Skip to main content

Babas and their Babes




Those who are familiar with Babas (godmen, sadhus, and whatever names they are known by) won’t be surprised by what followed the arrest of that Ram Rahim fellow.  We know that most of these men (and women too these days) clad in religious robes are sheer criminals.  Religion is merely a mask for them, a façade put up to hide the hideousness behind.

There are thousands of people in India like this Ram Rahim chap.  Most of them are not known beyond their limited circles.  Some are rich and powerful enough to have made their presence felt beyond their circles and even beyond the national borders.  Radha Soami Satsang Beas [RSSB], for example.  Like this Ram Rahim fellow, Gurinder Singh of RSSB enjoys fabulous following and high category security too.  This security is a big joke for me personally.

This guy Gurinder Singh is greedy for land while most of his counterparts are greedy for women and food and petty conquests like the old kings of little kingdoms.  RSSB arguably owns more area of the earth than any other dera.  I was a victim of its latest land acquisition.  The school where I was working was bought by them with its fifteen acres of campus just a year after Narendra Modi came to power in Delhi.  The school, hostels, and all other buildings on the campus were razed to ground and the whole thing today stands as wasteland except three times a year when Gurinder will lecture to his bhakts whose vehicles will be parked in the parking lot which was a school until two years ago.  RSSB was reported earlier to have conquered about hundred acres of forest lands in the Delhi-Haryana border.  Nobody is concerned about such things.

When the staff of the school complained to the AAP education minister about the imminent destruction of the school in 2015, the minister said, “We are helpless.  If we support you, we’ll get a few hundred votes.  The Baba’s devotees number to five lakh.”  The votes matter more than any principle.  Moreover, AAP’s premier, Arvind Kejriwal had already received some favours from Sitaram Jindal who had sold the school to Gurinder Singh and Jindal is a bhakt of the godman.  So we knew we were fighting a futile war.  The school died, we lost our jobs and I migrated to Kerala where godmen won’t fool the people easily.

Oh, I was saying that Gurinder’s security is a joke.  I digressed after that.  That’s how I am.  Sorry.  Gurinder visited the school when the deal was being settled.  It was rumoured that he bought the campus for ₹900 crore.  We were curious to see this wealthy ascetic and so were happy to know that he was visiting us.  But when the time came, we – the staff and students – were all asked to stay in the auditorium and never come out until we were told.  The ascetic came with a few police vehicle in front and behind.  Even the MPs who came to the school for various functions never had such security.  I wondered what kind of an ascetic this was.  One small boy escaped the attention of teachers and moved out.  He was chased back by the security police.  When asked by a teacher why he had gone out the boy said that he had to visit the washroom.  Baba must have gifted him constipation. We were let out of the auditorium only after the Baba left the campus with all the police vehicles in front and behind his vehicle.

After my school was converted into a parking lot I came to know that Gurinder has a different face when he visits his foreign ‘ashrams.’  He flies the business class and has the class’s due entertainments.  All his followers I met while I worked in the school during the two years after their takeover were villainous to the core.  They knew how to distort simple truths into circuitous lies. They assaulted rebellious teachers on the roads.  They fabricated false cases against some teachers. One charge was attempt to rape.  In order to fabricate that charge they sent some ancient (very old, I mean) women to the house of a staff member and created a ruckus.  What followed was hilarious comedy seen from the distance of today but acute tragedy for that family at that time.

I could go on and on.  My experience with one godman is fit for a novel (which I am writing).  You can imagine what the other godmen would be like.  I leave it to you to judge.  But I know that bhakti makes people blind to truths. 

PS. My latest short story collection, The Nomad Learns Morality, is dedicated to RSSB, especially one woman of that cult. 

Comments

  1. No doubt, India has become the breeding ground for many spurious babas who have been exploiting people and are becoming a curse to the society. The people who flock to them are either gullible or as criminally inclined as the babas.

    At the same time there are genuine spiritual masters who are interested in spreading spiritual knowledge and uplifting the society. Being non controversial they may not get as much media space as these spicy babas.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Present day Godmen (of all religions) are anything but spiritual. Why do they need acres and acres of land and other property to spread messages of Love and brotherhood?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Love and brotherhood have nothing to do with spirituality these days. Fake kingdom, that's what spirituality is today.

      Delete
  3. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Very well written

    http://www.thewordlyconfusion.com/

    ReplyDelete
  5. I so damn agree to everything you penned. Whom to trust is the big question? I am loosing faith in humanity now...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's the Baba's people who sucked my trust in humanity. Today religious people are deadlier than politicians.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

The Ugly Duckling

Source: Acting Company A. A. Milne’s one-act play, The Ugly Duckling , acquired a classical status because of the hearty humour used to present a profound theme. The King and the Queen are worried because their daughter Camilla is too ugly to get a suitor. In spite of all the devious strategies employed by the King and his Chancellor, the princess remained unmarried. Camilla was blessed with a unique beauty by her two godmothers but no one could see any beauty in her physical appearance. She has an exquisitely beautiful character. What use is character? The King asks. The play is an answer to that question. Character plays the most crucial role in our moral science books and traditional rhetoric, religious scriptures and homilies. When it comes to practical life, we look for other things such as wealth, social rank, physical looks, and so on. As the King says in this play, “If a girl is beautiful, it is easy to assume that she has, tucked away inside her, an equally beauti...

Indian Knowledge Systems

Shashi Tharoor wrote a massive book back in 2018 to explore the paradoxes that constitute the man called Narendra Modi. Paradoxes dominate present Indian politics. One of them is what’s called the Indian Knowledge Systems (IKS). What constitute the paradox here are two parallel realities: one genuinely valuable, and the other deeply regressive. The contributions of Aryabhata and Brahmagupta to mathematics, Panini to linguistics, Vedanta to philosophy, and Ayurveda to medicine are genuine traditions that may deserve due attention. But there’s a hijacked version of IKS which is a hilariously, if not villainously, political project. Much of what is now packaged as IKS in government documents, school curricula, and propaganda includes mythological claims treated as historical facts, pseudoscience (e.g., Ravana’s Pushpaka Vimana as a real aircraft or Ganesha’s trunk as a product of plastic surgery), astrology replacing astronomy, ritualism replacing reasoning, attempts to invent the r...

Waiting for the Mahatma

Book Review I read this book purely by chance. R K Narayan is not a writer whom I would choose for any reason whatever. He is too simple, simplistic. I was at school on Saturday last and I suddenly found myself without anything to do though I was on duty. Some duties are like that: like a traffic policeman’s duty on a road without any traffic! So I went up to the school library and picked up a book which looked clean. It happened to be Waiting for the Mahatma by R K Narayan. A small book of 200 pages which I almost finished reading on the same day. The novel was originally published in 1955, written probably as a tribute to Mahatma Gandhi and India’s struggle for independence. The edition that I read is a later reprint by Penguin Classics. Twenty-year-old Sriram is the protagonist though Gandhi towers above everybody else in the novel just as he did in India of the independence-struggle years. Sriram who lives with his grandmother inherits significant wealth when he turns 20. Hi...

Ghost with a Cat

It was about midnight when Kuriako stopped his car near the roadside eatery known as thattukada in Kerala. He still had another 27 kilometres to go, according to Google Map. Since Google Map had taken him to nowhere lands many a time, Kuriako didn’t commit himself much to that technology. He would rather rely on wayside shopkeepers. Moreover, he needed a cup of lemon tea. ‘How far is Anakkad from here?’ Kuriako asked the tea-vendor. Anakkad is where his friend Varghese lived. The two friends would be meeting after many years now. Both had taken voluntary retirement five years ago from their tedious and rather absurd clerical jobs in a government industry and hadn’t met each other ever since. Varghese abandoned all connection with human civilisation, which he viewed as savagery of the most brutal sort, and went to live in a forest with only the hill tribe people in the neighbourhood. The tribal folk didn’t bother him at all; they had their own occupations. Varghese bought a plot ...