Bringing Happiness & Samskara
Into the Lives of the Tsunami Children
12 March 2005 — Alappad Panchayat, Kollam District, Kerala
Every morning after breakfast you see him—with his
book-bag slung around his shoulder, pedalling off the
Ashram grounds on his bicycle, he could easily be taken
for a student. But instead of textbooks, his bag carries
collections of bhajans, and he is not heading off to
school but to various tsunami-relief camps where he
plays, sings and talks with the children.
 |
"A few weeks after the tsunami, Amma asked
me to start going out to the villages," says
Brahmachari Manoj. "Amma said, 'The children
are in shock. They still have terror in their
minds. They saw the water rush in, and they still
are having fear. Bring some happiness into their
lives. Be with them, play with them, talk with
them.' She also told me to teach them some bhajans,
to help bring some samskara [cultural
values] into their lives."
|
And for the past two months that's what he has been
doing—12 hours a day, seven days a week. In all, Manoj
regularly visits nine camps and is intimately involved
in the lives of 400 children. And even when he's not
at the camps, he frequently has a crew of three or
four young boys at his side. He jokes with them and
asks them thought-provoking questions, even as he eats
his breakfast.
"I visit the Ashram's camp in Srayikkad almost
every day," he says. "The other camps—which
are either run by the government or by the villagers
themselves—I go to on a rotation, visiting each of
them two or three times a week. I teach them bhajans,
how to meditate and talk to them in general about spiritual
matters. I focus mainly on how they should respect
their parents. In India, we say matru devo bhava
pitru devo bhava acharya devo bhava, atithi devo bhava,
which means we should regard our mother, father, teachers
and guests as God. So I focus on the first aspect.
When they meditate, I ask them to worship their parents
by mentally washing their feet. I also tell them stories
from the Puranas, like the one about the race between
Ganesha and Muruga*."
For the past week or so, Manoj has been regularly
bringing the children to Amritapuri to sing bhajans
for Amma while She gives darshan. They sit right in
front of her in groups of as many as 30, spending up
to two hours belting out traditional namavalis and
other songs praising Sri Krishna, Devi and Lord Ganesha.
Amma liked the children's singing very much, but—ever
the Mother interested in helping Her children to develop
hidden talents—Amma asked Manoj to start teaching them
more complicated songs.
A week later, Manoj came with some children from Srayikkad
and they sang an original song—this one dedicated
to Amma. When they first sang it for Amma, she
all but completely stopped darshan so as to be able
to look into their beaming faces as they sang:
We have an Amma, our own Amma,
That Amma's name is Amritamayi!
Amma will give us a kiss,
Oh, how sweet that kiss is!
Amma will hug us and give us darshan,
Oh how blissful is that darshan!
Isn't everything but everything my Amma?
Aren't you my very own Amma?
Amma gives love to everyone.
Isn't She the Amma who is always smiling?
Isn't She the Amma filled with motherly love?
Isn't She the Devi who is ever protecting us?
We shall give a gift to our Amma.
Do you know what that gift is?
We shall not fight amongst ourselves, we shall
not quarrel.
Are we not Amma's children?
We shall study well and grow better.
Always we shall stay as one.
We shall tell no lies, we shall do no wrong.
Are we not Your dear children?
We shall listen to what our parents tell us.
At home we will be good children.
Amma has given us a prayer
Do you know what that prayer is?
Om lokah samastah sukhino bhavantu
Om lokah samastah sukhino bhavantu
Peace, peace, peace Om peace, peace,
peace
Manoj says that now if any of the children start arguing
or fighting, the other children will start singing: We
shall not fight amongst ourselves, we shall not quarrel.
Are we not Amma's children?
Manoj is not the only ashramite who is working regularly
with the children. Several brahmacharinis are regularly
holding classes for them, and recently the Ashram has
begun providing them with classes in tabala,
harmonium and swimming. Amma says that she wants to
provide them with classes in yoga as well.
At Amma's request, Manoj also talks to the
children about the tsunami and encourages them
to draw pictures with crayons, which more often
than not are of the disaster. "For a while they were having
nightmares," Manoj says. "They would
dream that friends of theirs who had died were
coming for them, calling out to them in the night.
A few of them even started sleepwalking. But
their relationship with Amma has given them a
lot of strength. They really feel Amma is watching
over them, protecting them. The fact that she
gave them food right from the first day of the
tsunami made such an impression on them. Now,
even the ones who are scheduled to take food
elsewhere are coming to the Ashram to have their
breakfast. And they always make a rice-ball offering
for Amma before they start eating."
|
 |
In this day and age when the Indian culture is suffering
at the hands of cable television, materialism and "modernity," Amma
is the resurrecting force, breathing life back into
the younger generation through the enthusiastic efforts
of young men and women like Br. Manoj. Samskara is
not weakness but strength, a strength we can see starting
to shine in the faces of village children around the
Ashram.
"I ask them, 'Where did you get your eyes?'" They
can't say. So I tell them, 'You got your right eye
from your mom and your left eye from your dad! So you
know what that means? With your right hand you have
to serve your mother and with your left hand you have
to serve your dad. And then with both hands, you serve
the whole world."
—Sakshi
*Ganesha and Muruga are both sons of Lord Shiva and
Goddess Parvati. Once Parvati challenged them to race
each other. The first one to make a round of the entire
universe would be the winner. Muruga set off as fast
as he could, but Ganesha took his time. Knowing that
the entire universe was in truth within his father
and mother, he simply walked around them once and prostrated.
The story teaches about God's greatness, in particular
in the form of one's parents.
Watch Video:
Children singing with Manoj in Popup Window
|