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<!--Generated by Squarespace V5 Site Server v5.13.157 (http://www.squarespace.com) on Tue, 21 May 2013 04:56:48 GMT--><feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><title>Holy Mother Sarada Devi</title><subtitle>Holy Mother Sarada Devi</subtitle><id>http://www.vedantany.org/holy-mother-sarada-devi/</id><link rel="alternate" type="application/xhtml+xml" href="http://www.vedantany.org/holy-mother-sarada-devi/"/><link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.vedantany.org/holy-mother-sarada-devi/atom.xml"/><updated>2010-08-07T01:48:45Z</updated><generator uri="http://five.squarespace.com/" version="Squarespace V5 Site Server v5.13.157 (http://www.squarespace.com)">Squarespace</generator><entry><title>Holy Mother Sarada Devi - A Biography</title><category term="Holy Mother"/><category term="Sarada Devi"/><category term="Sri Ramakrishna"/><id>http://www.vedantany.org/holy-mother-sarada-devi/2010/8/5/holy-mother-sarada-devi-a-biography.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.vedantany.org/holy-mother-sarada-devi/2010/8/5/holy-mother-sarada-devi-a-biography.html"/><author><name>Vedanta Society of New York</name></author><published>2010-08-05T13:51:50Z</published><updated>2010-08-05T13:51:50Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p class="bodymaintext"><span class="full-image-float-left ssNonEditable"><span><img src="http://www.vedantany.org/storage/post-images/holy-mother-1.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1281145650359" alt="" /></span></span></p>
<p class="bodymaintext"><span class="bodymaintext">Rumours                                                  spread to Kamarpukur that   Ramakrishna                                                had turned  mad as a result  of the                                                 over-taxing spiritual  exercises                                                 he had been going through  at Dakshineswar</span><span class="bodymaintext">.                                                 Alarmed, Chandra Devi   brought him                                                home and  arranged that he  might                                                 have the best </span><span class="bodymaintext">medical care  available                                                 in their village. The   doctors who                                                examined him  declared that  there                                                was  nothing abnormal about  him.                                                 Chandra Devi who studied  him closely                                                 also found he was  absolutely normal.                                                 As he had always done,  Ra</span><span class="bodymaintext">makrishna                                                 sang songs, told  stories,  cut jokes                                                and  made people laugh.  That is all.                                                 He was interested in  everything                                                 except in the financial  affairs                                                 of the family.</span></p>
<p class="bodymaintext">Chandra                                                 Devi's neighbours advised  that if                                                 Ramakrishna could be  persuaded to                                                 marry, he might then be  more conscious                                                 of his responsibilities to   the family                                                and  accordingly pay more  attention                                                 to its financial needs.  Chandra                                                 Devi started looking for a  suitable                                                 bride. She did not want  Ramakrishna                                                 to know anything about her  plan                                                 , for she feared that he   might see                                                marriage as a  hindrance to  his spiritual                                                 progress. Ramakrishna,  however,                                                 came to know, and far from  objecting                                                 to the marriage, began to  take an                                                 active interest in the  selection                                                 of the bride. He, in fact,   mentioned                                                Jayrambati,  three miles to  the north-west                                                 of Kamarpukur, as being  the village                                                 where the bride could be  found at                                                 the house of one  Ramchandra Mukherjee.                                                 The bride, six-year old  and  bearing                                                the name, Sarada,  was  found. The                                                marriage  was duly  solemnized in                                                 1859; the bride went back  to her                                                 father's house and  Ramakrishna to                                                 Dakshineswar to resume his  spiritual                                                 practices.</p>
<p class="bodymaintext">Years  passed                                                 and the bride and the  bridegroom                                                 seldom met. Sarada  continued to                                                 live at her father's  house, helping                                                 her poor peasant parents  with  the                                                usual chores of  feeding  the cattle,                                                 carrying food to the  paddy-fields                                                 for labourers working for  her parents,                                                 cooking, cleaning, looking  after                                                 the younger brothers, and  so on.                                                 Once famine gripped   Jayrambati and                                                its  surrounding areas.  Starving                                                 people went about  searching for                                                 food, but there was no  food anywhere.                                                 It so happened that  Sarada's parents                                                 had saved some food grains  that                                                 year. They decided to  cook  some                                                food everyday  and  distribute it                                                to the  starving people,  fresh and                                                 hot. Sometimes, the hungry  people                                                 would burn their fingers  in eating                                                 hot food. Sarada, still a  tiny girl,                                                 would fan the food to help it  cool.                                                She did it on her  own.</p>
<p class="bodymaintext">As                                                Sarada grew older.  neighbours<span class="full-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><img src="http://www.vedantany.org/storage/post-images/jayrambati.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1281145671067" alt="" /></span></span> began                                                to gossip about  her  misfortune.                                                They  would say that her  husband                                                 had gone mad. Sarada  overheard such                                                 remarks and was naturally  very disturbed.                                                 She decided to go to  Dakshineswar                                                 and see for herself the   condition                                                of her husband.  She went  and found                                                her  husband quite normal. She stayed                                                 with him for some time and  then                                                 returned to Jayrambati.  After some                                                 years, she permanently  stayed with                                                 him .</p>
<p class="bodymaintext">In a  way,                                                 Sarada Devi was  Ramakrishna's first                                                 disciple. He taught her as  much                                                 religion as philosophy. He  taught                                                 her everything he had  learnt  from                                                his various Gurus.   Ramakrishna must                                                have  been pleased to see  that she                                                 mastered every religious  secret                                                 as quickly as he himself  had done,                                                 perhaps even more quickly.  Impressed                                                 by her great religious  potential,                                                 he began to treat her as   the Universal                                                Mother  Herself. Once she  asked him                                                 what he thought of her. He  said,                                                 'I look upon you as my own  mother                                                 and as the Mother who is  in the                                                 temple.'</p>
<p class="bodymaintext">Before  passing                                                 away, in 1886, Ramakrishna  made                                                 Sarada Devi feel as if she  was the                                                 mother of his disciples,  nay of                                                 the entire humanity. At   first, Sarada                                                Devi was  shy about playing  this                                                 role, but slowly, she  filled that                                                 role, and even became a  religious                                                 teacher in her own rights.</p>
<p class="bodymaintext">For  the thirty-four                                                 years or so that she lived  after                                                 Ramakrishna's passing  away, she                                                 inspired people, both  monastic and                                                 lay, with the ideals  that  Ramakrishna                                                himself  had preached and  practised.                                                 She did this in the same  way as                                                 Ramakrishna - she lived  those ideals.                                                 But her life was more  testing and                                                 complicated than  Ramakrishna's.                                                 Being an ideal monk,   Ramakrishna                                                always kept  away from the  cross-currents                                                 of a family life. He loved  to watch                                                 the fun called life but  was careful                                                 enough never to be drawn  into its                                                 maelstroms. Sarada Devi,  on the                                                 contrary, was at the very   heart                                                of it. She was  the head of  a large                                                 family comprising men and  women,                                                 most of them not even  distantly                                                 related to her. And what  an assortment                                                 of characters they were!  Some of                                                 them were great souls by  any  standard,                                                but there were  also some  who were                                                mean,  jealous, and  positively mischievous.                                                 She managed to keep them  all together                                                 without losing her balance  of mind.                                                 And each of them was  convinced  that                                                she loved him or her  the  best. They                                                were all  of them dependent  on her,                                                 not only spiritually but  also materially.                                                 She was not only their  'mother'                                                 but also their guru. She  gave them                                                 full satisfaction on both   scores.</p>
<p class="bodymaintext"><span class="full-image-float-left ssNonEditable"><span><img src="http://www.vedantany.org/storage/post-images/bagbaazar.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1281145689185" alt="" /></span></span>Sarada                                                 Devi had a hard life  from  beginning                                                to end.  As daughter, wife,  and finally,                                                 as the beloved mother of a  large                                                 community of people  cutting across                                                 race and language, there  were demands                                                 on her much more than a  woman  in                                                her circumstances  normally  has to                                                meet.  She fulfilled them  in a manner                                                 possible only for her. But  what                                                 is remarkable is that, in  the midst                                                 of all her cares, she  maintained                                                 a degree of aloofness  which  Hinduism                                                attributes to  the highest  and best                                                 among men and women.  Through the                                                 skein of the varying  situations                                                 which she faced, she  remained absolutely                                                 calm and equipoised as if  these                                                 were no concern of hers.  Her  fortitude,                                                courage, and  wisdom,  tested again                                                and  again, amazed  everybody.</p>
<p class="bodymaintext">But  the most                                                 amazing thing about her  was her                                                 renunciation. a quality  she shared                                                 with her husband in a  measure equal                                                 to, if not more than, his.   She often                                                found herself  in a  situation in                                                which  starvation seemed  certain,                                                 but under no circumstances  would                                                 she seek aid from any  quarter. Even                                                 when her disciples had  grown to                                                 a considerable number and  there                                                 were people among them  with  means                                                to keep her in  comfort and  also                                                anxious  to be of service  to her,                                                 she would never so far as  even drop                                                 a hint that she had any  difficulty                                                 or she had any hankering.</p>
<p class="bodymaintext">But  the trait                                                 of her personality, which  used to                                                 draw innumerabable people,  men and                                                 women, good and bad, rich  and poor,                                                 young and old fowards her   irresistibly                                                was her  Universal  Motherhood. She                                                 would often say, 'I am as  much the                                                 Mother of the good as of  the bad.                                                 ...I shan't be able to  turn away                                                 anybody if he addresses me  as  Mother...If                                                my son  wallows in the dust  or mud,                                                 it is I who have to wipe  all the                                                 dirt off his body and take  him to                                                 my lap.'<span class="full-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><img src="http://www.vedantany.org/storage/post-images/holy-mother-mandir.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1281145714280" alt="" /></span></span></p>
<p class="bodymaintext">She  taught                                                 not by precepts but by  examples.                                                 There were irritants  galore in the                                                 way people around her  behaved, but                                                 she was an indulgent  mother  who                                                knew the best way to   educate an                                                erring child  was to set an  example                                                 before him, which she did.  She had                                                 seen the worst side of  man, but                                                 she never lost faith in  him, knowing                                                 that, given affection,  sympathy,                                                 and guidance, he could   overcome                                                all his  limitations.</p>
<p class="bodymaintext">She  was human,                                                 yet divine. Her divinity  shone through                                                 everything she did, even  if it was                                                 something entirely  mundane.  She                                                was a simple woman,  but in  thought,                                                speech,  and action she was  attuned                                                 to God. She was a true  saint, but                                                 she never claimed she was.  She passed                                                 as an ordinary woman, but  everything                                                 about her was  extraordinary.</p>
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