Sai Baba of Shirdi
India 20th century | |
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Name: Sai Baba of Shirdi | |
Birth: 28th September 1835 | |
Death: October 15, 1918 (Shirdi, India) | |
School/tradition: Advaita Vedanta | |
Main interests | |
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Notable ideas | |
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Sai Baba of Shirdi (d. October 15, 1918), also known as Shirdi Sai Baba, was an Indian guru, yogi and Sufi who is regarded simultaneously by many Hindus and Muslims as a saint. However, his parentage, birth details, and life before the age of 16 are obscure, which has led to a variety of speculations and theories attempting to explain Sai Baba's origins.
Sai Baba of Shirdi taught a moral code of love, forgiveness, helping others, charity, contentment, inner peace, devotion to God and guru. His philosophy was Advaita Vedanta and his teachings consisted of elements both of this school as well as of bhakti and Islam. In his life and teachings, he tried to reconcile Hinduism and Islam: Sai Baba lived in a mosque, practised Hindu and Muslim rituals, and taught using words and figures that drew from both traditions. One of his well known epigrams says of God: "Allah Malik" ("God is Master").
Sai Baba of Shirdi remains a very popular saint and is worshipped by Indians across the world. He is also revered by several notable Hindu and Sufi religious leaders. Some of his Hindu devotees believe that he was an incarnation of Shiva or Dattatreya, and he was regarded as a satguru and an incarnation of Kabir.
In contemporary India, the famous Hindu guru Sathya Sai Baba is often thought to be a reincarnation of Sai Baba of Shirdi.
Etymology
The name 'Sai Baba' is a combination of Persian and Indian origin; Sāī (Sa'ih) is the Persian term for "holy one" or "saint," usually attributed to Islamic ascetics, whereas Bābā is a word meaning "father" used in Indian languages. The appellative thus refers to Sai Baba as being a "holy father" or "saintly father".[1]
Biography
Background
Although Sai Baba's origins are unknown, some indications suggest that he was born not far from Shirdi. Historical researches into genealogies in Shirdi give support to the theory that Baba could have been born with the name Haribhau Bhusari.[2] Baba was notorious for giving vague, misleading and contradictory replies to questions concerning his parentage and origins, brusquely stating the information was unimportant. He had reportedly stated to a close follower, Mhalsapati, that he has been born of Brahmin parents in the village of Pathri and had been entrusted into the care of a fakir in his infancy.[3] On another occasion, Baba reportedly said that the fakir's wife had left him in the care of a Hindu guru, Venkusa of Selu, and that he had stayed with Venkusa for 12 years as his disciple.[4] This dichotomy has given rise to two major theories regarding Baba's background, with the majority of writers supporting the Hindu background over the Islamic, while others combine both the theories (that Sai Baba was first brought up by a fakir and then by a guru).[5]
Baba reportedly arrived at the village of Shirdi in the Ahmednagar district of Maharashtra, India, when he was about sixteen years old. Although there is no agreement among biographers about the date of this event, it is generally accepted that Baba stayed in Shirdi for three years, disappeared for a year and returned permanently around 1858, which posits a possible birthyear of 1838.[6] He led an ascetic life, sitting motionless under a neem tree and meditating while sitting in an asana. The Sai Satcharita recounts the reaction of the villagers: "The people of the village were wonder-struck to see such a young lad practicing hard penance, not minding heat or cold. By day he associated with no one, by night he was afraid of nobody."[7] His presence attracted the curiosity of the villagers and the religiously-inclined such as Mhalsapati, Appa Jogle and Kashinatha regularly visited him, while others such as the village children considered him mad and threw stones at him.[8] After some time he left the village, and it is unknown where he stayed at that time or what happened to him. However, there are some indications that he met with many saints and fakirs, and worked as a weaver; he claimed to have fought with the army of Rani Lakshmibai of Jhansi during the Indian Rebellion of 1857.[9]
Residence in Shirdi
In 1858, Sai Baba returned to Shirdi with Chand Patil's wedding procession. After alighting near the Khandoba temple he was greeted with the words "Ya Sai" (welcome saint) by the temple priest Mhalsapati. The name Sai stuck to him and some time later he started being known as Sai Baba.[10] It was around this time that Baba adopted his famous style of dress, consisting of a knee-length one-piece robe (kafni) and a cloth cap. Ramgir Bua, a devotee, testified that Baba was dressed like an athlete and sported 'long hair flowing down to his buttocks' when he arrived in Shirdi, and that he never had his head shaved. It was only after Baba forfeited a wrestling match with one Mohdin Tamboli that he took up the kafni and cloth cap, articles of typically Sufi clothing.[11] This attire contributed to Baba's identification as a Muslim fakir, and was a reason for initial indifference and hostility against him in a predominantly Hindu village.[12] According to B. V. Narasimhaswami, a posthumous follower who was widely praised as Sai Baba's "apostle," this attitude was prevalent even among some of his devotees in Shirdi, even up to 1954.[13]
For four to five years, Baba lived under a neem tree, and often wandered for long periods in the jungle in and around Shirdi. His manner was said to be withdrawn and uncommunicative as he undertook long periods of meditation.[14] He was eventually persuaded to take up residence in an old and dilapidated mosque and lived a solitary life there, surviving by begging for alms and receiving itinerant Hindu or Muslim visitors. In the mosque, he maintained a sacred fire which is referred to as a dhuni, from which he had the custom of giving sacred ash ('Udhi') to his guests before they left and which was believed to have healing powers and protection from dangerous situations. At first, he performed the function of a local hakim and treated the sick by application of Udhi. Baba also delivered spiritual teachings to his visitors, recommending the reading of sacred Hindu texts along with the Qur'an, especially insisting on the indispensability of the unbroken remembrance of God's name (dhikr, japa). He often expressed himself in a cryptic manner with the use of parables, symbols and allegories.[15] He participated in religious festivals and was also in the habit of preparing food for his visitors, which he distributed to them as prasad. Sai Baba's entertainment was dancing and singing religious songs (he enjoyed the songs of Kabir most). His behaviour was sometimes uncouth and violent.[16][17]
After 1910, Sai Baba's fame began to spread in Mumbai. Numerous people started visiting him, because they regarded him as a saint (or even an avatar) with the power of performing miracles.[18] and they built his first ever temple at Bhivpuri, Karjat as desired by Sai Baba.[19] He died on October 15, 1918 on the lap of one of his devotees with hardly any belongings, and was buried in the "Buty Wada" according to his wish. Later a mandir was built there known as the "Samadhi Mandir".[20] Sai Baba left behind no spiritual heirs and appointed no disciples. In fact, he did not even provide formal initiation. Some disciples of Sai Baba achieved fame as spiritual figures like Upasni Maharaj of Sakori and Meher Baba of Ahmednagar.
Teachings and practices
Sai Baba observed worship procedures belonging to both Hinduism and Islam; he shunned any kind of regular rituals but allowed the practice of namaz, chanting of Al-Fatiha, and Qur'an readings at Muslim festival times. Occasionally reciting the Al-Fatiha himself, Baba also enjoyed listening to moulu and qawwali accompanied with the tabla and sarangi twice daily.[21] He also wore clothing reminiscent of a Sufi fakir. Sai Baba also opposed all sorts of persecutions on religious or caste background.
Sai Baba of Shirdi was also an opponent of religious orthodoxy - both Hindu and Muslim.[22] Although Sai Baba himself led the life of an ascetic, he advised his followers to lead an ordinary family life.
Sai Baba encouraged his devotees to pray, chant God's name and read holy scriptures such as the Qur'an, the Ramayana, the Vishnu Sahasranam, the Bhagavad Gita, and the Yoga Vasistha.[23] He advised his followers to lead a moral life, help others, treat them with love and develop two important features of character: faith (Shraddha) and patience (Saburi). He also criticized atheism.[24] In his teachings Sai Baba emphasized the importance of performing one's duties without attachment to earthly matters and being ever content regardless of the situation.
Sai Baba also interpreted the religious texts of both faiths: He explained the meaning of the Hindu scriptures in the spirit of Advaita Vedanta. This was the character of his philosophy. He said that God penetrates everything and lives in every being. He emphasized the complete oneness of God, which was very close to the Islamic tawhid and the Hindu doctrine (Vedanta). Sai Baba said that the world and all that the human may give is transient and only God and his gifts are eternal. Sai Baba also emphasised the importance of devotion to God - bhakti - and surrender to his will. He also talked about the need of faith and devotion to one's spiritual preceptor (guru). He said that everyone was the soul and not the body. He advised his disciples and followers to overcome the negative features of character and develop the good ones. He taught them that all fate was determined by karma.
Sai Baba left no written works. His teachings were oral, typically short, pithy sayings rather than elaborate discourses. Sai would ask his followers for money (dakshina), which he would give away to the poor and other devotees the same day. According to his followers he did it in order to rid them of greed and material attachment.
Sai encouraged charity and the importance of sharing with others. He said:
"Unless there is some relationship or connection, nobody goes anywhere. If any men or creatures come to you, do not discourteously drive them away, but receive them well and treat them with due respect. Shri Hari (God) will be certainly pleased if you give water to the thirsty, bread to the hungry, clothes to the naked and your verandah to strangers for sitting and resting. If anybody wants any money from you and you are not inclined to give, do not give, but do not bark at him like a dog."[25]
Other favorite sayings of his were: "Why do you fear when I am here",[26] "He has no beginning…. He has no end."[26] Sai Baba made eleven assurances to his devotees:
- Whosoever puts their feet on Shirdi soil, their sufferings will come to an end.
- The wretched and miserable will rise to joy and happiness as soon as they climb the steps of My Samadhi.
- I shall be ever active and vigorous even after leaving this earthly body.
- My tomb shall bless and speak to the needs of my devotees.
- I shall be active and vigorous even from my tomb.
- My mortal remains will speak from My tomb.
- I am ever living to help and guide all who come to Me, who surrender to Me and who seek refuge in Me.
- If you look at Me, I look at you.
- If you cast your burden on Me, I shall surely bear it.
- If you seek My advice and help, it shall be given to you at once.
- There shall be no want in the house of My devotee.
Worship
A devotional movement arose around Shirdi Sai Baba in the nineteenth century, while he was staying in Shirdi. A local Khandoba priest - Mhalsapathy - is believed to have been his first devotee. However, in the nineteenth century Sai Baba's followers were only a small group of Shirdi inhabitants and a few people from other parts of India. The movement started developing in the twentieth century and even faster in 1910 with the Sankirtans of Das Ganu (one of Sai's devotees) who spread Sai Baba's fame to the whole of India. Since 1910, numerous Hindus and Muslims from all parts of India started coming to Shirdi. During his lifetime, Hindus worshipped him and Muslims revered him greatly, considering him to be a saint. Later, in the last years of Sai Baba's life, Christians and Zoroastrians started joining the Shirdi Sai movement.[27]
The Sai Baba mandir in Shirdi is active every day with worship services. Shirdi Baba is especially revered and worshipped in the state of Maharashtra. A religious organization of Sai Baba's devotees called the Shri Saibaba Sansthan Trust is based there. The first ever Sai Baba temple is situated at Bhivpuri, Karjat. According to estimates the Sai mandir in Shirdi is visited by around twenty thousand pilgrims a day and during religious festivals this number amounts to a hundred thousand.[28]
The devotees of Shirdi Sai Baba have spread all over India.[27] According to the Gale Encyclopedia of Religion there is at least one Sai Baba mandir in nearly every Indian city.[27] His image is quite popular in India.[27] Beyond India, the Shirdi Sai movement has spread to other countries such as the U.S. or the Caribbean. Sai Baba mandirs and organisations of his devotees have been built in countries including Australia, Malaysia, Singapore and the USA.
Sai Baba's millions of disciples, followers and devotees believe that he has performed many miracles such asbilocation, exorcisms, curing the incurably sick, helping his devotees in need in a miraculous way, reading the minds of others. Numerous inhabitants of Shirdi wrote about how they (and others) were the witnesses of his unusual Yogic powers: levitation, entering a state of Samādhi at wish. Moreover, according to his followers, he continued to appear to them after his death, in dreams, visions and even in bodily form, whence he often gave them advice. His devotees have many stories and experiences to tell.[29] Many books have been written on the same.
Historical sources
Biographers of Sai Baba of Shirdi (e.g. Govindrao Ragulnath Dabholkar, Acharya Ekkirala Bharadwaja, Smriti Srinivas, Antonio Rigopolous) when writing about him base it on what people who knew Sai Baba said and wrote. Another source they use is the Shirdi Diary written by Ganesh Shrikrishna Khaparde,[30] which describes every day of the author's stay at Shirdi. When speculating about the unknown episode's of Sai Baba's life, they mainly base their conclusions on his own words.
The most important source about Sai's life is the Shri Sai Satcharita written in Marathi, in 1916 by Govindrao Ragulnath Dabholkar (translated into English by Nagesh Vasudevanand Gunaji with English title: Shri Sai Satcharitra) whom Sai Baba nicknamed Hemadpant, which is an account of his life, teachings and miracles. Other important sources about Sai Baba are books by B. V. Narasimhaswamiji such as Sri Sai Baba's Charters and Sayings or Devotee's Experiences of Sai Baba. Sri Sai Baba and His Teachings, by Acharya Ekkirala Bharadwaja is an indepth study of Sai's life routine and activities.
In various religions
Hinduism
During Sai Baba's life the Hindu saint Anandanath of Yewala declared Sai Baba a spiritual "diamond".[31] Another saint, Gangagir, called him a "jewel".[31] Sri Beedkar Maharaj greatly revered Sai Baba, and in 1873, when he met him he bestowed the title Jagadguru upon him.[32] Sai Baba was also greatly respected by Vasudevananda Saraswati (known as Tembye Swami).[33] Sai of Shirdi was also revered by a group of Shaivic yogis, to which he belonged, known as the Nath-Panchayat.[34] Swami Kaleshwar publicly worships Sai Baba, and treats him as a great saint and his own guru.[35]
Sufism
In Islamic culture, Sai Baba appears mainly in Sufism and is considered a Pir of a very high order. Meher Baba declared Baba to be a Qutub-e-Irshad - the highest of the five Qutubs.[36] Baba is also worshipped by prominent Zoroastrians such as Nanabhoy Palkhivala and Homi Bhabha, and has been cited as the most popular non-Zoroastrian religious figure attracting the attention of Zoroastrians.[37]
In culture
Sacral art and architecture
In India, in nearly every larger city there is at least one temple dedicated to Sai Baba.[27] In the mosque in Shirdi, in which Sai Baba lived, there is a life-size portrait of him by Shama Rao Jaykar, an artist from Mumbai. Numerous monuments and statues depicting Sai Baba, which serve a religious function, have also been made. One of them, made of marble by a sculptor named Balaji Vasant Talim, is in the Samadhi Mandir in Shirdi where Sai Baba was buried. In Sai Baba mandirs, his devotees play various kinds of devotional religious music.[38]
Film and television
Sai Baba has been the subject of several feature films produced by India's film industry.
Year | Film | Title role | Director | Language | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1977 | Shirdi ke Sai Baba | Sudhir Dalvi | Ashok V. Bhushan | Hindi | Also featuring Manoj Kumar, Rajendra Kumar, Hema Malini, Shatrughan Sinha, Sachin, Prem Nath |
1986 | Sri Shirdi Saibaba Mahathyam | Vijayachander | K. Vasu | Telugu | Dubbed into Hindi as Shirdi Sai Baba Ki Kahani, into Tamil as Sri Shiridi Saibaba |
1993 | Sai Baba | Yashwant Dutt | Babasaheb S. Fattelal | Marathi | Also featuring Lalita Pawar |
2001 | Shirdi Sai Baba | Sudhir Dalvi | Deepak Balraj Vij | Hindi | Also featuring Dharmendra, Rohini Hattangadi, Suresh Oberoi |
2005 | Ishwarya Avatar Sai Baba | Mukul Nag | Ramanand Sagar | Hindi | Composite movie drawn from Sagar's TV serial, Sai Baba. |
2008 | Malik Ek | Jackie Shroff | Deepak Balraj Vij | Hindi | Expected release in 2008. Also featuring Manoj Kumar, Divya Dutta, Rohini Hattangadi, Zarina Wahab and Anup Jalota as Das Ganu. |
- In the popular Hindi film Amar Akbar Anthony (1977), Rishi Kapoor playing the Muslim character Akbar sings "Shirdi Wale Sai Baba" in a temple. Laxmikant Pyarelal composed the music, Anand Bakshi wrote the lyrics, and Mohammed Rafi was the playback singer. The song became a hit and is still played today.
- A more recent Hindi TV series, "Sai Baba" was made by Ramanand Sagar and broadcast by Star Plus in 2006, with 31-year old Mukul Nag in the title role.[39]
- A TV serial on Sai Baba is telecasted on Star TV network every Sunday evening by Prof. C. V. Vijendra in Hyderabad.
- The TV serial "Sai Baba" directed by Ramanand Sagar is telecasted on Star Vijay, a Tamil Channel, every Friday evening.
Legacy
Sai Baba of Shirdi remains a very popular saint and is worshipped by Indians across the world. He is also revered by several notable Hindu and Sufi religious leaders. Some of his Hindu devotees believe that he was an incarnation of Shiva or Dattatreya, and he was regarded as a satguru and an incarnation of Kabir.
In contemporary India, the famous Hindu guru Sathya Sai Baba is often thought to be a reincarnation of Sai Baba of Shirdi.
Notes
- ↑ Antonio Rigopoulos. The Life and Teachings of Sai Baba of Shirdi. (State University of New York Press SUNY, 1993. ISBN 0791412687), 3
- ↑ M.V. Kamath and V.B. Kher. Sai Baba of Shirdi: A Unique Saint. (India: Jaico Publishing House, 1997. ISBN 8172240309), 13-18
- ↑ Rigopoulos, 8
- ↑ B.V. Narasimhaswami. Sri Sai Baba's Charters & Sayings. (Madras: All-India Sai Samaj, 1986), 62
- ↑ Dale Hoiberg and I. Ramchandani. (Popular Prakashan, 2000) Students' Britannica India.. accessdate December 8, 2008
- ↑ Rigopoulos, 45
- ↑ Rigopoulos, 46
- ↑ Rangaswami Parthasarathy. God Who Walked On Earth: The Life and Times of Shirdi Sai Baba. Sterling Publishing, 1997. ISBN 8120718097), 15
- ↑ (To Balakrishna Upasani Shastri) "I was at the battle in which the Rani of Jhansi took part. I was then in the army." Quoted in Narasimhaswami, B.V. (1986). Sri Sai Baba's Charters & Sayings. All-India Sai Samaj, Madras, pp. 209.
- ↑ Acharya E. Bharadwaja. Sai Baba The Master. (India: Sree Guru Paduka Publications, 1996), 21
- ↑ Marianne Warren. Unravelling the Enigma: Shirdi Sai Baba in the Light of Sufism. (Sterling Publishing, 1997. ISBN 8120721470), 104
- ↑ Rigopoulos, 51-52
- ↑ Narasimhaswami, 24: "One very closely associated devotee of his, now living, still believes that Baba was 'only a Mohammadan.' What can 'only a Mohammadan' mean? It means that even after 25 years of personal experience of him and 36 years of his post mortem glories, the devotee treats him as a communalist just as he did when Baba was in the flesh."
Narasimhaswami, B.V. (1990). Life of Sai Baba (Vol. 1). Madras: All-India Sai Samaj, 24-25. : "Baba wished to convince the devotee, if he was a Hindu, that he was Mahavishnu, Lakshminarayan, etc., and he bade water flow from his feet as Ganga issued fro Mahavishnu's feet. The devotee saw it and praised him as 'Rama Vara', but as for the water coming from his feet, that devotee simply sprinkled a few drops on his head and would not drink it coming as it did from a Mohammadan's feet. So great was the prejudice of ages that even one, who thought of him as Vishnu, thought he was a 'Muslim Vishnu'. Prejudices die hard and the devotee wondered and wonders how people can believe that Baba was a Brahmin and that his parents were Brahmins when he had lived all his life in a mosque and when he was believed to be a Muslim." - ↑ Warren, 45
- ↑ Rigopoulos, 86
- ↑ "That Shirdi Sai Baba was eccentric is well-attested, for it seems that he was sometimes of uncouth and violent behaviour." In David Bowen. The Sathya Sai Baba Community in Bradford: Its origins and development, religious beliefs and practices. (Leeds: University Press, 1988), 135
- ↑ "Of unpredictable moods, devotees remember him as both loving and harsh. When he got angry, often for no apparent reason, he would scream or abuse people, sometimes for hours at an end, at times even tearing off his own clothes." In Rigopoulos, xxxiii
- ↑ Warren, 340-341
- ↑ Sai Ananta - Kaka Saheb Dixit Trust of Shri Sai Baba saiananta.com.
- ↑ Dabholkar/Gunaji Shri Sai Satcharita/Shri Sai Satcharitra chapters 42, 43, 44 Retrieved December 8, 2008.
- ↑ Warren 29, 30
- ↑ Rigopoulos, 139
- ↑ Dabholkar/Gunaji Shri Sai Satcharita/Shri Sai Satcharitra chapter 27.saibaba.org. Retrieved December 8, 2008.
- ↑ Dabholkar/Gunaji Shri Sai Satcharita/Shri Sai Satcharitra chapter 3 saibaba.org. Retrieved December 8, 2008.
- ↑ Dabholkar (alias Hemadpant) Shri Sai Satcharita Shri Sai Baba Sansthan Shirdi, (translated from Marathi into English by Nagesh V. Gunaji in 1944)
- ↑ 26.0 26.1 [1].Saibaba.org. accessdate December 8, 2008
- ↑ 27.0 27.1 27.2 27.3 27.4 Srinivas Sathya Sai Baba movement
- ↑ Temple Complex. accessdate December 8, 2008
- ↑ Satya Paul Ruhela. Sri Shirdi Sai Baba - the Universal Master. (Sterling Publishers, 1994. ISBN 8120716248), 141-154.
- ↑ The Glory of Shirdi Sai Baba,[2]. Retrieved January 16, 2009.
- ↑ 31.0 31.1 Who is Shirdi Sai Baba". accessdate December 8, 2008
- ↑ A Short Biography of Shree Sadguru Beedkar Maharaj. accessdate December 8, 2008
- ↑ Dabholkar/Gunaji Shri Sai Satcharita/Shri Sai Satcharitra chapter 50 saibaba.org. Retrieved December 8, 2008.
- ↑ Ruhela, 27
- ↑ Sri Kaleshwar:: The Divine Lineage. accessdate December 8, 2008
- ↑ Bhau Kalchuri. Meher Prabhu: Lord Meher, The Biography of the Avatar of the Age, Meher Baba. (Manifestation, Inc., 1986), 64
- ↑ J. R. Hinnels. Zoroastrians Diaspora: religion and migration. (Oxford University Press, USA, 2005), 109
- ↑ Welcome to Shirdi Sai Trust - Arathi Timings (HTML). Retrieved December 8, 2008.
- ↑ TV's fascination for the gods. accessdate December 8, 2008
ReferencesISBN links support NWE through referral fees
- Bharadwaja, Acharya Ekkirala. Sri Sai Baba and His Teachings.
- Gibson, Lynne. Modern World Religions: Hinduism - Pupil Book Core. Heinemann Educational Publishers, Core ed., 2002. ISBN 0435336193.
- Hinnels J. R. Zoroastrians Diaspora: religion and migration. Oxford University Press, USA, 2005.
- Hoiberg, Dale, and I. Ramchandani. Students' Britannica India..(Popular Prakashan, 2000) accessdate December 8, 2008
- Kalchuri, Bhau. Meher Prabhu: Lord Meher, The Biography of the Avatar of the Age, Meher Baba. Manifestation, Inc. 1986.
- Kamath, M.V. & V.B. Kher. Sai Baba of Shirdi: A Unique Saint. India: Jaico Publishing House, 1997. ISBN 8172240309.
- Narasimhaswami, B.V. Sri Sai Baba's Charters & Sayings. Madras: All-India Sai Samaj, 1986.
- Rigopoulos, Antonio. The Life and Teachings of Sai Baba of Shirdi. State University of New York Press, Albany, 1993. ISBN 0791412687.
- Ruhela, Satya Paul. Sri Shirdi Sai Baba - the Universal Master. Sterling Publishers, 1994. ISBN 8120716248.
- Venkataraman, Krishnaswamy. Shirdi Stories. New Delhi: Srishti Publishers, 2002. ISBN 8187075848.
- Warren, Marianne. Unravelling the Enigma. Shirdi Sai Baba in the Light of Sufism. Revised ed. New Delhi: Sterling Publishing, 2004. ISBN 8120721470.
- White, Charles S. J. "The Sai Baba Movement: Approaches to the Study of India Saints.: in Journal of Asian Studies 31 (4) (Aug., 1972): 863-878.
External links
All links retrieved December 22, 2022.
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