LOVING LEGEND -- LIVING LEGACIES
     
               October 20, 1940. It was on  this day, seventy years ago, that Bhagavan Baba unveiled the mystery  surrounding His birth, life and mission.  He declared to the people  around, and through them to the entire mankind, that He indeed is the  Supreme Consciousness embodied in a diminutive and delightful form. “I  am no longer your Sathya, I am Sai…I have My work; My devotees are  calling Me…” He announced candidly on that day.
       Ever since, this eternal  reservoir of energy and empathy, hope and happiness, solace and succor,  light and love, has nursed and nurtured, and ensured that the tiny seed  of goodness latent within every individual grows into a gigantic tree of  love and serenity.  And like a perfect teacher, He has demonstrated  this more by living that principle in every moment of His own life. The  result is a luminescent legacy that will continue to illumine the dark  alleys of humanity’s collective consciousness, elevating it to a state  of absolute sublimity for generations to come.
       “Loving Legend – Living Legacies”  seeks to capture a few salient highlights of this glorious saga of Pure  Love. This 30-episode radio documentary starts on October 20, 2010 on  Radio Sai to continue daily till November 19, 2010. 
       Below is the textual adaptation of this audio series embellished with pictures, audio and video clips! 
       Let us immerse ourselves in  the story of His glory and more important strive to make our little  lives shine with the sacred glow of purity, nobility and genuine  compassion.
       
     
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   Nature is the creation of  God. The Divine infused it with innumerable bounties for man to use and  enjoy. However these gifts must be utilised within bounds, with  gratitude to the Giver. Alas, man has exploited these resources, abused  Nature, and shown scant regard. 
    Nature does not remain a  silent spectator. Incredibly patient she is, but when aroused her fury  is unmatched. And that is probably one of the reasons why we have  murderous tornadoes and typhoons, famines and deadly epidemics,  droughts, floods, avalanches, earthquakes and fiery volcanic eruptions.
   When disaster strikes, many  perish. Curiously, the hapless are those who seem to suffer most; the  evil ones seem to get away. This strikes many as unjust and at such  moments, God is cursed or denied. But those who believe know that the  Law of Karma is just but inscrutable and operates in its own mysterious  way and that those who suffer and the others who apparently escape  suffering are bound by the same Law. 
   This prompts some to say:  “It is all God’s will. Those who undergo pain are destined to do so.  Leave them alone. Why should I intervene?” This is a heartless argument  lacking all compassion. Bhagavan Baba says that we have no business to  sit in judgement but must rush to help. 
   When the Earth Beneath Shook
   On India’s Republic Day in  2001, an impressive pageant was in progress in the capital state of  Delhi, in the presence of national leaders. At the same time, parades  and flag hoisting ceremonies were being held all across the country, in  the towns and cities.
    In Gujarat, many children had  gathered for the celebration in their schools at that hour. Suddenly  the earth below their feet shook fearsomely, and soon buildings  crumbled. In a few quick seconds, thousands were trapped in the debris,  school children included.
   Entire villages were wiped  out in just a minute or two. Death made no distinction between the young  and old, the rich or the poor.
   As news trickled out from  the disaster area, gloom descended over the nation. The cry of anguish  reached even far-off lands. Baba was in Bangalore then, spending some  time there after the inauguration of the Super Specialty Hospital in  Whitefield in January 19 that year. People rushed to Him to convey the  news about the disaster. He listened but gave no verbal response.
   Relief and Rehabilitation by Sai Workers
   Soon He returned to  Prasanthi Nilayam and quietly and indeed unobtrusively, He organised  help and relief. Trucks were lined up loaded with food and provisions,  and given a loving send off. Swami personally blessed the convoy. And as  it moved off, bhajans sung by the departing volunteers could be heard wafting back to Prasanthi.
    Meanwhile, sevadals from  Gujarat and the neighbouring state of Maharashtra were already on duty  in the remote areas of distress. 
   When there is a natural  calamity, many service organisations (NGOs) with good intentions rush to  help. But the people drafted for volunteer work often have little  previous experience in rendering such service and tend to crowd into  cities, leaving out in the process the outlying villages. Among quake  victims, there is a scramble for provisions, but the NGO volunteers find  it hard to be patient under such demanding circumstances and often  fling items from the trucks into the crowd causing much anguish.
   Baba’s trucks on the other  hand went to places others did not bother about. Love was the basis for  the service, and relief work was earnestly undertaken in a few selected  and needy villages.
    While service work ended for  most volunteer organisations soon after the emergency provisions were  distributed, with Baba it was quite different. In an expression of  compassion, He gave instructions that the villages that had been reduced  to rubble be rebuilt by Sai effort. His command was tantamount to not  just relief but rehabilitation too. What ensued was that long after  other volunteers had left their area of work and returned to their own  homes, Sai volunteers remained in Gujarat helping restore the villages  to a state of normalcy.
   Nature’s Balancing Act
    Speaking on the earthquake in  Gujarat, Baba has said: “Man should put a ceiling on his desires. As  man’s conduct is perverted, we find the occurrence of natural  calamities. You are aware of the devastation caused by the  earthquake in Gujarat. Thousands of people lost their lives. The reason  for this is man and his excessive desires.
   “God maintains perfect balance in His creation. The earth and the oceans are endowed with a balance of perfection. When  man exploits the earth by extracting oil, removes tonnes of fish from  the oceans on a daily basis, and does similar acts it results in an  imbalance. Nature then demands an adjustment that plays havoc with human  lives.
   “A few days ago, I sent lorry loads of rice and grams to the earthquake victims of Gujarat. Some  people asked, ‘Swami, why do you take the trouble of spending money in  sending relief to Gujarat? You just as well could have averted the  earthquake.’ I replied, ‘My dear, man has to blame himself for the  earthquakes. With his excessive greed for wealth, he is disturbing the  balance of the earth. Hence, earthquake happens. That is the law of Nature.
   “You have to express your love for man by helping the needy. Love is your nature. Just as balance is very much essential for Nature, so too love is very much needed for man.Know that whatever God has created is for your own welfare. You should enjoy Nature according to your need and not rob Nature of her resources to satisfy your greed.” 
                              
Selfless Service – Way to Divinity      
    Baba has reminded us over the  years that selfless service is worship of the Divine. Disasters and  calamities, horrible in their own right, are opportunities for devotees  to express their love through selfless service. Through their  activities, despair is checked, hope is raised, and healing love becomes  tangible, enveloping all as it spreads forth. 
   Time and again Baba has  reminded us thus: “Members of the Sevadal should overcome the sense of  'mine' and 'thine.' When they embark on service activities, they should  regard it as a privilege to help others and an opportunity to worship  the Divine who is the Indweller in all. They should consider look upon  service to society as the means of finding self-fulfillment in life.
   “All should regard  themselves as the children of one God. When they are united by this  sense of divine kinship, they will act with love towards all. They  should shed all narrow and limited ideas and engage themselves in  service with a heart full of love for all. True seva selfless service can come only out of a pure and loving heart.”
   Natural disasters  are capricious in the selection of location, and strike without warning.  Human grief and misery follow in their wake. In response, Sai seva  volunteers come to relieve the suffering. To comprehend the  scope of seva inspired by Bhagavan, let us move beyond the villages of  India to the catastrophes that has struck mankind in other parts of the  world.  
   Global Disasters – Service by Sai Organizations  
   Hurricane Katrina  
   On 29 August 2005, New  Orleans, Louisiana was inundated as a consequence of Hurricane Katrina.  Causing over US$81 billion in devastation, it was the costliest  hurricane in the history of the United States and the sixth strongest  among recorded Atlantic hurricanes. It was also one of the deadliest  with about 1,836 lives lost due to the storm and flooding. 
   Guided by Baba’s holistic approach to grama seva,  a core group of Sai Young Adults from 10 cities in the US coordinated a  team, a week after the catastrophe. They assessed needs, planned  transportation and organised aid from various Sai Centres. As  Hurricane Katrina brought forth a mammoth response from the US  government and international aid agencies, the Sai Youth focused on a  specific location where the needs were considerable. It was Tylertown in  the Gulf State of Mississippi. They supplied food to 50 families,  cleared fallen trees from homes and roadways, and repaired roofs.
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     Faced with such an appalling scale of disaster, these young people  were inspired by Swami to simply do what they could. They were a small  representation of the outpouring of Seva that was undertaken by other  Sai Groups, Sai Centres and Sai devotees individually in the aftermath  of the hurricane.
Indonesia Rocked in 2006          
     On 27 May 2006, in the early morning hours, a massive earthquake  measuring 6.3 on the Richter Scale struck about 15 miles south of  Yogyakarta, on the island of Java in Indonesia. Almost 6,000 people died  and 1.5 million were left homeless.      
      
11-year old Tita recalls: “I  was very sad and frightened when the earthquake struck. My home was no  longer standing. I could only see planks of wood here and there. There  was no food or water. My family was starving and no one came forward to  help us. I was so happy when the people from Sai Baba arrived. They gave  us rice, towels, biscuits, milk, soap and clothes. I felt that God had  listened to my prayer. We no longer felt alone.”            
      
     Into the scene of death and devastation came dozens of Sai devotees  ready to work tirelessly for those who had lost everything. Food,  blankets and medical supplies were collected, transported and  distributed generously. Two and a half tonnes of rice were distributed  by the Sevadals. Fifty stoves and many essential household items were  given to the needy. Tools and volunteers arrived to rebuild homes. Six  Sai medical teams were dispatched. By June 14, approximately 1,070  victims had been medically treated by Sai volunteers. 
The Devastating Haiti Earthquake in 2008          
     Moving on to the West Indies, the Caribbean region consists of  nearly 7,000 islands. Among these, arranged from east to west, are  Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Cuba. The Dominican  Republic and Haiti actually share an island in common.      
      
     Every year, from August through November, this region is subject to  storms that originate off the coast of Africa and develop into  hurricanes in the Caribbean Sea. The 2008 season was quite active. The  region was battered by eight hurricanes, of which five caused serious  damage.
     The Sathya Sai Organisation of Puerto Rico came into being in 1987.  Since then, its Sai devotees have engaged in a variety of social welfare  activities, often reaching the needy outside their borders.     
     The Service Coordinator of the Sai Organization in Puerto Rico was  particularly concerned about the poor people, especially those living in  Haiti. Among Latin American countries, Haiti has the lowest standard of  living, and the Haitian people would likely suffer the most from these  violent storms. In anticipation of this, the devotees of Puerto Rico  began to collect clothes and food items with the idea of transporting  them to Haiti.     
     Their apprehension was correct: Haiti was first hit by Hurricane  Gustav on 27 August, and then by Hurricane Ike on 7 September. Both  caused major destruction and loss of life.     
      
     The care packages were soon on their way. The first stop was the  Dominican Republic immediately to the west of Puerto Rico. There, the  packages were detained because of bureaucratic red tape and later by  transportation costs. Through Bhagavan’s grace, both these obstacles  were overcome and 48 cartons of aid arrived at the Haitian capital.  Devotees from the Sai Center of Haiti gift-wrapped 110 packages with  essential food items and clothes for families that had lost everything.     
       Deadliest Earthquakes in the Decade     
     These disasters are devastating and involve significant loss of life  and human suffering. But there are tragedies that dwarf even these. Two  have occurred in this decade alone.      
     With a magnitude between 9.1 and 9.3 and an epicentre off the west  coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, the earthquake of 26 December 2004 is the  third largest earthquake ever recorded on a seismograph. This tremor had  the longest duration of faulting ever observed, between 8.3 and 10  minutes. It caused the entire planet to vibrate as much as 1 cm and  triggered other quakes as far away as Alaska. It produced tsunamis that  crashed onto the coasts of lands bordering the Indian Ocean. Over  230,000 people lost their lives in 14 countries. In some places, coastal  communities were drowned in waves 100 feet high.     
           On 12 January, 2010 an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.0 and an  epicentre approximately 16 miles west of Port-au-Prince devastated the  capital of Haiti. An estimated three million people were affected by the  quake. The Haitian Government reported that approximately 230,000  people had died, 300,000 had been injured and 1,000,000 made homeless.  They also estimated that 250,000 residences and 30,000 commercial  buildings had collapsed or were severely damaged. 
Immediate Relief and Never-ending Support          
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        Responding to both these mega disasters, many countries and world  humanitarian organisations appealed for aid, pledged funds and  dispatched rescue and medical teams, engineers and support personnel. 
     In numerous countries, the Sai organisations rallied to provide aid,  support and relief services. And in true Sai fashion, these  organisations continue to work in these areas to relieve the suffering  of the needy and help them rebuild their shattered lives.     
Man’s Actions Result in Natural Disasters          
     Bhagavan has said in His discourse that the excesses of man are the  cause of such disasters. If man were to live within the proper limits of  Nature, it would not react with such violence.     
     Some may disagree with this pronouncement. Long before man walked  this earth, there were natural upheavals of colossal proportions. A few  of these were such that many of life’s species perished at the time. Man  was not responsible for those. Why hold him responsible now? They may  ask.     
     Professor G. Venkataraman offers an explanation for this. He says:      
     “Let me start with the question many have asked, ‘How can God  silently watch all this terrifying devastation and destruction? Why did  He not do anything to stop it?’ Swept by emotions and shallow  perception, people are quick to blame God for events like this.     
     “The earth, which many often take to be a purely inanimate object,  is not quite what we imagine it to be. True, technically speaking the  earth might be classified as inanimate, but those who have followed  Swami’s discourses would realise that even inert objects in creation are  suffused with divine consciousness, though it might be present in a  passive form, as opposed to the active form manifested in living beings.     
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     “Consciousness pervades the universe as one integral fabric. It is  like the atmosphere that surrounds the earth. There is air everywhere,  be the Artic, Antarctic, or over land and sea, and in all lungs too.  There is an organic continuity of atmosphere. The consequence is that  air gets mixed up. For example, depending in the direction of the wind,  one day we might breathe cold air from the Artic and the next day warm  air from the Indian Ocean. Likewise, the air we breathe out may be swept  away to another continent. 
     “But what does all this have to do with God, punishment, and the  tsunami? Our actions generate subtle vibrations in the higher dimensions  of thought and consciousness. And these vibrations spread out reaching  everywhere pervading the entities they encounter. For example, when a  person speaks, he generates sound vibrations in the air, and these  propagate and can travel through solid matter like walls and liquid  materials such as water. Speaking about      bhajans in one of His  discourses, Swami mentioned that along with sound vibrations, which  occur in gross matter, subtle vibrations are also set up and proliferate  forever without any attenuation. In this respect, the later are quite  different from the former, which get weakened with distance. These  subtle vibrations interact with subtle matter. Swami said, that when a  large number of people sing bhajans with all their heart, these  sacred sensations so generated help to calm the turbulence in the world  that is otherwise so full of agitations.
           “The tsunami is one example of a natural disaster. Cyclones,  typhoons, earthquakes are other instances. True, every one of these can  occur due to natural causes, but man can trigger them. Imagine a rock  perched next to the edge of a hill. Over a period of time, due to  erosion and such factors, one fine day the boulder may roll down. This  would be due to natural causes. On the other hand someone may come, put a  lever under the rock and give it a shove. If that is done then the huge  stone would roll down for sure. So you see the same kind of phenomenon  can be triggered both by Nature as well as by man. In this example, a  human intervenes via a direct physical act.
     “But man can trigger Nature’s reaction via subtle vibrations too. If  through widespread evil man generates mental unrest, then that  turbulence can trigger turmoil in the subtle state of the earth. In  turn, this can set in motion natural calamities. The  point simply is that whether we like it or not, and believe in it or  not, everything in the Universe is connected, and this connection is  subtle and can and does produce reactions.”     
Is God only a silent spectator?          
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        Way back in 1976, Baba spoke similar words during an interview with editor-in-chief, R.K. Karanjia of Blitz News magazine.
     Karanjia:      “The critics of Swamiji ask why Sai Baba does not  help people in distress by bringing rains in times of drought or  creating food where there is famine by means of His Sankalpa Shakti (Power  of His Will)? Cannot an Avatar help humanity to control the natural  forces and prevent calamities like earthquakes, floods, droughts, famine  and epidemics?”
     Baba: “This is precisely what I am doing by incarnating or rousing  the indwelling God in man to overcome such calamities like earthquakes,  floods, droughts, and epidemics. 
   “There are two ways  in which an 'Avatar’ can help people - offer an instant solution as  against a long-term one. Any immediate solution would go against the  fundamental quality of Nature itself as well as the Karmic Law of cause  and effect.
   “Most of people live in the  material world of desires and egos, which is governed by this law. They  reap the fruits of their actions. This brings about their evolution or  devolution. If the Avatar intervenes to instantly solve their  problems, it would stop all actions in development, even evolution. This  solution can be ruled out, because it totally negates the natural laws.
   “The other and more  effective alternative presents a long-term solution, whereby the Avatar  leads the people themselves to a higher level of consciousness to  enable them to understand the truth of spiritual laws so that they may  turn towards righteousness and steadfastly work for better conditions.  This will relate them back to Nature and the Karmic Law of causation.  They would then transcend the cycle of cause and effect, in which today  they are involved as victims and thereby command and control the natural  forces to be able to avert the calamities you mention.”
     Karanjia: “You mean that you are presently raising the consciousness  of mankind to a godlike condition to enable them to command their own  destiny?”     
     Baba: “Exactly. They will become shareholders of My      Sankalpa Shakti.  I have to work through them, rouse in them the indwelling God, and  evolve them to a higher reality in order for them to master the natural  laws and forces.      
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        “If I cure everything instantly, leaving the people at their  present level of consciousness, they would soon mess up things and be  at each other's throats again. The result is that the same chaotic situation would develop in the world.
     “Suffering and misery are the inescapable acts of the cosmic drama.  God does not decree these calamities, but man invites them by way of  retribution for his own evil deeds.     
“So, finally, if the Avatar  brings the calamities to an immediate end (which I can do when there is  great need) the whole drama of creation with its Karmic Law will  collapse.
       
       “Remember, these catastrophes occur not because of what God has made of man, but really because of what man has made of man. 
       
     “Therefore, man has to be unmade and remade with his ego destroyed  and replaced by a transcendental consciousness, so that he may rise  above the           Karmic bondage to the freedom of averting such disasters. This is the work of the Avatar, which I am presently doing.”
     In enumerating global diasaters, we have endeavoured to illustrate  the reach of the seva activities of Sai organisations worldwide. More  important, we delved into the motivations of man and the impact this has  had on the planet.      
     In the next episode, we return to India and investigate how a  comprehensive and holistic seva project initiated by Bhagavan Baba was  undertaken in the aftermath of a mega disaster.                  
                      To be  continued)
          
           - Heart2Heart Team
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TEXTO TOMADO DE: http://media.radiosai.org/Journals/Vol_08/01NOV10/05-L4_26.htm