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Please do not contact indiayogi.com for ashram bookings. You need to contact the ashram directly. We only provide information on the ashrams.
The ashram of Sathya Sai Baba at Puttaparthi believes
in fostering ananda (bliss), to wean people away from vice, mitigate suffering and
want.
The ashram with the lyrical name, Prashanthi Nilayam, is situated at Puttaparthi
in India's southern state of Andhra Pradesh. Seventy-five years ago, Puttaparthi
was just a village of two lanes; today, it is a famous town developed almost single-handedly
by Sathya Sai Baba.
Prashanthi Nilayam is a large, well-planned ashram, bearing everywhere the stamp
of its in-sync-with reality founder. So, while you will find several impeccably
maintained temples there, a kalpavriksha ('wish-fulfilling tree) and a 'meditation
tree', and a lovely, airy high-domed darshan hall where the Swami meets his devotees,
there also is within the sprawling complex a post office, a public relations desk,
a canteen and even a bakery.
Sathya Sai Baba inaugurated the ashram on November 23, 1950, on his 25th birthday.
At that time, of course, it was just a new mandir (temple), constructed to accommodate
the increasing numbers of devotees. By then, the young Swami's fame had swept through
newly independent India. People flocked to see his 'miracles' - the way he plucked
things like flowers, candy, idols, nectar out of thin air. His spontaneously composed
bhajans were being sung all over Andhra Pradesh.
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Leela on the banks of the Chitravathi |
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All the seemingly carefree leela on the banks of the Chitravathi notwithstanding,
Sathya Sai Baba already was a man with a mission. At 23, he had written a letter
to his brother defining his life-goals. He proposed to foster bliss (ananda), to
wean people away from vice, mitigate suffering and want, and teach his devotees
to treat joy and grief with equanimity. At 75, the Swami has been able to fulfil
these aims to an amazing extent, admit even his most cynical assessors. The Swami
recently celebrated his birthday on November 23.
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Helping the needy
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Prashanthi Nilayam has grown into a unique ashram, with a free school and a deemed
university, as well as a super-speciality hospital where open-heart surgery and
kidney transplants are performed free of charge for the needy every day. Sai Baba
also has another tranquil ashram (Brindavan) at Whitefield in the outskirts of Bangalore,
where yet another Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences is coming
up on 52.26 acres of land donated by the government of Karnataka. This free hospital
too will serve the poor. The Swami has said he will attain samadhi at age 93, which
gives him almost two more decades to work towards achieving his goals.
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"The divine world is here itself"
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The teachings of this frizzy-haired, saffron robe-clad yogi are as rational as his
bountiful 'materialisations' defy so-called rationality. For him, all religions
are great moral paths and God is omnipresent. As he says, "Prema Swaroopas! God
is in us. All the energies and all the powers are in us. We have to recognise this
truth and conduct ourselves properly. There is no separate heaven or any other world
elsewhere! The divine world is here itself."
Sai Baba preaches a life of self-discipline, love
and active service. Self-discipline in daily life gives us the power not to waste
"even a grain of rice," to limit our wants to what is essential, and eschew vices.
Love begets tolerance and harmony in society and defeats divisive forces. Active
service means making full and practical use of whatever education or talent we may
have and serving humanity to the utmost extent possible in our circumstances. Although
Hindu deities and ideals appear as metaphors in the Swami's discourses, his teachings,
in their quintessence, propagate a simple, uncompromising morality that people of
all faiths can appreciate. This is perhaps why people from all over the world come
to Prashanthi Nilayam (Abode of Peace) to meet a yogi who has travelled abroad only
once - to Uganda in 1968. (Read more
about Sathya Sai Baba in our Guru Section.)
Heads of states and ambassadors from Fiji, Mauritius, Sri Lanka, Italy and several
South American nations have visited the ashram. The Duchess of York had two interviews
with the Swami in 1997. Visitors from Japan, Eastern Europe, Russia and Southeast
Asia and USA are common. In India, apart from the surge of ordinary people, whom
the Swami loves, at Prashanthi Nilayam all round the year, many politicians, artistes,
physicians, scientists, industrialists and film stars are among regular high-profile
guests and donors at the ashram.
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Calendar of events at Prashanthi Nilayam |
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January: Makara Sankranti, Vaikuntha Ekadashi, Sports and Cultural Festivals
(of the Nilayam schools)
February-March: Maha Shivaratri
March-April: Yugadi (New Year), Rama Navami
May 6: Easwaramma Day (dedicated to Swami's late mother)
June-July: Guru Poornima
August-September: Shri Krishna Jayanti, Onam, Ganesha Chaturthi
October-November: Navaratri and Vijayadashami, Diwali
November 23: Sathya Sai Baba's birthday
December 25: Christmas
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Contact Information |
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Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba,
Prashanthi Nilayam,
Anantapur District, AP 515 134,
India
Official website: http://www.sathyasai.org/
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Other Important Centres |
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Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba,
Brindavan,
Kadugodi, Bangalore 560 067
India
There are some 1,200 centres of the Sri Sathya Sai Organisations all over the world,
information about which can be had from Prashanthi Nilayam, the official website
or by emailing the webmaster of the site.
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How to reach Prashanthi |
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Southern Railway has opened a broad gauge link between Penukonda and Puttaparthi,
and now there is a direct three-hour rail service between Bangalore and Puttaparthi.
Besides, once the Puttaparthi-Dharmavaram link is completed by end-2001, Northern
Railway too will run direct trains to Puttaparthi.
The nearest airports to the ashram are Puttaparthi (6 km) and Bangalore (180 km).
Indian Airlines operates a flight twice a week between Mumbai and Chennai via Puttaparthi
when the Swami is at Prashanthi Nilayam.
Devotees could also fly to Bangalore and take a train/bus/taxi on to Puttaparthi.
Buses ply daily between Bangalore/Chennai and Puttaparthi.
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Dos and Don'ts of travel |
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Make travel reservations early as flights to Puttaparthi get booked months in advance
during rush seasons (July-August and November to January).
For taxis, contact authorised travel agencies with help from airport/railway station
inquiry desks to avoid getting fleeced.
Avoid road travel at night. Prashanthi Nilayam remains closed from 9 pm to 4 am.
Try also to avoid the local road rush hours (4 pm to 7 pm).
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When to plan the trip |
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November to February is a good time to visit Prashanthi Nilayam because of the pleasant
cool weather. However, make your accommodation arrangements at the ashram early
because winters are busy and crowded at Prashanthi. Also, do correspond with the
ashram to find out whether the Swami would be in residence at Prashanthi when you
would be visiting.
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Accomodation at Prashanthi |
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Address your accommodation queries to:
Accommodations Office,
Prashanthi Nilayam,
Anantapur District, AP 515 134,
India
During busy festival or holiday seasons, you may be put up in the large halls, which
can each accommodate more than a hundred people. At these dormitories, washbasins,
toilets and showers are shared. You only pay Rs 10 a day to stay here. There are
separate halls for married couples and families, single men and single women.
There are also small, unfurnished rooms with attached bathrooms that are allotted
if available. Up to six people can stay together in these rooms and the rent is
Rs 40 per day.
There can be either the 'Roundhouses' and Blocks at New South and West Prashanthi
(with Western-style toilets) or the rooms at West Prashanthi with Indian-style toilets.
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Wherever you stay, you would need |
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a mosquito net
large sheets or sleeping bag or single-size air/cotton mattress
plastic bucket
mat
hangers, rubber gloves, disinfectant, earplugs, string or twine, plastic bags for
garbage disposal, old newspapers
Some of these and other things that you miss out can be bought or rented from the
ashram store.
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Meals/schedules/seva or service to be carried out at ashram |
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Vegetarian meals are available at the Canteen and condiments and snacks at the bakery
within the ashram premises.
Schedules at Prashanthi Nilayam change in accordance with the many festivals that
are celebrated there all round the year. The Swami believes that every visitor to
Prashanthi is there with the purpose of understanding him and his teachings. So
he wishes every guest to make full use of his/her time at the ashram to attune him/herself
to the atmosphere of spiritual quest and service that pervades the ashram. No guest
is compelled to follow any strict regimen, but the ashramites do have a regular
routine and anyone who really wants to know what Prashanthi Nilayam is all about
would do well to fall in with this routine.
Daily schedule
The ashram wakes up at 4 am and sleeps at 9 pm and the day begins with meditation
and Omkar at the prayer hall. Throughout the day, programmes are held at various
venues at the ashram, except two free, silent hours after lunch. Communal bhajan
singing, lectures, darshan of the Swami are usual.
Service is voluntary, but certain basic sharing of responsibilities is expected
during the ashram-stay. For instance, if you stay at the dormitory, you need to
take turns in sweeping the floor, cleaning the bathroom and disposing of the trash.
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Conduct and attire |
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The Swami advocates silence, introspection and a dignified bearing among the ashramites.
Earphones are to be used if you'd like to listen to music and an awareness of other
people's needs (including using an anti-snoring device in the dormitory if you snore
loudly!) is mandatory. No substance abuse is tolerated. Regarding attire, covering
the body is advised for men as well as women. Wear cotton if you find the heat oppressive,
but wearing garments that do not reveal the body are necessary.
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Passport, visa, duration of stay |
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Every overseas visitor must have a valid passport and visa covering the entire period
of his/her stay at the ashram. Visitors can stay at Prashanthi Nilayam for a maximum
of 60 days. Anyone who wishes to stay longer must seek prior permission from Sathya
Sai Baba.
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- Kohinoor Dasgupta
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