Ramalinga Swamigal
Overview and Significance
Arutprakasa Vallalar Chidambaram Ramalingam (5 October 1823 – 30 January 1874), whose pre-monastic name was Ramalingam, is one of the most famous Tamil Saints. He is commonly known in India and across the world as Vallalar, Ramalinga Swamigal, or Ramalinga Adigal. He is also one of the greatest Tamil poets of the 19th century belonging to a line of Tamil saints known as ‘gnana siddhars’ (gnana meaning higher wisdom).
The Samarasa Suddha Sanmarga Sathya Sangam (The Unified Pure Path of Absolute Truth) was spread and passed on by him not only in theory but especially in practice by his way of living which is an inspiration for his followers. Through the notion of Suddha Sanmarga Sangam (pure path of absolute truth), the saint endeavored to eliminate the caste system. According to Suddha Sanmarga, the prime aspects of human life should be love, connected with charity and divine practice, leading to pure knowledge.
Ramalinga advocated the concept of worshipping the flame of a lighted lamp as a symbol of the Eternal Power.
Life History
Ramalingam was born as the fifth son of Ramayya Pillai and Chinnammai in the small village of Marudhur in Southern India. One day, when Ramayya Pillai was away from home, a saffron-clad saint came to their house. The guest was treated courteously and fed with good dishes. Pleased immensely with the courtesy given to him, the saint at the time of his departure, blessed Chinnammai with some sacred ash and uttered the following words, ‘You will beget a son, who will be able to deliver the art of deathlessness, which will be a boon to the entire world.‘ So saying the saint disappeared. Soon Ramalingam was born, and when the child was five months old, the parents took him to Chidambaram temple to offer their grateful prayers. As usual, the priest lit the camphor and offered it to the Lord at the Sanctum Sanctorum. No sooner had the vision appeared, the child laughed loudly and gazed at it for a few seconds. This pleasant experience has been expressed in some of the poems edited by the saint subsequently.
‘No sooner the Light was perceived, happiness prevailed on me.‘
‘The sweet nectar was tasted by me as soon as the great Grand Light (Arutperunjothi) became visible.‘
Unfortunately, only one month after this event, when Ramalingam was six months old, his father, Ramayya Pillai, passed away. Chinnamai was heartbroken and under swollen grief since she did not know what to do with no breadwinner in the family. This worried her so much that she decided to leave Marudhur and settle at Chinnakavanam, a village in Chengalpattu district, her mother’s place, thinking she could lead the family with the help of her relatives. With this intention, she left the village with all her five children. After some years, when the elder brother had grown up, he showed some interest in looking after the family. Because Chennai was considered a place where he could find work, the family moved to Chennai. Ramalingam was taught elementary education from age five to nine by his elder brother Sabapathy Pillai. The young boy showed little interest in the formal education by his brother; instead, he used to go to the nearby temple of Lord Muruga, known as Kandakottam, and prayed to Lord Muruga to teach him the art of meditation.
On an auspicious day, a room upstairs was provided to the boy to carry on his studies without any disturbance. But instead of collecting books on literature and concentrating on the same, Ramalingam collected things for performing pooja, lit a lamp, and placed a mirror in front of it within the room. Sitting before it, he concentrated on a specific spot in the mirror where the brilliance of the lamp fell and used to become lost in deep meditation. As providence would have it, Ramalingam beheld the glorious vision of Lord Muruga, whose Grace and Divinity engulfed the entire mirror space. Ramalinga was filled with divine ecstasy, and such joy overpowered him to make him sing ethereal songs in praise of the Lord. By Divine Grace obtained this way, Ramalingam was blessed with the knowledge of all arts and skills and gifted with the ability and talent to perform miracles and Siddhis (wondrous deeds). Without the little boy’s knowledge, his elder brother’s wife witnessed the occurrences with awe and amazement.
Ramalingam continued to do meditation in front of the mirror for about three years, from 1832 to 1835. Lord Muruga appeared through the mirror and taught him the path of Wisdom, as narrated in the following poem of the Saint:
You taught me the Vedas
Your grace helped me to rise up.
You prevented me from going to unworthy Preceptors
You took me as your disciple for a short period. – Thiruvarutpa 5B/40:4
ACCEPTED AS A DISCIPLE BY LORD SHIVA
When Ramalingam was a boy of twelve years old [1835], while playing on the street with friends, Lord Shiva appeared in the form of a Saint. The Saint called him, took a garland of Rudraksha beads with a pendant in the shape of a Shivalingam with a flame at the centre [Shivamaalai], and put it around the neck of Ramalingam. He told him in a low voice that he would meet him in the night and went away. This event is described in the Thiruarutpa:
One evening when I was playing on the Street
with my friends as a boy of 12 years,
you put Sivamaalai around my neck. – 6B/11:9
It is difficult for me to explain how much effort was taken by me
from my age of twelve till this midday in the path of wisdom. – 6A/13:126
THE TEACHER SHOWS HIMSELF
With the eloquence he had in Tamil literature, his elder brother Sabapathy gave lectures in some rich people’s houses at their request. For this, he used to receive some remuneration, which provided for his family. Thus, Sabapathy entered into a contract with a rich man in Chennai to give a series of lectures. This went on smoothly for some days. But one day, he was laid down with a high fever and could not keep up his commitment. He was rather puzzled, not knowing what to do. He did not want to disappoint the organiser and the audience. As his wife knew the talents of his young brother, and as these were not revealed to others so far, she pleaded with her husband to send his brother to the place and fulfill the engagement.
Sabapathy, totally ignorant of his younger brother’s capacity, initially refused to accept her request, but as there was no alternative, at last, he agreed to send him on his behalf. He called on the boy and asked him to read out one or two stanzas before the audience and apologise before the organiser for his elder brother’s inability to keep up the engagements.
Even at the place of the sermon, where Ramalingam ventured to inform the news of his brother’s inability, the organiser was very disappointed. By that time, the hall was fully packed. To avoid any flutter from the audience, and as there was no one to continue the lecture, with much reluctance, the organiser asked the boy to say something.
The first word ‘Ulagelam’ beginning in Periyapuranam was taken up for annotation, after which words gushed through his mouth like water flowing in a river after torrential rain. Pin drop silence prevailed in the assembly, and everybody was surprised to see the extraordinary eloquence the boy had even at this young age. There was a consensus among all that he is a God sent. It was midnight, yet he had hardly finished explaining just two lines from the very first stanza itself. The explanation for each word came in a torrent, and thus, the time constraint was not felt by any of them. There was a considered opinion among all that the boy himself should continue the discourse, and it was agreed by the organisers also. The information was conveyed to his brother Sabapathy at once.
Sabapathy was very much perturbed to hear the news that there was a mass appeal for continuing the lectures by Ramalingam himself. His pride was pricked, and he wondered how a boy who had not stepped into a school could give such astounding lessons. However, he allowed Ramalingam to continue the lectures.
To verify the truth, Sabapathy himself went to the scene in a corner of the hall without the knowledge of others and his brother and listened to the lectures. He first thought that it was a dream. But second thought brought him to conclude that it was a fact and not a dream. The lecturer was none other than his younger brother Ramalingam. After returning home, he narrated the incident to his beloved wife, as she used to plead more about the young boy. Both averred that Ramalingam was not a mere boy but representative of God fully vested with His Divine Grace. Ramalingam returned home after finishing his discourse.
Having much regret and feeling sorry for all his discourteous behaviour shown towards Ramalingam, Sabapathy embraced him with affection and requested him to pardon him for all the trouble he had given in the past. Ramalingam stood easy as if he was not aware of difficulties as posed by his brother but kept quiet and was praising the Almighty inwardly as he was sailing along with the current with His Grace.
The news spread like wildfire to all places in the vicinity, and people began to surround Ramalingam to have a glimpse of the young boy and hear the divine voice emanating from his lips. Eminent scholars and religious heads became his students and disciples. Velayudha Mudaliar of Thozhuvur, the head of Tamil literature in the Presidency College, Chennai, was the first to step in. Several others also followed suit, and they used to address him as ‘Ramalinga Adigalar.’
Ramalingam undertook regular pilgrimages to holy shrines in the southern part of Chennai. He used to offer his prayers to the Deity enshrined there by way of songs. The poems swelled into thousands, and all have been compiled in two volumes and presented to the world at a later stage as ‘Thiru Arutpa,’ a composition of thousands of poems, with a small number in the prose form. It includes the letters written by Adigalar to his disciples to reply to their letters and prayers made before the Almighty in prose form.
At last, he settled in a village called Karunguli, which is now about ten kilometres from Neyveli. He continued to live there for about nine years.
Family Life
According to the principles of the Siddhas, family life is considered beneficial to meditation since it allows for balancing biological energies. Accordingly, Ramalingam married Dhanakodi, the daughter of his second elder sister. Ramalingam lived with his wife in Chennai for about seven or eght years, but the pressure of family life and having to care for his wife and mother eventually became too much for him, and he prayed to Lord Shiva for relief. Finally, after some time, both his wife and mother passed away, and Ramalingam was relieved of family worries and obligations.
Personal Appearance and Habits
In personal appearance, Ramalingam was a moderately tall, spare man – so spare, indeed, as to virtually appear a skeleton – yet a strong man, erect in stature, and walking very rapidly; with a face of a clear brown complexion, a straight, thin nose, large, fiery eyes, and with a look of constant sorrow on his face. Towards the end of his life, he let his hair grow long. He wore shoes, and his garments consisted of only two pieces of white cloth.
His habits were excessively abstemious. He was known to hardly ever take any rest. A strict vegetarian, he ate but once in two or three days and was then satisfied with a few mouthfuls of rice. But when fasting for two or three months at a time, he literally ate nothing, living merely on warm water with a bit of sugar dissolved in it.
He was a great alchemist. Frequently he changed a carnivorous person into a vegetarian; a mere glance from him seemed enough to destroy the desire for animal food.
As seen in the next section, Ramalingam faced hardship and opposition. He was described as having a look of constant sorrow on his face. During the latter part of his life, he often expressed his bitter sorrow for the sad state of things.
Controversy and Opposition
It is a well-known historical fact that the lives of Saints can at times be very hard, often because they meet opposition from religious orthodoxy. Ramalingam’s life was no exception, and the difficulties weighed heavily on him. The root cause occurred during his stay in Karunguzhi and Vadalur in the period from 1864 to 1869. Saiva religious people, led by Arumuga Naavalar, developed enmity because of differing scriptural interpretations and a lost debate. He criticised Ramalingam’s poetry, assassinated his character, and maliciously sued him in court.
Over time Ramalingam’s opponents developed a large following and even tried to poison him with arsenic. On one dark night, a large crowd of agitators came to his house in Vadalur and dashed the door forcibly. Ramalingam wept, holding the bolt of the door, and prayed to Lord Siva to rescue him. His suffering and agony were expressed by him in his poems:
Oh Lord! I cannot tolerate the words of abuse any longer. I am unable to take my food and go to sleep. – 6B/11:3
If you safeguard me, I will remain in this world; otherwise, I will die. – 6B/13:130
I cannot tolerate the fear, the troubles, and the sufferings; I can’t live! I can’t live! I can’t live! – 6B/13:133
When Ramalinga cried out for help while the mob was at his door Lord Shiva appeared there for his rescue:
Oh, Lord! You came in a double horse chariot with the Supreme Mother – 6C/16:4
In the dark night, the noise of the hard hoofs of two horses and the wheels of a chariot made the miscreants believe that a large crowd was rushing to the spot, and they ran away. Lord Shiva then consoled Ramalingam and left.
Oh, my son! Don’t be exhausted. – 4/2:4
Oh, my son! Don’t be perturbed by the cruel deeds of the people.
Oh, my son! You remain here itself with a stubborn mind – 4/2:6
You remain with full liberty in the building constructed by you. – 4/2:7
Finally, one day, a supporter of Ramalingam, Muthiah Padayachi, who was the Village Headman of the adjacent village of Mettukuppam, heard the news that the Saint’s life was in danger and rushed with some residents to rescue him. He made him stay safely in a separate, thatched house in Mettukuppam, which became the Saint’s residence from 1870 until the end of his life in 1874.
Tradition and Gurus
From age nine to twelve, for three years from 1832 to 1835, Ramalingam placed a mirror with a lamp in front of it in his room at Chennai and prayed to Lord Muruga to teach him how to meditate. Lord Muruga appeared through the mirror and taught him the path of Wisdom.
You taught me the Vedas
Your grace helped me to rise up.
You prevented me from going to unworthy Preceptors;
You took me as your disciple for a short period. – 5B/40:4
As noted above, at the age of twelve, while playing with friends outside on the street, Lord Shiva appeared before him in the guise of a Saint and placed a garland around his neck. There are hundreds of poems in the Thiruvarutpa showing that Lord Shiva Himself was the Guru of Ramalingam.
I learned from you; I heard Vedas from you;
I saw the heaven through you; I drank nectar through you;
I had done a very great penance, and it was admirable. – 2/1:16
Due to immaturity of mind, Ramalingam had a lot of doubts while doing meditation. As he did not want to disturb Lord Shiva frequently, he asked for a guide to help him. Then Lord Siva directed the Sages Thirugnana Sambandar [7th century AD] and Manikavasgar [9th century AD] to assist him. Both of them appeared in their subtle bodies before Ramalingan and talked with him.
Teachings
At the age of thirty-five, Ramalingam left Chennai during the year 1858. First, he went to Chidambaram where he had a debate with Kodaganallur Sundara Swamigal. At the request of one Ramakrishna Reddiyar he went to his house at Karunguzhi and stayed there for nine years. He was very much against the caste system because of the adverse impacts it had on society. Towards that end, he started the ‘Samarasa Vedha Sanmarga Sangam’ in 1865. In 1872 it was renamed ‘Samarasa Suddha Sanmarga Sathya Sangam,’ meaning ‘Society for pure truth in universal self-hood.’
In 1867, he established a free food facility named ‘The Sathya Dharma Salai’ in Vadalur. There all people are served free food without any caste distinctions. The land for the facility was donated by kind, generous people, and those registered documents are available for seeing by the visitors. This free facility continues its service till the present time.
Ramalingam intensely disliked people eating non-vegetarian foods, about which he said:
‘When I see men feeding on the coarse and vicious food of meat, it is an ever-recurring grief to me.‘
Entrance to the Sathya Gnana Sabha. The sign above it reads, ‘Only those who have renounced meat and murder should enter.‘
On 25 January 1872, Ramalingam opened the ‘Sathya Gnana Sabha’ (Hall of True Knowledge) at Vadalur. One of the primary teachings of Vallalar is ‘Service to Living Beings is the path of Liberation/ Moksha.’ He declared that death is not natural and that our life’s priority should be to fight death. He laid a very great emphasis on being vegetarian. He said God is ‘Arul Perum Jyothi,’ who is the personification of Grace or mercy and knowledge. He said the path of compassion and mercy is the only path to God.
In 1867 he established a centre for feeding the poor people. On the inaugural day, he lit the fire of the stone stove with a declaration that the fire should be ever alive and the needy shall be fed forever. Around 1872 he established the ‘Sathya Gnana Sabai,’ Hall of True Wisdom Forum, and ensured it was entirely secular. This place is not a temple; fruits, flowers are not offered, and no blessings were given. It was open to people of all castes except those who ate meat, who were only allowed to worship from the outside. He wrote in detail about the pooja to be performed in Gnana Sabai. Those who are under twelve years or those who are above seventy-two years alone were expected to enter Gnana Sabai and do poojas. The oil lamp lit by him is kept perpetually burning.
He said that souls are blinded by seven veils. There are seven cotton fabric screens, representing the seven factors that prevent a soul from realising its true nature. The entire complex is bound by a chain with 21,600 links, said to represent 21,600 inhalations by a normal human being. He said the intelligence we possess is Maya (illusory) intelligence which is not accurate and final intelligence. The path of final intelligence is Jeeva Karunyam (Compassion for living beings). Vallalar was opposed to superstitions and rituals. He forbade killing animals for the sake of food and advocated feeding the poor as the highest form of worship. As an opponent of the caste system, he condemned inequality based on birth. Today there are spiritual groups spread out worldwide who practice the teachings of Ramalingam and follow the path of Arul Perum Jothi.
A Life of Love and Compassion
Marital life did not distract Ramalingam from his religious duty. As an ardent follower of bhakti (the practice of devotional worship), Ramalingam was a relentless critic of practices based on birth, class, status, or privilege. He had no regard for the ‘Puranas,’ ‘Vedas,’ and ‘Agamas.’ He worshiped God as Light (Jyothi) and was a man of utmost love and compassion for all living creatures. He would weep at the sight of even a withering crop. He firmly believed in anna dana (food donation), a free offering of food to the needy.
Swamiji as Light Body
It can be seen from the history of his life that in his later years, his physical body had become tenuous and translucent. Disciples have recorded that it cast no distinct shadow. It has been reported that several attempts were made to photograph him, but since light passed through his body, no clear image could be obtained. What could be seen were only his clothing and a very misty vision of his face and limbs, and from such a translucent body made so by pure living, dematerialisation was but a few steps away.
Swami Ramalingam (Vallalar) himself says, ‘Life of eternal bliss is union with God. Those who have achieved this will have transmuted this impure carnal body into a pure golden body, and again have the pure body transformed into a super-sensitive, spiritual body.‘
Swamiji’s approach to spiritual life
Spirituality that secluded itself from ordinary people had no meaning for Swami Ramalingam (Vallalar). His God-consciousness was based on love and compassion. As already seen, he was never at peace when people went without food. What was the meaning of kindness and love if one did not satisfy the hunger of a fellow human being? Moreover, food was the basic need of the body, and the body was the seat of the soul. Without taking care of the body, how could anyone take care of the soul that dwelt in the body? Thus, according to Swamiji, the very basis of spirituality was feeding the hungry since the removal of hunger meant renovation of the living temple of God, the body.
Dharma Salai – Feed the Hungry
Dharma Salai was constructed as a house to feed the poor. According to Ramalingam, the central theme of the mission of a saint is to dedicate himself to selfless service to humanity at large. It is this higher aspect of every religion to which the saint gives prominence. He holds compassion as the basis of higher spiritual experiences. According to him, he who loves best serves best. He emphatically declared that love for God would develop in the human minds only and not in other creatures. When a man develops compassion towards his fellow beings, he is said to prepare the ground for Divine Grace.
Without Divine Grace, abiding love for God is not possible. The saint has used the term ‘Jeevakarunyam’ to denote profound compassion. Compassion is the fundamental trait of the character of a saint. This factor is apparent from his poetic appeals to the Almighty.
There are two aspects to compassionate service.
- Doing good to fellow beings when they suffer from hunger, thirst, disease, ignorance, poverty, and fear;
- Refraining from killing animals and consuming flesh.
As regards the first, he stresses relieving the hungry from hunger. If one pursues the virtue of relieving others from hunger, it is the supreme help. Then other kinds of help can be easily rendered by anybody else, as they are supplementary and sustain life for some more time.
The Saint insists that one should give help to all souls with his earned money and through his physical labour.
When this is not possible, he should at least pray for them. He insists on family men of low income to be prudent enough in spending money for feeding their own family and others who may happen to approach them for food. He thus advocates prudence and thrift. He not only dissuades the rich from spending money unscrupulously on a grand style during family ceremonies like marriages and other rituals but persuades them to feed the needy instead.
Sathya Gyana Sabai – Temple of Golden Wisdom
After the inauguration of Sathya Dharma Salai at Vadalur, Ramalingam lived in the hermitage called ‘Siddhi Valagam’ in the village Mettukuppam. There he used to give sermons which led him to be regarded as a spiritual guide and teacher. Admirers and disciples, and even Government Officials, changed their residence to live where they could constantly remain near him.
During this time, all the poems composed in his early days were compiled in five parts by his disciple Velayuda Mudaliar. The same was printed and published in a single volume. Instead of noting the editor’s name as ‘Chidambaram Ramalingam,’ which the saint used to put as his signature in all the letters and other poems he had written, the compiler noted it as ‘Thiru Arutprakasa Vallalar.’ This volume was produced before the Saint had been given a chance for perusal, thinking that the compiler would get the appreciation of the Saint for the work done. However, the situation changed otherwise. Instead of giving tributes to the work done, Ramalinga questioned the disciple as to why the name of the editor was changed, with whose permission it was printed, and to explain the significance of the new name.
Without knowing what to do, the disciple stood before the Saint with a shivering body and folded hands. Seeing his plight, the Saint came to his rescue and explained, as below. It is the Almighty who, in the form of supreme Effulgence, is bountiful in nature. Since He is termed as all giver, the name goes to the Lord himself and none else.
The disciple, after hearing the explanation given by the Saint, left the place with a peaceful mind and narrated the incident to his fellowmen. From this time onwards, the saint was called by that name, ‘Thiru Arutprakasa Vallalar,’ as desired by his disciples. The saint’s statements are well exemplified by his own experience. He attained the experience of the Lord’s Grace and earnestly wished that his fellow men all over the world should get a similar experience.
The universal path realised and lived by him has been propagated through the poems compiled by him. For this reason, his poems are styled as ‘Arutpa’ (the song of grace). It is literally meant that the poems are sung with the aid of Grace only. This is certainly correct since it is the divine law that without Grace not a single atom can move. The special feature is that Arutpa has been sung not only with God’s Grace, but it enables the readers to experience and make them live eternally under this Grace light. This is the peculiar nature of ‘Thiru Arutpa,’ and it makes one be absorbed in ecstasy.
A Short Sermon by Ramalingam
‘Those who received a human birth in this world should understand and obtain the benefit for the soul which is attainable through this birth, while there is still time.
To understand what is meant by the benefit for the soul: One should realise truly that the benefit for the soul is to live the unique great life at all times, at all places, and in all ways without any sort of hindrance, obtaining the Absolute Natural Bliss of God, who by His Power of Grace has made all the universes, all the worlds, all the things, all the living beings, all the ways of living and all the uses manifest and exist and enlighten them.
To know, by which to attain that great life, where one lives without any obstacle obtaining Natural Bliss. It should be known that it can be obtained only by Grace, God’s Natural Manifestation.
To know how to obtain Grace which is God’s Natural Manifestation: God’s Grace can be obtained only by leading a life of compassion towards all living beings and that not even a little of it can be obtained by any other means.
How is it that God’s grace can be obtained only by leading a life of compassion towards all living beings and not by any other means?
Grace is God’s Mercy, God’s Natural Manifestation, compassion means living beings’ sympathy or their souls’ natural manifestation. Therefore it is certain that by sympathy, we can get mercy and by manifestation get manifestation. It is the experience that any other thing cannot obtain; therefore, Grace can be obtained only by being compassionate to other living beings and not by any other thing. One should understand that no other proof is necessary for this.’
Summary
Ramalinga Swamigal Vallalar, commonly known in India and around the world as Vallalar, advocated a casteless society and was firmly opposed to superstitions and rituals. He forbade killing animals for the sake of food and condemned inequality based on birth. The primary teaching of Vallalar is:
1. Service to mankind is the path of Moksha.
2. God in the form of Grace is the personification of Mercy and Knowledge.
3. Mercy is a path to God.
Sacred Practices/Sadhana
A Divine Call for World Transformation into Supreme Consciousness came from Swami Ramalinga Vallalar in 1873. As an Avatar of the Supreme Consciousness, Swami Ramalinga came on earth to seed Supreme Grace Light. During his time on earth, he opened the doors of Supreme Grace Light and transformed his body into an Immortal Golden Body of Light. He transformed himself into a Supreme Grace Light Body and blessed humanity by giving the mantra [see below] to invoke Supreme Grace Light. His coming on this earth was not to attain immortality for himself but as a gift to the world. Because of this, he sacrificed his immortal body by dissolving it on this earth and didn’t go back to the ultimate divine source. He is still vibrantly available for anyone who calls him from his heart and ready for Ultimate Ascension in this life itself.
The Supreme Grace Light and Energy received by chanting this mantra are countless times more potent than any energy healing system available on this earth. Supreme Grace Light is the ultimate energy of the Supreme Consciousness, which is the source of all creation. Once we start invoking this Supreme Grace Light in our bodies, then Self-Transformation begins, and all the qualities of Supreme Grace Light, i.e., Ultimate Peace, Harmony, Bliss, and Abundance, start manifesting in us.
Guidelines for Meditation:
- Sit on a woolen mat in a quiet place with the spine erect, preferably facing East or North.
- Breathe deeply for 3-5 minutes
- Visualize Bright Supreme Grace Light at the Ajna Chakra/Third Eye Centre and chant the following mantra 108 times or 15-30 minutes.
Arut Perum Jyothi
Arut Perum Jyothi
Thani Perum Karunai
Arut Perum Jyothi
meaning:
Supreme Grace-Light
Supreme Grace-Light
Supreme Compassion
Supreme Grace-Light
Source: World Transformation, https://srividyasadhana.com
Miracles
A selection of a few miracles out of the many listed on www.vallalar.org:
(1) MERCURY TURNED INTO A BEAD
A magician came and requested the Swami, a Siddha, to turn mercury into a bead. The Swami gently poured into the hollow of his palm a little mercury and, after keeping the same closed for a while, dropped it as a mercury bead.
(2) FEEDING THE UNEXPECTED GUESTS
One night, food had been cooked in the Dharma Shala for a limited number of people. Unexpectedly about a hundred additional guests came at the time of serving the food. Shanmugam Pillai, the man in charge of the food section, reported to the Swami that food was not sufficient to serve all. The Swami immediately rose up, voicing forth ‘pich.’ This was Swami’s characteristic exclamation at the time of performing miracles, possibly signifying that it was a child’s play and there was nothing impossible. There was the divine blessing to do what was needed. According to Ooran Adigal, the biographer of the Swami’s life in Tamil, ‘pich’ is a short form of ‘Pichan’ (name of the divine Lord), which is derived from ‘Pichu.’ We may add that the Divine Lord performs miracles as if a play of a tender child (pinju Pillai or Pichu Pillai) or by an inexplicably miraculous way as in a divine madness (Pichu or Pithu). Thus with the exclamation of ‘Pich,’ the swami asked him to supply guests in sitting rows, leaf for serving food. The Swami himself served food by his hands. All took food sumptuously, but there was still food left remaining in vessels after serving all.
(3) PREMONITION OF FRESH SUPPLIES OF RICE
One day Shanmugam Pillai, the manager of Dharma Shala reported to the Swami that there was no stock of rice to cook. The Swami sat alone in a place and concentrated for a few seconds and then assured him that rice and all other things needed would come the next day. Exactly so, the next day, a devotee from Tiruthurai village brought three cartloads of rice and other provisions and reported that he had been asked in his dream the night before to bring in supplies of food.
(4) MASTERY OVER FIRE AND RAIN
In the summer month of April, many who came to the Dharma Shala at Vadalur suffered due to the drought and heat. The Swami knew about it and asked them to pour a vessel of water over his feet. The devotees did so. Shortly, there was a heavy downpour of rain. Devotees of the village Pudupet (near Cuddalore) heard of this and came to Vadalur and implored the grace of the Swami, as all wells of the village had become dry for want of rain. The Swami asked them to pour six pots-fulls of water over his head. They did so; There was a heavy downpour of rain immediately, and the springs of the six wells which had gone dry once again became active, bringing in fresh and very tasty supplies of water in the wells. The village thus had good rains to support and nourish its life and activity.
(5) DRY LAND TURNED INTO WETLAND
A relative of the Swami’s devotee, who was a tahsildar by the name Murugesa Pillai failed in his several attempts to have his dry lands changed into wetlands through petitions to the Government (possibly for facilities of irrigation). He implored the Swami for grace and received from Him the sacred ash of blessing. Thereafter, the dry lands could be converted into wetlands.
(6) FIRE DIES BY SIGNAL
In Pudhupettai near Kurinjipadi, a house caught fire. The Swami, who happened to be in the opposite house at that time, waved his cloth and the fire soon died down.
(7) RAIN WITHOUT DRENCHING
One evening Swami went out for a walk with the devotees. Suddenly it rained. All of them except the Swami got drenched in the rain. Not even a drop of rain was seen on Swami’s body.
(8) FIRE WITHOUT BURNING
In the Siddhi Valagam cottage house at Mettukuppam, the Swami used to keep on his two sides flaming fire in iron bowls of burning coke. The Swami sat in between them on a tub-like seat. (His direct disciple and biographer Kandasamy Pillai writes to say that the swami perhaps wanted to enjoy more intense heat than what was normal to his body which was golden). One day a devotee of the Swami by the name Sabapathy Shivacharya, the priest in charge of the Shrine of Satya Jana Sabha, suddenly entered the Swami’s room when his leg struck a bowl of burning coke. The burning coke scattered hither and thither and hit the Swami and himself. The visitor got alarmed and hastened to remove the burning coke that fell on Swami’s thigh by his hands. He burned his hands, but Swami’s body remained unaffected, and not even his cloth bore any mark of the burn. The Swami, however, said to him, ‘Why are you anxious? It (fire) will not affect me in any way.‘
(9) PHOTOGRAPHIC FAILURE
Once some devotees of the Swami brought a famous photographer named Masilamani Mudaliar from Madras to take a photo of the Swami. He attempted eight times, but each time he failed to get a picture of the form and figure of the Swami in the photo negative; only the white cloth which the Swami wore came into the picture.
(10) SHADOWLESS BODY
One day the Swami was standing in the sunshine with a devotee named Ayyasamy Pillai of Cuddalore. The Swami asked him, ‘What is the sign of a Suddha Jnani?’ The devotee remained silent, unable to answer. Then the Swami told him that there would be no shadow of the body of a Suddha Jnani. The fact that the Swami’s body did not cast a shadow on the ground came to be known thus. This proves the glory of one who had realized Suddha Satya Jnana, the Pure Truth Consciousness, and the Siddhi or perfection of the triple body.
NOTE: The Swami’s body, by transformation, had become full of divine Light within and without.
Source: www.vallalar.org
Final and Greatest Miracle:
The greatest miracle in the life of Ramalingam is his mysterious and final disappearance in a locked room.
On 22 October 1873, Rāmalingam raised the flag of brotherhood on his one-room residence Siddhi Valagam in Mettukuppam. He gave his final and most popular lecture about spiritual progress and the ‘nature of the powers that lie beyond us and move us.’ He recommended meditation using the lighted lamp from his room, which he then kept outside.
On 30 January 1874, Ramalingam entered the room, locked himself inside, and told his followers not to open it. After opening, he said, he will not be found there – He will be ‘United with Nature and ruling the actions of ‘all of the alls,’ as told in his poem called ‘Gnana Sariyai’. His seclusion spurred many rumors, and the Government finally forced the doors open in May of that year. The room was empty, with no clues.
Final Words and Swami Ramalingam Predicting His Return
- If you want the Grace of God, you sit before the lamp because God is in the form of Light now.
- Be kind to all living beings.
- I will not be visible for two and a half Kadigai [ 1 Kadigai = 60years]. The year of disappearance is 1874. 2 ½ x 60 = 150 years. 1874 + 150 = 2024 (!)
- I will be in this world as well as in the Universe. Afterward, when the Lord of Great Gracious Light comes, I will do miracles with this form of a human body.
- When this door remains closed, if the Government authorities order to open it, the Lord would be looking into it.
After informing as mentioned above, he went into the room and ordered to close the door and bolt and lock it on the outside.
Holy Sites and Pilgrimages
Chennai Kandakottam
Kandakottam Kandaswami Temple is located in the Parry’s Corner neighbourhood of Chennai city. Ramalingam and his mother lived with his eldest brother Sabhapati and his wife Pappathi at 31/14 Veerasamy Pillai Street at Sevenwells area of Chennai, which is in the area near Chennai Kandakottam Kandha swāmi temple. He spent a lot of his time at this temple. Ramalingam composed ‘Deiva mani malai’ here. At this temple, there is a hall called the Mukha mandapam, where the idols of Sarva Siddhi Vinayakar, Meenakshi Sundareswarar, Idumban, Sri Ramalinga Swamigal] and Pamban Swamigal are found. The locality where he lived has been renamed as ‘Vallalar Nagar.’
Satyagnana Sabha is a temple constructed by the Shaivite saint Sri Ramalinga Swamigal in the town of Vadalur in Cuddalore district, Tamil Nadu, India. It is an octagonal structure; the sanctum sanctorum of this temple is concealed from the main hall by seven curtains which are parted only on the Thai Poosam day.
The building was built in an octagonal shape which represents the eight bones in the human skull. Only two Saints established Sangha (sabha) in Indian and World history. One is Gautama Buddha; the other is Saint Vallalar. All Shaivite madams are primarily for religious pupils, to which ordinary people only go when a need arises. But a Sabha is a place where common people can go, join, organise and they can interact with spiritual people. Vallalar clearly mentioned this in his poetry as given below:
‘This sabha is a commonplace for everyone who follows San Maargam (good way).’
Near the Sathya Gnana Sabha, there is the Dharma Salai, where free food is offered to thousands of people every day. The Dharma salai has a stove that was lighted by Sri Ramalinga Swamigal (Vallalar), which is still being used for cooking.
Address: Vadalur, Tamil Nadu 607303, India
Bibliography
- As a musician and poet, Ramalingam composed 5818 poems teaching universal love and peace, compiled into ‘Six ThiruMuraigal’, which are all available today as a single book called Thiruvarutpa (thiru-arut-pa, Holy book of Grace).
- Another work of his is the Manumurai Kanda Vasagam, describing the life of Manu Needhi Cholan and Jeeva Karunya Ozhukkam, a work emphasizing compassion towards all sentient forms and insisting on a plants-only diet.
- Annamalai University’s complete compilation of Thiruvarutpa in all six Thirumurai in ten volumes
External Links
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramalinga_Swamigal
www.vallalar.org – a website dedicated to the life and teachings of Ramalinga Swamigal