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Swami's beloved pet
Sai Geetha merged at His lotus feet at
around 5pm (local time)
on 22nd May, 2007
read all the
details, click here.
At that time, Sai Geetha, Swami’s pet-elephant, had a
huge vaulted roofed enclosure right in front of the Senior Boys’ Hostel.
Apparently, hearing the sound of the siren, she rushed towards the gate
and had it not been for her caretaker, she would have crushed it. She
was out on the road even before the boys lined up. She seemed unduly
excited that day, making it difficult for her mahout to hold her in
check. Swami’s car approached and Sai Geetha moved forward. Everyone
there, who had seen Sai Geetha raise her trunk in salutation whenever
she saw Swami, were witness that day to an unusual scene. Her stocky
trunk lay heavily on the bonnet of the car. She refused to budge despite
urgings. Her ears were flapping at an alarming rate; she seemed
disturbed. “I want to go Geetha, come on, come on, move,” said
Swami, reaching up to stroke her cheek. And suddenly a diamond
glistened, a dew drop that was the coalescence of her love for Him, a
silent expression of her feelings: a tear found its way down the very
cheek upon which His hand rested. As the students and devotees watched,
more tears coursed down and wet His hand. He looked up at her and nodded
understandingly. Her ears stood still, unmoving, her massive domed-head
drooping.
If you can feel for the Lord in every cell of your
being; if you pine for Him every single second of your life; if nothing
else interests you in this world except His form and proximity, then ‘my
mind’ and ‘His mind’ will no longer exist, but will all become ‘One
awareness’. You are then in perfect sync with God, just like Sai Geetha.
Isn’t it incredible to see an animal having so much love for the Lord? You can find parallels only in the ancient epics: in
Hanuman, the greatest monkey-devotee of Lord Rama; or in Jatayu, the
bird which sacrificed her life fighting for Mother Sita; or the cows of
Gokul which became lifeless without food and drink if Krishna did not
accompany them to the pastoral groves. You need not read the scriptures
and imagine in your mind’s eye those beautiful scenes from the
Bhagavatham to fill yourself with divine bliss. It is enough to just see
Sai with His Geetha. The same divine leela is being replayed in
this age. How fortunate we are! Sai Geetha’s life is a demonstration for
all humanity of that pinnacle of deep love and surrender which every
devotee of the Lord should one day ascend.
It was on a trip along with few devotees to the
Muddumalai forest in 1962 that Swami first noticed the tender and tiny
toy of joy that Sai Geetha was then. His love and affection for this
infant elephant that had lost her mother immediately after her birth,
was phenomenal. When the forest officers offered the elephant calf to
Swami, He gladly accepted. Soon arrangements were made and the little lady arrived
in Puttaparthi in an airy and comfy vehicle escorted by four Sai
volunteers. And since then the motherless child has never missed her
parents. In fact, the love and warmth she has received, no other being
in the whole animal kingdom - nay, the living kingdom - can dream of it.
She was blessed with a mother who made all other mothers in the world
pale by comparison. Yes, with Sai Geetha and Swami, from the beginning it
has been a sweet mother-child relationship in every way. It was Swami
who named her, fed and fondled her everyday, found medical experts to
check on her, appointed people and allotted tasks to take care of her
every need, and as a hardly three-feet cute kid she followed Swami
everywhere, even into the interview room! Years later, Swami confirmed this to Sri B. N. Narasimha
Murthy when He said, “What you have seen is nothing, she used to come to
my room along with me!” Her first living space was, in fact, right next
to Swami’s bedroom. A small shed with a thick cushion of sand-bed was
constructed attached to the Prasanthi Mandir on the western side wall
and Swami could see her anytime from His bedroom. Sai Geetha grew,
enveloped in His loving and guarding grace, into a disciplined and
devoted soul. She was an example to emulate even as a kid.
Recalling the fun ’n’ frolic days of Sai Geetha, Mrs.
Geetha Mohan Ram, who came to Swami as early as 1943, says: “I have wonderful memories of Sai Geetha, the baby
elephant, when she was first brought to Puttaparthi. We, the children,
would follow her everywhere in the days of old when hardly a few hundred
people would be present in the ashram. We were always amazed at her
one-pointed devotion to Swami and her excitement as soon as she could
sense His presence even from a distance. Swami, in those days, would
quite often visit her shed and she would ‘know’ Swami was coming even
before we had spotted Him. “She would be up early in the morning at three and
having been taken for a bath in the River Chitravati by the then
caretaker Murali, would arrive looking very neat with the Naamam
and Kumkum on her forehead to run around the Prasanthi Nilayam
Mandir with us behind her circumambulating the sanctum sanctorum three
times every morning. After this, she would patiently wait for Swami to
come out near the lotus circle of the old days (where the students’
Vedam group now sit); and as soon as she spotted Swami she would spring
forward to garland Him and touch His beloved Feet with her trunk.” “This has never changed over the years,” Sri Pedda
Reddy, her current caretaker confides and continues, “Though her
agility, with age, has reduced. Even now, the first thing she does
whenever she gets a chance to be in His presence is touch His Feet.”
In the early sixties, the regular evening ‘appointment’
of Swami with Sai Geetha was a sight which devotees looked forward to
with great anticipation and elation. She would wait at the gate on the
ladies’ side (where Swami’s car now enters Sai Kulwant Hall) and if for
some reason Darshan was delayed, she would get very impatient. Twisting
and twirling her tiny trunk, intermittently flapping her
lotus-leaf-sized ears vigorously, and her swift and strong legs jumpy
and restless, she would eagerly look at the Mandir unable to bear the
delay. When Swami came, it was a divine thrill in totality, not
only for Sai Geetha, but for every devotee witnessing the sublime play
of pure love. Swami would first walk up to her and she would almost
kneel down – her hind legs half-bent and front legs folded to the
maximum extent possible. Her height now would be a mere two feet, and
she would lift her tiny trunk up and down three times in salutation.
After she had offered her prostrations at His feet, she would take a
garland, raise her nimble trunk over the five feet frame of her beloved
very carefully, and then with lots of glee slip it down Swami’s opulent
hair onto His shoulders. Swami, in turn, would flash an enchanting
smile, pat her cheeks so affectionately and would start speaking to her
softly. Time would stand still watching the Lord so much at ease
with His dear devotee. Like a teacher who is never tired of talking to
his best student, the Lord too is most happy to be with His perfect
devotee. Swami would then feed her. There would be a bag full of fruits
(all offered at the shrine in the Mandir) and a bucket of Teertham
(consecrated liquid) for her to drink. One by one, Swami would put each apple (her favourite)
in her mouth and she would want to be fed no other way. “Even to this
day,” Sri Pedda Reddy says, “she will not accept fruits from Swami on
her trunk, she will insist that Swami put it personally in her mouth.
But if it were anybody else, she will either refuse it or accept it only
in her trunk.” Just like a child who is most comfortable and secure with
her mother, Sai Geetha is in ‘peace and bliss’ only with her Swami.
Only after Swami had spent considerable time with her,
would she reluctantly let Him go and continue the Darshan every evening.
So, this is the drama that used to go on for many years when she was
still a ‘teenager’. Those days, she lived just next door and it was as
if she was sharing the Mandir with Swami. But as the number of devotees
multiplied, Sai Geetha had to be shifted and Swami instructed an ashram
officer to erect a shed for her on the northern end of the Mandir facing
Bhagavan’s residence, just in front of the Gopuram (where the idols of
Lord Rama, Lakshmana and Sita now stand). Her small enclosure was airy, had a drinking well beside
it, but faced the East, which meant Sai Geetha could not see Swami
during Darshan. And this is something she could not bear; the face of
her home had to face south for her to watch Swami coming in and out of
the Mandir. Apparently, Sai Geetha was so upset with the orientation of
her new shed that in a rage one day, she brought the whole
tin-and-concrete structure down with her massive trunk and sheer muscle
power. The officer was, of course, later reprimanded for ineffectively
executing Swami’s command and Sai Geetha, in no time, had a new room
which faced the South. The happy elephant could now see Swami
uninterruptedly directly from her home. Sai Geetha spent many good years in this home close to
the Mandir during the late sixties and early seventies. But when
preparations began for the fiftieth birthday celebrations of Bhagavan in
1975, Sai Geetha had to be moved from the Mandir premises to accommodate
the mammoth crowd expected. (It was during this birthday that Swami gave
darshan to the teeming crowds from a helicopter). Now, she was placed in
a big shed in the South West corner of the ashram.
It was in this year that the Sri Sathya Sai Gokulam was
inaugurated by Swami and soon Sai Geetha was relocated to live with the
cows. For the first time, she was physically far away from her beloved,
but that never diminished her devotion for her Lord even by an iota.
Narrating a revealing incident during her stay in the Gokulam, Sri Pedda
Reddy says: “It was the year 1976. The primary school and the
college buildings were under construction and these structures were
coming up at the foot of two hills. The terrain was obviously undulating
with big rocks, sharp-edged boulders and thorns. On Swami’s bidding, the
engineers had constructed a bund (barrier) which would facilitate the
accumulation of water flowing down the hill. It was primarily meant for
the buffaloes of the Gokulam to ‘cool off’ and bathe with pleasure. The
distance between the Primary School work site, where Swami would visit
occasionally to oversee the construction work, and Gokulam, where Sai
Geetha lived with other cows, was around four hundred meters. One day,
when Swami was on one such inspection tour to the school site, Sai
Geetha somehow felt His presence and immediately set herself free and
ran in Bhagavan’s direction. Absolutely unmindful of the terrible
terrain, she jumped across rocks, bounced on the boulders, cared least
for the bund and in minutes crossed the half-kilometer ‘hurdle track’;
and once at the feet of Bhagavan, she bowed down obsequiously and was a
picture of peace and serenity. Swami was deeply moved with her love and
devotion. He lovingly cared for her, caressed her and said to all the
devotees around, ‘See her devotion, in comparison you are all
dunnapotus (buffaloes).’” Though an animal, truly Sai Geetha has divine instincts
and we, though human by birth, give way to animal instincts many a time.
Perhaps, one of the most profound demonstrations of her steadfast
dedication and purity of devotion was an event that happened in the
eighties. This was the time when Sai Geetha was staying in the
high-rise shed constructed exclusively for her in front of the Senior
Boys’ Hostel. She was moved here once the number of cows increased in
Gokulam and a greater need was felt to give her more space, and
increasing attention. The Central Trust then purchased this additional
piece of land in front of the Hostel and thus was born this spacious
fifteen-foot enclosure padded with thick beds of sand, surrounded by
coconut trees and actually nestled in a mangrove. It had plenty of space
for her to rove and relax in. Moreover the adjoining extra land was
cultivated for her fodder. Of course, Sai Geetha was bereft of any
company here but that is how she wanted her life to be. She was happy
when alone, happier with her caretaker and happiest when Swami was
beside her.
It was during this time that certain elders mentioned to
Swami the idea of sending her to the forest for a short while for
breeding. Swami, from the start, never seemed convinced about the
proposal. Nevertheless, He gave in, thanks to the dogged persuasion of
senior members of the ashram. And so it happened that the reluctant Sai
Geetha was sent to the forest along with two caretakers, Vasant Rao and
Sathyanarayana. “It was a thirteen-day journey by walking with
sufficient periods of rest on the way at various locations,” recollects
Sathyanarayana. “Once we were there,” continues the former mahout, “Sai
Geetha was least interested in any elephant of the jungle; she would
never go near the elephants of the wild, let alone to find a companion.
We used to keep two baby elephants around her to kindle in her the
desire to have a ‘family’; but she would allow the small ones to be with
her as long as we were around and once we were out of sight, she would
disinterestedly drive them away. "On many nights, she would even quietly escape from the
jungle and sure enough, she would be on the road to Puttaparthi. We
would follow her big footprints and identification marks left on the
soil by the thick iron ring and chain, to find her the next morning,
usually six to seven kilometers away. It went on in this fashion for
three months; nothing could ever budge her focus from Swami even to a
microscopic extent.” The mahouts had exhausted all the options. “It was at this juncture,” continues Sathyanarayana,
“that Swami visited the Mudhumalai forest one fine day, totally
unanticipated. The forest had a canal and Swami’s car stopped at the
left bank while we were on the right bank. The moment I shouted ‘Swami
has come’, Sai Geetha, who was grazing nearby, acted as if possessed by
a gigantic force. Without a second thought, she jumped into the canal
and started swimming vigorously. Concerned about her, I too jumped and
tried to catch hold of her ears or neck, but nothing could stop her that
day. If we reached the other shore safely that momentous morning, it was
purely His grace. “Swami immediately opened the door and Sai Geetha was in
bliss as Swami fondled her, patted her and enquiringly spoke to her with
utmost love and concern. It was as if the mother had found her long-lost
daughter. There were bags of fruits for her in the car and Swami
lovingly put a few apples in her mouth. Sai Geetha was too overwhelmed
with joy to eat; she just let them be in her jaws, did not even chew or
swallow them. “After a few minutes, Swami got inside His car with
instructions to me that we should stay on for some more time, and as the
car moved off, poor Sai Geetha’s condition became pathetic. She just
could not accept it. It was as if she was dropped from heaven into hell
in an instant. She spit out all the fruits and started crying loudly. I
had never seen anybody so depressed earlier in my life. I too wept. We
were helpless. She was inconsolable. Dejected to the hilt, she went on
grumbling; and from then on her ‘night escapades’ to Puttaparthi became
more frequent.. “We concluded that she is never ever going to mate with
any elephant and sent a message to Swami conveying Sai Geetha’s mental
frame. We were delighted when we received instructions that we could
return to Puttaparthi.” But the story does not end there. In fact, the divine
drama begins now. After Sai Geetha returned to Puttaparthi, again at the
insistence of elders, a veterinary doctor was called. Upon testing the
urine of Sai Geetha, he pronounced, “She is pregnant.” Sathyanarayana
and Vasant were doubly sure that no crossing took place in the forest,
but nobody believed them. Even Swami, apparently, held to what the
doctor said. The news that Sai Geetha is going to deliver a baby spread
like hot smoke in Puttaparthi. The doctor who had come from Kerala
stayed with her in the shed to attend to any eventuality and after a few
days even declared, “Sai Geetha is going to deliver in a few weeks.” In
no time, a fence rose around her living area to give her ‘needed
privacy’ and everyone was now more than convinced that Sai Geetha was
going to be a mother. Not only this, even Swami used to visit her often
and enquire about her with the doctor. On one occasion, it is said He
even pointed to Sai Geetha’s belly and said to Prof. Kasturi, “Kasturi,
can you see the baby moving in her stomach?” The d-day was approaching and the doctor finally
announced that she would deliver in the next week. The much-awaited week
arrived. The air was thick in anticipation, and everyone awaited the
good news with bated breath and enthusiasm. One, two, three…slowly all
the week days rolled by, but there was no activity in the Sai Geetha
shed. People’s suspicions grew and the whole bubble bust when a month
later, the doctor did a complete u-turn to say, “She is not pregnant.”
What was Swami’s immediate reaction to this news we do not know, but we
are sure He must have smiled heartily and mischievously. Now, the whole
drama was an alluring mix of comedy and mystery, was it not? But one
wonders, “What was the purpose of this divine play?”
It all became crystal clear when immediately
after this episode Swami emphatically declared to the devotees around,
“Sai Geetha is a Shuddha Brahmachari (pristine and perfect
celibate). She has come for me. She has never and will never mix with
any elephant.” At this point, one is reminded of the appalling
tests that Mother Sita underwent (in the sacred epic Ramayana), even
though the omniscient Lord Rama was fully aware of her purity and
integrity. Every single twist in the Lord’s story is to teach mankind a
lesson. And He teaches it in a way that its impact resonates in the
sphere of man’s mind for centuries to come. The bond between Swami and Geetha only strengthened
after this whole drama, and her unwavering devotion to Swami was an
inspiration which no one could easily ignore. Whenever Swami used to go
to Brindavan for long periods in those years, He would also make
arrangements for Sai Geetha’s stay near His residence in Bangalore. On
most occasions, Sai Geetha would walk the way to Bangalore, escorted by
her caretakers and Sai volunteers, with proper rest stations arranged
for her at appropriate distances along the route. An indelible part of
Bhagavan’s life story, Sai Geetha’s moments and movements on this earth
were closely intertwined with her beloved’s There is a hilarious incident, which Sri B. N. Narasimha
Murthy, Warden of the Sri Sathya Sai Hostel in Brindavan (Bangalore)
narrates, concerning Sai Geetha’s arrival to Brindavan: “This happened in the early eighties, when Swami used to
stay in the ‘old Brindavan bungalow’ and Mr. Rama Brahmam, the caretaker
of the Bangalore ashram, also used to sleep inside this building. One
day, it was late into the night, maybe past midnight, when Rama
Brahmam’s sleep was disturbed by weird sounds outside the doors and
windows. It was not very loud, but was a mystifying muffled clatter,
some kind of ‘hissing noise’ in addition to other sounds. Perturbed,
Rama Brahmam looked through the window as it was strict instruction from
Swami that he should not open the door unless he knows the person. What
he saw through the window in that dark hour was only a trunk and he got
really panicky. Interestingly, at the same instant, Swami came there
from inside and Rama Brahmam at once blurted out, ‘Swami, something has
come.’ Swami only smiled and calmed him saying, ‘Do not worry, it is Sai
Geetha.’ And then Swami opened the door, pacified Sai Geetha who was
hungry for darshan, made arrangements for her stay and only then retired
to His room.” Such is the Lord’s mercy. When the devotee’s love is
pure, the Lord does not care whether it is midnight, mid-air, mid-forest
or mid-ocean
Sai Geetha’s more than four decades of association with
Swami is not only a love story, but also a tale which in its every facet
demonstrates how inseparable the bond of pure love can be. Recalling a
sweet experience from Sai Geetha’s days in Brindavan, Mrs. Geetha Mohan
Ram says: “As Swami was getting ready to leave, we could hear Sai
Geetha trumpeting loudly from far behind Swami’s residence. She somehow
knew that Swami was leaving and you could make out from her voice that
she was desperate. Swami responded to her call and walked to the rear of
the building. We followed Him as He marched towards Sai Geetha. Once
there, He caressed her, gently stroked her cheeks, fed her with apples,
and finally as He turned to leave, she put her trunk around His
shoulders and pulled Him gently but firmly to her side. She held on to
Him securely and would not let Him go. Swami could only sweetly plead
and He kept telling her in Telugu, “
vidu Geetha, vidu Geetha, ne povala. Podaya bangaaru ne vegara
vastanu! Vidu Geetha!" (Please leave me, Geetha; leave me, please;
I have to go, it is late. Golden one, I will come back soon, leave me,
please!”) “It was after five minutes of gentle persuasion by Swami
that Geetha let Him go reluctantly. And as He moved away, she lifted her
trunk and still held on to His right arm and would not let go again for
a few minutes. Swami tried offering her some fruits, but the apple was
no consolation. She refused to accede. Finally, after a lot of cajoling,
Swami extricated Himself from her, but by now His robe was covered by
her saliva as she kept nuzzling Him all through. Unmindful of
the dribble on His gown, Swami then turned to all of us and what He said
then was very profound. He said, ‘Your devotion should be
one-pointed like her. She is not even tempted by the fruit I offer. She
only wants me and thinks of me at all times. When you are like her you
then receive Darshanam, Sparshanam and Sambhashanam (the fortune of
vision, touch and conversation with the Lord).’He then
gave her one last loving pat and left. He had to go back to His room to
change into a new robe and we were ready to leave.” How wonderful is her
relationship with the Lord! How fortunate she is!
At the same time, it is not as if life has been always
rosy-n-cozy for her, she has had her share of ailments and afflictions,
and even now has difficulties mainly because of her advanced age; but
these have least bothered her. “Somehow she does not feel the pain,”
says Pedda Reddy, her current caretaker. Her mind is always fixed on the
lord; and in turn, it is the same intensity with which Bhagavan looks
after her welfare. When Sai Geetha suffered from a stomach disorder
resulting in her tummy bulging inordinately, Swami immediately arranged
expert vets from Kerala and Bangalore to attend on her; when the leather
on the sole of her feet started peeling off due to Foot and Mouth
disease, Swami encouraged the doctors to start treatment without any
hesitation and assured them that she would be cured soon and that’s
exactly what happened. “On one occasion when it was reported to Swami that she
was sick,” says Sri Chiranjeevi Rao, who was caretaker of the Prasanthi
Nilayam ashram for many years, “Swami created vibhuti and asked me
personally to deliver it to her. Whenever I went to Gokulam (which was
frequent those days), He would invariably ask me to visit Sai Geetha on
the way and check if she is comfortable and well cared for. “Is she
getting sugarcane leaves to eat?” He would enquire. Sai Geetha relished
the sweet sugarcane leaves very much and Swami knew this too well. He
was also aware that these leaves were not easy to come by in
Puttaparthi, and so, He would say, “You must take pains to bring for her
things she likes. Being an animal, she cannot express herself so
categorically, but when we know what she wants, we should make all
attempts to provide for her wishes and keep her happy. That is real
service.”
Incidentally, it was Sri Chiranjeevi Rao who was
instrumental in building the new spacious shed for her with a high wall
and lots of greenery around in the early eighties. Sai Geetha moving to
this new location from the Gokulam in 1979-80 was the beginning of a new
chapter in her life. Apart from having a comfortable place to stay, she
was now the neighbor of Swami’s students, which brought along with it so
many precious advantages. Her home now stood right opposite to the
Senior Students’ Hostel. “I remember this touching incident very vividly,” a
former student tells H2H. “It was a bright festive morning – the
exciting day of Christmas. After the captivating carol-singing and
beautiful darshan in the Mandir, some of us just got up and prayed to
Swami: ‘Swami, please come to the Hostel.’ We expected answers like ‘Why
do you want me in the hostel? I am with you here all the time,’ or,
‘Wait….’, or, ‘Today I am very busy, see so many people have come from
different countries,’ or simply a mischievous smile. “But no, that day, Swami immediately asked, ‘Are you
ready?’ And we loudly shouted, ‘Yes’ but within we were nervous to our
bones. We had not made any arrangements, the dining hall was not
decorated, the garden was not pruned, the entrance had not even
rangoli and mango leaves, and then what about decorating Swami’s
jhoola (swing)? What to offer to Swami? What programmes do we stage? Our
minds were zapped. Even as we were lost in this avalanche of thoughts,
Swami called for the car and said, ‘I am going now!’ “There was no time to even think. We ran like boys
possessed. And by the time we reached the hostel, Swami was already
there. Some boys, who would have undoubtedly broken national records in
marathon running that day, reached the hostel well before Swami’s car
and were fortunately there to welcome Him. And what a day it was!
Everything was so informal. Swami was with us for half an hour and how
He blessed each one of us: walking in the lawns, collecting letters,
cracking jokes, blessing whatever we offered and obliging us in whatever
we asked.
“But this is not what the highlight of this memorable
visit was. The best part was yet to come and I remember those few
moments so well: Swami standing at the entrance of the Hostel
all smiles, looking so radiant with the rays of the morning Sun adding
to His divine luster, and then calling out with a voice that was so
sweet, ‘Geetha…’, ‘Geetha…’ as if singing a divine melodious tune. It
was so soft; maybe I and a few others who were close enough to Swami
alone could have heard it; but Sai Geetha, standing hundred meters away,
felt it and immediately the ten-thousand-pound body of Sai Geetha
galloped like a race horse! Excited and overwhelmed-with-joy,
Sai Geetha presented herself before Swami in the next instant and the
next ten minutes it was only Swami and Sai Geetha. “The purest-devotee-of-an-elephant went on caressing
Swami, and how Swami, in turn, was so gentle and loving towards her, is
a sight that remains embedded in gold in my memory forever. Sai Geetha
was least concerned about the fruits that Swami was offering, she only
wanted Swami to touch her, look at her eye-to-eye, speak to her and be
next to her. Even an inch of separation was intolerable. For me, it was
the greatest demonstration of pure love.” While Sai Geetha gets her precious opportunities
whenever Swami visits the Students’ Hostel, everyday the boys have a
living example and inspiration of true divine love. This is how Sai
Geetha’s abode being right opposite to the Students’ dwelling has been
such a wonderful win-win situation. Both love each other, but love Swami
more than each other. Every time Swami has visited the Hostel, it has
been a red-letter-day for her. Recalling another similar incident, Sri
Y. Arvind, another former student says: The morning session in the Mandir went off without a
hitch. Swami granted us all Darshan wearing a Pitambara (yellow robe),
the robe of Lord Krishna apt for the occasion of Janmashtami. The
procession went like clockwork with Sai Geetha in the vanguard with all
her majesty, all dressed up for the Lord – richly caparisoned in gold
and silver with five foot silver ear hangings, gold brocaded saddle
cloth on her back, beaten gold ornaments on her forehead – she looked
royal. Swami walked down to her with a haste that belied His
‘impatience’ and His interaction with her was the cynosure of all
attention – I would not be exaggerating if I said the cows were feeling
jealous of her! Their Gopala (Lord Krishna’s another name literally
meaning “caretaker of cows.”) was going to Sai Geetha! But they too had their chance when Swami came to feed
them with bananas. Everything smoothly led to the point when Swami
signaled for the bhajans to start. The procession was on its way back to
the Gokulam, the prasadam distribution was complete and now expectant
faces looked at every minute gesture of Swami – waiting for the signal.
He knew it, and He tantalized us all… till the last moment and then the
smile bloomed… “Go… I will come”. Immediately, their energy levels
tripled and in a trice, they traversed the thousand metres to the hostel
jet set like. When Swami reached the path that lay across the
quadrangle, the boys brought His attention to the new garden. His eyes
lit up at the new sight and He gently undulated towards the picturesque
setting. Swami picked up the scissors offered on a velvet platter, and
cut the saffron silk ribbon that lay across the primary arch leading
into the garden. Simultaneously, one of us started the cascade and the
murmur of gently flowing water added to the sacred atmosphere. Swami
walked along the paths laid out and touched the chair set for Him on the
rock, blessing it. Then He stepped onto the bridge spanning the pond.
One of the boys offered Him a silver bowl of fish food with a spoon and
pointed to the water. Swami sweetly picked up the spoon and sprinkled a couple
of spoonfuls and then He picked up the whole bowl and dumped it in at
one go. Suddenly He seemed to be in a hurry! It was obvious, His gait
quickened as He walked back to the main lobby. All of us were perplexed
at the sudden change – then we understood, as we saw Swami make a
beeline to Sai Geetha waiting outside the Hostel. He was speeding
towards her. All of us stepped aside and watched the show! Her heavy
ornaments and other embellishments had been removed and she was
oblivious to everything except her Swami. Baskets of fruits were
offered, and Swami kept feeding her. His eyes were twinkling and His
face beamed with a different joy as He patted her cheek, rubbed her
trunk and murmured endearments to her. She responded in kind, speaking to her Master in her
language. No doubt they understood each other. Well! One should be there
to see the sight. Three hundred and fifty boys and teachers, a large
bunch of them around Swami and Geetha, two long lines extending on
either side of the path leading out of the Hostel, lots of devotees
outside…all of us enjoying Swami’s interaction with Geetha. If only we
had an aerial photograph of the sight… for now, words will have to do.
He spent more than ten minutes with her and then almost regretfully
patted her good bye. We offered Him aarti and hundreds of voices
welled up in unison. She raised her trunk in salutation as Swami left
the Hostel. Many of us took the opportunity to touch the one so much
beloved by the Lord. After enduring the petting by all of us, she
retired to her enclosure. But even as she crossed the road, she paused
and turned towards the direction Swami’s car had left. She watched for a
few seconds and then silently returned to her enclosure. At times, she
seems more than just an animal. Her love for Swami is far greater than
ours because of its simplicity. She exists only to Love and adore Him.
That is the highest form of devotion: To exist only for the love of
God.” Yes, this is the lesson that she drives into the minds
of everybody – be it student or devotee – that the whole purpose of life
is to exist for the Lord and there is nothing holier or more purposeful.
Swami has exalted her devotion often and asked students to learn from
her. In a discourse to the boys in the Prasanthi Mandir on the occasion
of Ganesh Chaturthi in 1992, Swami said, “Those of you who are staying in the Hostel
notice cars going up and down the road. On the other side of the Hostel
is Sai Geetha. She takes no notice of the innumerable cars going on the
road. But, without any notice, she ‘smells’, as it were, the passing of
Swami's car and immediately comes out with a roar to greet Swami. That
is her devotion to her Lord… It is steadfast love.”
Come what may, Sai Geetha’s focus has always been
compass-like, pointing constantly in one direction. “The moment she
hears the siren of the police jeep (an indication that Swami is on His
way),” says Sri Pedda Reddy, “she will come off immediately from
wherever she is; be it in the shed or in the tank and run to the road.
Standing beside the tarmac she will scan every car that passes by and
the moment she spots Swami’s car, she will trumpet in glee and sometimes
make peculiar sounds of joy. When His car draws near, searchingly she will see where
Swami is seated – in the front or rear, and if the car window is closed,
she will embrace the front windshield with her trunk, and wait for the
door glass to roll down. If it happens, she is ecstatic; she will slowly
slide her snout in and start nuzzling Swami’s hair and face. She loves Swami’s crown; the Vibhuti smell enlivens her.
She is in bliss. But if, for some reason, Swami’s car does not stop, she
is crestfallen, devastated. She will start crying and grumbling and
‘hmm…hmmm…’ would go on endlessly. Some days if she is very disturbed, she would even start
shouting and trumpeting as if calling out to Him with all the wind power
at her disposal. Only after half an hour of pacifying phrases of, ‘He
will come’, ‘Maybe He is busy today’, ‘He saw you. Didn’t He? Do not
worry. Tomorrow He will come specially for you’, etc. will she
reconcile herself. And it will take another hour to persuade her to
accept any food. That is the intensity of her love for Swami and it is
this fervent yearning which has rewarded her with so many beautiful
blessings from Swami.”
Yes, when one yearns only for God, he gets God and
everything else too, just like Jesus said, “Seek the Kingdom of God, and
everything else shall be added unto you.” One of the lovely blessings
bestowed on Sai Geetha, for example, is how she has become an indelible
part of all major celebrations in Prasanthi Nilayam, be it Birthday,
Dasara, Krishnastami or the students’ Sportsmeet on January 11 every
year. How does she feel being decorated like a royal and majestically
leading the procession on special days? Does she get excited about it?
“Oh yes, very much,” says Pedda Reddy, who has been her
caretaker for nearly two decades. “On any normal day, when I
take her out for a walk, she will go about the whole process very
casually and the few meters stroll would drag on for nearly two hours.
But look at her going to Mandir on festival days, it is as if she has
become twenty years younger! She wants to run. She knows she is
going to see Swami and her eagerness takes the better of her. In fact, in the early morning itself, when I apply
turmeric on her feet (which is the first thing I do whenever she has to
be dressed up for the occasion), that is her first hint, and from then
on she is just waiting for my command and the gates to open to quickly
glide into Mandir. She is still as a statue when I start adorning her
with more than twenty-seven types of ornaments. She patiently goes through the ‘make up’ session, which
apart from smearing Vibhuti on her body, includes bedecking her with the
exquisitely carved golden head-gear, the richly embroidered body
blanket, shining silver anklets, the tiny, resounding golden bell, many
dazzling necklaces, dangling earrings, gorgeous garlands and so on. In
the procession, she enacts her role to perfection, walking gracefully
and with regal air as befits the grandeur of the occasion.” The most beautiful part is how Swami, just like a
mother, who would be very particular how her child should be properly
dressed for an important occasion, would be concerned about her. He
would check with Peddy Reddy if her silver anklets were polished, if her
dress was in perfect order, if all her ornaments were in tact and so on.
“Just a year ago before the eightieth birthday
celebrations,” Pedda Reddy recalls, “Swami wanted to see all her
ornaments. So I went to His residence and discreetly displayed all her
jewels. A few seconds of inspection, and then Swami asked, ‘Where are
all her ankle belts?’ I was taken aback; I thought I had preserved all
her belongings securely. Only when He asked again, did I realise that I
had, in fact, sent two of her ankle belts to Bangalore because they
needed repair. Immediately calls were made and the next day she was
there for the Rathotsavam festival immaculately decked up. When Swami
came near Sai Geetha that morning, His eyes first went to her feet. Only
when I explained that the anklets arrived last evening and they are
fitting her perfectly now, did He look satisfied. Incidents like this are numerous. Very recently when I
put a gaudy synthetic garland on her neck, Swami said, ‘Why do you put
the plastic garland there? It is covering all her gold and silver
necklaces.’ On another occasion, He thoughtfully remarked, ‘Three
elaborate silver bracelets on her neck is looking so cramped. Maybe you
could try changing the position of some of them’. And so now I place two
of her big shining bracelets on either side of the velvet jacket.” For Swami, every detail about her is important; and for
Sai Geetha, if there is anything significant, it is Swami.
And what is dear to Swami is dear to her too; and that
is why even though she would always like to be left alone, one community
for whom she has a soft corner is His students. She would allow the boys
to touch her, be around her, speak to her and when in good mood, even
play with them. Going down the memory lane and picking up one such
exciting anecdote, Y Arvind, a former student, says: “One evening I was in the Hill View Stadium when she
came for her routine walk. I had finished a couple of games of volley
ball and was sitting on the stone steps that run along the road leading
uphill. Seeing her at a distance I climbed down and walked towards her.
From afar I could hear her high pitched greeting. I felt a smile glow
when I saw her patient eyes and sedate walk. She had all the time in the
world. Even as she ambled up, her long trunk reached out sniffing at me.
I gently patted her elephantine affection, grateful for the attention
from someone so beloved of the Lord. Her trunk roamed over my hands and
my pockets and with an indignant squeak she turned away. The boy who was
accompanying her laughed and said, ‘You used to give her something to
eat every time you met her, today you disappointed her.’ Then, the boys playing football kicked the ball towards
her. Immediately she responded. Her huge ears flapped in excitement and
she lumbered towards the ball and gave it a careful kick. It was so
lovely to watch her raise her foreleg, swing it back and kick the ball.
That was it! For the next twenty minutes, about thirty enthusiastic boys
and one very jolly elephant played. Of course, no referee had the heart
to tell her that using her trunk was against the rules but even so, the
match was friendly and ended with a bell instead of a whistle. The
hostel bell was ringing to call us in for Bhajans. It was with regret
that she let us go and I saw many a head turn back and look at her as we
returned to the hostel. She looked so massive, against the deepening sky
of the summer evening; so huge, strong and powerful. I felt a vague
stirring in me. Somehow a lump formed in my throat. She was missing her
Swami, her Master. Her yearning was so intense. I sat down on one of the
rocks that still dot the rear of the Easwaramma High School and watched
her. She moved away and as though sensing that someone was watching
turned back and threw one long look. I felt the lump dissolve and I was
myself again. The grass seemed greener and the sky more vibrant with the
colors of the setting sun. I smiled to myself as I carried the sight
with me to the hostel.”
How many lives have been inspired by her exalted
example! Even though she is a five-toed pachyderm, whenever people have
looked at her, it is always with awe and reverence. Showering affection
on an animal and getting love and loyalty in return is an occurrence
which many can relate to. We know of dogs who have given their lives for
their owners; of pets who give more unconditional love to their keepers
than their best friends; of cats who act as stress-busters and provide
instant happiness to their possessors. But is there any pet in the world which has turned
peoples’ attention Godward? What Sai Geetha has taught humanity without
speaking a word is what saints and noble persons take years to learn and
then decades to impart. Just by her presence and example, she has goaded
thousands of students and devotees to practise ‘higher thinking’ and
aspire for the Highest and nothing else. To demonstrate how noble her
life is and how much esteem Swami places on her faith and devotion, Sri
Sanjay Sahani, Principal of the Brindavan campus of the Institute,
shares a revealing incident: “It was one of those occasions when Sai Geetha had
‘sensed’ Swami’s arrival and was standing in full alertness beside the
road much before we, the boys in the Hostel, heard the police siren and
rushed towards the gate. If she is on the road, more often than not,
Swami would invariably stop the car and that’s what happened this
particular day too. Swami alighted from the car and went near her. We,
who did not want to miss even a millisecond of the divine drama, rushed
near Swami too. And suddenly there was a splash! This happens many
times. Excited with happiness, Sai Geetha would start urinating. But
that day, since it was on the tarmac it was splashing all over and so
immediately many boys retreated and most of us were waiting and watching
from a distance. But Swami was with her, standing right beside and His
robe, evidently, was fully wet. After a minute or so, Swami looked at
all of us and said something which sent shivers down our spine. “If you
drink a cup of her urine, maybe you will get a fraction of her
devotion,” He said solemnly. We knew at what level our devotion was and
how sacred was this saintly soul, encased in an elephant body. Years later, when I quoted this incident in a small talk
in Trayee Brindavan in His presence and said exactly what Swami had said
on that occasion, Swami, sitting in the jhula and intently listening to
the story, immediately said, ‘Aaunuu, Aaunuu’ in Telugu,
meaning, ‘Yes, it is true, it is true.’” That was a certificate which would surpass any other
achievement in this material world. It was a testimony to the purest
love that this silent yet salient four-legged being had for the Lord. As
Sri Chiranjeev Rao says, “What she has for Swami is – Perfect Love.” It is for this reason that she is always in Swami’s
mind. Even when lakhs had gathered in Prasanthi for the eightieth
birthday celebrations and there were a million arrangements to be made
for the devotees, Swami never forgot her; He was more concerned about
her missing ankle belt. (A cup of cow’s milk is more valuable than
barrels of donkey milk, as they say).
Very recently, when Swami gifted the students of the
Institute with a world class indoor stadium christened as the ‘Sri
Sathya Sai International Centre for Sports’, at the same time, He built
a ‘palace of a home’ for Sai Geetha with exquisite carvings done by the
same sculptor who had fashioned the beautiful domes that adorn the
Prasanthi Mandir. But this was the culmination of another beautiful
drama which began a few weeks earlier. When the land was being cleared to start work for the
Indoor Stadium, unfortunately Sai Geetha’s shed could not be spared
because of the vast area the new multi-game sporting complex mandated.
And when it was brought to Swami’s notice, He seemed upset. He was concerned and issued a strict instruction that in
no case should Sai Geetha be moved unless she has another proper and
peaceful accommodation built for her. At that time, nobody had a
definite idea where exactly to build her new home. When someone suggested to Swami that a shed can be built
for her beyond the indoor stadium, Swami immediately rejected the
proposal saying, “No, it is too far, she will get afraid. She should be
near.” And that is how plans were drawn to accommodate her
before the new stadium inside the Planetarium complex itself. Swami
liked this idea but still had many changes to it. He did not want a shed
for her, He wanted a palatial home. Also, He wanted it to be located
closer to the road so that it would be easy for her to have darshan
whenever Swami was passing by. But building this new structure would
take at least a few weeks; then where is she going to stay in the
interim period? This was Swami’s anxiety. And so, a new temporary shed
came up in just two or three days behind the planetarium complete with a
bath tub, relaxing area, etc. Swami almost visited this site daily and only when He
was satisfied with the temporary shed was Sai Geetha moved. Even after
that, He would visit many times to see if Sai Geetha was comfortable and
ask Pedda Reddy if she was ok and all her needs taken care of. Then He
would inspect the construction of her new ‘grand home’ and seem pleased.
Looking at the grandeur of the new enclosure, many
people would ask, “Is this the place where Swami would sit and watch the
boys play in the indoor stadium?” That is how captivating the new
residence of the Lord’s dearest devotee is. And that is what pure love
can do. If anything matters to Swami when it comes to His devotees, it
is devotion and devotion alone.
When we asked Sri Pedda Reddy what is the most precious
lesson he has learnt in his twenty-year association with Sai Geetha,
without thinking a second he said, “Devotion to Swami”. “I have not seen
anybody crave for Swami like she does. That is the greatest thing I have
learnt from her,” he says and continues, “In fact, I often pray to her
and offer my gratitude saying, ‘Geetha, it is only because of you I get
a chance to go near Swami, that He speaks to me and I have this
wonderful prospect to serve. I am fulfilled by this sacred
opportunity.’” It seems, Sri Peddy Reddy is no less an ideal, or maybe,
years of relationship with Sai Geetha, has metamorphosed his life into a
shining example of loving service and devotion. That is what happens
when one comes in close contact with ‘illumined souls’. And all one
needs to be illumined, as Swami often says, is not scriptures, spiritual
practices or sermons, but just unsullied love. Perhaps, it is to prove
this to the muddled mind of man that Sai made ‘Sai Geetha’…the celestial
song of pure love. Five thousand years ago, Swami in the form of Lord
Krishna, sang the song of “Bhagavad Geeta” to impart man the wisdom to
lead a life of perpetual harmony, and now we have the Lord demonstrate
this precious knowledge through ‘Sai Geeta’. Her life is a tale, which
because of its immaculate purity and soul-entrancing sublimity, compels
and inspires millions to transform their lives into beacons of beatific
light, serene love and never-ending happiness. Maybe it will not be an
exaggeration to borrow the quote of Sir Einstein about Gandhiji and
modify it to say, “Generations to come, it may be, will scarce believe
that such an animal as this, ever in flesh and blood walked upon this
earth." SAI GEETHA Also Read:
2009 - Remembering Sai Geeta - The great Legacý of Sai Geeta
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source: radiosai.org