Hyderabad, November 29
Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N
Chandrababu Naidu, Congress President Sonia Gandhi, Prime Minister Atal Behari
Vajpayee, cricketers Sunil Gavaskar, Clive Loyd and Steve Waugh, actress
Meenakshi Seshadri, rock singer Jimi Hendrix and the underworld don of
Chennai, Wodeyar - they all have one thing in common: unstinting devotion to
the Sathya Sai Baba, whose gargantuan empire is spread across 165 countries,
where 13,000 institutions run on the financial steam of a collective
membership of about 37 million, give or take a few.
A section of this membership is reportedly becoming truculent, for not
everything is said to be aboveboard in the house of the holy. A spate of
incidents, such as the attack on his life, attempts by his Japanese devotees
to take over the Prashanti Nilayam in Puttaparthi, the drying up of his
grandiose Rs 350 crore scheme to provide drinking water to the people of
Anantpur district, and the worldwide campaign to tamp down rumours
of his alleged child abuse, muddied the festivities surrounding his 75th
birthday celebrations last week.
Against a projected two million, hardly half a million turned up; most of the
new apartments in Puttaparthi valley, with quoted rents of Rs 5,000-10,000 a
week,
went vacant. Of the 2,500 special trains deployed
to transport the devotees, less than 750 were
eventually required.
After the convocation of Sathya Sai University on November 23, attending
dignitaries slipped out of Puttaparthi without participating in the other
events
of the day. Both Union Human Resources Minister
Murli Manohar Joshi and Chief Minister Naidu dashed
to New Delhi in the afternoon. Many industry bigwigs
also hotfooted it out soon after.
The
Sai Baba is credited with
having attained spiritual enlightenment
when he was
eight years old.
He started
performing
mahimas (miracles)
at the age of 14
|
Things
seem to have gone
wrong for the godman, whom
his devotees style as "Bhagwan" Sathya Sai Baba; to his
critics,
he is either Vibhuti Guru or the Godman of Frauds. Atheists
such as Premananda and
former vice-chancellor of
Bangalore University, Professor Narasimhaiah, have labelled
him a cheat. Premananda
has even filed a case in the
Supreme Court under the |
Gold Act against Baba's
showy morphosing of gold
ornaments from thin air.
According to an unofficial estimate of the Income Tax
(I-T) department, which has granted blanket tax exemptions to all donations to
the Sai Baba's trust, the total value his assets, both in India and abroad, is
about Rs 5,000 crore. He receives donations worth Rs 65
crore every year.
Sai Baba's popularity nosedived after the attack on his
life in 1994 by a few of his own trusted corps of volunteers (see Ashram
Mandiram: fortress of solitude). He
managed to dampen the outcry against the conspiracy within the Prashanti
Nilayam Ashram. His influence
with the state police helped him hush up the episode, which could have
snowballed into a major embarrassment because the police killed four of the
offending "volunteers" (four others were "pardoned").
"They are out of Prashanti Nilayam but not out of
Baba's coterie, which runs his vast empire," says
a critic in Hyderabad.
The case was personally
handled and an inquiry conducted by a senior deputy inspector general, who
has now risen to the rank of director general of police
and is all set for a posting to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI),
thanks to the Sai Baba's blessings.
It is common knowledge that judges and mafia dons
alike are given immediate audience with the Sai Baba
and move around freely within the ashram even when
the police are around. Although he has been given a crack protection unit, he
has his own guards trained
in Israel. The security is so tight that local devotees -
from Puttaparthi and nearby villages - are unhappy
about restricted perambulation within Prashanti Nilayam.
The Sai Baba is credited with having attained spiritual enlightenment when he
was eight years old. He started performing mahimas (miracles) at the
age of 14. Through the 1990s, he witnessed a rash of competitors and religious
simulacra: there are, at present, at least four other self-styled Sai Babas in
Andhra Pradesh.