constructed an ashram and temple, and space the accommodate
the many visitors. All ate the same food and Ramana sat with the rest of the
people during meals and did not expect special treatment. The ashram was a
sanctuary for animals and Ramana had great fondness for the cows, monkeys,
birds, and squirrels that inhabited the grounds.
Ramana continued to practice the method of inquiry - Vichara Meditation - into the nature of the self
best expressed by the question "who am I?".
Ramana was not a guru in the classic sense of a teacher who gives instruction on
a regular basis or gives mantras during initiation. In fact, if the seeker
wanted to practice repetition of a mantra rather than the "who am I?"
Vichara Meditation method of
self inquiry, he recommended repeating the pronoun "I" or the phrase "I am"
rather than repeating sacred Sanskrit words or the names of gods. This focused
the person's mind on "being itself" or the mystery of their own awareness rather
than an external object or word.
However, Ramana did give informal initiations using a special glance, or touch,
or in dreams. Lex Hixon writes:
... although the Guru , or teacher is within everyone as primal awareness, an
illuminated sage can push us in the direction he described as inward in the
sense of being more primary, or primal. Ramana could give this initiatory push
by touch or by glance. Seated in silence, he would suddenly turn, fix one with
an intense gaze, and the person would become directly aware of the right-hand
Heart (the spiritual center of one's awareness) and its vibrant current of
primal awareness. Those who experienced the power of Ramana's gaze have reported
that the initiation was so clear and vivid that they could never again seriously
doubt that the Guru was none other than their own primal conscious being.
(Coming Home, The Experience of Enlightenment in Sacred Traditions by Lex Hixon,
Jeremy P. Tarcher - Martin's Press, New York, 1989, p. 46)
Ramana also initiated people in dreams by gazing intently into their eyes, and
he would sometimes travel in the subtle body to visit people. There are many
reports and testimonials where he would appear to
a disciple hundreds of miles away as a luminous figure, and the person would
recognize his appearance in that form. He noted that one's waking life and one's
dream life were both a kind of dream each with different qualities of awareness.
He referred to them as "dream 1" and "dream 2". He therefore did not make a big
distinction between appearing to a waking disciple and a dreaming disciple since
he considered both spheres of existence to be dreams.
Ramana recommended renunciation of enjoyment of physical and mental pleasures as
a means of entering into a state where the oneness of the self and cosmos could
be perceived. He also felt that a person who is not attached to the results of
his actions can live in the world like an actor that plays his or her part but
is immune to emotional disturbance, because he realizes he is only play-acting
on the stage of life.
Ramana was able to demonstrate his own non-attachment when thieves broke into
the ashram and he counseled the disciples and visitors to let them have anything
they wanted. He remained calm during the incident even when struck by one of the
thieves. He also displayed no loss of equanimity at the death of his mother, who
had come to live at the ashram after selling the family home.
Ramana developed cancer and when his devotees voiced concern about losing him,
he responded with the statement "I am not going anywhere, where shall I go? I
shall be there where I am always." He died in April, 1950, sitting in lotus
position. The final word that passed from his lips was the sacred syllable OM.
The French photographer Cartier-Bresson was visiting Ramana's ashram as Ramana
neared death. He noted the following astronomical event which appeared in the
night sky over the sacred mountain Arunachala as Ramana died:
I saw a shooting star with a luminous tail unlike any I had ever seen before
moving slowly across the sky and reaching the top of Arunachala, the mountain,
disappearing behind it. We immediately looked at our watches. It was 8:47. We
raced to the ashram only to find that the master had passed in to Mahanirvana at
that exact minute. Nor was this experience only documented by a select few … All
the English and Tamil papers which arrived this morning from Madras referred to
the meteor which had been seen in the sky over the entire state of Madras at
8:47 on the night of April 14 by a large number of people in different places.
These eyewitnesses had been struck by its peculiar look and behavior.
Ramana who often circumambulated the sacred mountain as an act of worship seemed
to be making his final arc around the mountain as a blazing light in the night
sky.
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Books on Ramana Maharshi:
Ramana Maharshi and the path of Self Knowledge by Arthur Osbourne
Day to Day with Bhagavan by Arthur Osbourne
The Collected Works of Ramana Maharshi by Arthur Osbourne
Be As You Are by Davis Godman
A Search in a Secret India by Paul Brunton
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