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The Recorder of the Gospel
MAHENDRANĀTH GUPTA
In the life of the
great Saviours and Prophets of the world it is often found that they are
accompanied by souls of high spiritual potency who play a conspicuous
part in the furtherance of their Master's mission. They become so
integral a part of the life and work of these great ones that posterity
can think of them only in mutual association. Such is the case with Sri
Ramakrishna and M., whose diary has come to be known to the world as the
Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna
in English and as Sri Rāmakrishna Kathāmrita
in the original Bengali version.
Sri Mahendra Nath Gupta, familiary known to the readers of the Gospel by
his pen name M., and to the devotees as Master Mahashay, was born on the
14th of July, 1854 as the son of Madhusudan Gupta, an officer of the
Calcutta High Court, and his wife, Swarnamayi Devi. He had a brilliant
scholastic career at Hare School and the Presidency College at Calcutta.
The range of his studies included the best that both occidental and
oriental learning had to offer. English literature, history, economics,
western philosophy and law on the one hand, and Sanskrit literature and
grammar, Darsanas, Puranas, Smritis, Jainism, Buddhism, astrology and
Ayurveda on the other were the subjects in which he attained
considerable proficiency.
He was an educationist all his life both in a spiritual and in a secular
sense. After he passed out of College, he took up work as headmaster in
a number of schools in succession Narail High School, City School,
Ripon College School, Metropolitan School, Aryan School, Oriental
School, Oriental Seminary and Model School. The causes of his migration
from school to school were that he could not get on with some of the
managements on grounds of principles and that often his spiritual mood
drew him away to places of pilgrimage for long periods. He worked with
some of the most noted public men of the time like Iswar Chandra
Vidyāsāgar and Surendranath Banerjee. The latter appointed him as a
professor in the City and Ripon Colleges where he taught subjects like
English, philosophy, history and economics. In his later days he took
over the Morton School, and he spent his time in the staircase room of
the third floor of it, administering the school and preaching the
message of the Master. He was much respected in educational circles
where he was usually referred to as Rector Mahashay. A teacher who had
worked under him writes thus in warm appreciation of his teaching
methods: "Only when I worked with him in school could I appreciate what
a great educationist he was. He would come down to the level of his
students when teaching, though he himself was so learned, so talented.
Ordinarily teachers confine their instruction to what is given in books
without much thought as to whether the student can accept it or not. But
M., would first of all gauge how much the student could take in and by
what means. He would employ aids to teaching like maps, pictures and
diagrams, so that his students could learn by seeing. Thirty years ago
(from 1953) when the question of imparting education through the medium
of the mother tongue was being discussed, M. had already employed
Bengali as the medium of instruction in the Morton School."
(M
The Apostle and the Evangelist by Swami Nityatmananda Part I. P.
15.)
Imparting secular education was, however, only his profession ; his main
concern was with the spiritual regeneration of man a calling for which
Destiny seems to have chosen him. From his childhood he was deeply
pious, and he used to be moved very much by Sādhus, temples and Durga
Puja celebrations. The piety and eloquence of the great Brahmo leader of
the times, Keshab Chander Sen, elicited a powerful response from the
impressionable mind of Mahendra Nath, as it did in the case of many an
idealistic young man of Calcutta, and prepared him to receive the great
Light that was to dawn on him with the coming of Sri Ramakrishna into
his life.
This epoch-making event of his life came about in a very strange way. M.
belonged to a joint family with several collateral members. Some ten
years after he began his career as an educationist, bitter quarrels
broke out among the members of the family, driving the sensitive M. to
despair and utter despondency. He lost all interest in life and left
home one night to go into the wide world with the idea of ending his
life. At dead of night he took rest in his sister's house at Baranagar,
and in the morning, accompanied by a nephew Siddheswar, he wandered from
one garden to another in Calcutta until Siddheswar brought him to the
Temple Garden of Dakshineswar where Sri Ramakrishna was then living.
After spending some time in the beautiful rose gardens there, he was
directed to the room of the Paramahamsa, where the eventful meeting of
the Master and the disciple took place on a blessed evening (the exact
date is not on record) on a Sunday in March 1882. As regards what took
place on the occasion, the reader is referred to the opening section of
the first chapter of the Gospel.
The Master, who divined the mood of desperation in M, his resolve to
take leave of this 'play-field of deception', put new faith and hope
into him by his gracious words of assurance: "God forbid! Why should you
take leave of this world? Do you not feel blessed by discovering your
Guru? By His grace, what is beyond all imagination or dreams can be
easily achieved!" At these words the clouds of despair moved away from
the horizon of M.'s mind, and the sunshine of a new hope revealed to him
fresh vistas of meaning in life. Referring to this phase of his life, M.
used to say, "Behold! where is the resolve to end life, and where, the
discovery of God! That is, sorrow should be looked upon as a friend of
man. God is all good."
(Ibid
P.33.)
After this re-settlement, M's life revolved around the Master, though he
continued his professional work as an educationist. During all holidays,
including Sundays, he spent his time at Dakshineswar in the Master's
company, and at times extended his stay to several days.
It did not take much time for M. to become very intimate with the
Master, or for the Master to recognise in this disciple a divinely
commissioned partner in the fulfilment of his spiritual mission. When M.
was reading out the Chaitanya Bhagavata, the Master discovered that he
had been, in a previous birth, a disciple and companion of the great
Vaishnava Teacher, Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, and the Master even saw him
'with his naked eye' participating in the ecstatic mass-singing of the
Lord's name under the leadership of that Divine personality. So the
Master told M, "You are my own, of the same substance as the father and
the son," indicating thereby that M. was one of the chosen few and a
part and parcel of his Divine mission.
There was an urge in M. to abandon the household life and become a
Sannyāsin. When he communicated this idea to the Master, he forbade him
saying," Mother has told me that you have to do a little of Her work
you will have to teach Bhagavata, the word of God to humanity. The
Mother keeps a Bhagavata Pandit with a bondage in the world!"
(Ibid
P.36.)
An appropriate allusion indeed! Bhagavata, the great scripture that has
given the word of Sri Krishna to mankind, was composed by the Sage Vyāsa
under similar circumstances. When caught up in a mood of depression like
that of M, Vyāsa was advised by the sage Nārada that he would gain peace
of mind only qn composing a work exclusively devoted to the depiction of
the Lord's glorious attributes and His teachings on Knowledge and
Devotion, and the result was that the world got from Vyāsa the
invaluable gift of the Bhagavata Purana depicting the life and teachings
of Sri Krishna. From the mental depression of the modem Vyāsa, the world
has obtained the Kathāmrita
(Bengali Edition) the Gospel of Sri
Ramakrishna
in
English.
Sri Ramakrishna was a teacher for both the Orders of mankind, Sannyāsins
and householders. His own life offered an ideal example for both, and he
left behind disciples who followed the highest traditions he had set in
respect of both these ways of life. M., along with Nag Mahashay,
exemplified how a householder can rise to the highest level of sagehood.
M. was married to Nikunja Devi, a distant relative of Keshab Chander
Sen, even when he was reading at College, and he had four children, two
sons and two daughters. The responsibility of the family, no doubt, made
him dependent on his professional income, but the great devotee that he
was, he never compromised with ideals and principles for this reason.
Once when he was working as the headmaster in a school managed by the
great Vidyāsāgar, the results of the school at the public examination
happened to be rather poor, and Vidyāsāgar attributed it to M's
pre-occupation with the Master and his consequent failure to attend
adequately to the school work. M. at once resigned his post without any
thought of the morrow. Within a fortnight the family was in poverty, and
M. was one day pacing up and down the verandah of his house, musing how
he would feed his children the next day. Just then a man came with a
letter addressed to 'Mahendra Babu', and on opening it, M. found that it
was a letter from his friend Sri Surendra Nath Banerjee, asking whether
he would like to take up a professorship in the Ripon College. In this
way three or four times he gave up the job that gave him the wherewithal
to support the family, either for upholding principles or for practising
spiritual Sadhanas in holy places, without any consideration of the
possible dire worldly consequences; but he was always able to get over
these difficulties somehow, and the interests of his family never
suffered. In spite of his disregard for worldly goods, he was, towards
the latter part of his life, in a fairly flourishing condition as the
proprietor of the Morton School which he developed into a noted
educational institution in the city. The Lord has said in the Bhagavad
Gitā that in the case of those who think of nothing except Him, He
Himself would take up all their material and spiritual responsibilities.
M. was an example of the truth of the Lord's promise.
Though his children received proper attention from him, his real family,
both during the Master's life-time and after, consisted of saints,
devotees, Sannyāsins and spiritual aspirants. His life exemplifies the
Master's teaching that an ideal householder must be like a good
maid-servant of a family, loving and caring properly for the children of
the house, but knowing always that her real home and children are
elsewhere. During the Master's life-time he spent all his Sundays and
other holidays with him and his devotees, and besides listening to the
holy talks and devotional music, practised meditation both on the
Personal and the Impersonal aspects of God under the direct guidance of
the Master. In the pages of the Gospel the reader gets a picture of M.'s
spiritual relationship with the Master how from a hazy belief in
the Impersonal God of the Brahmos, he was step by step brought to accept
both Personality and Impersonality as the two aspects of the same
Non-dual Being, how he was convinced of the manifestation of that Being
as Gods, Goddesses and as Incarnations, and how he was established in a
life that was both of a Jnāni and of a Bhakta. This Jnāni-Bhakta outlook
and way of living became so dominant a feature of his life that Swami
Raghavananda, who was very closely associated with him during his last
six years, remarks: "Among those who lived with M. in latter days, some
felt that he always lived in this constant and conscious union with God
even with open eyes (i.e., even in waking consciousness)."
(Swami
Raghavananda's article on M. in Prabuddha Bharata vol. XXXVII. P.
442.)
Besides undergoing spiritual disciplines at the feet of the Master, M.
used to go to holy places during the Master's life-time itself and
afterwards too as a part of his Sādhanā. He was one of the earliest of the disciples to
visit Kamarpukur, the birthplace of the Master, in the latter's
life-time itself; for he wished to practise contemplation on the
Master's early life in its true original setting. His experience there
is described as follows by Swami Nityatmananda: "By the grace of the
Master, he saw the entire Kamarpukur as a holy place bathed in an
effulgent Light. Trees and creepers, beasts and birds and men all
were made of effulgence. So he prostrated to all on the road. He saw a
torn cat, which appeared to him luminous with the Light of
Consciousness. Immediately he fell to the ground and saluted it"
(M
The Apostle and the Evangelist by Swami Nityatmananda vol. I. P.
40.) He had similar experience in Dakshineswar also. At the
instance of the Master he also visited Puri, and in the words of Swami
Nityatmananda, "with indomitable courage, M. embraced the image of
Jagannath out of season."
The life of Sādhanā and holy association that he started on at the
feet of the Master, he continued all through his life. He has for this
reason been most appropriately described as a Grihastha-Sannyāsi
(householder-Sannyāsin). Though he was forbidden by the Master to become
a Sannyāsin, his reverence for the Sannyāsa ideal was whole-hearted and
was without any reservation. So after Sri Ramakrishna's passing away,
while several of the Master's householder devotees considered the young
Sannyāsin disciples of the Master as inexperienced and inconsequential,
M. stood by them with the firm faith that the Master's life and message
were going to be perpetuated only through them. Swami Vivekananda wrote
from America in a letter to the inmates of the Math: "When Sri Thākur (Master) left the body, every one gave us up
as a few unripe urchins. But M. and a few others did not leave us in the
lurch. We cannot repay our debt to them."
(Swami
Raghavananda's article on M. in Prabuddha Bharata vol. XXX P.
442.)
M. spent his weekends and holidays with the monastic brethren who, after
the Master's demise, had formed themselves into an Order with a Math at
Baranagore, and participated in the intense life of devotion and
meditation that they followed. At other times he would retire to
Dakshineswar or some garden in the city and spend several days in
spiritual practice taking simple self-cooked food. In order to feel that
he was one with all mankind he often used to go out of his home at dead
of night, and like a wandering Sannyāsin, sleep with the waifs on some
open verandah or footpath on the road.
After the Master's demise, M. went on pilgrimage several times. He
visited Banāras, Vrindāvan, Ayodhyā and other places. At Banāras he
visited the famous Trailinga Swāmi and fed him with sweets, and he had
long conversations with Swami Bhaskarananda, one of the noted saintly
and scholarly Sannyāsins of the time. In 1912 he went with the Holy
Mother to Banāras, and spent about a year in the company of Sannyāsins
at Banāras, Vrindāvan, Hardwar, Hrishikesh and Swargashram. But he
returned to Calcutta, as that city offered him the unique opportunity of
associating himself with the places hallowed by the Master in his
life-time. Afterwards he does not seem to have gone to any far-off
place, but stayed on in his room in the Morton School carrying on his
spiritual ministry, speaking on the Master and his teachings to the
large number of people who flocked to him after having read his famous
Kathāmrita
known to English readers as The Gospel of Sri
Ramakrishna.
This brings us to the circumstances that led to the writing and
publication of this monumental work, which has made M. one of the
immortals in hagiographic literature. While many educated people heard
Sri Ramakrishna's talks, it was given to this illustrious personage
alone to leave a graphic and exact account of them for posterity, with
details like date, hour, place, names and particulars about
participants. Humanity owes this great book to the ingrained habit of
diary-keeping with which M. was endowed. Even as a boy of about
thirteen, while he was a student in the 3rd class of the Hare School, he
was in the habit of keeping a diary. "Today on rising," he wrote in his
diary, "I greeted my father and mother, prostrating on the ground before
them" (Swami Nityatmananda's 'M
The Apostle and the Evangelist' Part I. P 29.) At another place he wrote, "Today, while on my way to school, I
visited, as usual, the temples of Kāli, the Mother at Tharitharia, and
of Mother Sitala, and paid my obeisance to them." About twenty-five
years after, when he met the Great Master in the spring of 1882, it was
the same instinct of a born diary-writer that made him begin his book,
'unique in the literature of hagiography', with the memorable words:
"When hearing the name of Hari or Rāma once, you shed tears and your
hair stands on end, then you may know for certain that you do not have
to perform devotions such as Sandhya any more."
In addition to this instinct for diary-keeping, M. had great endowments
contributing to success in this line. Writes Swami Nityatmananda who
lived in close association with M., in his book entitled
M - The Apostle and Evangelist:
"M.'s
prodigious memory combined with his extraordinary power of imagination
completely annihilated the distance of time and place for him. Even
after the lapse of half a century he could always visualise vividly,
scenes from the life of Sri Ramakrishna. Superb too was his power to
portray pictures by words."
Besides the prompting of his inherent instinct, the main inducement for
M. to keep this diary of his experiences at Dakshineswar was his desire
to provide himself with a means for living in holy company at all times.
Being a school teacher, he could be with the Master only on Sundays and
other holidays, and it was on his diary that he depended for 'holy
company' on other days. The devotional scriptures like the Bhagavata say
that holy company is the first and most important means for the
generation and growth of devotion. For, in such company man could hear
talks on spiritual matters and listen to the glorification of Divine
attributes, charged with the fervour and conviction emanating from the
hearts of great lovers of God. Such company is therefore the one certain
means through which Sraddha (Faith), Rati (attachment to God) and Bhakti
(loving devotion) are generated. The diary of his visits to Dakshineswar
provided M. with material for re-living, through reading and
contemplation, the holy company he had had earlier, even on days when he
was not able to visit Dakshineswar. The wealth of details and the vivid
description of men and things in the midst of which the sublime
conversations are set, provide excellent material to re-live those
experiences for any one with imaginative powers. It was observed by M.'s
disciples and admirers that in later life also whenever he was free or
alone, he would be pouring over his diary, transporting himself on the
wings of imagination to the glorious days he spent at the feet of the
Master.
During the Master's life-time M. does not seem to have revealed the
contents of his diary to any one. There is an unconfirmed tradition that
when the Master saw him taking notes, he expressed apprehension at the
possibility of his utilising these to publicise him like Keshab Sen; for
the Great Master was so full of the spirit of renunciation and humility
that he disliked being lionised. It must be for this reason that no one
knew about this precious diary of M. for a decade until he brought out
selections from it as a pamphlet in English in 1897 with the Holy
Mother's blessings and permission. The Holy Mother, being very much
pleased to hear parts of the diary read to her in Bengali, wrote to M.:
"When I heard the Kathāmrita,
(Bengali name of the book) I felt as if it was he, the Master, who was
saying all that."
(Ibid
Part I. P 37.)
The two pamphlets in English entitled the
Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna
appeared in October and November 1897. They drew the spontaneous
acclamation of Swami Vivekananda, who wrote on 24th November of that
year from Dehra Dun to M.:"Many many thanks for your second leaflet. It
is indeed wonderful. The move is quite original, and never was the life
of a Great Teacher brought before the public untarnished by the writer's
mind, as you are doing. The language also is beyond all praise, so
fresh, so pointed, and withal so plain and easy. I cannot express in
adequate terms how I have enjoyed them. I am really in a transport when
I read them. Strange, isn't it? Our Teacher and Lord was so original,
and each one of us will have to be original or nothing. I now understand
why none of us attempted His life before. It has been reserved for you,
this great work. He is with you evidently."
(Vedānta
Kesari Vol. XIX P. 141. Also
given in the first edition of the Gospel published from
Ramakrishna Math, Madras in 1911.)
And Swamiji added a post script to the letter: "Socratic dialogues are
Plato all over you are entirely hidden. Moreover, the dramatic part is
infinitely beautiful. Everybody likes it here or in the West." Indeed,
in order to be unknown, Mahendranath had used the pen-name M., under
which the book has been appearing till now. But so great a book cannot
remain obscure for long, nor can its author remain unrecognised by the
large public in these modern times. M. and his book came to be widely
known very soon and to meet the growing demand, a full-sized book, Vol.
I of the Gospel,
translated by the author himself, was published in 1907 by the
Brahmavadin Office, Madras. A second edition of it, revised by the
author, was brought out by the Ramakrishna Math, Madras in December
1911, and subsequently a second part, containing new chapters from the
original Bengali, was published by the same Math in 1922. The full
English translation of the Gospel
by Swami Nikhilananda appeared first in 1942.
In Bengali the book is published in five volumes, the first part having
appeared in 1902 and the others in 1905, 1907, 1910 and 1932
respectively.
It looks as if M. was brought to the world by the Great Master to record
his words and transmit them to posterity. Swami Sivananda, a direct
disciple of the Master and the second President of the Ramakrishna Math
and Mission, says on this topic: "Whenever there was an interesting
talk, the Master would call Master Mahashay if he was not in the room,
and then draw his attention to the holy words spoken. We did not know
then why the Master did so. Now we can realise that this action of the
Master had an important significance, for it was reserved for Master
Mahashay to give to the world at large the sayings of the Master."
(Vedānta
Kesari Vol. XIX P 141.) Thanks to M., we get, unlike in the case of the great
teachers of the past, a faithful record with date, time, exact report of
conversations, description of concerned men and places, references to
contemporary events and personalities and a hundred other details for
the last four years of the Master's life (1882-'86), so that no one can
doubt the historicity of the Master and his teachings at any time in the
future.
M. was, in every respect, a true missionary of Sri Ramakrishna right
from his first acquaintance with him in 1882. As a school teacher, it
was a practice with him to direct to the Master such of his students as
had a true spiritual disposition. Though himself prohibited by the
Master to take to monastic life, he encouraged all spiritually inclined
young men he came across in his later life to join the monastic Order.
Swami Vijnanananda, a direct Sannyāsin disciple of the Master and a
President of the Ramakrishna Order, once remarked to M.: "By enquiry, I
have come to the conclusion that eighty percent and more of the
Sannyāsins have embraced the monastic life after reading the
Kathāmrita (Bengali name of the book) and coming in contact with you."
(M
The Apostle and the Evangelist
by Swami Nityatmananda Part I, P 37.)
In 1905 he retired from the active life of a Professor and devoted his
remaining twenty-seven years exclusively to the preaching of the life
and message of the Great Master. He bought the Morton Institution from
its original proprietors and shifted it to a commodious four-storeyed
house at 50 Amherst Street, where it flourished under his management as
one of the most efficient educational institutions in Calcutta. He
generally occupied a staircase room at the top of it, cooking his own
meal which consisted only of milk and rice without variation, and
attended to all his personal needs himself. His dress also was the
simplest possible. It was his conviction that limitation of personal
wants to the minimum is an important aid to holy living. About one hour
in the morning he would spend in inspecting the classes of the school,
and then retire to his staircase room to pour over his diary and live in
the divine atmosphere of the earthly days of the Great Master, unless
devotees and admirers had already gathered in his room seeking his holy
company.
In appearance, M. looked a Vedic Rishi. Tall and stately in bearing, he
had a strong and well-built body, an unusually broad chest, high
forehead and arms extending to the knees. His complexion was fair and
his prominent eyes were always tinged with the expression of the divine
love that filled his heart. Adorned with a silvery beard that flowed
luxuriantly down his chest, and a shining face radiating the serenity
and gravity of holiness, M. was as imposing and majestic as he was
handsome and engaging in appearance. Humorous, sweet-tongued and
eloquent when situations required, this great Maharishi of our age lived
only to sing the glory of Sri Ramakrishna day and night. Though a very
well versed scholar in the Upanishads, Gitā and the philosophies of the
East and the West, all his discussions and teachings found their
culmination in the life and the message of Sri Ramakrishna, in which he
found the real explanation and illustration of all the scriptures. Both
consciously and unconsciously, he was the teacher of the
Kathāmrita the
nectarine words of the Great Master.
Though a much-sought-after spiritual guide, an educationist of repute,
and a contemporary and close associate of illustrious personages like
Sri Ramakrishna, Swami Vivekananda, Keshab Chander Sen and Iswar Chander
Vidyāsāgar, he was always moved by the noble humanity of a lover of God,
which consists in respecting the personalities of all as receptacles of
the Divine Spirit. So he taught without the consciousness of a teacher,
and no bar of superiority stood in the way of his doing the humblest
service to his students and devotees. "He was a commission of love,"
writes his close devotee, Swami Raghavananda, "and yet his soft and
sweet words would pierce the stoniest heart, make the worldly-minded
weep and repent and turn Godwards."
(Prabuddha
Bharata Vol. XXXVII P 499.)
As time went on and the number of devotees increased, the staircase room
and terrace of the 3rd floor of the Morton Institution became a
veritable Naimisaranya of modern times, resounding during all hours of
the day, and sometimes of night, too, with the word of God coming from
the Rishi-like face of M. addressed to the eager God-seekers sitting
around. To the devotees who helped him in preparing the text of the
Gospel,
he would dictate the conversations of the Master in a meditative mood,
referring now and then to his diary. At times in the stillness of
midnight he would awaken a nearby devotee and tell him: "Let us listen
to the words of the Master in the depths of the night as he explains the
truth of the Pranava."
(Vedānta
Kesari XIX P. 142.)
Swami
Raghavananda, an intimate devotee of M., writes as follows about these
devotional sittings: "In the sweet and warm months of April and May,
sitting under the canopy of heaven on the roof-garden of 50 Amherst
Street, surrounded by shrubs and plants, himself sitting in their midst
like a Rishi of old, the stars and planets in their courses beckoning us
to things infinite and sublime, he would speak to us of the mysteries of
God and His love and of the yearning that would rise in the human heart
to solve the Eternal Riddle, as exemplified in the life of his Master.
The mind, melting under the influence of his soft sweet words of light,
would almost transcend the frontiers of limited existence and dare to
peep into the infinite. He himself would take the influence of the
setting and say,'What a blessed privilege it is to sit in such a setting
(pointing to the starry heavens), in the company of the devotees
discoursing on God and His love!' These unforgettable scenes will long
remain imprinted on the minds of his hearers."
(Prabuddha
Bharata Vol XXXVII P 497.)
About twenty-seven years of his life he spent in this way in the heart
of the great city of Calcutta, radiating the Master's thoughts and
ideals to countless devotees who flocked to him, and to still larger
numbers who read his Kathāmrita
(English Edition : The Gospel of Sri
Ramakrishna),
the last part of which he had completed before June 1932 and given to
the press. And miraculously, as it were, his end also came immediately
after he had completed his life's mission. About three months earlier he
had come to stay at his home at 13/2 Gurdasprasad Chaudhuary Lane at
Thakur Bari, where the Holy Mother had herself installed the Master and
where His regular worship was being conducted for the previous 40 years.
The night of 3rd June being the Phalahārini
Kāli Pooja day, M. had sent his devotees who used to keep company
with him, to attend the special worship at Belur Math at night. After
attending the service at the home shrine, he went through the proof of
the Kathāmrita
for an hour. Suddenly he got a severe attack of neuralgic pain, from
which he had been suffering now and then, of late. Before 6 a.m. in the
early hours of 4th June 1932 he passed away, fully conscious and
chanting:
'Gurudeva-Ma,
Kole tule na-o
(Take
me in your arms! O Master! O Mother!!)'
SWĀMI TAPASYĀNANDA
Sri
Ramakrishna Math, Madras
March 1974.
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