Swami
Aftab Joo Wangnoo
The
Adorable Saint
by
Prof. A.N. Dhar
Religion
and culture are intertwined in Hinduism;
this is evident from the time- honoured
institution of sainthood in India that has always
got wide acceptance and support from our society.
Saintly orders of many hues and varieties have
flourished in this country for ages, since the
beginning of the Vedic civilization. Even in the
present age of science and technology, sainthood
survives in our land and the true saint continues
to command respect in society. I have witnessed
this fact with particular interest as a native of
the valley of Kashmir since my boyhood days.
Sadhus and mahatmas hailing from various corners
of the country, wearing ochre robes or moving
about semi- nude (their bodies smeared with ashes)
have traditionally been served, fed and treated
with great care and respect by the Kashmiri
Hindus. We specially noticed this during the days
of the yatra of the devotees, who included sadhus
in bulk, to the Amarnath Cave.
Swami
Aftab Joo Wangnoo
Kashmiri
Saints
However,
the Kashmiri Hindu saint himself, as a son of the
soil, has maintained his identity in preferring to
stay indoors, remain a member of the household
though leading a godly/celibate life. Most
Kashmiri Hindu saints - though some chose to live
in seclusion, in ashrams or cottages - did not
look different from householders in respect- of
dress or food habits. Of course, the bearing of a
saint or some outward mark (such as the length or
shape of the tilak) would suggest that he should
be a godly person. Since neither monasticism nor
living apart in hermitages is stressed upon in the
Saiva or Sakta doctrines that prevailed among the
Hindus in the valley, it is understandable why our
saints would not attach any special significance
to external renunciation, requiring them to
distance themselves from the household life. All
the same, sadhus and mahatmas from outside the
valley, recognized as such through distinct
outward marks, were treated with reverence here.
To
illustrate what true sainthood means, as I see it,
I have chosen to talk about the Kashmiri Hindu
saint, Swami Aftab Joo Wanganoo, affectionately
called 'Akalal' by his devotees, who I came to
know early in my life when I was 18 years old.
Born in 1893, he was a resident of Babapora,
Habakadal, Srinagar.
I
recall, with feelings of reverence and gratitude,
my fruitful association with him that did not,
however, last long. This was because he gave up
his mortal coil in 1943 (when he was 55 years
old), only within a year of my meeting him.
It
was way back in 1947, when my friend Trilokil and
I studied at the A.S. Degree College, Srinagar,
that we met Swami Akalalji for the first time at
the famous Kshir Bhavani shrine, Tulamula,
Kashmir. Though carefree as young men, we had
almost an identical interest in spirituality then
and were inwardly engaged in the quest for Truth.
Destiny brought us into contact with this saint at
a crucial phase in our lives. It was my mother who
actually directed us to the precise spot at the
Tulamula shrine where the Swami was seated, amidst
a number of his followers, under a chinar tree
close to the holy spring of the Bhavani. As we
bowed to him, he immediately dropped a 'hint' to
us that conveyed that he had been "waiting
for us".
Spirituality
and Worldly Duties
At
the very outset, when Triloki and I met the Swami,
he was forthright in telling us that "as the
bird employs two wings to fly, you have to
practise spirituality and undertake worldly duties
simultaneously, i.e., "combine parmarth and
vevhar". This was meant to convey to us that
the sadhak should maintain a delicate balance
between the practice of meditation and involvement
in worldly obligations. The Swami pointedly told
us that we had to get married; this implied that
he did not see marriage as an obstacle to the
attainment of spirituality in spite of the fact
that he himself had remained a brahmacharin. What
I can also infer now from his pronouncement is
that probably he could foresee that we had to work
out our past karmas as men of the world and,
therefore, he advised us to discharge our
household duties for our well-being in all
respects.
I
recall further that as Swami Akalalji spoke kindly
words to us at the Kshir Bhavani shrine, we felt
wholly drawn to him as if we had known him long.
He stood up from the spot he had sat upon and just
strolled about. Grabbing the opportunity, we
followed him and unfolded to him whatever we had
to say as spirituality seekers. His response was
encouraging: "My heart is delighted".
Then we three sat together at another spot and
were joined by some more devotees. One of them,
pointing towards Triloki and me, asked Akalalji
whether we were his friends. In reply, he
remarked: "Whom you call my friends are my
very eyes". In Kashmiri, the reply sounded
lyrical, a rhyming couplet: "tuhend geyi
mether, sen geyi nether". What an intimacy
grew within a short time between the saint we met
and ourselves !
Crucial
Observations
Then
Swami Akalal performed a parikrama of the holy
spring and we walked in step with him, listening
to the instructions he gave us further. I vividly
recollect the two crucial observations he made:
i)
He was categorical in saying that we had to make
the best possible use of our present lives - this
should consist of consolidating what we had
achieved in our past lives. It is the stability
that has to be prized most in the spiritual path,
he emphasized. This brings to my mind what Lord
Krishna reveals in the sixth chapter of the Gita--that
the aspirant has to build on what he has attained
in his past life until he is firmly established in
sadhana (a 'long' pursuit, indeed!).
ii)
Cautioning us, the Swami said that during the
course of his life, an aspirant has to remain
mentally alert and vigilant throughout to avoid
pitfalls. Inward purity and peace have to be
cultivated at all costs. This calls for patience
and perseverance - qualities highly necessary for
advancement in spirituality. The Swami gave an
illustration to drive home the point: just as the
flowing stream "swallows up" whatever
refuse is thrown into it, so should an aspirant
develop in himself the capacity for bearing
hardships; he should remain unruffled in the
extremes of joy and sorrow, never losing his
mental equilibrium. The Swami observed further
that facing the severities of life heroically and
retaining mental composure even in adverse
circumstances are a kind of penance that pays the
aspirant rich dividends in spiritual terms.
After
receiving the updesh (teaching) so liberally given
by the saint (through the Bhavani's grace), we
took leave of him and left the shrine, accompanied
by my mother. Then followed our many periodic
visits to his residence at Babapora. During the
first visit (following our meeting with him at
Tulamula), we found to our joy that Akalalji was
reciting some mystical verses of his guru, Swami
Zanakak Tuphchi, to some of his devotees seated in
front of him in his room; the verses were
delivered by him in a tuneful voice that made a
profound impact on the listeners. I specially
noticed the small temple-like wooden structure,
erected to the left of Swami Akalal's seat, in
which was installed a life-size painting of
Zanakakji (seated properly in the pose of a saint)
with the picture of Akalalji drawn in miniature
towards the bottom, just below the guru's feet. On
all the walls of the room were seen hanging, or
pasted, the photographs of a large number of well-
known Kashmiri Hindu saints of the valley, most of
whom had already left this world. It was Swami
Akalalji himself who had taken pains to collect
all these photographs.
Discourses
for Teaching
As
our visits to the Swami's house got frequent, we
came very close to him. Whenever we found him
alone, he would lend his ear to our queries and
satisfy us with his pointed answers. Often he
quoted lines from the mystical utterances of
several celebrated Kashmiri saint-poets, including
Lal Ded. He had also a good knowledge of the whole
text of the Gita and would recite appropriate
slokas during the course of a discourse to clarify
points and reinforce his teaching. He was well
aware of the writings of Swami Vivekananda on Yoga
and Vedanta and was also conversant with
Patanjili's Yoga Sutras. Usually in the evenings,
whenever there was no likelihood of any visitor
intruding, he would talk to us in close confidence
and reveal his experiences to us. Very often we
heard him chanting these lines in a state of
ecstasy: "Sivoham Sivoham Siva Kevelohan/Sat
Chitananda Rupah, Sivoham, Sivoham. "
I
quite remember how in response to my question
once, he talked to us about Maya, characterizing
it as the mysterious power of the Lord of the
Universe. Dwelling on the distinction between
Sukshama Maya and Jada Maya (which I could not
quite comprehend then), he made two important
observations: (i) It is very difficult, but not
impossible, to be free from the entanglement of
Maya. The solution of the problem, he said, lies
in the aspirant's ability to stand mentally aloof
and not get involved in the maze of this
phenomenal world of sensory experience. For this,
an aspirant has to cultivate dispassion and the
power of detachment. The Self, he said, is to be
realized as the Lone witness of all that goes
around us. (ii) The other way of piercing the veil
of Maya, and thus getting at the Truth, is, he
maintained, through our inward purification
whereby one's intellect gets finer and finer
until, through divine grace, it seizes the elusive
Reality.
Unmistakable
Visions
During
the course of his conversation once, Swami
Akalalji, who, as I ponder now, had unmistakable
marks of the Master Yogi, explained to us the
significance of yogic visions. According to him,
having visions of various divinities and hearing
'voices' during meditation do have a significance
for the aspirant, but they are not to be looked
upon as the ultimate end. As one achieves purity
of mind and progresses in meditation, visions do
occur and may be seen as landmarks on the path,
indicating that the spiritual goal is within the
reach though, in terms of the steps or stages, its
attainment may be still distant - the spiritual
path having been aptly compared to "the
razor's edge". The human form divine,
encountered during the course of sadhana as the
aspirant advances, may be taken as the lotus that
emerges from the mansarovar of the yogi (when his
mind is serene and still). All such experiences
are valuable, indeed, but the aspirant's main goal
has to be the realization of God, which is no
different from Self-realization. All divine forms,
the Swami said, are only a reflection of our
Swarupa (Real Form): that is essentially Formless,
comprehending Being and Becoming, paradoxically
perceived as the still/ever-throbbing Light of
Pure Consciousness.
In
this context, I must mention, for elaboration,
what Akalalji one day told me when I was his lone
listener in his room. He said that the divine
forms that the sadhak sees in meditation as
distinct from himself fade wholly in the state of
samadhi: all duality dissolves here and the self
abides in perfect tranquillity; there is no one to
converse with and all conversation drops. What
remains is pure Consciousness-Bliss. This is the
stage when the little self stands wholly conquered
and the aspirant attains Sivahood. About 48 years
have passed since I heard this illuninating
account of Self-realization from the Master,
beloved Akalalji. The nectarine words I heard then
still linger in my memory as a constant source of
inspiration.
Swami
Zanakak Tuphchi
The
present account of Swami Akalalji would be
incomplete without something said about the
spiritual eminence of his Guru, Swami Zanakak
Tuphchi. Zanakakji lived a hundred years, man
years of which he spent at the Wanganoos' at
Babapora until he attained Nirvana. Here he was
looked after with great care by Akalalji and
others in the family (his unmarried elder brother,
Sirikakji Wangnoo, and two married brothers,
Gopinathji and Balji Wangnoo, besides two married
sisters). It is said of Zanakakji that he was an
accomplished yogi and had spiritual sidhis at
command. There are two anecdotes that were
narrated to Triloki and me, by Swami Akalalji
which confirm the fact.
Once
Zanakakji directed him (Akalalji) to spend a
couple of weeks in solitude inside the Parimahal
building on the hill adjacent to the shrine of
Goddess Zishta in Srinagar. Akalalji obeyed and
stayed away from home, absorbed in meditation. He
witnessed a miracle happening every day: all that
he needed for his puja and also what he needed to
feed himself would materialize at the spot he had
chosen for his sadhana. The Swami also talked of
his special love for Brari-Angan, Uma Nagri, where
his younger brother, Gopinathji, an employee of
the State Forest Department, had been posted for
three years. Here he practised meditation
undisturbed. Once he stayed here for a continuous
period of six months and experienced deep samadhi
that was stable. Talking of the experience, he
said: "The period of six months seemed to me
just a brief interval of six seconds". This
was, of course, a miracle of a different order, a
sign of his consummation as a sadhak, his
attainment of the "summit" of divine
consciousness. Surely, he was a befitting disciple
of his accomplished guru.
The
other incident is a fearful story of Swami
Akalalji's encounter with an Aguri, who stayed in
the Bairow Mandir, Narsingarh, Srinagar. The Aguri
had befriended Akalalji for some time and one day
he almost succeeded in his evil design. This was
to offer him as a human sacrifice through his
occult power, but the design failed because
Zanakakji's grace came to the disciple's rescue.
As the Aguri started his kriya, Akalalji, who was
seated opposite him, started feeling spell-bound
(his limbs chained as it were). Some luminous
thread-like object materialized before him that
gradually took the form of a snake. There were
seven earthen plates containing flaming wicks
immersed in ghee between the Aguri and Akalalji.
When the snake that was formed in the air had
moved on to the fifth plate and was very close to
Akalalji, he turned his thoughts to his guru
Zanakakji, seeking his spiritual help.
Immediately, he felt the guru whispering these
words into his ear: "Spit into the dhooni
(sacred fire)". He did accordingly and was
instantly released from the spell. He rushed back
home, where he was admonished by Zanakakji and
advised to beware of persons such as the Aguri. On
the following day, Akalalji, out of curiosity,
again visited the Bairov Mandir and found to his
surprise that the kriya had recoiled on the Aguri;
in the process he had iost his own life.
Devotion
to Guru
Among
the many things that impressed me most about Swami
Akalalji was his extreme devotion to the guru. On
several occasions, when he mentioned Zanakakji's
qualities, he went into bhava-samadhi. In memory
of the guru, he performed a yagya twice annually;
on these occasions he worked with devotion and
fervour, paying personal attention to all the
participants: a crowd of sadhus specially invited
besides his own devotees and relatives, who all
were served with prasad.
Swami
Akalalji's father, Shri Keshav Joo Wangnoo, served
as a revenue clerk at Leh during the reign of
Maharaja Ranbir Singh. He was assassinated while
in service. In view of this tragedy. his widow,
Kudamal, and children had to face great hardships.
Swami Akalalji had to abandon his studies at the
eighth standard; he took up the job of a messenger
in the State Telegraph Department, Srinagar, to
earn for the big family as his elder hrother had
also done earlier (taken up a job in the State
Revenue Department).
Akalalji's
mother was a noble and deeply religious woman. He
himself was the most religious of all her six
children. As a boy, he spent most of his time in
the company of saints and frequented religious
places.
He
came into contact with Swami Zanakak Tuphchi
through his brother-in-law, Shri Janki Nath Misri,
a disciple of Zanakakji. Soon Akalalji got
attracted to the Swami, who gladly accepted him as
his disciple.
I
have gathered some additional biographical
information, reproduced below (a few facts having
been mentioned already), concerning Swami Akalalji
from his nephew. Shri Makhanlal Wangnoo; it
touches further upon his family background and
also tells us something more about his guru
Zanakakji.
Devoted
Disciple
Swami
Zanakakji was originally a resident of Krimshur,
Badgam, whence he moved to Srinagar and stayed
first at the Tuphchi's at Dalhasanyar. Thence he
shifted to the house of Shri Janki Nath Misri.
Akalalji served his guru devotedly, paying regular
visits to the Misris tor the purpose. Usually. he
brought him dinner from his home cookcd hy his
mother, after he got free from his official duty.
Once, on a snowy night at 9 p.m., he went with a
bowl of food to Shri Misri's house to be served as
dinner to Zanakakji. The main gate of the house
was bolted from inside; despite Akalalji's
repeated knocking at the gate, no inmate came
forward to open it. The devoted disciple remained
waiting outside and fell asleep (with the bowl of
food in his hands). Next morning, at about 4 a.m.,
Zanakakji got up and opened the gate. Seeing thc
devout Akalalji asleep (carrying the bowl), he
woke him up, took him inside and ate the food that
had by now got frozen.
From
Shri Janki Nath Misri's house, Swami Zanakakji
shifted permanently to his disciple Akalalji's
residence at Babapora. The disciple soon realized
that he could not devote himself wholly to the
service of his guru and, at thc same time,
continue serving the State Telegraph Department.
He chose to give up his job and thus had all the
time at his disposal to serve his Master. In turn,
Zanakakji lavished all care on his promising
pupil, who did not take long in learning the
skills of a yogi and advancing on the spiritual
path.
Akalalji's
sadhana included daily visits in the afternoon to
Hariparbat. Here he practised meditation for hours
at the foothill just below the Kali temple. While
performing Parikrama of Hariparbat, not even once
did he go up to the shrine of Goddess Sharika (Chakreshwari
temple) and preferred to bow to the Devi from the
foothill itself.
Under
the directions of his guru, Akalalji read the Guru
Gita (in Sharda script) every morning. He also
recited the slokas of Bhavani Namasahastrastuti
and Indrakshi Strotam in the evenings. He was vely
fond of devotional songs and music; Kirtans and
Bhajan Mandalis were often held at his house.
People
in difficulty, who came to seek his blessings,
were received by him with love. He gave them basma
(sacred ashes) from his guru's Kangri (the firepot
a Kashmiri uses in winter), which he had preserved
as a relic. To some he gave yantras, consisting of
sacred words written in saffron-ink on bojpatra.
He also used the knife of his guru for heaiing the
sick; he applied its touch to the ailing part of a
patient's body. Those who sought his help had,
obviously, all faith in him. They included the
local Muslims too.
Unostentatious
Saint
Swami
Akalalji was an unostentatious saint, who never
dissociated himself from household duties. There
was nothing about his dress that would mark him
off as a sadhu; he smoked and was a non-
vegetarian. He took pleasure in coaching his
school-going nephews, Shri Makhanlal and his
younger brother. Makhanlalji remembers still how
once he requested his uncle to tell him what he
should do to cultivate the habit of getting up
early in the morning, without being roused up by
anyone. The Swami prescribed a method:
"Direct the pillow you rest your head on to
wake you up at the desired time". Then a
youngster, Makhanlal practised the instruction
with success, which he describes today as a
"sort of inculcation for determined
action".
Swami
Akalalji visited the holy cave of Amarnath many
times. Every year he gifted clothes, money etc. to
many sadhus and mahatmas that joined the yatra to
the cave.
Swami
Zanakakji was learned and versatile. His
devotional/mystical poems in Kashmiri, written in
his own hand, were carefully preserved by the
Wangnoos until they left the troubled valley six
years back. (It is hoped that no harm has been
done to any of the relics kept in the room
Zanakakji had occupied for years.) He was good at
astrology and could read horoscopes very well.
When he looked at the horoscope of his young
disciple, Akalalji, he noticed that Venus occupied
the twelfth house (Sagittarius), which he
considered unfavourable. Using satfron- ink he
made a cross-mark on the planet and instead placed
it in a different house (to ensure that the planet
had a benefic influence on the native). As if to
fall in line with what Zanakakji had done,
Akalalji too did something similar (but not
identical) to help the daughter of one of his
devotees, in whose horoscope Mars was in a house
unfavourable to her matrimonial life, predicting
widowhood. Through a religious ritual, she was
'married' to a sapling to ward off the evil
influence of the planet. It was seen that in some
time the sapling withered completely, showing that
the tantra had worked well. Later, the girl got
married and her husband lived long.
Company
in Distress
Makhanlalji
confirms the view that Swami Attab Joo was the
senior gurubhai (spiritual brother) of Bhagawan
Gopinathji. He not only visited the house of
Akalalji when his guru Zanakakji was alive but
also when yagyas were performed in memory of him
by the senior disciple.
As
reported by a devotee of Swami Akalalji, namely
the late Shri Shivji Mattoo, resident of Nawakadal,
who once accompanied the Swami to the Kshir
Bhavani shrine, he witnessed a miracle. When the
Swami, along with his devotees, was returning from
the shrine by a Doonga (houseboat), he unveiled
his back to the inmates at Shadipur; they found
visible marks of lashes on this part of his body.
That was the time when the Bread Movement launched
by the Kashmiri Hindus was on. The Swami then
revealed that the agitating young boys were being
caned mercilessly at Srinagar, and, therefore, he
desired that they should reach Srinagar speedily.
This incident confirms that Akalalji was in
spiritual tune with the youngsters in pain and
distress.
References
1.
Shri Triloki Nath Dhar, author of several books,
including Life and Teachings of Rupa Bhawani.
2.
He furnished this information to me in response
to my queries incorporated in a questionnaire. I
thankfully acknowledge his help.
(Prof.
Dhar retired as Head of the Department of
English, Kashmir University, recently. With
several books on literature and religion to his
credit, he was also Professor Emeritus. He
contributes to K.S. also.)
Source:
Koshur
Samachar
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