Meher Baba

Meher Baba (born Merwan Sheriar Irani; 25 February 1894 – 31 January 1969) was an Indian spiritual master who said he was the Avatar, or God in human form, of the age.[1][2][3] A major spiritual figure of the 20th century,[4][5] he had a following of hundreds of thousands of people, mostly in India, but with a significant number in the United States, Europe and Australia.[2][6][7]

Meher Baba
Meher Baba in 1945
Born
Merwan Sheriar Irani

(1894-02-25)25 February 1894
Died31 January 1969(1969-01-31) (aged 74)
Other namesThe Awakener
Notable workGod Speaks, Discourses
Main interests
Religion, metaphysics, aesthetics, ethics
Websiteavatarmeherbabatrust.org
Signature

Meher Baba's map of consciousness has been described as "a unique amalgam of Sufi, Vedic, and Yogic terminology".[8] He taught that the goal of all beings was to gain consciousness of their own divinity, and to realise the absolute oneness of God.[2][9]

At the age of 19, Meher Baba began a seven-year period of spiritual transformation, during which he had encounters with Hazrat Babajan, Upasni Maharaj, Sai Baba of Shirdi, Tajuddin Baba, and Narayan Maharaj. In 1925, he began a 44-year period of silence, during which he communicated first using an alphabet board, and by 1954, entirely through hand gestures using an interpreter.[9] He died in 1969, and was buried in Meherabad. His tomb has become a place of pilgrimage for his followers, often known as "Baba lovers".[6]

Overview of teachings

Meher Baba's teachings concerned the nature and purpose of life. He described the phenomenal world as illusory, and taught that the Universe is imagination. He taught that God alone exists, and each soul is God passing through imagination in order to realize its own divinity.[10] He advised followers wishing to attain God-realization, emphasizing love and selfless-service to others.[11] His other teachings included discussion of Perfect Masters, the Avatar, and those on the various stages of the spiritual path, which he termed involution. God Speaks and Discourses are regarded as among his most important written works.

For decades he declined to speak and later refrained from communicating via written language. This practice has remained a topic of discussion among some of his followers.[12][13]

Wider influence

His legacy includes the Avatar Meher Baba Charitable Trust he established in India, and a handful of centers for information and pilgrimage. He has influenced pop culture creators and introduced the common phrase "Don't worry; be happy". This was used in Bobby McFerrin's hit 1988 song of the same name. Among his followers were well-known musicians such as Melanie Safka and Pete Townshend, as well as journalists including Sir Tom Hopkinson.[14][15]

In 1971, Meher Baba's following in the United States was estimated at 7,000. Some commentators have suggested that the size of the movement has been underestimated due to the rarity of proselytising by Meher Baba's followers, and that in 1975, the movement was larger than the more visible Hare Krishna movement.[14]

Meher Baba identified as a Sufi, and was accepted as the leader of a Sufi organization based in California which he renamed Sufism Reoriented.[16] Meher Baba's Sufi influence is said to have drawn from Sai Baba of Shirdi, whom Meher Baba designated as a Qutb.[17] However, some commentators have asserted that Meher Baba's interpretation of Sufism shared very few similarities with the Sufi Movement apart from universalism and anti-dogmatism.[18]

Life and works

Early life

Meher Baba (as Merwan Irani) at 16 years old in 1910

Meher Baba was born to Irani Zoroastrian parents in 1894 in Pune, India.[19][20] He was named Merwan Sheriar Irani, the second son of Sheriar Irani and Shireen Irani. Sheriar Irani was a Persian Zoroastrian from Khorramshahr who had spent years wandering in search of spiritual experience before settling in Poona (today known as Pune).[21]

As a boy, Baba formed the Cosmopolitan Club, which was dedicated to remaining informed on world affairs and donating money to charity.[22] He was a multi-instrumentalist and poet. Fluent in several languages, he was especially fond of the poetry of Hafez, William Shakespeare, and Percy Bysshe Shelley.[23][24][25]

His spiritual transformation began when he was 19 years old and lasted for seven years.[26][27] At 19, he met Hazrat Babajan, an elderly Muslim saint. He was cycling past a tree that she had made her abode, when she called to him. When he approached her, she kissed him on the forehead, causing him to enter a nine month-long trance which he described as "divine bliss", with a lack of consciousness of his body.[28][29] Babajan predicted that he would become a spiritual leader.[30] He then encountered Upasni Maharaj, who he later said helped him to integrate his mystical experiences with ordinary consciousness, thus enabling him to function in the world without diminishing his experience of God-realization.[31][32]

Over the next several years, he encountered other spiritual figures, namely Tajuddin Baba, Narayan Maharaj, and Sai Baba of Shirdi, who, along with Babajan and Upasni Maharaj, Baba later said were the five "Perfect Masters" of the age.[33][34] By early 1922, at the age of 27, Baba began gathering his own disciples.[35] They gave him the name Meher Baba, which meant "compassionate father".[36]

In 1922, Meher Baba and his followers established Manzil-e-Meem (House of the Master) in Bombay (now called Mumbai). There, Baba commenced his practice of demanding strict discipline and obedience from his disciples.[37] A year later, Baba and his mandali moved to an area a few miles outside Ahmednagar that he named Meherabad (Garden of Blessing).[38] This ashram would become the center for his work. During the 1920s, Meher Baba opened a school, hospital, and dispensary at Meherabad, all of which were free and open to all castes and faiths.[39]

From 10 July 1925 until the end of his life, Meher Baba maintained silence.[40][41][42] With his mandali (circle of disciples), he spent long periods in seclusion, during which time he often fasted. He also traveled widely, held public gatherings, and engaged in works of charity with lepers and the poor.[43] He now communicated first through chalk and slate, then by an alphabet board, and later via a repertoire of gestures unique to him.[44] On 1 December 1926, he wrote his last message, and began relying on an alphabet board.[45][46]

1930s – First contact with the West

Beginning in 1931, Meher Baba made the first of many visits to the West. Throughout that decade, Meher Baba began a period of extensive world travel and took several trips to Europe and the United States. It was during this period that he established contact with his first close group of Western disciples.[47] He traveled on a Persian passport, as he had given up writing, as well as speaking, and would not sign the forms required by the British government of India.[48] Here, he attracted more followers.[47] Throughout most of the 1940s, Meher Baba worked with a category of spiritual aspirants called masts,[49] who he said are entranced or spellbound by internal spiritual experiences. Starting in 1949, along with selected mandali, he traveled incognito around India in a period he called the "New Life".[50]

Meher Baba dictating a message to a disciple in 1936 using his alphabet board

On his first trip to England in 1931, he traveled on the SS Rajputana, at the same time as Mahatma Gandhi, who was sailing to the second Round Table Conference in London. Baba and Gandhi met three times on board. One of these exchanges lasted for three hours.[51] The British press publicized these meetings,[52] but an aide to Gandhi said, "You may say emphatically that Gandhi never asked Meher Baba for help or for spiritual or other advice."[53][54][55]

In the West, Meher Baba met with a number of celebrities and artists, including Gary Cooper, Charles Laughton, Tallulah Bankhead, Boris Karloff, Tom Mix, Maurice Chevalier, and Ernst Lubitsch.[56] On 1 June 1932, Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. held a reception for Baba at Pickfair at which he delivered a message to Hollywood.[57] As a result, says Robert S. Ellwood, Meher Baba emerged as "one of the enthusiasms of the '30s".[58]

In 1934, after announcing that he would break his self-imposed silence in the Hollywood Bowl, Baba changed his plans abruptly, boarded the RMS Empress of Canada, and sailed to Hong Kong without explanation. The Associated Press reported that "Baba had decided to postpone the word-fast-breaking until next February because 'conditions are not yet ripe'."[59] He returned to England in 1936[60] but did not return to the United States again until the early 1950s.[61]

In the late 1930s, Meher Baba invited a group of Western women to join him in India, where he arranged a series of trips throughout India and British Ceylon that became known as the Blue Bus Tours. When the tour returned home, many newspapers treated their journey as an occasion for scandal.[62] Time magazine's 1936 review of God Is My Adventure describes the US's fascination with the "long-haired, silky-mustached Parsee named Shri Sadgaru [sic] Meher Baba" four years earlier.[63]

1940s – Masts and the New Life

Meher Baba with a mast in Bangalore, 1940

In the 1930s and 1940s, Meher Baba worked extensively with masts, or those "intoxicated with God".[64] According to Baba, these individuals are disabled by their enchanting experience of the higher spiritual planes. Although outwardly masts may appear irrational or insane, Baba claimed that their spiritual status was elevated, and that by meeting with them he helped them to progress spiritually while enlisting their aid in his spiritual work.[65] One of the best known of these masts, Mohammed, lived at Meher Baba's encampment at Meherabad until his death in 2003.[66]

During his journey in 1946, he went to Sehwan Sharif to meet a well known Sufi saint and a descendant of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, Murshid Nadir Ali Shah, whom Baba referred to as an advanced pilgrim.[67]

In 1949 Baba began an enigmatic period that he called the New Life. Following a series of questions on their readiness to obey even the most difficult of his requests, Baba selected twenty companions to join him in a life of complete "hopelessness and helplessness".[68]

He made provisions for those dependent on him, after which he and his companions otherwise gave up nearly all property and financial responsibilities. They traveled around India incognito while begging for food and carrying out Baba's instructions in accordance with a strict set of "conditions of the New Life". These included absolute acceptance of any circumstance and consistent good cheer in the face of any difficulty. Companions who failed to comply were sent away.[69]

Concerning the New Life, Meher Baba wrote:

This New Life is endless, and even after my physical death it will be kept alive by those who live the life of complete renunciation of falsehood, lies, hatred, anger, greed and lust; and who, to accomplish all this, do no lustful actions, do no harm to anyone, do no backbiting, do not seek material possessions or power, who accept no homage, neither covet honor nor shun disgrace, and fear no one and nothing; by those who rely wholly and solely on God, and who love God purely for the sake of loving; who believe in the lovers of God and in the reality of Manifestation, and yet do not expect any spiritual or material reward; who do not let go the hand of Truth, and who, without being upset by calamities, bravely and wholeheartedly face all hardships with one hundred percent cheerfulness, and give no importance to caste, creed and religious ceremonies. This New Life will live by itself eternally, even if there is no one to live it.[70]

Meher Baba ended the New Life in February 1952[71] and once again began a round of public appearances throughout India and the West.[72]

1950s – God Speaks and automobile accidents

After being injured as a passenger in two serious automobile accidents, one near Prague, Oklahoma in the United States in 1952,[73] and one in India in 1956, Meher Baba's ability to walk became limited.[74][75]

In the 1950s, Baba established two centers outside of India, namely the Meher Spiritual Center in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina in the United States and Avatar's Abode near Brisbane, Australia. He inaugurated the Meher Spiritual Center in April 1952. On 24 May 1952, en route from the Meher Spiritual Center to Meher Mount in Ojai, California, the car in which he was a passenger was struck head-on near Prague, Oklahoma. He and his companions were thrown from the vehicle and injured. Baba's leg was severely broken and he sustained facial injuries including a broken nose. The injured were treated at Duke Hospital in Durham, North Carolina, after which they returned to Myrtle Beach to recuperate.[76] While recuperating at Youpon Dunes, a home owned by Elizabeth Patterson, in Myrtle Beach, he worked on the charter for a group of Sufis, which he named Sufism Reoriented.[77]

Meher Baba began dictating his major book, God Speaks, The Theme of Creation and Its Purpose, using an alphabet board in Dehradun, in August 1953.[78] In September 1954, Meher Baba gave a men-only sahavas at Meherabad that later became known as the Three Incredible Weeks.[79] During this time Baba issued a declaration, "Meher Baba's Call", wherein he once again affirmed his Avatarhood "irrespective of the doubts and convictions" of others.[80] At the end of this sahavas, Meher Baba gave the completed manuscript of his book God Speaks to two members of Sufism Reoriented, Ludwig H. Dimpfl and Don E. Stevens, for editing and publication in America.[81] The book was published by Dodd, Mead and Company the following year.

On 30 September 1954 Meher Baba gave his Final Declaration message.[82]

In October 1954, Meher Baba discarded his alphabet board and began using a unique set of hand gestures to communicate, which he used for the rest of his life.[83]

On 2 December 1956, outside Satara, India, the car in which Meher Baba was riding went out of control and a second serious automobile accident occurred. Baba suffered a fractured pelvis and other severe injuries. Nilu, one of Baba's mandali, was killed.[84] This collision seriously incapacitated Baba. Despite his physicians' predictions to the contrary, Baba began to walk again after great effort, but from that point on was in constant pain and was severely limited in his mobility. During his trip to the West in 1958, he often needed to be carried from venue to venue.[85]

In 1956, during his fifth visit to the United States, Baba stayed at New York's Hotel Delmonico before traveling to the Meher Spiritual Center at Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. In July he traveled to Washington, D.C., and received friends and disciples at the home of Ivy Duce,[86] wife of James Terry Duce, the vice-president of the Arabian American Oil Co.[87] He then traveled to Meher Mount at Ojai, California before proceeding to Australia. His final visits to the United States and Australia were made in 1958.[88]

1960s – Later years and message discouraging the use of drugs

In 1962, Baba held one of his last public functions, a mass meeting in India called the East-West Gathering. At these meetings, at which his Western followers were invited to meet his Indian disciples, Baba gave darshan to many thousands, despite the physical strain this caused him.[89][90] Despite deteriorating health, he continued what he called his "Universal Work", which included fasting and seclusion, until his death on 31 January 1969. His samadhi in Meherabad, India, has become a place of international pilgrimage.[91]

In the mid-1960s Baba became concerned with the drug culture in the West and began correspondences with several Western academics, including Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert, in which he discouraged the use of hallucinogenic drugs for spiritual purposes.[92] In 1966 Baba's responses to questions on drugs were published in a pamphlet titled God in a Pill? Meher Baba stated that drug use was spiritually damaging and that if enlightenment were possible through drugs then "God is not worthy of being God".[93] Meher Baba instructed his young Western disciples to spread this message; in doing so, they increased awareness of Meher Baba's teachings. In an interview with Frederick Chapman, a Harvard graduate and Fulbright scholar who met Meher Baba during a year of study in India, Baba described LSD as "harmful physically, mentally, and spiritually" and warned that "[its continued use] leads to madness or death".[94]

Baba lovers in the United States, Europe, and Australia initiated an anti-drug campaign during this period. Though some contend that this campaign was mostly futile, it attracted new followers to Meher Baba.[95] Furthermore, some of Baba's views entered into academic debate on the merits and dangers of hallucinogens.[96]

Death and aftermath

From the East-West Gathering of 1962 onward, Meher Baba's health deteriorated. Despite the physical toll it took on his body, he continued to undergo periods of seclusion and fasting.[97] In late July 1968, Baba stated that he had completed a particularly taxing period of seclusion and noted that his work was "completed 100% to my satisfaction".[98] He was by then using a wheelchair. Within a few months, his condition had worsened and he was bedridden, wracked by muscle spasms that had no clear medical origin. Despite the care of several physicians, the spasms worsened.[99]

On 31 January 1969, Meher Baba died at his home in Meherazad, 25 days short of his 75th birthday.[100] He conveyed by his last gestures, "Do not forget that I am God."[99] In time, his devotees called the anniversary of his death Amartithi (deathless day). Meher Baba's body was placed at his samadhi at Meherabad, covered with roses and cooled by ice. His body was kept available to the public for one week before its final burial.[101] Prior to his death, Meher Baba had made extensive preparations for a public darshan program to be held in Poona. His mandali decided to proceed with the arrangements despite the absence of the host. Several thousand attended this "Last Darshan," including many hundreds from the United States, Europe, and Australia.[102]

Silence

From 10 July 1925, until his death in 1969, Meher Baba was silent.[40][41][103] He communicated first by using an alphabet board and later by unique hand gestures which were interpreted and spoken out by one of his mandali, often Eruch Jessawala.[104] Meher Baba said that his silence was not undertaken as a spiritual exercise but solely in connection with his universal work.

Man's inability to live God's words makes the Avatar's teaching a mockery. Instead of practicing the compassion he taught, man has waged wars in his name. Instead of living the humility, purity, and truth of his words, man has given way to hatred, greed, and violence. Because man has been deaf to the principles and precepts laid down by God in the past, in this present Avataric form, I observe silence.[105]

From 1925 until 1954 Meher Baba communicated by pointing to letters on an alphabet board.

Meher Baba often signaled the moment "that he would 'break' his silence by speaking the 'Word' in every heart, thereby giving a spiritual push forward to all living things".[106]

When I break My Silence, the impact of My Love will be universal and all life in creation will know, feel and receive of it. It will help every individual to break himself free from his own bondage in his own way. I am the Divine Beloved who loves you more than you can ever love yourself. The breaking of My Silence will help you to help yourself in knowing your real Self.[107]

Meher Baba asserted that the breaking of his silence would be a defining event in the spiritual evolution of the world.

When I speak that Word, I shall lay the foundation for that which is to take place during the next seven hundred years.[108]

On many occasions Meher Baba promised to break his silence with an audible word before he died,[109] often stating a specific time and place when this would occur,[110] but according to all contemporary accounts, Meher Baba remained silent until his death.[111] His failure to break his silence disappointed some of his followers, while others viewed it as a test of their faith.[112] Some of his followers speculate that "the Word" will yet be "spoken" or that Meher Baba broke his silence in a spiritual rather than a physical way.[108]

For many years Meher Baba asked his followers to undertake austerities on 10 July, the anniversary of the day his silence began, such as keeping silence, fasting, and praying. In his final Silence Day request to his followers in 1968, he asked only that they keep silent.[113] Many followers continue to celebrate Silence Day by keeping silence in his honor.

Teachings

Meher Baba's teachings can roughly be divided into two main categories: his metaphysics on the nature of the soul and the Universe, and practical advice for the spiritual aspirant. The two are interrelated. His metaphysics is mostly found in his principal book on the subject, God Speaks. It contains detailed statements on his cosmology, the purpose of life, and the progression of the soul. His teachings on the practical spiritual life are mostly contained in Discourses, although it also covers many metaphysical areas mirroring or amplifying God Speaks.[114]

God Speaks

In God Speaks, Meher Baba describes the journey of the soul from its original state of unconscious divinity to the ultimate attainment of conscious divinity. The whole journey is a journey of imagination, in which the original indivisible state of God imagines becoming countless individualized souls which he likens to bubbles within an infinite ocean.[115] Each soul, powered by the desire to become conscious, starts its journey in the most rudimentary form of consciousness. This limitation brings the need of a more developed form to advance it towards an increasingly conscious state. Consciousness grows in relation to the impressions each form is capable of gathering.[116]

According to Baba, each soul pursues conscious divinity by evolving; that is, experiencing itself in a succession of imagined forms through seven "kingdoms" of stone/metal, vegetable, worm, fish, bird, animal, and human.[117] The soul identifies itself with each successive form, becoming thus tied to illusion. During this evolution of forms, the power of thought increases, until in human form thought becomes infinite. Although in human form, the soul is capable of conscious divinity, all the impressions that it has gathered during evolution are illusory ones that create a barrier against the soul knowing itself. For this barrier to be overcome, further births in human form are needed in a process known as reincarnation.[118]

The soul will reach a stage where its previously gathered impressions grow thin or weak enough that it enters a final stage called involution. This stage also requires a series of human births, during which the soul begins an inner journey, by which it realizes its true identity as God. Baba breaks this inner journey of Realization into seven stages he called "planes." The process culminates, at the seventh plane, with God-realization, at which the goal of life for the soul is reached.[119]

Discourses

The Discourses are a collection of explanations that Meher Baba has given on topics that concern the advancement of the spiritual aspirant. These topics include: sanskaras (mental impressions), Maya (the principle of illusion), the nature of the ego, reincarnation, karma, violence and non-violence, meditation, love, discipleship, and God-realization.[120] His explanations often include stories from the lore of India and the Sufi culture. One such story, the wise man and the ghost, shows the power that superstitious beliefs can have on a person, while another, Majnun and Layla, show how selfless love, even in human relations, can lead one to discipleship.[121]

Meher Baba's suggestions include putting theory into practice, internally renouncing desires, offering selfless service to humanity or the master, spontaneity, and avoiding actions that bind one to illusion. Rather than lay out moral rules, Baba explains why some actions bind the individual whereas others aid emancipation.[122] Several chapters discuss the mechanisms by which consciousness gets caught up between the opposites of experience, such as pleasure and pain, good and evil, and suggest how to transcend these opposites.[123]

Perfect Masters and the Avatar

Meher Baba related that there are 56 incarnate God-realized souls on Earth at any given time. Of these souls there are always five who constitute the five Perfect Masters of their era.[124] When one of the five Perfect Masters dies, another God-realized soul immediately replaces him or her.[125]

The Avatar, according to Baba, is a special Perfect Master, the first soul to achieve God-realization. This soul, the original Perfect Master, or Ancient One, never ceases to incarnate. Baba indicated that this particular soul personifies the state of God called Vishnu in Hinduism and Parvardigar in Sufism, i.e. the sustainer or preserver state of God. Baba taught that the Avatar appears on Earth every 700–1400 years and is "brought down" into human form by the five Perfect Masters of the time to aid creation in the endless process of moving toward Godhood. Baba claimed that in other ages this role had been fulfilled by Zoroaster, Rama, Krishna, Buddha, Jesus, and Muhammad.[126]

Baba described the Avatar as "a gauge against which man can measure what he is and what he may become. He trues the standard of human values by interpreting them in terms of divinely human life."[127]

Most of Meher Baba's followers accept his claim of avatarhood,[128] and he is said to be "revered by millions around the world as the Avatar of the age and a God-realized being".[94]

Legacy

Meher Baba's tomb in Meherabad

Meher Baba's travels and teachings left a legacy of followers and devotees worldwide.[40]

The Avatar Meher Baba Charitable Trust, established by Meher Baba in 1959, maintains his tomb and pilgrimage facilities, as well as a free school and dispensary, a cataract clinic, and a veterinary clinic.[129] The Trust follows the charter Meher Baba left for it, but does not act as spiritual authority over groups. Likewise, the Trust does not engage in propaganda, promote creeds or dogmas, or seek converts.[130] Baba discouraged evangelizing, stating, "I need no propaganda or publicity."[131] Rather, he encouraged his followers to "let your life itself be my message of love and truth to others"[132] and to "spread my message of Love and Truth as far and wide as possible".[133] Though some followers of Meher Baba have no established rituals, others perform practices such as pujas, aartis, prayers, music, plays, and viewing films of Baba.[134] The primary focus for many followers is living as Meher Baba would approve, such as by abstaining from marijuana and psychedelic drugs,[135] and trying to remember God with love.

Gatherings of Baba followers are generally informal. Special effort is made to gather together on Amartithi, the anniversary of Baba's death, and on his birthday. Many Baba followers keep silent on 10 July (Silence Day), observing the request Baba frequently made of his followers during his lifetime.[136] Aarti is performed morning and evening at Baba's samadhi in India. Also at Meherabad, his followers maintain Baba's practice of lighting a dhuni fire on the 12th of each month.

Meher Baba had gained public attention in the West as early as 1932, due to contacts with contemporary celebrities of the time, and from the rather disillusioned account of Paul Brunton in his A Search in Secret India (1934).[137][138] Baba received further attention posthumously via various mentions in western pop-culture.[139]

For example, Pete Townshend of the Who, became a follower of Baba and dedicated his 1969 rock opera Tommy to him in the gatefold.[140] The Who's 1971 song "Baba O'Riley" was named in part after Meher Baba,[141] and Townshend recorded several Meher Baba tribute albums including Happy Birthday, I Am, Who Came First, and With Love.[142]

In 1970, Melanie Safka (stage name "Melanie") mentioned Baba in the spoken word intro to her song "Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)". Listed as a standalone piece entitled "Candles in the Rain", the lyrics are "Meher Baba lives again".[143] Bobby McFerrin's 1988 Grammy Award–winning song "Don't Worry, Be Happy" was inspired by Baba's adage, which has appeared on many posters and inspirational cards depicting him.[144]

In 1979 Indian filmmaker Jagat Murari co-produced the ethnographic film on Meher Baba titled "The Awakener". The 35 millimeter, 118 minute found footage film was distributed by Films Division of India.[145] Various Indian films produced by Edida Nageswara Rao have depicted Meher Baba's images.[146] Works such as Swati Kiranam (1992) were exclusively filmed at the Meher Baba center in Tapeswaram, Andhrapradesh, depicting life size images of Meher Baba.[147][148]

Elements of Meher Baba's philosophy, as well as an unnamed character based upon him, have appeared in the works of comic book writer-screenwriter J. M. DeMatteis. Works particularly influenced by Baba include DeMatteis' scripts for Doctor Fate and DeMatteis creator-owned comic book Seekers into the Mystery.[149]

In 2012, the feature film Nema Aviona za Zagreb premiered in the Netherlands with an exclusive interview with Meher Baba filmed in 1967.[150] In the interview, Baba explains the difference between God-realization and drug-induced hallucinations[151][152] and the scene plays a pivotal role in the documentary's narrative.[153]

Major centers of pilgrimage

Notes

  1. Kalchuri (1986) p. 2324
  2. Anthony, Dick; Robbins, Thomas (1975). "The Meher Baba Movement: Its Affect on Post-Adolescent Social Alienation". Religious Movements in Contemporary America. United States of America: Princeton University Press. pp. 479–514. doi:10.1515/9781400868841. ISBN 978-1-4008-6884-1.
  3. Sedgwick, Mark (November 2016). "Introduction". Western Sufism: From the Abbasids to the New Age. Online: Oxford Scholarship Online. ISBN 9780199977642. The most important less Islamic tendencies were represented by Meher Baba, an Indian understood to be an avatar, and by Pak Subuh, an Indonesian guru.
  4. Samuel, Geoffrey; Johnston, Jay, eds. (2013). "The Subtle Body in Sufism". Religion and the Subtle Body in Asia and the West: Between Mind and Body. New York: Routledge. p. 179. ISBN 978-0-415-60811-4. It would be useful, however, to highlight the views of just four major figures of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries – Inayat Khan, Meher Baba, Javad Nurbakhsh, and Robert Frager.
  5. Billington, Ray (1997). Understanding Eastern Philosophy. United States of America, Canada: Routledge. p. 20. ISBN 0-415-12964-8. This period ended with the emergence of a number of dynamic spiritual leaders in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: Ramakrishna, Vivekananda, Sri Aurobindo, Gandhi, Meher Baba; this was a period of increasing apperception of Hinduism in the West.
  6. Bowker, John (2003). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions. Online: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191727221. The Baba's tomb at Meherabad is now a centre of pilgrimage. While it has attracted several thousand people in the West since the 1950s, the overwhelming majority of 'Baba lovers' are still to be found in India.
  7. Sovatsky, Stuart (2004). "Clinical forms of love inspired by Meher Baba's mast work and the awe of infinite consciousness" (PDF). The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology. 36 (2): 134–149. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 September 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2020. He remained in silence after 1925, made several teaching tours throughout Europe and America and drew a following of many hundreds of thousands worldwide who believed him to be an avatar, the most mature of saints in the Indian terminology.
  8. Sovatsky, Stuart (2004). "Clinical forms of love inspired by Meher Baba's mast work and the awe of infinite consciousness" (PDF). The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology. 36 (2): 134–149. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 September 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2020. His elaborate map of consciousness (formulated in the 1930s and 40s), a unique amalgam of Sufi, Vedic, and Yogic terminology, can be found in his Discourses (1967/2002) and God Speaks (1955/2001).
  9. Encyclopedia of World Religions. Encyclopædia Britannica, Incorporated. 2006. p. 706. ISBN 978-1-59339-491-2.
  10. God Speaks, 2nd edition, 1973. p. 170
  11. Discourses, 7th edition, 1987. p. 315
  12. Purdom (1964) p. 407  "Why he ceased to speak and write Baba has explained only vaguely, though much natural curiosity is aroused; the first question asked when people come to know about him or to see him is why he does it. That both silence and nonwriting are of great significance is certain; not surprisingly Baba does not explain. Silence is the answer to silence."
  13. Meher Baba's Silent Semiotic Output, José Sanjinés, Signs and Society, Vol. 2, No. S1, Supplement 2014, The University of Chicago Press, p. S121
  14. Anthony, Dick; Robbins, Thomas (1975). "The Meher Baba Movement: Its Affect on Post-Adolescent Social Alienation". Religious Movements in Contemporary America. United States of America: Princeton University Press. pp. 479–514. doi:10.1515/9781400868841. ISBN 978-1-4008-6884-1.
  15. Hopkinson, Tom; Hopkinson, Dorothy (1974). The Silent Messenger: The Life and Work of Meher Baba. Winchester, UK: Gollancz. ISBN 978-1-78904-057-9. OCLC 1124575231. Archived from the original on 20 February 2022. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  16. "MEHER BABA | Sufism Reoriented". 1 October 2023.
  17. Srinivas, Smriti (May 1999). "The Brahmin and the fakir: Suburban religiosity in the cult of Shirdi Sai baba". Journal of Contemporary Religion. 14 (2): 245–261. doi:10.1080/13537909908580865. ISSN 1353-7903.
  18. Sedgwick, Mark (November 2016). "Conclusion". Western Sufism: From the Abbasids to the New Age. Online: Oxford Scholarship Online. ISBN 9780199977642. One branch of the Sufi Movement retained the word "Sufi" in its title, but joined the Meher Baba movement, which had nothing in common with the Sufi Movement other than universalism and anti-dogmatism.
  19. In an Indian context, an Irani is a member of one of two groups of Zoroastrians of that subcontinent, the other being the Parsis. They are called Iranis by other Indians because they spoke an Iranian language. "Those who left Iran soon after the advent of Islam to escape persecution, reached the shores of Gujarat 1,373 years ago. Their descendants are the Parsis. While the Zoroastrians who migrated to India from Iran relatively recently -- 19th century onwards -- are called Irani Zoroastrians." (Quote from Padmaja Shastri, TNN, "What sets Zoroastrian Iranis apart" Archived 3 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine, The Times of India, 21 March 2004. Retrieved 11 July 2008.)
  20. Sutcliffe (2002); p. 38.
  21. Purdom (1964), pp. 15–17
  22. Kalchuri (1986) pp. 186–188
  23. Kalchuri (1986) pp. 190–192
  24. Purdom (1964), p. 20
  25. Haynes (1989), p. 37
  26. Hopkinson, Tom & Dorothy: Much Silence, Meher Baba Foundation Australia, 1974, p. 24
  27. Purdom (1964) p. 20
  28. Sovatsky, Stuart (2004). "Clinical forms of love inspired by Meher Baba's mast work and the awe of infinite consciousness" (PDF). The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology. 36 (2): 134–149. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 September 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2020. At 19 years of age, Meher Baba (nee Merwan Sheriar Irani, 1894–1969) received a kiss on his forehead from the highly venerated Muslim, Hazrat Babajan (alleged to be 122 years old at the time), and then kissed her hands. That evening, he entered an altered state of blissful, electrified consciousness wherein he did not sleep or eat for nine months.
  29. Landau, Rom (1935). God Is My Adventure: A Book on Modern Mystics, Masters, and Teachers. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 105–118. OCLC 525882.
  30. Chryssides, George D. (2011). Historical Dictionary of New Religious Movements. United States of America: Scarecrow Press, Inc. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-8108-6194-7. As a youth, he became acquainted with Hazrat Babajan, a Muslim who was said to be one of the five "Perfect Masters", and she predicted that he would become a spiritual leader.
  31. Chryssides, George D. (2011). Historical Dictionary of New Religious Movements. United States of America: Scarecrow Press, Inc. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-8108-6194-7.
  32. Listen Humanity, ed. D. E. Stevens, 1982. pp. 247–250
  33. Purdom (1964) p. 270
  34. Encyclopedia of World Religions. Encyclopedia Britannica, Incorporated. 2006. p. 706. ISBN 978-1-59339-491-2.
  35. Haynes (1989) pp. 38–39
  36. Haynes (1989) p. 40
  37. Purdom (1964), pp. 29-30
  38. Kalchuri (1986) p. 501
  39. Purdom (1964), pp. 49–50
  40. Encyclopedia of Religion, Macmillan Publishing Company, 1995, vol. 9, p. 346
  41. Haynes (1989) p. 2
  42. Baba (2007) p. 3
  43. Haynes (1989) p. 70
  44. Haynes (1989) p. 41
  45. Dowling, Elizabeth; Scarlett, W. (2006). Encyclopedia of Religious and Spiritual Development. California: SAGE Publications, Inc. pp. 285–286. doi:10.4135/9781412952477. ISBN 978-0-7619-2883-6.
  46. Purdom (1964) p. 66
  47. Kalchuri (1986) p. 1405ff
  48. Kalchuri (1986) p. 1249
  49. Donkin (2001) p. vi
  50. Purdom (1964) p. 431
  51. Purdom (1964) p. 95.
  52. See articles from the Daily Herald, 4 April 1932 (quoted in Kalchuri (1986), p. 1573) and from Sunday Express, April 1932 (quoted in Purdom (1964), p. 99)
  53. Landau, Rom: God Is My Adventure: A Book on Modern Mystics, Masters, and Teachers, Faber & Faber, London, 1936. p. 111.
  54. Indian Mystic in New York, Associated Press, 20 May 1932, The Lowell Sun
  55. "Meher Baba Hopes to Elevate People Here to "Infinite State" He Enjoys. He Will Establish Spiritual Retreat at Harmon, N.Y., and Seek to Break Religious Barriers". The New York Times. Associated Press. 26 March 1932. Archived from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  56. Landau, Rom: God Is My Adventure: A Book on Modern Mystics, Masters, and Teachers, Faber & Faber, London, 1936. p. 108 Available as a Google book
  57. Purdom (1964) pp. 103–105
  58. Ellwood 1973 p. 281
  59. Associated Press, 13 July 1932 , as cited Kalchuri (1986), p. 1670
  60. Kalchuri (1986) p. 2040ff
  61. Kalchuri (1986) pp. 1661–1668
  62. Kalchuri (1986) pp. 2338–2421
  63. "Men, Masters & Messiahs". Time Magazine. 20 April 1936. Archived from the original on 2 June 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2008.
  64. Donkin (2001) p. vff
  65. Donkin (2001) p. 9
  66. "A Tribute to Mohammed Mast". Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 30 August 2007.
  67. Donkin, William (2001). The Wayfarers: Meher Baba with the God-Intoxicated. Myrtle Beach, S.C: Sheriar Foundation. ISBN 1-880619-24-5.
  68. Purdom (1964) p. 177
  69. Purdom (1964) pp. 163–176
  70. Purdom (1964) p. 187
  71. Purdom, (1964), p. 194
  72. Kalchuri (1986) p. 3762
  73. Kalchuri, Bhau (1986). Meher Prabhu: Lord Meher, The Biography of the Avatar of the Age, Meher Baba. Manifestation.
  74. Haynes (1989) p. 60
  75. Purdom (1964) p. 376
  76. Kalchuri (1986) pp. 3834–3840
  77. Glimpses of the God-Man, Meher Baba, vol. 3, by Bal Natu, Sheriar Press, 1982, pp. 64, 65
  78. Kalchuri (1986) p. 4208
  79. Three Incredible Weeks with Meher Baba: 11–30 September 1954, by Charles Purdom & Malcolm Schloss, Sheriar Press, 1979, pp. xi–xii
  80. Meher Baba: "Meher Baba's Call", Pamphlet, 12 September 1954
  81. Kalchuri (1986) p. 4551
  82. "The Final Declaration". Archived from the original on 8 July 2018. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  83. Kalchuri (1986) pp. 4457, 4464
  84. Purdom (1986) p. 289
  85. Kalchuri (1986) p. 5450
  86. Awakener Magazine, Vol. 10, No. 2, pp. 38–39 "Heroines of the Path, Part 7C". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 25 June 2008.
  87. Man hasn't spoken in 31 years, Big Spring Daily Herald, 30 June 1957 Note: this article identifies the visit as Meher Baba's 10th US visit, and places the planned date as July 1957, not 1956 as generally accepted.
  88. Kalchuri (1986) p. 5457
  89. Kalchuri (1986) p. 6000
  90. Awakener Magazine, Volume 9, Number 1–2, 1963, p. 1
  91. Haynes (1989) p. 62
  92. Kalchuri (1986) p. 6412ff
  93. God in a Pill? Meher Baba on L.S.D. and The High Roads, Sufism Reoriented, Inc. 1966
  94. Spiritual Leader Warning on LSD, United Press International, 27 July 1967
  95. Bruce Hoffman, 'Something on an Inner Level,' Glow International Feb 1990, p. 17
  96. Albert Moraczewski, 'Psychedelic Agents and Mysticism,' Psychosomantics Vol. 12:2 (1971), 95–96
  97. Haynes (1989) p. 61
  98. Awakener Magazine, Volume 13 Number 3-4, p. 75
  99. Kalchuri (1986) p. 6713
  100. Encyclopædia Britannica, retrieved 7/2/14,
  101. Kalchuri (1986) p. 6735
  102. James Ivory, The Talk of the Town, "Jai Baba!", The New Yorker, 21 June 1969, p. 28
  103. Kalchuri (1986) p. 738 "Meher Baba had observed silence three times before, but the silence beginning July 10th, 1925, was to last until the end of his life."
  104. Purdom (1964) p. 52
  105. Meher Baba. "The Universal Message". Avatar Meher Baba Perpetual Public Charitable Trust. Archived from the original on 8 July 2018. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
  106. Haynes (1989) p. 66
  107. Ullman, Robert; Judyth Reichenberg-Ullman (2001). Mystics, Masters, Saints, and Sages. RedWheel / Weiser. ISBN 1-57324-507-0.page 125.
  108. Haynes (1989) p. 67
  109. Purdom (1964), p. 278
  110. See for example: Kalchuri (1986), pp. 900, 915, 5648, 5655, 5787, 5807, 6015, 6024, 6027, 6037, 6105, 6061, 6090, 6151, 6166, 6170, 6172, 6206, 6164, 6318, 6319, 6341, 6370,, 6425, 6532, 6548, 6579, etc.
  111. Two close disciples have reported hearing Baba speak or make sounds in the days preceding his death. In 1992, Eruch Jessawala, a close disciple of Meher Baba, recalled that "a few days before Meher Baba dropped his body [...]Meher Baba had covered his mouth with his hand and shouted with great intensity:...'Mmmmmmm!'" [Glow International, May 1992, pp. 13-18]. Similarly, Bhau Kalchuri recalled in 2001 "Baba actually spoke two words to Bhau: 'Yad rakh [remember this]!' and then gestured, 'I am not this body!'[...]'Although Baba's voice was feeble,' Bhau recalled, 'the sound was audible and clear, and its intensity and impact very, very forceful. It conveyed so great an impression, that my mind itself neither registered nor questioned the fact that Baba was speaking." [see Kalchuri, Bhau (2005). Lord Meher. Vol. 8 (Second (India) ed.). Meher Mownavani Publications. p. 4765.] although this recollection contradicted his own earlier accounts [see Kalchuri (1986) p. 6710] and Kalchuri later clarified those recollections, saying that actual words had not been spoken [Glow International, Spring 2012, page 3].
  112. Kalchuri (1986) p. 1668
  113. Glimpses of the God-Man, Meher Baba, vol. 6, by Bal Natu, Sheriar Foundation, 1994, p. 77 – "I want all my lovers to observe complete silence for twenty-four hours, from midnight of July 9th to midnight of July 10th, 1968."
  114. "Avatar Meher Baba Trust Online Library". Archived from the original on 3 July 2013. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
  115. God Speaks, Revised 2nd edition, 1997, p. 7
  116. God Speaks, Revised 2nd edition, 1997, pp. 8–27.
  117. God Speaks, Revised 2nd edition, 1997, pp. 28–30
  118. God Speaks, Revised 2nd edition, 1997, pp. 31-40
  119. God Speaks, Revised 2nd edition, 1997, pp. 41–54
  120. Discourses, 7th edition, 1987, p. v
  121. Discourses, 7th edition, 1987, p. 147
  122. Discourses, 7th edition, 1987, pp. 5, 42, 46, 53, 62, 65, etc.
  123. Discourses, 7th edition, 1987, pp. 26, 61, etc.
  124. Kalchuri (1986) p. 944
  125. Adriel, Jean.Avatar: The Life Story of the Perfect Master, Meher Baba (1947), p. 49 , J. F. Rowny press
  126. The Path of Love, by Meher Baba, Sheriar Press, US, 2000, p. 30. (originally published in 1976 by Samuel Weiser, New York)
  127. Meher Baba: "Discourses", Sufism Reoriented, 6th ed., 1967. Vol III, p. 15
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  129. Medical facilities at the Trust (Archived 22 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine), Educational programs at the Trust (Archived 8 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine).
  130. Avatar Meher Baba Trust Website Archived 23 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine "Meher Baba never wanted nor encouraged propaganda. The Trust does not, accordingly, work to promote creeds or dogmas, nor does it seek "converts"."
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  137. Brunton, Paul, A Search in Secret India, First published in England by Rider & Co., London, (1934), First American publication, New York, S. Weiser, (1935)
  138. Kemp, Daren; Lewis, James R., eds. (2007). Handbook of New Age. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-15355-4. Meher Baba came from a Zoroastrian background. He took a vow of silence in 1925, claiming to be the avatar for the present age, just like Krishna, Buddha, Jesus and Muhammad had been in their time and place. His messianic teachings are recorded in Paul Brunton's A Search in Secret India (1951/1934).
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  153. Seventy Fourth Family Letter, 1 September 1967, 82 Family Letters, Mani S. Irani, Sheriar Foundation, 1976. "The appearance of the Avatar in my film is more than functional, it is necessary, to give all the other happenings and sequences the final and right dimension." (Louis van Gasteren to Meher Baba in 1967)

References

  • Abdulla, Ramjoo (1979). Ramjoo's Diaries, 1922–1929: A Personal Account of Meher Baba's Early Work. Sufism Reoriented.
  • Baba, Meher (1987). Discourses (7th ed.). Myrtle Beach, S.C.: Sheriar Foundation. ISBN 1-880619-09-1.
  • Baba, Meher (2007). Discourses (rev 6th ed.). Myrtle Beach, S.C.: Sheriar Foundation. ISBN 978-1-880619-34-6.
  • Baba, Meher (1966). God in a Pill? Meher Baba on L.S.D. and the High Roads. Sufism Reoriented, Inc.
  • Baba, Meher (1997). God Speaks. Walnut Creek, California: Sufism Reoriented. ISBN 0-915828-02-2.
  • Baba, Meher (1989). Silent Master. Spartacus Educational Publishers. ISBN 0-948867-25-6.
  • Choquette, Diane (1985). New religious movements in the United States and Canada: a critical assessment and annotated bibliography. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-23772-7.
  • Cohen, Allan Y. (1977). The Mastery of Consciousness: An Introduction and Guide to Practical Mysticism and Methods of Spiritual Development. San Francisco: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-06-090371-6.
  • Donkin, William (2001). The Wayfarers: Meher Baba with the God-Intoxicated. Myrtle Beach, S.C.: Sheriar Foundation. ISBN 1-880619-24-5.
  • Ellwood, Robert S. (1973). Religious and Spiritual Groups in Modern America. New York: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-615641-X.
  • Haynes, Charles C. (1993). Meher Baba, the Awakener. Avatar Foundation, Inc. ISBN 0-9624472-1-8.
  • Kalchuri, Bhau (1982). The Nothing and the Everything. Manifestation, Inc. ISBN 0-932947-02-6.
  • Kalchuri, Bhau (1986). Meher Prabhu: Lord Meher, The Biography of the Avatar of the Age, Meher Baba. Manifestation, Inc.
  • Landau, Rom (1972). Magazine. Freeport, N.Y.: Books for Libraries Press. ISBN 0-8369-2848-2.
  • Purdom, Charles B. (1964). The God-Man: The Life, Journeys & Work of Meher Baba with an Interpretation of His Silence & Spiritual Teaching. London: George Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-880619-36-9.
  • Sutcliffe, Steven J. (2002). Children of the New Age: A History of Alternative Spirituality. London: Routledge.
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