ALEXANDRA
H.M. NAGEL
The Netherlands, August 2001
Summary
Since
the publication of a document titled The
Findings, March 2000, quite a few devotees of Sri Sathya Sai Baba have
become ex-devotees. The accusations against the Indian guru are enormous:
deceit, fraud, murder, undesired sexual intimacies with men, even minors. Prior
to The Findings, and afterwards, the
Internet has been the primary communication vehicle.
Introduction
When typing in www.srisathyasai.org.in,
the official site of Sai Baba’s ashram Prasanthi Nilayam lights up the screen.
Both sites show pictures, a logo, and pieces of text to inform the surfer what
it is about: a guru born in 1926 and living in Puttaparthi, South India, whose
teachings can be summarised in five Sanskrit words. Sathya,
or truth, dharma, right conduct, shanthi,
peace, prema love and ahimsa non
violence, are five ‘human values’.
Internet,
websites, links, e-mail addresses, surfing are words belonging to the
communication medium
that over the last few years has grown in importance. Internet is nowadays the means to globally gather and spread information, and to seek
contact with like-minded persons. This fact, combined with the global popularity
of Sai Baba, makes it reasonable to assume that besides the official
(inter-)national websites, there might be more sites on the Internet on Sathya
Sai Baba. This assumption is indeed true. Yet, it might still be surprising for
many people to learn that the number of sites exceeds a hundred.[ii]
Many of these present general information about the guru’s teachings,
pictures, meeting places and links to other sites.
Naturally,
it is through this very same medium that the beloved Sai Baba has been accused.
He is said to be a fraud, fake, charlatan, liar, and above all, a
homo-paedophile molesting innocent children. In the year 2000, quite a few,[iii] often very loyal, devotees, some of them for over 20 years, have become
ex-devotees. Many of their questions, much of their search for truth and the
results of their actions against Sai Baba, can also be found on the Internet.
Letters, for example, written by former Sai-organisation officials explaining
why they resigned from their functions, have been placed on Sai-critical
websites. They are meant to let others know that something very fundamental is
wrong with Sathya Sai Baba and the organisation.
In
short: the Internet is used by devotees to spread Sai Baba’s teachings, and at
the same time it is used by ex-devotees to inform and warn people about Sai
Baba. Counter measures from devotees against the negative publicity on the
Internet were not long in appearing. On open message boards devotees vehemently
argued with ex-devotees about the matter, even though Sai Baba on October 15,
1999 said in a sermon:
“Some
of the elders sitting at the Verandah are indulging in gossip; it is finding its
way into the internet. (…) Swami has nothing to do with the internet. Not only
now, even in future also. You should not indulge in such wrong activities.”[iv]
A
message he repeated on September 26, 2000 by saying “Internet is like a waste
paper basket”, followed three days later, on September 29, by
I
have already told you about internet, radio, video etc. We have seen so many
people who have been exposed to these media. But, what is their effect? All
transient, passing clouds that come and go. It is an utter waste of time. It is
all business oriented. That is not our aim. Do not hanker after internet: turn
to the innernet. Concentrate on inner vision.[v][AN1]
Actually,
these sayings contradict the blessing Sai Baba gave in July 1995 for starting
the official international website (www.sathyasai.org)
of the Sathya Sai Organisation. They also clash with the subsequent decision by
the Sathya Sai Organisation to set up an attractive website for the ashram (www.srisathyasai.org.in).
Moreover, the Computer Class Service Project of the Sathya Sai Baba Center in
New York provides courses on Internet use,[vi] and many students in Sai Baba colleges and universities also use the
Internet. And yet Sai Baba seems to feel threatened, (although his devotees will
not agree with this view, as Sai Baba is believed to be above all human feelings
and emotions) by the negative publicity which came out last year – due to the
Internet? Why else would he make these fairly recent statements?
In
another paper I have compiled, in as much detail as possible, a list of the
accusations against Sai Baba over the last three decades. This paper focuses on
the developments involving the religious movement inspired by this guru, which
have taken place since January 2000. It shows how the Internet has been a major
tool for ex-devotees to seek, find and present information critical of Sai. At
the same time, it has to be made clear that although some of the material
presented in the following pages may be disturbing, one ought to be very careful
before judging Sai Baba to be a homo-paedophile, or his devotees as blind
followers. Many more facets have to be taken into account before such an opinion
can be formulated.
The
research for this paper has mainly been carried out – how could it have been
otherwise? –through rather intensive web surfing for 1 to 3 hours daily
between June 2000 and February 2001, updated by a quick survey made in August
2001. The most important Sai Baba websites are listed and briefly described in
the Appendix.
Background
of the Sai-critical Websites
As
stated above, during the past year a large amount of information critical of Sai
Baba information has been posted on the Internet. This, of course, has a
history. In the past some people have become very critical towards Sai Baba.
Such persons and stories have been dismissed by many of his devotees as
emanating from critical individuals,
critical one time stories only –
therefore not important. These persons apparently did not understand Sai
Baba’s real message, and probably still had to learn how to come to terms with
their private disappointed egos. The belief that ‘Guru Baba will never leave
them, and such persons might over the years finally become aware of Baba’s
greatness’, is a common rationalised devotee way to look upon critical non- or
ex-devotees.[vii]
Some
non-devotees are ‘sceptics’, people who are very suspicious and critical
towards everything coming close to paranormal, superstitious, religious beliefs.
One of these is Herman de Tollenaere, a sceptic in the Netherlands, who
maintains a critical-towards-many-things website since 1997, of which a
collection of critical Sai Baba material is a section. More important for the
Sai Baba case is the Indian rationalist and magician Basava Premanand, the
editor of the monthly magazine Indian
Skeptic, in which he tries to expose all occult, magic and esoteric frauds
and fakes. For over 30 years Premanand has been following Sai Baba’s moves,
and whenever some (dubious) news item appears in an Indian newspaper, a copy
appears in the Indian Skeptic.
Examples: visits of Indian ministers to Prasanthi Nilayam, Sai Baba’s ashram,
(to show Sai Baba’s involvement in politics), the still unresolved murders of
six persons in the ashram in 1993 (four former students, Sai Baba’s personal
assistant and driver, and a MBA student from Sri Lanka who was living in the
room next to Sai Baba, were killed, but the case was never investigated),[viii]
as well as the alleged disappearance without trace of devotees of Sai Baba.[ix]
The contents and some of the articles of Indian
Skeptic have been on the Internet since at least since 1995.
Linked
to Premanand is Dale Beyerstein, a sceptic and philosopher from Canada. He
compiled a large number of inconsistencies regarding Sai Baba’s teachings, and
revealed some miracles Sai Baba is alleged to have performed as untrue.[x] His book Sai Baba’s Miracles. An
Overview is
available via the Indian Skeptic, and
turned up in full on the web.
The
long-standing host of one special Sai-critical niche of its own is David C.
Lane, Professor of Philosophy & Sociology at the Mt. San Antonio College,
California. As far back as May 1997, Lane, who is referred to for further
information in Beyerstein’s study, presented on his personal website
correspondence with, among others, Jed Geyerhahn, USA, and Said Khoramshagol,
born in Iran, now living in the USA. The correspondence, dated May 1997,
concerns the sexual encounters both young men had with Sathya Sai Baba when
invited by Sai Baba for private interviews.[xi]
Khoramshagol
started his critical Sai Baba website in 1998. Paul Holbach, of Italy,
presented, independently of others, his sceptical views on Baba on a site
between April 1999 and fall 2000. On February 9, 1999 Lane opened a ‘message
board’ on the Internet to create a platform for discussions between Sai Baba
devotees and those critical of Sai Baba. Messages sent to this board are
accessible for all surfers. It is here that gradually information exchanges
began between people, logged in under their own name (like p_holbach) or a
different name (like ‘Parvarti’, ‘saiblahblah’), about the problematic
stories concerning Sai Baba.
The
Findings
In
March 2000 a manuscript titled The
Findings was published in England.[xii]
Soon
after its physical appearance, in April or May, it was posted on the websites of
Khoramshagol and Holbach.[xiii] To be blunt, the document looks like a loose collection of e-mail
messages, bundled together with an introduction and epilogue written by David
and Faye Bailey. Much of its information, but not all, does stem from the
Internet; the lay-out of the writings adds to the appearance of it being
Internet messages only. The manuscript shows no date nor name or
city of publisher. It contains approximately 40 pages (the amount varies
depending on the version downloaded). At first sight, only one sentence on the
Contents page, “This document has been perused for libel [,] by a lawyer in
London” seems to dignify The Findings with some credentials. Nevertheless, the document has
created havoc among Sai Baba devotees.
David
Bailey, a British musician and teacher, became a follower of Sathya Sai Baba in
1994. Sai Baba paid him a lot of attention and Bailey became a so called
‘verandah man’, one of Baba’s chosen people who, during darshan, are
privileged to sit near Sai Baba’s interview room. For six years Bailey made
visits of a few weeks to Puttaparthi, once, twice, or when possible, three times
yearly. He became involved with musical performances in the ashram, and taught
music to the students of the Sai Baba schools.
After
introducing them to one another in 1996, Sai Baba married David Bailey and Faye,
a longtime devotee from Australia, in January 1997. Barely knowing one another,
they married afterwards according to the law and in church in England. They did
so as a result of their belief that Baba was guiding them this way. Both their
experiences with Sai Baba are compiled in three books, clearly showing their
devotion for him.[xiv]
As
a result of their close connections with Sai Baba, their books and David’s
music performances and lectures, the Baileys became extremely well known as
prominent devotees, who travelled around the world to spread Baba’s glory.
Everywhere they went, they were confronted with questions from fellow devotees,
including awkward questions of a sexual nature. This did not shake their faith;
they kept believing in Sai Baba, and explained all away with ‘Swami is only
love’. Whatever Swami did, it had to be divine. Until one day when the Baileys
were approached in the ashram by a student of one of the Sai Baba schools, who
pleaded with David: “Please Sir, do something to stop him sexually abusing
us!” From then on Bailey carefully began to listen to and search for critical
stories. One of the places he turned to was the Internet, where some information
could already be found. A long period of intensifying doubt, in which stories
were collected and verified, led to the publication of The
Findings.
Astonishingly,
the manuscript contains the stories of a few former Sai Baba students. They
openly confessed to preparing Baba’s chair in the interview room with
‘planted’ rings and other trinkets. They also revealed that when Sai Baba
leaves for darshan, he squeezes small tablets of vibuthi (made from ashes of cow
dung) between the middle and ring finger of his hand holding his robe. When
accepting letters of devotees, he simply shifts a tablet from this hand to the
other. So when ‘materialising the holy ashes,’ Swami simply crushes a small
tablet into powder. Anyone, it is said, who carefully watches Sai Baba’s hands
instead of his face, can discover the trick quickly. The same is said to be true
for the materialisations of jewellery. It often appears to be an ordinary
handiness of sleight of hand. Other than this, The
Findings refer to some alleged malpractices in the Sathya Sai hospital
(kidney-theft), the murders in 1993 are mentioned, as are some anomalies in Sai
Baba’s teachings. Particularly shocking is a brief section on Dr Naresh
Bhatia, who for six years was the head of the blood bank of the Sai Super
Specialty hospital:
Three
young students from Sai Baba’s junior male college were called for interview.
One of them, a seven year old boy student, came out of the interview room
crying. He continued to cry for two days, and was unable to eat or study.
That
evening Dr Bhatia, on duty in the children’s canteen, was asked to find the
cause of the child’s distress. He questioned and then examined the child, and
found that he had been sexually penetrated, via his anus. The child was taken to
Bangalore and re-examined. A second medical opinion confirmed sexual abuse.
Dr
Bhatia had been involved in sexual activity with Sai Baba for six years,
believing that he was serving divinity. He went to Sai Baba: “Why do you do
this to such a young child when you have all of us adults and the older students
to play with?”
Sai
Baba’s reply: “Don’t bargain with God!”
Soon
after, five men went to Dr Bhatia’s home, threatening his life with knives. He
made his escape by car, fleeing to Delhi.[xv]
The
spreading of The Findings started
mainly through an announcement in The
Quarterly, a three monthly magazine founded in England by Peggy Mason, a
long time Sai Baba devotee. After Peggy Mason passed away, Faye Bailey had taken
over the editorship. The March 2000 issue of The Quarterly indicated that David and Faye Bailey were not Sai Baba
devotees any more. Those interested to know why could order The
Findings. Devotees who ordered and read The
Findings and believed the stories to be true, passed it on to others. This
time they were not individual cases from disappointed egos, but many different
cases, and even children were involved!
Internet Dynamics
Many
people who read The Findings and were
affected by the document, went on the Internet and surfed to sites containing
information critical of Sai Baba. The message-board created by David Lane had
already become the meeting place to post and read bits and pieces of
Sai-critical information.[xvi]
The interaction increased after The
Findings had come out. Discussions flared up. New data surfaced. For
instance the sexual encounter Hans de Kraker had with Sai Baba in 1997 was
mailed to the Baileys, and was added to The
Findings. Someone offered the information that a particular building close
to the ashram gate, the one having the sign ‘Ayurvedic Massage Institute’ on
the outside, was a brothel. When entering for a massage, this person found that
a visitor was offered all kind of services by young boys and girls, depending on
how much the visitor was willing to pay. The building is said to be owned by a
younger brother of Sai Baba (named Jankiramaiah) and the doctor running the
business often sits on Baba’s verandah.
Delta_108,
the Internet name for Hari Sampath from India – nowadays living in the USA –
explained that he had left the organisation sickened after getting to know
inside information. He was a volunteer member of the intelligence and inner
security wing of the ashram between 1992 and 1995, in which period he cultivated
relationships with persons he considers to be members of the ‘second ring’
of Sai devotees. Belonging to the ‘first ring’ are the members of the Sri
Sathya Sai Central Trust and family members of Sai Baba. Members of the first
‘inner coterie’ are often of high social status and they stay in the Sai
Organisation for a long time. All these, according to Sampath, know that Sai
Baba is not omnipotent, omniscient, or omnipresent, the qualities believed to be
attributes of an avatar, a God-in-human-form, as Baba claims he is and his
devotees believe. The ring behind this inner coterie, the second ring, is built
up of presidents of national Sai Organisations, and presidents of States in
India. These people manage the money streams towards the Central Trust, and they
have ample opportunity to personally gain from it – as a fee for their
loyalty. Not all members of this second ring are aware of the huge sums of money
involved, and some are convinced Sai Baba is the avatar, says Sampath.[xvii]
When
information like this began to grow like a snowball, and more and more people
began to meet in cyberspace, things changed, naturally. Devotees became
ex-devotees. They had to cope with anger, and feelings of betrayal (spiritual
rape) by Sai Baba. Some of them posted rude, and accusing notes on the message
board. Devotees staying loyal to Sai Baba began to post just as upset or angry
messages.[xviii]
An impression:[xix]
July
24, 2000 message # 6963, by aoclery, ‘It’s time for the dirty gritty
again.’:
“S.B.
sucks boy’s penises and penetrates anuses from 7 to 30 yr olds. Lots of vice a
versa and sexual orgies in groups at Kodai. S.B. likes to watch boys having sex
in front of him also. He is a voyeur as well as a varied pervert it seems.
There
is a pedophile brothel at P.N.
There
are some drugs involved, perhaps ganja and more.
He
is an embezzler, a murderer, a liar and a cheat.
He
is a hypocrite for approving meat eating and alcohol consumption in HRC and HOBs
against his published teachings.
Om
Nama Sivaya, Tony. Sorry about this but too much crap is getting from the
point.”
[Abbreviations:
Kodai: residence of Sai Baba in Kodaikanal, P.N.: Prasanthi Nilayam, HRC: Hard
Rock Café, HOBs: House of Blues. The last two are set up by Isaac Tigrett, who
when he sold the Hard Rock Cafés, donated US$20 million for the Sathya Sai
Super Special hospital.]
September
3, 2000 message # 7820, by rkmsr, a reply to delta_108, ‘Re: Filthy>>
Hmm ?? Now you k’:
“(…)
We hindus and Indians are proud of our culture, and heritage. I don’t need any
advice from pigs and hyenas. If you are hungry, i will throw shit at your face,
eat it and keep quiet, RKMSR”
October 18, 2000 message # 9085, by aoclery, ‘Re:
what about this ????’:
“sb
says nothing most ghost written, he is not a swami, he is a molestor and anal
penetrator of children.”
October
19, 2000 message # 9104, by dark_knight_9, replying to aoclery, ‘Re: what
about this ????’:
“Oh
would you just shut up and say something different instead of saying the same
thing over and over and over againnnnnnnnn …..”
October 19, 2000 message # 9113, by aoclery:
“Heis
an arse bandit in pn molesting kids.”
When
the discussion on the board got clogged with off-topic pro-Sai postings, (only
on rare occasions will Lane, the webmaster, delete a message), out of sheer
frustration a new board was opened, promising to maintain a friendlier
atmosphere and delete off-topic messages. Also new critical websites got set up
– in the foreign languages Spanish, French, Polish and Dutch, carrying
translations of The Findings, letters
and testimonies. One message-board was initiated for people to share the grief
of having lost the dearly loved Sathya Sai Baba. Another impression:[xx]
November 19, 2000 message # 11, by phoenixboy28,
‘Feeling the sadness’:
“Dear
Contessa
I
am at that point now. I thought It didnt matter anymore that I was really
getting over it. I even tried to justify it by telling people to get over it and
move on. Thats not where I am today. I am feeling really sad and abandoned by
god. You know I still have his pictures sitting down off the walls in a pile
next to me as I write. Im finding it hard to let go, but Im just stalling the
inevitable.
I
was listening to Jewel singing one of her songs yesterday and I just burst into
tears. It felt great to cry and I sang along with her.
I
think theres heaps more crying to do. I feel it well up in my heart and I know I
have to release it, but its like letting go of sb and im still finding it hard.
Maybe
one day we can all cry together, and then I know we will laugh and heal our
hearts.
Love
Phoenixboy.”
November 21, 2000 message # 35, by lisabeth59840,
‘Re: Necessary Loss’:
“Dear
Contessa,
I
feel this way as well. How could I have been so self-deceiving, ignoring little
things that should have “stood out like a sore thumb”… One that troubles
me still is remembering how when my first child was a baby, I placed a picture
of SB near his crib where he could see it, thinking of course that it would be a
blessing to him. I remember very well how emphatically he said to me one day
“No like Baba! No like him!”
I
could go on and on but my daughter’s calling me!”
November 23, 2000 message # 57, by contessa92000,
‘Re: more signs along the way’:
“I
am wondering where my head was at that I was so impressed with this “God”
who had, or so I thought, the great capacity to manifest cow dung? My. My. My.
What an accomplishment.
I
am also wondering where my head was at when I gratefully received and ate it. My
My. My. What a fool.”
Ex-devotees
who wanted to stay up to date could contact Glen Meloy, a retired management
consultant in California, who after 26 years of devotion, could not deny the
authenticity of a hand-written account of a 15-year old boy he knew personally.
That document, in a rather detached tone, describes how he, the boy, had been
sexually approached by Sai Baba in two private interviews. Having become an
ex-devotee, Meloy became the co-ordinator of an email group that had formed
itself in Spring 2000, and had become rather active in the exposure of the
guru’s ‘dark’ side. When this group became too large – having grown from
a handful in the early summer 2000 to a list of 500 names by November – and
people on the list notified him they preferred to remain anonymous for the
others, he blindcopied the mailings to the large list.
The
e-mail Meloy sent out in June consisted of several messages per day. It
diminished to one message per week in November and from January 2001 onwards the
activity of mailing the complete list changed into sporadically messages on
changing intervals.[xxi]
The information varied from a forwarded e-mail letter written by illusionist
Enrique Marquez from Argentina (saying that he, Marquez, can perform the same
tricks as Sai Baba), to the news item that the book The Naked Sai Baba, written by a Japanese living in the United
States, had been published in Japan.[xxii]
The book contains material gathered from interviews held, among others, with
several men who attest to having been sexually abused by Sai Baba. Some mailings
concerned persons who shared their writings with Sai officials who were still
into denial, or believed Baba’s divinity. For example, the story of a mother
whose son had told her in 1980 that Sai Baba was a homosexual and tried to have
oral sex with him (the son). The case was at the time, in 1980, discussed among
Sai officials (Phyllis Krystal, John Hislop, Michael Goldstein, three Sai VIPs).[xxiii]
They decided to believe Sai Baba to be God, ergo, the boy and his mother had to
be lying.
Also
calls for protest letters to be sent to journalists or government officials were
made by Meloy.
For instance, it became known that two Sathya Sai Baba schools would open, one
in the US (Hartford, Connecticut), the other one in Canada (Toronto).[xxiv]
Since such schools integrate Sai Baba’s teachings, and it is believed that
this same Sai Baba is using (young) boys for his personal gratification, should
ex-devotees not try to stop such events? So, through Meloy’s efforts, letters
got mailed and faxed to newspapers to inform journalists on Sai Baba, and –
hopefully – to prevent the schools from opening.
A
major success of this ‘e-bombing’ method has been the withdrawal by UNESCO
of its participation in the conference on “Strengthening Values Education:
Innovative Approaches to Teacher Education for Peace and International
Understanding”. Sai devotees had been officially informed that the Institute
for Sathya Sai Baba Education had been invited by UNESCO and Flinders
University in Australia to participate in organising this conference, to be held
from 25-29 September in Puttaparthi. However, nowhere in the UNESCO
calendar was the conference listed as a UNESCO activity. The same
held for Flinders University. It turned out to be an initiative of the Institute
for Sathya Sai Eduction. When both UNESCO and Flinders
University had withdrawn their official participation in the conference, based
upon the information they had received (among the material being The
Findings) this, according to some ex-devotees, was not enough. UNESCO ought to explicitly state why it had withdrawn.
Only when the announcement came out on September 15, “The Organization is
deeply concerned about widely-reported allegations of sexual abuse involving
youths and children that have been levelled at the leader of the movement in
question, Sathya Sai Baba”, was it time for celebration.[xxv]
This message immediately found its way to Meloy’s subscribers, and the various
Sai-critical websites.
Websites
and Regular Media
The
UNESCO affair is typical of the exposé activities which took place during the
second half of the year 2000, and which in a more sporadic manner continue
today. Relatively small groups of ex-devotees are not only active in helping
others with their grieving process, and adding information to the disturbing Findings,
they also seek to place publicity in regular news media. They consider it
important for devotees and non-devotees to really know what has been happening
around and with Sathya Sai Baba. Therefore, they believe that newspapers ought
to carry articles, radio and television should offer programs, and (legal)
institutes ought to look into this matter. Information on websites only is not
enough because not all people are reached and somehow regular news media seem to
have more credentials.
However,
what journalists want and need besides hard proof, is news.
Subjective stories and opinions found on the Internet are not sufficient. Only
first hand accounts of a ‘victim’ and official complaints are newsworthy. So
far, just a minority of (young) men have been willing to openly talk about their
experiences, and, as far as publicly known, only one, Jens Sethi of Germany, has
filed an official complaint against Sai Baba. Based on names and stories found
on the Internet, a list of twenty accounts can be compiled, some of which are
second-hand, and some only concern Sai Baba massaging the young man’s genitals
with oil. In reality the list of victims of young men who have been sexually
abused, must run into the hundreds, if not thousands.[xxvi]
Against
this background it becomes understandable that ex-devotees consider all
publications having appeared in Canada, Australia, Denmark, Poland and the
Netherlands important.[xxvii]
Often, as soon as something appeared in a newspaper or magazine, it was
quickly posted on a website for all ex-devotees to see. Two stand out in the
exposé efforts: the
publication by Mick Brown in the English Daily
Telegraph on October 27, 2000,[xxviii]
and the article in India Today by
Vijay Thapa on November 25, 2000.[xxix]
The Brown article is important for the new case of ‘Sam Young’, and the
second article is especially valuable because India
Today is a rather conservative magazine distributed in six different
languages over the whole of India. The article reported on the massive
celebration of the guru’s 75th birthday on November 23, (although
less people showed up than expected – due to the Internet rumours?) and, more
importantly, some testimonies of the abused men are mentioned. Before the end of
the week the issue had sold out, and a second edition was printed. The last time
this happened with an issue of India Today
was after the murder on Rajiv Gandhi in 1991. The article attracted the
attention of members of the Indian parliament and personnel at foreign embassies
in New Delhi. As a result, the case has been discussed at these high political
levels.
Contrary
to his custom, Sai Baba himself seemed to react to the publication in his
Christmas discourse given on December 25, in Brindavan, his ashram at
Whitefield, near Bangalore. Speaking of Jesus, he said:
Many
people could not bear this popularity of Jesus Christ. They created a lot of
problems for Jesus and put him to suffering. They even attempted to take his
life.
In
the attempts on his life his disciples were also associated. Jesus had 12
disciples. The 12th disciple was Judas. In those days there was only one Judas,
but today there are many Judases. Because of the rise in number of such Judases
we find unsacredness developing all over the world.
[xxxi]
Shortly
after the appearance of an article on Swami’s discourse in the Times
of India,[xxxii]
the newspaper text dropped in the e-mailboxes of ex-devotees, who responded
immediately on the message boards with remarks like: “Who’s paying?”
“Shall I buy a Jaguar?” “If I’m getting paid for my expose efforts,
perhaps they sent the money to the wrong address!”[xxxiii]
As
if nothing had happened, a few weeks later, on January 19th, Sai Baba
attended the opening of a new Super Specialty hospital in Whitefield. The prime minister of India, A.B. Vajpayee, and three chief
ministers praised Sai Baba’s latest project.[xxxiv]
Besides
a few informative, or generally critical websites, the Sai Baba information
stems from and stays within the group of people (formerly) inspired by Sathya
Sai Baba. There are no attacks from ‘anti-cult warriors’ on the Sai Baba
websites, and so-called ‘flame wars’, the verbal fight on an increasingly
loud tone, take place within the (ex-) devotee group itself.[xxxv]
In retrospect, some ex-devotees do consider the Sai Baba movement to be a
cult, and express feelings of having been brainwashed – although they
participated of their own free will and were not forced, it was the group
dynamic that made you do things – through reading Baba books, singing bhajans
(devotional songs), meditations on his name, seeing in all events his divine
guidance, etcetera. The official site of the international Sathya Sai Baba
Organisation and www.geocities.com/the_sai_critic
carry sections explaining why the organisation is not a cult; the critical
websites offer links to cult-informative websites.
At
first sight, especially for those surfing to the sites now, an information
overload may make it difficult to sift the grain from the chaff. After a while
it will not be so difficult to see that the most important document is The
Findings, and much of the same material is posted on
several message boards, the most informative currently being www.snowcrest.com/sunrise,
www.exbaba.com
and www.sathyasaivictims.com. No really new information has surfaced after the
publication in India Today, and the discussions on the boards are merely
repetitions of previous ones.
What
stands out in the activities of the ex-devotees is the urge for publications in
the regular media and the lobbying for raising public awareness of the matter in
society in general. Many ex-devotees have experienced the sweetness and even the
miracles of once being a devotee, yet they cannot deny the sexual abuse stories
and they consider it their duty to prevent more happening. Therefore, the major
desire of ex-devotees is a thorough investigation on Sai Baba concerning the
accusations of sexual abuse especially, carried out by some independent
international governmental institution. Their activities are mainly a plea for
further investigation.
Time
will tell what the outcome will be. In the meantime, most probably, more
devotees will become ex-devotees, those ex-devotees having come to terms with
their loss of Sai Baba will go on with their lives, and a core group will remain
active until the Sai Baba case is finally properly investigated.
Acknowledgement
This
paper could not have been written without the information received from Glen
Meloy, Hari Sampath, David Bailey
and many other former Sai-devotees. Thanks to them, and the ones daring to speak
about their sometimes really troublesome experiences. Yet, thanks are also due
to those devotees who posted opinions on Internet message boards, as the picture
of Sai Baba would have become really one-sided had they not spoken out too.
Further thanks to the many friends and acquaintances interested in the recent Sai developments and in my involvement in the matter, as all communications helped me to explore the matter more thoroughly. I am particularly grateful to Paul W. Roberts for the brief, but to me very important, private email correspondence last April, Mick Brown for moral support to stay down to earth, and Brian Steel for editing the English grammar in this text.
Appendix: Websites
For
the purpose of this paper a list of important Sai Baba websites has been
collected and short descriptions added. Criteria have been: a) criticality
concerning Sai Baba, and b) major pro-Baba sites.
Discussion
board started by ‘Neuralsurfer’, USA, on February 9, 1999. It has been
important for the exposé developments.
Discussion
board started on July 17, 2000, by ‘Shaghols’, USA.
American
site started in August 2000. At the end of March 2001, the decision was made not
to add further or alter the information, and in June 2001 it was closed down.
Its original message board changed on December 1, 2000 into clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/saibabaguruexpose,
and this was taken off the web at the end of January 2001.
www.myfreeoffice.com/saibabaexposed
Site
of Said Khoramshagol, USA, from 1998 until the webhost went out of business, mid
January 2001. It had its own message board, which after its closure continued on
www.quicktopic.com/5/H/ePGD5eJtqFgQLf6Q4tbt.
Shaghols was sent ‘hate
mails’ for having his website, for instance the following one, sent on October
19, 1999, by ‘XpozEvil’:
We
are part of an international network campaigning against hate, disinformation,
white supremacy, and KKK retarded mentality. One of our network watchers has
just informed us about your hate and disinformation articles. We have checked
them and have identified them as hate crap. We have reported you to the
Wiesenthal Center and will aggressively expose your false claims. You have
written that Sai Baba has said that He is Imam Mahdi and you claim that this is
printed in Sanathana Sarathi. You are false. Tell us which issue of Sanathana
Sarathi and what page. Produce facts. We are not blind or retarded. It is the
end of 1999 and you are still trying to sell magicians to unsuspected people.
Tell us the name of one magician who has ever been able to produce anything out
of nothing? Produce facts not falsity. You don’t seem to be smart or even
slightly enlightened. Your name suggests you are Iranian. Perhaps that tells the
story. Are you financed by the mullahs in Iran? You’ll have a very hard time
to market your hate commodity. Come up with facts, kid.
clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibabaexposeheal
Discussion
board from November 17, 2000, till the end of January 2001, intended as a
comforting meeting place for ex-devotees.
Started
July 2000, originally Dutch only site, but since July 2001 has been adding a
large English section.
www.geocities.com/descubrimientosSB
Spanish
site, started September 2000
French
Canadian site, started October 2000.
Scandinavian
site in Swedish and Danish language, put up in April 2001.
www.quicktopic.com/7/H/uVTiRX8McBie
A
moderated Australian message board that entered the web May 5th,
2001.
www.snowcrest.com/sunrise
American
website started June 30, 2001, created to make up for the loss of
www.saibabaguru.com.
American
website opened July 2001, managed by ‘Shaghols’, owned by Hari Sampath.
www.geocities.com/athens/cyprus
This
was the Sai Baba-expose website of
Paul Holbach, Italy, from April 1999 till fall 2000. Part of it is now at
www.iosono.com/paulholbach/golden_e.htm
and www.iosono.com/paulholbach/promuh_e.htm.
A2.
Sites of which critical Sai Baba material is a section
vclass.mtsac.edu:940/dlane/saidebates.htm
Personal
site of professor David C. Lane, ‘Neuralsurfer’, California, which contains
correspondence on Sai Baba dated May 1997.
Site
stemming back to at least 1995, managed in Germany, which lists the contents of
every edition of (and on an irregular basis articles published in) the Indian
Skeptic, the monthly magazine of Basava Premanand.
www.stelling.nl/simpos/shree_sai_baba.htm
Site
of the Foundation for Information on Social Problems and around Occult
Movements, the Netherlands, that since its existence 1997, carries Sai Baba
material.
www.nhne.com/specialreports/srsaibaba.html
Website
of New Heaven New Earth, with a critical Sai Baba text dated February 1998.
Polish
site of the Information Center for Sects and Other Religious Movements with Sai
Baba material since April 2000.
www.iae.nl/users/lightnet/religion/sai.htm
Site
of a Dutch webmaster but in English language, started in 1995 with Sai Baba
section since June 2000.
B. Pro
Sai Baba websites
There
are many websites praising Sai Baba, explaining who he is, and where information
on him can be obtained.[xxxvi]
Important are:
The
official site of the International Sai Baba Organisation since January 1996.
Based in the USA.
Relatively
new (put on the web around the end of November, early December 2000, and
allegedly created with Baba’s blessing.), official and glossy website of
Prasanthi Nilayam, Sai Baba’s ashram in Puttaparthi.
Discussion
club started on October 12, 1998, meant for pro Sai Baba conversation only.
groups.yahoo.com/group/saiunity
Discussionclub
started on December 2, 1999. Out of this one came
groups.yahoo.com/group/unityindiversity, for members only, started November 30,
2000, to discuss the Sai-critical material.
clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibabahelpfuldiscussion
Discussion
board managed by Pax_Gabriel and Dark_Knight, two UK devotees, which existed
briefly in December 2000 and January 2001. Ex-devotees were welcomed too.
www.geocities.com/the_sai_critic
Based
in Australia; contains an extended reply to The
Findings and the article in India
Today. Put on the web around October 2000.
people.delphi.com/bongiovanni/carp.htm
Site
of the well-known USA devotee, Bon Giovanni. He closely manages several closed
message boards, among them groups.yahoo.com/group/SandehaNivarini,
(begun on November 25, 1999), where The
Findings have been discussed since the appearance.
www.saibaba-and-sex-aclearview.com
Site of Ram Das Awle, India, expresses how he as a devotee copes with the sexual allegations against Sai Baba. Put on the web in May 2001.
Notes
[i]
Literally
‘the sight of him’. Sai Baba devotees line up in the court yard and wait
for his walk among the crowds.
[ii]
See
for instance www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/9158.html,
or follow the links on www.sathyasai.org,
and clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibaba.
[iii]
Exact numbers on ex-devotees are not known, but they must run into the
thousands, based on the fact that within a few months time after The
Findings had come out, the e-mail list of ex-devotees from Glen Meloy
had increased from a handful to over 500.
[iv]
Sanathana Sarathi vol. 43, March 2000:86. Message # 14244 on clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibaba
refers to a conversation Sai Baba had in 1979-1980 concerning the use of
computers at a university. “No,” Sai Baba had said then to Michael
Goldstein, “The growing tendency to rely on computers and calculators to
provide answers to problems is bringing about a rapid deterioration of
intellect.” It is printed in John
Hislop, (who was present when this conversation took place), My
Baba and I, San Diego: Birthday, 1985.
[v]
The quotes of September 26 and 29, 2000 can be found on www.ieasai.com/baba.
[vii]
Henk Meijer, a long term Dutch devotee resident in Puttaparthi,
wrote in a letter published in Op de
Hoogte, nr 3, October 2000:10-11 (my translation):
It
is a tremendous pity that so many, even acknowledged senior devotees turn
away from Baba by the test He is giving them. “Test is my task”. Ah
well, also this is, like everything, the Divine Play. Baba is not concerned
with the quantity of devotees, but with the quality with which we want to be
His devotees. For all of those who would like a way back to His Motherheart,
He says: “Yes, yes yes!” But if not, then sounds his “No”.
Ultimately
everybody comes back to Him. There is no escape because he is the All, and
we with Him; we form that Unity.
[viii]
In 1993 some time after the murders a Sai-Baba exposé message was posted on
soc.culture.tamil by former Sai student Meenakshi Srikanth. I could not
retrace this message itself on the board; it appeared in:
Bailey, David &
Faye The
Findings,
Conwy, North
Wales: private publication, 200:18.
[ix]
An example of a newspaper clipping reprinted in Indian
Skeptic August 1993, 6(4):34:
THE
TELEGRAPH 10.6.1993
An
Australian lady, who was also a member of the Trust (belonging to the
faction of the ousted secretary of the trust) was murdered in her room in
Prasanthi Nilayam seven months ago but the entire incident was hushed up.
While
over 80% of the sum is spent in maintenance of the Ashram’s educational
institutions and the Super Speciality Hospital at Puttaparthi, the left over
amounting to Rs. 25 crores, goes to the trustees and key aides of the
godman.
[x]
Beyerstein,
Dale Sai Baba’s Miracles. An Overview, Vancouver: private publication
by Dale Beyerstein, 1992. The contents of the Indian
Skeptic show that Beyerstein was in touch with Premanand as early as
1988.
[xi]
From members.tripod.com/~dlane5/saiessay.html:
Jed Geyerhahn, at the time he had his private encounters with Sai Baba aged
16, wrote:
On
my second trip to Sai Baba I had four interviews. Each time I saw Baba, his
hand would gradually make more prominent connections to my groin. The first
interview was a slight swipe, the second a definite touch and the third time
he grabbed me and with a very stern face looked me directly in the eye and
said “you are very weak!”. Needless to say, he scared and embarassed me.
From
members.tripod.com/~dlane5/saisep.html:
It does happen that Sai Baba touches person’s chakras, energy centers,
with vibuthi. Said Khoramshagol reacted on a comment on this:
First
of all, Baba rubs “oil” in an area “behind” the testicle and
doesn’t do anything with the testicle. This ritual has been a part of
Hinduism for God knows how long. It has nothing to do with rubbing something
on the dick. Secondly, the dick is not a chakra area either. Third, why did
Baba have to touch my dick? Fourth, why did Baba have to hug me while doing
so? Fifth, why did he make sexual noises? Sixth, why did he make me touch
his private area? Eighth, why did he make sexual sounds while directing me
to touch him? I think if you put two and two together you will see that most
probably he is GAY.
[xii]
Bailey, 2000.
[xiii]
The Findings were also
available in April 2000 on David Icke’s website www.davidicke.com
carrying his e-magazine, and
were also posted on the Danish site www.npi-news.dk/page152.htm.
[xiv]
Bailey,
David A Journey to Love, Prasanthi Nilayam: Sri Sathya Sai Towers Hotels
Pvt. Ltd., 1998 (1997). Id. A Journey
to Love Book 2: Love and Marriage, Further Experiences with Sathya Sai Baba,
Prasanthi Nilayam: Sai Towers Publishing, 1998. Bailey, Faye Another Journey
to Love: Experiences with Sathya Sai Baba, Prasanthi Nilayam: Sai Towers
Publishing, 1998. The Baileys have taken their books off the market after
they became ex-devotees.
[xv]
Bailey, 2000:17-18. Several people have attempted to follow up on the story
of Dr N.K. Bhatia, but without further clarifications. To Mick Brown (see
note 28) Bhatia admitted to have had a sexual relationship with Sai Baba for
sixteen years, but he denied the story of the 7-year old categorically and
still believes Sai Baba is God. For background of Bhatia himself, see his
own book: Bhatia, Dr Naresh The Dreams
& Realities. Face to Face with GOD, Faber, Virginia, USA: Leela
Press Inc., 1996.
[xvi]
See on www.clubs.yahoo/clubs/sathyasaibaba
for instance messages # 345 and 392 by David Bailey.
[xvii]
See messages # 126, 352, 353 and 356 on
clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibabadiscussionclub.
[xviii]
On one occasion the abusive messages posted on clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibaba,
by Radha Vanamanali alias Rkmsr alias Ramakrishnan, led to Ramakrishnan’s
arrest in the UK. See message # 11.961 posted on the same board, on January
23, 2001
A
rumour was passed on concerning David Bailey. Nsfmark, who turned out to be
a made up person, sent to clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibaba
message # 2.951:
On
the pretence of taking me out in the car to listen to a tape of his
compositions, David drove to a quiet spot , adn [sic] there, in a very
embarrasing [sic] incident, he invited me to have sex with him, which as an
openly gay man, I found very easy to decline.
The
same rumour got spread again on the message board clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibabahelpfulldiscussions,
which existed for a brief period in December 2000 to January 2001. Another
rumour, coming from another source, suggested that David Bailey had been
arrested for paedophile activities and that David and Faye Bailey had
separated. See message # 2.237 on
clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibabadiscussionclub. In Australia a rumour was
spread alleging that David Bailey had borrowed (and failed to pay back) a
large sum of money from the well known devotees, the ‘Pink Twins’. [No
ref.]
[xix]
Copied from clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibaba.
[xx]
Copied from clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibabaexposeheal.
[xxi]
Glen Meloy has remained active for the Sai exposé until late July 2001,
when he decided to focus on other issues in life than Sai Baba.
[xxii]
Fuefuki,
Panta
The
Naked Sai Baba, Tokyo: Voice Inc., 2000. The book will not be translated
into English.
[xxiii]
Phyllis Krystal and John Hislop have been prominent devotees since the early
‘70s, who have written several books on Sai Baba. (Steel,
Brian
The
Sathya Sai Baba Compendium. A Guide to the First Seventy Years, York
Beach, ME: Samuel Weiser Inc., 1997: 93, 106.) Through them new people were
led to Sai Baba. Michael Goldstein is the Coordinator of the Sathya Sai
Organisation in the USA.
[xxiv]
See www.sathyasaischool.com.
[xxv]
See www.unesco.org/education/highlights/media_advisory.htm
and www.unescobkk.org/news/aceid-withdrawal.htm.
The message is also available on most Sai exposé websites.
[xxvi]
Hari Sampath knows about a hundred, many of whom he has spoken with
personally. Calculations lead to a larger number: 250 times / year x 2
darshan / day x 2 private interviews / darshan x 25 years = 25.000 private
encounters in the course of 25 years.
[xxvii]
Examples are radio-interviews on a Danish and a Dutch website, videos
showing Sai Baba’s sleight of hand, and newspaper/magazine articles: Harvey,
Bob
“The Man believers think he is God”, in Ottawa
Citizen Newspaper, 19 December, 2000:A6; Meer,
Matthijs van der “Sai Baba & de Waarheid. Het verhaal van een
bevochten ontgoocheling” [The Truth will prevail… a Sai-devotee’s
struggle for disenchantment], in Spiegelbeeld,
9(10):18-21; Murphy,
Padraic “Scandal engulfs guru’s empire: divine downfall”, in The
Sunday Age 12 November, 2000; Ranft,
Wolfgang “Münchner froh aus Indien: Guru wollte plötzlich Sex”, in
Bild
Münich, 21 August, 2000:3; Roads,
Duncan M. et al. “Sai Baba Exposed: Fraud, Fakery &
Molestation”, in Nexus,
7(5), 2000:56-61; Velde,
Koert van de
“The Downfall of a Guru Sai Baba” in Trouw,
6 September, 2000; Vilmun,
Bettina “En Gurus Syndefald” and “Jeg var offer for Babas
overgreb”, in B.T.,
Sunday 5 & 11 November 2000.
[xxviii]
Brown,
Mick
“Divine downfall”, in The
Daily Telegraph Saturday Magazine, 27 October, 2000.
[xxix]
Menon,
Amarnath K. & Ashok Malik
“Test of Faith”, and Thapa, Vijay Jung et al. “Test of faith, a God
Accused”, in India
Today 4 December, 2000: 38-46.
[xxx]
A letter by Ramana Murthy was sent to the webmaster of www.saibabaguru.com.
It is now available on other exposé websites. See also www.iheu.org.
[xxxi]
See www.iae.com/baba/docs/d001225.html,
or Sathya
Sai Baba
“Overcome jealousy with love. Christmas message”, in Sanathana
Sarathi, 44(1), 2001:1-11.
[xxxii]
Manu
Rao, B.S.
“Sai Baba lashes out at detractors”, in Times
of India 26 December, 2000. Also on www.saibabaguru.com.
[xxxiii]
From clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/saibabaguruexpose
messages # 204, 208-209; clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibabaexposeheal
message # 358, and clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/sathyasaibaba
message # 11.400.
[xxxiv]
Jayaram,
A. “Vajpayee hits out at high cost of medicare”, in The
Hindu, Friday 19 January 2001. See
www.indiaserver.com/thehindu/2001/01/20/stories/0220000b.htm.
[xxxv]
Introvigne,
Massimo
“So
Many Evil Things”: Anti-Cult Terrorism via the Internet, a paper
presented at the annual conference of the Association for Sociology of
Religion, Chicago, 5 August 1999, preliminary version, available on www.cesnur.org/testi/anticult_terror.htm.
[xxxvi]
See note 2.
[AN1]On October 15, 1999, Sai Baba said: “Some of the elders sitting at the Verandah are indulging in gossip; it is finding its way into the Internet. (…) Swami has nothing to do with the Internet. Not only now, even in future also. You should not indulge in such wrong activities.” (Sanathana Sarathi maart 2000, p. 86; www.saibabaguru.com). On September 26, 2000: “Today people are ready to believe all that they see on television and Internet but do not repose their faith in the Vedic declarations. Internet is like a waste paper basket.” This one and the quote of September 29 can be found on www.ieasai.com/baba.