| Sri
Karunamayi is revered in India as an embodiment of divine
motherly love, due to the love and affection that she showers
liberally on people, animals, and even plants, the spiritual
knowledge and guidance that she gives freely to all of humanity,
and the humanitarian works that she has undertaken. "Amma," as
she is affectionately called by her devotees, is simply the
Telugu word for "mother," Telugu
being Amma's native language. Although it is not possible
to convey the experience of being in Amma's vibrant presence
through words or pictures, the text on this page attempt
to provide a brief glimpse into her nature through a brief
biographical sketch, and a description of Amma's mission.
Spiritual Childhood
Born in the traditional South India of 1958, Sri Karunamayi
spent a childhood immersed in an atmosphere of prayer and
worship created by her deeply spiritual parents. Both of
her parents had received visions indicating that Sri Karunamayi
was not an ordinary child, and her astrological chart indicated
that she would dedicate her life to serving humanity.
Naturally inclined toward charity as a child, Sri Karunamayi,
or "Amma," would often give away food and clothes to whoever
needed them. When a family servant contracted cholera, a
deadly contagious disease, Amma tended closely to the servant
without concern for her own safety. To the delight and amazement
of Amma's family, the servant survived the illness and recovered
quickly, despite the doctor's dire prognosis.
One time, during a religious festival, Amma came to know
that some poor people who had come had not eaten in several
days. Amma immediately brought and served them some food
that had been prepared by her grandmother specifically to
be offered to God during a special ceremony. When her grandmother
saw what she had done, Amma told her, "Ammamma, today you
have done a very good thing. This is how the food so nicely
prepared by you has been accepted by the Lord in the form
of these people." Amma's grandmother was moved by her granddaughter's
universal outlook, and quickly brought out the remainder
of the food for distribution to all who wanted it. (Amma's
biography is available in English, Telegu, Hindi, and
Spanish, in the AmmaStore.)
As a child, Amma enjoyed helping her mother by making flower
garlands by hand for her mother's daily practice of worship
to Lord Rama. She also delighted in hearing Sanskrit prayers
and verses sung by her father. Though she had never studied
Sanskrit, she would often surprise her father with spontaneous
insights into the inner spiritual meaning of the verses.
When Amma's parents invited learned scholars to their home
to give teachings, these scholars were often shocked and
amazed to hear the original thoughts that flowed spontaneously
from Amma's mouth. They had never heard of such a young girl
discussing the spiritual essence of the Sanskrit prayers
with such expertise.
Austerities in the Sacred Penusila Forest
As she grew into a young woman, Amma felt an inner urge
to begin spending more and more time in the family worship
room, immersed in prayer and meditation. As she was now a
first-year college student, she was forced to make time for
meditation by reducing the time she spent sleeping. As her
meditations deepened and intensified, she also began reducing
her intake of food. These meditation sessions grew in length
until one day Amma locked herself inside a room of the house
and remained there in meditation for a month. Though her
family members were perplexed, they did not dare to disturb
her, having witnessed the profundity of her meditations before.
When she finally emerged, she seemed like a different person
to her family members. Though she still showed the same sweet
affection to which they were accustomed, her demeanor now
expressed a more impersonal, universal love. Determined to
fulfill the sacred purpose of her life, Amma gently told
her mother that it was time for her to go into seclusion
in the sacred Penusila Forest, to meditate there in solitude.
Always respectful of her daughter's divine nature, and trusting
completely in God, Amma's mother did not try to stop her
from going.
In the year 1980, at the tender age of 21, Amma left the
comfort and security of her parents' home and traveled by
foot to the remote and sacred Penusila Forest, where a number
of India's ancient sages had meditated for many hundreds
of years. There, she was free to live according to principles
established by India's ancient Vedic sages. Rising at 2:30
in the morning, Amma would bathe with cold water from a pure
river. Wearing only a simple cotton sari, she would go to
one of the forest's many sacred groves and remain there,
absorbed in meditation for hours, days, or even weeks at
a time.
Local villagers who spotted her sometimes mistook her for
a statue, as they could not even detect the movement of breath
in her perfectly still form. Some of the more mischievous
ones would toss small pebbles on her, just to see if she
was really alive or just a corpse! Others, feeling that only
an incarnation of the Divine Mother could sit for so long
in deep meditation, would leave small offerings of fruit
before her. Whether she emerged from her meditations to find
stones or fruit in front of her, Amma always maintained a
state of perfect equanimity and gave her blessings to all,
regardless of how they treated her.
Amma never felt that these meditations were done for her
own sake, as she was following the example of India's ancient
Vedic sages, who meditated for hundreds of years in order
to discover the best teachings for all of mankind. Through
Amma's austerities, she determined which of the Vedic teachings
and practices would be of greatest benefit to people living
in this difficult modern age. After performing such intense
tapasya for ten years, Amma decided that it was time to share
her knowledge with all those who thirsted for true spirituality,
wherever they may live in the world.
Current Activities
Emerging from her relative seclusion, she was invited by
a devotee to stay in Bangalore, where a simple building was
constructed to house a temple as well as living quarters.
She began giving public discourses on various aspects of
Sanatana Dharma, India's ancient spirituality, and conducting
sacred ceremonies to promote world peace and universal well-being.
As these discourses began attracting more and more people,
she also began working toward fulfilling her dream of bringing
medical care to the villagers of the Penusila area by arranging
for free medical camps and initiating construction of the
Sri
Karunamayi Free Hospital.
In 1995, Amma was invited to come to America to give public
programs, and since then she has returned to the US every
year to give teachings and blessings, hold meditation retreats,
and perform sacred fire ceremonies for the benefit of the
world. During her visits to each city, people come by the
hundreds to express their worries and problems and to request
blessings or guidance. Amma's feeling, as she comforts each
person like a mother, is that even her sari has become sacred
because she has used it to wipe away the tears from her children's
eyes. Amma often likes to say that her only work in this
world is to remove the suffering from the hearts of her children.
This she does through her kind, loving words of spiritual
guidance and encouragement, her healing touch, and her divine
knowledge and insight. Today, Amma divides her time between
the US, Europe and India, fulfilling her life's mission of
providing comfort, solace, and spiritual guidance to all
who come to her
|
Divine Mother
is the mother for this entire universe, from a tiny ant to Lord Brahma Himself. She is all-pervading,
and She is shining brilliantly
in the secret chambers
of your heart. To become one with Mother, learn
to love everything in Her Creation, all the creatures,
even the small
grass blades." ~ Amma. |

Blessing
visitors after a talk
in Washington,
DC. |
|