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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Will ZULKOWSKY

MEETINGS WITH

YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR BHAVAN

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR BHAVAN

Photo : Yogi Ramsuratkumar with Truman Caylor Wadlington


(left) and Will Zulkowsky (right) in 1973.

YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR BHAVAN - Janvier 2008

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

INTRODUCTION

Will Zulkowsky met Yogi Ramsuratkumar in 1973, at a time


Yogiji was living in Nature, near the station, under the punnai
tree. Will was one of the first Westerners to come in touch with
Him.

What is known of Will is just what we can read in Hilda’s


Charlton book, which has been put on the website of the Yogi
Ramsuratkumar Bhavan, along with a French translation.
Another part has come out with the book “Under the Punnai
Tree”, for which somebody was sent to Will to record an
interview.

During one of Yogiji’s darshans, He asked Lee Lozowick to go


and meet Truman Caylor Wadlington and Will, who also were
living in USA. He did more than asking. He required, three
times, knowing Lee’s reluctance as Will and him were ‘as day
and night’. Here is the exchange between the interviewer and
Will concerning Yogiji’s request:

- Tom: (Yogi Ramsuratkumar) remembered you very


strongly. ’96 or ’94, I don’t know, whenever he mentioned
you to Lee.

- Will: Yeah.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Tom: And as I saw it, Yogi Ramsuratkumar called Lee back


three times, in succession to make sure that he really
understood that Yogi Ramsuratkumar wanted him to have Lee
visit you and Caylor and this other person.

-Will: Yeah.

- Tom: And each time. First time it was like a lightly stated
request, and next it was more, a little bit stronger, and then
last time he said it, it was emphatic, kind of like, you are
gonna do this…. Just seemed like it was really, really
important to him.

Never the guru will ask one of his devotees to pay a visit to
another one without any reason. Up to the devotee to find that
reason, and he has to find it, it is the purpose! He does or he
does not. The devotee has something to learn from the other. In
the same way, never will a Master go to his disciples (here we
speak of a trip), but the disciples go to him. Lee Lozowick paid
a very short visit to Will, forced to do so in order to respect his
Master’s ‘command, but then sent one of his students, Tom
Lennon, to go to Will for recording his memories about Yogi
Ramsuratkumar.

Now, Will had begun to write a book, entitled “Meetings with


Yogi Ramsuratkumar”. It seems that he stopped writing
when Tom Lennon came to him. Why? Maybe did he think that,
as he spoke during 4 tapes, he had said everything he could
and that it was useless to continue writing. Or, as i was told,
maybe was he discouraged… Obviously, even if Will knew that
a book will be published using his interview, he was clever
enough to know that only a part of it would be used. However
he stopped. Will passed away some time later.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Will’s interview was partly used for the book “Under the
Punnai Tree”.

In December 2007 in Tiruvannamalai, Ma Devaki gave us


everything she had of Will’s papers, including the text of the
interview, asking us to go through them in order to see whether
some material could be useful. Parts of this interview are
missing. The head of Hilda Charlton’s group in New York City
did everything to help us and went all the ways to try to get
some of Will’s writings, but nothing came out, there are
nowhere. Therefore we must do with what we have of this
interview. The missing parts are important: Tape 1 face A,
tape 2 face B and tape 3 face B. Some parts of them could be
retraced in some isolated pages as well as in the book “Under
the Punnai Tree.”

So, we have worked on this interview and did in such a way


that all Will’s words are respected. As far as possible, we have
removed the interviewer’s questions or cuts, so that Will words
flow naturally, and we have just removed the words when Will
began a sentence, stopped it and began another one. Very few
footnotes have been added.

Will passed a long time with Yogi Ramsuratkumar. And


reading his words, we can feel his deep love for the one who
became his Master. Will is so humble and dedicated, never
searching any fame. He came to be part of Hilda Charlton’s
group where he was loved. All people that knew him speak of
him with high regard. And another thing that has to be known
is that Will financially participated in the first book on Yogiji,
which was Caylor Wadlington’s book, and the publication of
this book was very important at that time, knowing the very

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

hard times Yogiji passed through then. He also helped


financially other friends for their trip to India.

We think that what he had to say – and he had to say something


since he began to write a book – has to be known by all
Yogiji’s devotees. For sure, like most of Americans, Will likes
speaking in terms of ‘energy’ etc… but this is very secondary,
and he expresses the main thing, “But the greatest gift, I think,
is not any physical prasad but the gift of consciousness – his
blessing. That’s the greatest gift.”

It is surprising that, concerning Yogiji, as said before, we find


mention of Will’s name only in Hilda’s writings that have been
published in the ‘Souvenir 95’ by the Ashram. Now we can also
find some of them in the book “Under the Punnai Tree”. But
Will was on the way to write his own book, independently. It
would have been great to have such a book, not mixed with a
long and everywhere coming self-projection of some other
American devotee… Will’s evidence is very important, and it is
why we have decided to publish on the Internet the two
chapters Will had already written, as well as his words during
the interview, even if a part is missing. It would be a real loss if
we don’t do anything, as Will’s writings would be lost forever.

It is why, under the title he chose, you will find them here in the
form of a book and in two parts, the first part being the two
chapters he had already written, and the second part giving his
words during the interview.

(Gaura) Krishna, 16th January 2008

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

MEETINGS WITH

YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

FIRST PART

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

CHAPTER I

OM, today is the start of a book entitled MEETINGS


with Yogi Ramsuratkumar. The purpose of the book is
to share my experiences and relate those of other
people as well with Beloved Yogi Ramsuratkumar.
Yogi Ramsuratkumar was called Swami by most of
the local people at the time i met Him in 1973.

As a background, i grew up in West Virginia then


moved to Indiana in the sixties where i attended
Indiana University. After dropping out of graduate
school, i had a fascination for the yoga philosophy.
While in grad school, I married my wife, Joan who
fortunately shared my interest in yoga, not hatha yoga
though, but in the how and why of creation. At the
time, the Vietnam War was really heating up and
Uncle Sam was looking for warm bodies to fight in
the war, but that whole notion was alien to the very
fiber of my being. By God's Grace, i received a
conscientious objector status and worked in Indiana
Univ. Medical Centre in Indianapolis for two years in
lieu of the draft. At the time, I had a clerical job at the

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

medical centre evening shift. i had plenty of time to


read after my duties were finished and read ail of Sri
Aurobindo's works and Swami Vivekananda's works
that i could get my hands on. After working this dull
job for two years, my wife who had taught grade
school and i decided to go to India to meet the real
saints.

During this time my wife and i were going to


Bloomington on the weekends and we met Truman
Caylor Wadlington, who was living with several
people in a house, one of whom had spent time at Sri
Ramanashram in Tiruvannamalai. We were
influenced along with Caylor to go to Tiruvannamalai
as the friend had recommended Sri Ramanashram
very highly. Caylor was only 19 years old at the time
and free of all worldly ties. Lucky enough for
someone to pay his way to India, he arrived six
months before my wife and i came in October 1970.

When we arrived in Tiru1 in October 1970, Caylor


met us and found us a house to rent in the Bose
Compound opposite Ramanashram. lt took awhile to
first adjust to India as the culture shock was quite

1
A lot of towns in Tamil Nadu begin with the prefix ‘Tiru’, but, of course,
Will means ‘Tiruvannamalai’ here.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

strong initially, Tiru was not a thriving urban place


that it is now but, rather a dusty south Indian town
where few people even spoke English. There were
only two cars in the whole town at the time and all
transport was by foot or horsedrawn cart called jet
cars. Ramanashram was on the outskirts of town.
Buses were always totally overflowing with
passengers. Our rented house had no running water.
Bathing and cooking water had to be drawn from the
main compound well by the compound servant. After
six weeks, we started to feel more grounded though
we felt like we were foundering. Although we were
going Ramanashram every day, we felt that we
needed a living teacher to help us make the transition
from intellectual spirituality to practical spirituality.
Shortly after our arrival in Tiru, Caylor told us that he
was leaving for Madras to live at the Theosophical
Society in Adyar without any explanation. This made
us feel more isolated as there few westerners to
communicate with. After going to Sri Ramana's
samadhi and praying to meet a living teacher once
Caylor had left, an old friend from Bloomington,
Indiana showed up the next day named Wendel Field,
who had shared the same house with Caylor. Wendel
is a really great artist who also was searching for the
mystical truths. He had just come from Sri Aurobindo
ashram in Pondicherry which at the time was a day's
journey from Tiru, and was on his way to see Sathya

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Sai Baba in Puttiparthi2. After dinner and tea at our


modest bungalow, we went up to the roof to see the
spectacular sunset. Suddenly ail three of us got the
inspiration to go to see Sai Baba that very night at
midnight There was a bus a midnight to Bangalore
which was an all night journey. Luckily, Wendel
knew the directions to Puttiparthi as information in
those days was always sketchy at best on how to get
to various places. The local bus to Puttiparthi left at
noon and reached the destination eight hours later.
The driver was the postman and delivery man
stopping at every local village on the way taking
numerous tea breaks at local people's houses on route.
At eight p.m. we finally reached Puttiparthi after
traversing some very tough dirt roads the last three
hours. It felt like we on the moon the place seemed so
distant. We arrived in a really dusty village with lots
of little tea and fruit stalls and photo stalls selling
photos of Sai Baba. We three were the only
westerners on the crowded bus. Mr Kasturi, the
ashram manager was there to greet us as Sai Baba had
requested him to meet the nightly bus and give him
the names of the foreign visitors. Mr. Kasturi then
lead us into the ashram near the bus stop and showed
to our accommodations which was a small room
shared by fifteen other westerners.

2
Puttaparthi.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

The next day Sai Baba spoke to Wendel and told him
that he would see him the next day. We were all
excited as in those days whoever came in your party,
if one was called for an interview, the rest could go in
as well. As it happened, fifteen new foreigners came
the next day and Baba called in ail the new people.
Wendel had purchased all new clothes in preparation
for the interview. When the call came for the
interview, we were all excited, but did not know what
to expect. Sai Baba ushered us in and called a devotee
from Madras to translate for him. Baba then sat on the
floor with all of us and began to talk in simple phrases
in English. He said God was everywhere and that he
was God but we were God as well. Then he began
materialising very objects such as gold aum rings and
crystal japa malas with his sleeves rolled up so we
could see no trickery was involved. He was extremely
loving and simple appearing without ego. He was
reading people's minds as to their problems and many
broke down in tears. He then turned to Wendel and
asked him if he wanted a private talk. There were
stairs leading to his private quarters behind a curtain
and that is where the private talks were held in those
days. You could hear every word Baba spoke to
Wendel during the private talk and after a few minutes
Wendel emerged while Sai Baba stayed behind the
curtain with only his hand and head protruding. Sai

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Baba then pointed his finger in my direction


motioning me to come behind the curtain. Sai Baba
was standing up a few steps so that we were face to
face. He summed up my life in a few sentences saying
that i was the black sheep of the family, that i lacked
concentration, and that i had no worries because my
heart was pure. The next thing he wanted to know is
what i wanted. I told him that i did not know but
wanted to open my heart to love. Then, he hit my
chest quite hard with his hand and instantly i felt my
heart chakra open so far that i was totally flooded with
bliss and light, so much so that i almost passed out.
For the next three days, i felt so filled with bliss, love,
and light that i felt that i was floating more than
walking. Everyone only appeared a light being with a
personality that seems completely incidental to their
existence.

After the third day Baba called my wife and i in for


another interview. We were the only two westerners
in that room and although he spoke in Telegu, his
native language, i felt i understood every word. He
called me for another private talk and told me all the
thoughts that i had in the past three days. He told me
not to worry that he was always helping me wherever
i was.. Next, he called in my wife Joan, and spoke to
her with me present. We both felt such love and
encouragement for our lives. He told my wife that her

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face would be like the sun. Baba gave regular


interviews to ail the westerners every two weeks or
so. As time passed the number of westerners went
from sixty or to about a hundred plus. Sai Baba would
leave Puttiparthi to disperse the crowds after big
festivals for Whitefield outside of Bangalore where he
has a college.

We stayed at the ashram for nine months in all


originally planning for a three day trip. We had left all
of our passports and traveller's checks in Tiru and
brought clothes and money for a three day stay. Only
after three months, we returned to Tiru to pick up our
things and clear out the house we rented. By Sai
Baba’s Grace, we never lacked anything as all the
western devotees looked after each other as family
and shared whatever they had together which was
quite extraordinary.

After almost nine months, my wife Joan came


down with hepatitis, we decided to return to Tiru so
she could recuperate. Sai Baba had just left for a
month tour of North India, so the timing was perfect.
Arriving in Tiru on the bus at night on the full moon, i
alighted from the bus feeling very blissful feeling the
presence of the Holy Mountain Arunachala. We
stayed with an old Ramana Maharishi devotee named
Rhoda Mc Iver. She was a Parsi lady from Bombay

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

married to a Scotsman. She was very kind to us and


was very helpful in Joan's speedy recovery with her
cooks wonderfully prepared meals. She told many
stories of being around Ramana Maharishi for years.
We also met Mrs. Osborne, wife of the late Arthur
Osborne who wrote books on Sai Baba of Shirdi as
well as Ramana Maharishi. Three weeks later, Joan
was feeling much better and we met Caylor in
Pondicherry at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram. He
introduced us to Satprem who written many books on
Sri Aurobindo and the Mother through a friend on the
beach. We asked Satprem about having a living
teacher and he replied that life itself is our best
teacher and will teach us every thing we need to
know. Also, we put a note in requesting darshan with
the Mother of the ashram. She responded via Her
secretary Mr. M.P. Pandit, also a prolific writer on Sri
Aurobindo, asking us to wait three more days and said
we could see Her. On May 15, 1971, we were very
fortunate to get her darshan. Over a hundred devotees
lined up for the darshan, each given a free small fresh
bouquet of flowers to present to the Mother. The
Mother sat with Her back towards the line as you
entered the room which was filled with the most
amazing golden light. As the line came around each
person came on front of the Mother seated. She
greeted each person very lovingly. Joan simply put
her head in Mother's lap and Mother stroked her head

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so gently and lovingly. When i carne next, Mother


simply stared into my eyes for a long time. It was
really intense, then i had a selfish thought and Mother
nodded that darshan was over for me. Afterwards, we
saw the bouquets that we offered to Mother were
placed on Sri Aurobindo's Samadhi. It was a
wonderful vibration there and Mother passed Her
body in 1973.

We returned to Tiru only to get a 'Quit India' notice


from the foreigner's registration office in Bangalore.
We came on a six months tourist visa which we tried
to extend another six months but were turned down.
We had gotten an extra five month, just by applying
for an extension by the vast bureaucracy of the Indian
Gov't. On the last day as we were packing up to leave
Tiru for Bangalore on the midnight bus, Caylor
unexpectedly shows up about six pm and tells us that
he has met a swami around the mountain that he
wants us to meet. First, he has to get permission from
the swami for us to come. Around ten pm, Caylor
returns and tells us it is too late to see the swami. Only
then does he tell us that it is Yogi Ramsuratkumar.
When he approaches Swami and mentions our names,
Swami then tells Caylor that He knows us and that it
is our duty to go back to America to do some seva as
that is in our natures, but we will meet the next time
we come to India.

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Returning to Bombay for the flight to the States, we


stayed with Maurice Friedman, an elderly Polish Jew
who came to India in 1930 as an engineer. He was a
devotee of Ramana Maharishi as well as J.
Krishnamurti. Maurice was a real character with a
razor sharp intellect. He was living with Miss Petit, a
lady from a wealthy Parsi family in Bombay who
supported him. J. Krisnamurti and the young Dalai
Lama had been over for tea at their residence on
several occasions. Maurice takes us to see
Nisargadatta Maharaj about who he is editing a book
of conversations called I AM THAT. Maharaj is quite
a powerful presence, utterly simple, and totally
without pretence. At the time, he was a really not
known outside of Bombay and only considered a local
saint. Maharaj lived near Grant Road Station, the red
light district in Bombay in a very simple house. His
family lived down stairs and Maharaj lived upstairs
where you had to climb a ladder to enter. Maharaj was
very gracious to my wife and i. He even gave me
prasad once after i visualized breathing in His essence
during our meeting. Though a jnani, Maharaj did
nighty bhajans to His guru with tear filled eyes. After
the book, I AM THAT, hordes of westerners
descended on Bombay to see him, It became the
spiritual IN scene.

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CHAPTER II

We came back to the U.S. and settled down in the


Washington D.C. outskirts in Silver Spring, Md. Joan
got a secretarial job and i got a construction clean up
job. For two years during the time we were in the
D.C. area we ached to back in India and were
determined to return as soon as possible. Prior to
starting work, Caylor wrote informing us that he has
written a book on Yogi Ramsuratkumar and can we
pay to get it printed. Luckily, we had half the money
and raised the other half by donations from friends.
The money was quickly sent and Caylor had the book
Yogi Ramsuratkumar, The Godchild, Tiruvannamalai
published. Several months later, Caylor sent us eighty
copies of the book and we distributed all the copies to
various bookstores and libraries around the USA.

During the first summer back, a friend calls and wants


us to join him to see Sant Kirpal Singh who is in the
D.C. area. We go and it turns out to be an initiation
ceremony unbeknown to us. We all receive the mantra

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en masse and are given forms to send in. A few


months go by and my wife receives a call from the
local Kirpal Singh rep and he wants to know why we
have not been sending our forms relating our
experiences in. She tells him that we are following Sai
Baba. He tells her that Sai Baba only knows magic
and she tells him if he can come over and materialize
something she will gladly touch his feet.

A friend from Sai Baba returns from India named


Serenity to visit us and tells she is moving to New
York to study with Hilda Charlton. Hilda had lived in
India eighteen years and met many of the great saints
at that time such as Nityananda, Sai Baba, Papa
Ramdas and Mother Krishnabai, Mahadevananda, a
150 year old saint, Yoga Swamigal in Sri Lanka, and
many others. We had heard many good stories from
Sai Baba's ashram about Hilda as she had sent many
people over to see Baba from New York. In fact many
of the first people we met there were sent by Hilda.
She was also giving spiritual classes at St. Luke’s
Church in the West Village.

Several months go by; Serenity calls us from New


York and invites us up for the weekend to her apt on
the east village. Having only passed through New
York City before, we are in awe of this massive city.
Serenity, a regular visitor to Hilda's apt on the upper

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west side of Manhattan, while we are staying in her


tiny apt, receives a phone call from Hilda. Hilda tells
her she wants her to bring us to her apt to meet us. We
are completely surprised because we have never met
Hilda before. Hilda graciously sees that very
afternoon. She is wearing a sari and there is
something completely unearthly about her. She is soft
spoken and you feel that she can see right through you
with her penetrating yet compassionate eyes. She asks
if we would like to meditate with her. We say that
would be wonderful. We sit in her room with her
along with Serenity and another friend Lou. Hilda
then has us close our eyes and then so gently rubs our
third eye area in the middle of the forehead with her
finger. With that gentle loving touch Joan and i are
transported instantly into a blissful, peaceful and
loving state of consciousness. After what seems like a
short time, an hour has elapsed. Hilda brings us gently
down. She then asks how the meditation was and we
respond that it was wonderful. She asks Serenity and
Lou how their's was and they say it was okay. She
comments that "it’s not your day kids" to them. It was
unforgettable experience. On the way out she gives
Joan her private telephone number and tells her that if
Will goes too high and cannot come down , give her a
call.

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Back in the D.C. area, we are restless to return to


India. We write a letter to Caylor asking him to please
ask Yogi Ramsuratkumar if it is a good time to return
to India. Weeks later, a letter arrives from Caylor,
who has written after a long session with Swami about
the matter.

When we opened the letter, we were thrilled. Caylor


had stated that Swami had told him that we should not
delay our trip any longer as we had already postponed
a year. Swami told us that Mother India's arms were
always open to us. Swami was encouraging us to
come as soon as possible. Swami wrote the last two
sentences in the letter. "My Father Blesses Will" and
"My Father Blesses Joan" signed "Yogi
Ramsuratkumar". Needless to say, we were thrilled
that a real yogi in India would be sending two sinners
such grace and love. We were filled with joy for days
after receiving this letter.

Now we prepared for our trip to India planning to


meet Caylor in Madras and go to Tiruvannamalai to
meet this wonderful swami who had been kind
enough to answer our letter.. About a month or so
before our departure to India, Serenity called with an
invitation to spend a long week end in upstate New
York with Hilda, who would be holding a small
private gathering at a friend's property bordering a

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state forest. We accepted this opportunity to get


together with Hilda again. We caravanned with four
other cars from NYC and drove up to Stan and
Grace's cabin In the Catskills in early September of
1973. Twenty people were invited in all. We all
stayed in tents while Hilda, Grace and Stan stayed in
the cabine. There was singing, bonfires, cookouts.
And Hilda invoked the magical presence of the Native
American Indians as well as Krishna. During one
session when we were meditating, Hilda touched my
third eye and I went into an altered state for about
seven hours. I felt that everything was just light and
nothing more. At the end of the weekend, we said
goodbye to Hilda, who told us to see her in NYC just
before departing to India.

At last, we were off to India again, stopping at Hilda's


apt first were she gave us a letter to give to Sai Baba
and gave us her blessings for the trip. We reached
Bombay in late Oct. 1973. Once again, we stayed with
Maurice Frydman in Bombay for a few days to
recover our jet lag. We went to see Maharaj again, but
this time the place was full of westerns that had
migrated from Tiruvannamalai and was no longer held
in his bungalow, but a large hall. Maharaj was
answering all the usual philosophical questions put to
him by the westerns. For some reason Maharaj singled
Joan out and told her to remain and study with him.

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However, our sites were set on Yogi Ramsuratkumar


in Tiru.

We met Caylor in Madras and after a day or so we all


set off for Tiru together. We arrived in the early
evening in Tiru were we tracked down Swami to some
advocate's house where he was spending the evening.
He indicated to Caylor that he had a fever that day and
could he bring these friends tomorrow. So, Caylor
stayed with Swami and we went to Ramanashram.
The next morning, we all rented bicycles and rode
into town and out towards the railway station. In a
farmer's field, we see Yogi Ramsuratkumar dressed
with faded plaid blanket around his torso and wearing
a rather tattered white jupa, a traditional thin long
sleeve white cotton shirt with several stands of
rudraksha beads around his neck. His white beard
flows freely on this breezy day. He has the innocence
of a child. He is utterly playful and delightful and
greets us very lovingly. After asking him what he has
in his bulging pockets, he pulls out a hand full of
nellica, that look like cashew halves but are darker in
color and taste quite bitter as herbs. He invites us to
try some and laughs when we say they are bitter. He
says after you chew them a white they sweeten up in
your mouth. Later, I discovered this herb in one of the
prime ingredients in Tibetan Medicine and also in
Ayurvedic medicine as well. At any rate, He is

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concerned that we are not used to the tropical sun and


has us sit together under a small palm tree though it is
a cloudy day. The next thing I know is I close my eyes
and waft into a tremendously deep inner space which
is utterly tranquil and devoid of all stress. It is like
being in a well of tranquillity and the light is
extremely soft. When the experience occurred, i never
wanted to leave the state and made up mind then and
there that I would never leave that space. After this
decision was made, I could hear Swami's voice say
«Mr. Will, come this side, no good to be on that side.
No good .tea, coffee, or cigarettes on that side." My
mind is made up; I am never leaving that side. Again
Swami says "Mr. Will, come this side. No good to be
on that side, no good tea, coffee or cigarettes on that
side". I am not budging from my space. Then I feel a
circle of light around me. Swami now speaks slowly
and distinctly "nine, eight, zero, two' and I am
instantly back in body consciousness. For the next ten
minutes or so Swami is roaring with laughter
occasionally slapping Caylor on the arm saying, "that
must be Will's number." After this experience, I feel
that Swami is my Guru.

Every time I asked Swami about the number 9802 and


its meaning he always said that it was "this beggar's
madness". Swami would always refer to Himself as
"this beggar" or "this madman" or "this sinner", rarely

27
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

would he use the word I. After some photos of


Swami, Caylor and Joan, then Swami, Caylor and
Will, Swami sent us away. Caylor stayed as he was
leaving back for Madras the next day but Swami
invited us to see Him the next evening in the main
bazaar in Tiru.

At eight pm every evening Mon- Sat, the mostly


stainless steel and brass shops in the main bazaar
closed for the day. The bazaar was situated in front of
the main entrance or gopuram (approx. 267 ft tall) to
the huge Arunachala Iswara Temple in the centre of
town. This two thousand year old temple occupying
twenty five square acres is dedicated to Lord Shiva
worshipped here as the fire aspect. It was at that time
and place every evening for years Swami was to be
found on a certain shop's stoop, whom owners were
Swami's devotees kept a very worn straw mat stored
for Swami. As soon as the owners left, Swami rolled
out the straw mat on the concrete stoop, sat down and
settled in until the next morning. Swami told us to
come at eight pm and we came at night for the next
two weeks. We would stay until 5:30 in the morning,
then Swami would head back to the farmer's field near
the railway station and we returned to our room near
Ramanashram. Most evenings Joan and I were the
only ones with Swami, though at times other people

28
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

would come by to speak with Swami. Swami thanks


us for sponsoring Caylor's book about Him and
whenever other locals come, He tells them that we
financed the book and looks very pleased.

As we approached Swami sitting in the bazaar each


evening, he would call out in a loud voice "come on
Mr. Will" with a jovial laugh, then he would indicate
where He wanted us to sit. It was always in a spot that
He designated. By eight pm the bazaar was only
lighted by kerosene lanterns or candles and Swami
always had candles on hand so He could see those He
was speaking with. The candies were always placed
so Swami was in the shadows and you were in the
candle light. Swami was filled with joy and mirth and
it was really contagious no matter who came, they
were soon laughing and had forgotten all their
troubles. Swami's first question was always how could
this dirty beggar possibly be of any help to anyone
and then laugh. Swami did smoke some times quite a
lot, but only when people came around. Also, there
were always several large burlap bags near Swami
filled with his possessions, namely old newspapers
folded in a certain way, old clothes, new clothes never
worn and even empty cigarette package wrappers.
Swami is on another wave length, at one moment
totally jovial, the next moment totally serious, filled
with the most amazing wisdom. He seems to

29
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

completely see through each person and each situation


that appears before Him. Most of time he is staring
over the head of the person with whom He is
speaking, moving His lips as if reciting a mantra and
moving his right thumb and middle finger together
constantly.

His presence is so powerful that all that you know and


have seem so meaningless, yet Swami claims that He
does nothing, all is the work of the "Father". He says
that He is only doing the "Father's work". The depth
of His wisdom, understanding, and compassion for
those coming to see Him is truly so profound that few
can actually comprehend what is even happening. He
is constantly laughing about what a madcap and a
sinner He is. Yet behind His smoking, dirty and worn
clothing, there is a real majesty of spirit, a radiance,
an underlying bliss and joy in His very Being. He
takes such an enthusiastic interest in everything that
you feel in essence that He has the simplicity of a
child. His name even means child of God. He insists
that you say Yogi Ramsuratkumar instead of
Ramsuratkumar, but Swami is alright.

Sitting with Swami every night for two weeks


straight, we marvel at being in the presence of such a
great soul. Each morning, we seem to float back the

30
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

two mile walk to our room near Ramanashrarn,


feeling that we are more in spirit than body after being
in Swami's radiant presence. We feel more alive than
we ever have. Swami insists that we stay up the entire
night and not sleep. If we nod off, He is quick to say
"sit up Mr. Will" or "sit up Joan", but sometimes He
doses off Himself. Seldom do others come, some
locals come just out of curiosity, others are quite
familiar with Swami and the laughter flows. Usually
as we are leaving Swami, He thanks us for helping
Him which always puzzles us, because we do not
have a clue as to what is really happening.

After three nights, in the middle of the night about


three am, He starts telling me My future via the third
person.. He tells Joan that Will is going to be a great
healer one day, throwing dirt over people's heads and
they would be perfectly healed and that even heads of
state would come to see him. Also that he would be a
good spiritual teacher one day, having about fifteen
disciples and be more of a one on one teacher. Other
statements Swami made also that i cannot share.
When I tell Swami how could all this happen as I am
only an ordinary person, He put up both of His hands
over His head in Blessing and says it is "Father's
Will" That night Joan had a revelation that she told
Swami that He was not a beggar but really a king
amongst men. His response that this was a divine

31
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

revelation to Joan and gave her His Blessings. After


that night we were really amazed with event that
unfolded. Our only hope is that some day we can
come to understand what He is really all about.

Most evenings Swami would order tea from the local


chai stalls. Swami had several attendants who did all
of the errands; however Swami never had any money
but had numerous accounts in town at various tea
stalls and hotels, local parlance for restaurant. Once
every six months or so a devotee from Madurai would
come to see Swami and then pay off all the accounts.
One hotel proprietor who graciously fed Swami for
years ended up owning many hotels in town. Even
drinking tea with Swami was a unique experience.
The tea was brought in a pot with the cups empty.
Swami would then place each cup carefully in front
each person, then proceed to pour the tea or chai.
Once the tea was poured, after Swami sipped His tea,
then could the rest begin. This was the protocol. Once
I unconsciously moved my tea cup closer after Swami
had placed it. Swami then stopped, gave me a tierce
look and told me firmly I had just spoiled His work.
He said then that he had to make some adjustment to
compensate for my blunder. I never moved my tea
cup again, needless to say as I felt so horrible. Swami
later explained that drinking tea together unifies when

32
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

people of all different backgrounds meet, it is at least


one thing that they have in common at that moment.

When you are in the company of these great souls,


you make every effort to accommodate their program
and realize that only in serving them can you possibly
go forward in your own evolution. You realize that
your spiritual goals are quite vague and that you do
not have a clue how to get there anyway.

Near the end of the first two glorious weeks with


Swami, He suggests that we go to Ananda ashram in
Kerala to see Mother Krishnabai. Ananda ashram is
the ashram of Papa Ramdas and Mother Krishnabai,
located in Khanangad3, Kerala. Papa Ramdas was one
of Yogi Ramsuratkumar's gurus, who initiated Swami
with the Ram Nam mantra. Papa Ram Das had passed
his body in 1963, however.

Within a few days we start on our journey to Ananda


Ashram. We proceed via Bangalore, stopping briefly
at Whitefield where Sai Baba has a college and where
he stays in Bangalore. At the time he is in Bangalore,
but the western scene has really changed. Many of the
western devotees are singing bhajans or devotional
songs under the influence of ganja, Indian pot and Sai

3
Kanhangad

33
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Baba is quite displeased as he feels that it is a bad


example to the young Indian students. He stops giving
group interviews to the western devotees as a result,
with only a few exceptions. We however realize that
this is no longer where we feel comfortable in this
scene and within a day or so, are on the road to
Ananda Ashram.

After an arduous bus trip from Bangalore to


Mangalore, we catch the Southern Railway train to
Khanangad. It is a hot dusty little town on the Arabian
Sea. We proceed to Ananda Ashram. It is a small but
friendly ashram a few kilometres from the railway
station. Joan is put in the ladies dorm and I am
assigned to the gent's dorm. In the main hall, the name
of Rama is chanted or sung most of the day. The place
is completely saturated with the name of God and the
vibration is not of this world. Beside the main hall is
Mother Krishnabai's room. She is elderly and stays in
bed most of the time, but the westerners can come in
and sit with Her for an hour each day at 4 pm. You
can ask questions and there are only about no more
than 10 - 15 westerners there at the time. Her radiant
eyes tell you that She is living in another realm of
consciousness. While we were there, a Spanish couple
came with an eight year old daughter. These people
were just travelling through India as tourists with no
belief in gurus but when the daughter saw Mother

34
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Krishnabai, she spontaneously prostrated before Her


as soon as she brought before the Mother.

She tells you that She does nothing and that Papa as
She calls Him does everything. She is so kind and
gracious to all who approach Her. She seems to
thoroughly know what is happening on the ashram
and constantly on top of the issues involving the
ashram though she spends almost al] of Her time in
bed.

Each morning and evening the ashram so lovingly


brings fresh milk to our rooms. Ai] the westerners
seem to bond together very nicely. We also meet
Swami Satchitananda who is the main administrator
of the ashram but also an homeopathic doctor.

On the way to the latrine in the middle of the night


half asleep one night, I find my self repeating
"Sri.Ram Jai Ram Jai Jai Ram". Such was the
saturation of the name in the air, it implanted itself
into my consciousness though I was not in that
practice. Also we met and shared stories with a
wonderful German friend from Canada named
Hetman, who had an amazing amount of real mystical
experiences. Herman was travelling around India as a
sadhu or holy man only wearing white clothes.. He
was a real seeker of God and truth, yet ever kind and

35
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

humble. We share our experiences Herman about


Yogi Ramsuratkumar and he tells us that he is
planning a trip to Tiruvannamalai. We also read the
numerous books written by Papa Ram Das about His
spiritual pilgrimage to God Realization, which we
round tremendously inspiring. We also visit a cave
build into a huge rock near the ocean that the great
saint Swami Nityananda lived in for ten years in
Khanangad.

After spending two inspiring weeks at Ananda


Ashram, we tell Mother Krishnabai that we are
leaving. She tells us to come early the next morning to
Her room and She gives a garland of flowers to place
on Papa Ram Das's samadhi shrine that morning,
where the sound of om or aum is chanted 24 hours a
day. It is called the OM Mandir. Also she gives us 16
large Kerala bananas to eat and tells us not to share
them. Her love and kindness were really wonderful, it
was the last time we were to see Her. She passed Her
body in Feb. l989.

We now head for the beaches of Goa. After spending


a week on the beaches filled with young mostly naked
westerners tripping on recreational drugs and visiting
the shrine of Saint Francis Xavier in Panjim, Goa, we
head for Bombay with the idea of going up to Mount

36
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Abu in Gujurat to see some Jain saints. Many of the


Jain Saints do not wear any clothing despite the cool
temperatures in the winter. Once we get to Bombay,
our friend Maurice Frydman tells us that it is too cold
to venture up to Mount Abu that time of year. So, we
decide to go back to Tiruvannamalai to spend more
time with Yogi Ramsuratkumar.

Returning to Tiru, we are once again nightly visitors


to Yogi Ramsuratkumar in the bazaar. He is however
more strict this time around. We are constantly on our
toes to be in harmony with His movements. We try to
become His perfect servants as best as we are able, as
this is the only way we can harmonise with Him.
Finally, we understand that He has His mission to do
what He calls "the Father's Work" and seems to be
totally immersed in this work. We try to blend in with
out causing any disturbance to His spiritual work. We
stay more in the background now and are more
observers to the uniqueness of His work and
mannerisms which are really quite eccentric at times.
We have the chance of witnessing some really
interesting moments with Him. For example, a young
American man with a shaved head who had just come

37
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

from seeing Anandamayee4 Ma, a famous North


Indian Saint, appears one evening while we are sitting
with Swami. He tells Swami that he has graduated
summa cum laud, i.e. first in his class, from Harvard
University and has completed three years at John
Hopkins Medical School. As a result of his medical
studies, he realizes that pain and suffering are
everywhere and has come to India to find out what is
the root cause of suffering before he goes out to
practice medicine. Swami first asks him what a dirty
beggar like Him could possibly tell a Harvard grad.
Swami listens nicely to the man for about two hours
and then the man leaves. A few minutes after the man
leaves, Swami turns to us and says that "this beggar
could do nothing for that man."

About ten minutes later, Swami tells us that


Anandamayee Ma had made a blessing over that
man's head and that He did not want to disturb it.

Another time, an Indian family brings their son on a


Sunday. Swami spends the entire day in the bazaar
often on Sunday. The son though in his early twenties
has a really short attention span. He is not able hold a
job as a result. Swami has. the young man repeat the
4
Anandamayî Ma. This ‘ee’ used by Will is only used for English, which is
the only language to pronounce ‘ee’ as it does, while it does not pronounce
‘i’ the same manner all the other languages do.

38
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

name of Rama nine times in a row. To this family, this


is a big breakthrough and they leave greatly relieved
and grateful to Swami. About an hour later, they
returned with a large quantity on bananas and other
fruit. Swami gives them some prasad and they leave
with tears in their eyes.

Many people during our time with Swami come to ask


about marriage advice. The south Indians are very
traditional in having arranged marriages. The parents
would come with the list of candidates and want
Swami to tell them what was the best match Swami
would tell them just to read the names. Once He heard
the names, He would say pursue only one or two of
the names and leave the rest.

Swami was big on names. No matter who came with


whatever problem, Swami wanted always to know the
names of those involved. He would usually write the
name of the person in the air with His finger in Hindi,
His native tongue. He then would proceed to describe
that person in complete detail getting their essence.
He quickly got to the root of the problem and usually
had a solution as to how the problem could be
resolved.

39
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

A Canadian girl came to see Swami to get His advice


on her very young niece with a major health problem.
After hearing the girl’s name, Swami asks if the
parents can change the name. The girl replies that the
family would not do this. He then suggests a new
name and tells her if only she uses the new name the
niece will be alright. As I am listening to this
discussion, I am facing Swami and can see an owl
landing on a 'distant rooftop in the night. The next
question Swami asks the Canadian girl "do you have
owls in Canada?"

An American young man named John Gilbert comes


from Sai Baba's and says that he has cancer and can
Swami heal him. Swami studies him visually very
intensely for about twenty minutes, then declares that
He sees no evidence of cancer. He tells John that if he
feels there is a problem to tell himself that he is not
the body. Swami then laughs and jokes with John and
he feels totally uplifted. John did die a few years later
at Sai Baba's ashram due to cancer, supposedly.

One evening when we come in the evening, Swami


asks Joan to roll out His straw mat just as we come at
eight pm. He gives her very specific instructions on
how this should be done. She does not really listen
closely, and in the midst of her endeavour, Swami

40
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

tells her to stop and sit down. He does it Himself and


then says to me, "Will, Joan thinks this beggar is very
arrogant". She later confides to me that is what she
was thinking. When we are with Swami there is only
one way to do things, that is His way and you learn
that quite quickly.

On several occasions, Swami would have me sit right


next to Him and He would gently stroke my arm for
maybe fifteen or twenty minutes. Afterwards, I would
feel like every atom in my being was changed and like
I was altogether a different person from that time on.
It was quite remarkable. After these experiences I
realized that all change only comes from Grace and
that our individual efforts on the spiritual path do not
really count for too much.

At this time, usually on Thursdays, we were going


during the day to see an unusual saint named Poondi5
Swami, who lived about twenty five kilometres way
road in the tiny village of Poondi. The village was
about two kilometres off the main road to Vellore.
Poondi Swami sat a few feet off the road from the one
bus stop in Poondi in a little open hut constructed by
His devotees. He literally sat there for almost eighteen

5
Pundi Swami. Same remark concerning the ‘oo’.

41
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

years without moving and only lying down at nights


the last year of his life. He sat in .the same spot
without getting up the entire time. He would shift
positions of His arms and legs but never stand up
during all those years. He supposedly ate three meals
a day but never passed any water or bowels during the
entire time. The local people referred to Him as a
karma eater. 'Poondi Swami had very long grey hair
wrapped up on His head and a long grey beard and
was wrapped in what looked like a white sheet. His
eyes told that He was far removed from this world. He
would always avoid your eyes directly by looking
away when you looked al Him. He usually sat with
one leg crossed over the other and when you came
up, He would put some holy ash on your forehead.
Sometimes, I would make a stupid prayer that He
should enlighten me and then this big barrage of
coughing would come from Him. People would bring
Him cigarettes to smoke and He would smoke the
entire cigarette in a few seconds without ever
exhaling. Others brought bottles of soda that He
would drink in one large gulp. Many people gave Him
money, but he usually just held it or threw it behind
him. About six sadhus lived nearby and served Him.
They took the money collected and bought bicycles
for this small poor village that they rented out very
reasonably. The village was so small that it only had
one tea stall and no eateries. Every time we came, one

42
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

sadhu who spoke English would always invite us to


eat with the sadhus. On one occasion, the sadhu told
us no food was available from them and within a few
minutes a lady from the village sent us a, full meal an
stainless steel container for that purpose. Two
incidents come to mind, once Caylor was here with a
inmate of Sri Ramanashram and a man offered Poondi
Swami a soda, that Poondi Swami was very reluctant
to accept, then finally grabbed the soda and in one
gulp drank the entire bottle. Poondi Swami then told
the man that he did vile things and Poondi Swami
would take it from him and he would go do these
things again.

One American friend named Ira who was a devotee of


Neem Kerali Baba, who had previously passed his
body, from Chicago came and asked Poondi Swami
where he could get the darshan of his guru. After five
minutes standing before Poondi Swami, Ira got his
answer in perfect English «go to the North". After
another ten minutes, Poondi Swami answered where
in the north? “Brindavan" was the reply. After that
Ira’s luck ran out with regards to questions. Poondi
Swami's standard reply was 'go and come' in Tamil.
Also, the small local school children would line for
Poondi Swami's Blessings before school each day.

43
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Two other stories come to mind. Each time we caught


the Vellore bus going to Poondi Swami's on
Thursdays, we had to take another local bus the two
kilometres into the village. Each time we tried to pay
the conductor for that trip, he always refused our
money to our surprise. Then one day the English
speaking Sadhu introduced us to a man form Vellore
who had told Poondi Swami that he needed money
and within two weeks won the state lottery in Tamil
Nadu. That man came every Thursday to thank
Poondi Swami for his good fortune and would always
pay our fare whenever he saw us getting on the bus.
One day when we were there that sadhu read us a
letter written from Paris by a French couple having
visited Poondi Swami a few years prior. These people
stated that Poondi Swami had physically materialized
before them in the next pew while they were praying
at a cathedral in Paris. Poondi Swami passed His body
in 1983 and thousands of people all over India and
abroad came to see this mysterious saint.

Almost every Friday, we would stop at the tomb of a


Muslim saint named Haji Baba on our way to, see
Swami. The tomb was in a poor neighbourhood near
the government hospital in Tiru. We had read about
Haji Baba in a book by Mouni Sadhu called "In the
Says of Great Peace". The author had come to

44
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Ramana Maharishi when He was alive and discovered


this treasure. Haji Baba was a contemporary of Sri
Ramana and also lived in Tiru with His twelve
disciples. He was a Muslim saint that had walked to
Mecca four times from India. Just before Haji Baba
passed his body, He said that God was pleased with
his service and promised whoever came to his tomb
would have all their prayers answered as he would see
to it personally. After inquiring from a few locals, we
located the tomb and started to come every week.
Usually surrounded by a retinue of screaming children
as we were nearing the small tomb, things quieted
down as we came to the tomb where the old caretaker
as his daughter shooed away the kids. The old man
had patch over one eye and was the caretaker as well
as one of Haji Ba original twelve disciples. The tomb
was very simple with a concrete mound as the tomb
covered with many dried garlands of flowers. The
tomb had thatched roof as well and short walls on
each side. The old man would have you sit quietly and
then take a peacock feather and touch the middle of
the tomb with it then gently brush your arms and head
with the peacock feather. The vibration of the place
was really fantastic, and when you felt the peacock
feather, it was so beautiful you felt totally uplifted.
We always brought incense and sweets for the
caretaker and his daughter. They always treated us
with the utmost respect though our Tamil was not

45
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

good enough to communicate with them verbally.


Many years later, the tomb was incorporated into a
large Muslim cemetery with high wall around it
making access almost impossible to non Muslims.

Past Sri Ramana Ashram on the road to Bangalore as


you went on the road going around Arunachala
clockwise, there was a small road leading directly to
the foot or the mountain. As you approached the area,
about one half mile out you could feel a powerful
peace and presence. There was a cave in this area
inhabited by a recluse named Jungle Swami. He lived
in the cave for many years only coming out on full
moon nights. Sri Ramana was a welcome visitor but
the crowd that came to see him on his monthly outing
were an unwelcome disturbance to him so that he left
the place, but thirty years later, his vibration of peace
and a subtle presence could still be felt a half-mile
away.

While staying near Sri Ramana ashram, we would


often take our meals at a small tea stall to the side of
the main gate to the ashram run by a old gentleman
wearing only loin cloth who had once been a cook in
north India. He was simply known as "tea stall
swami". He made wonderful chapattis for many of the
westerners and this place was regular hangout for

46
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

those of us that were living off the ashram. We met


James, a very tall young English barrister, there and
convinced him to come down to see Yogi
Ramsuratkumar with us one evening. Swami
immediately focused on him and told him that he
would dedicate his life to India just as Annie Besant,
one of the founders of the Theosophical Society, did.
James left saying what a bunch of "poppycock".
However within two weeks of that meeting, a
wonderful saint named Jillelamudi Amma from
Andhra Pradesh came through Tiru on her only south
Indian trip and James followed her. It was not till
years later that I even knew of what became of James.
He lived at her ashram for over twelve years, took a
Indian wife after his guru passed her body and now
lives in Mysore with his wife and two children.

Two girls from Germany come one afternoon to see


Swami. Their names are Ute and Else and they have
written to Swami several times and sometimes sent
packages of cigarettes in the mail to Swami. Swami
jumps up and exclaims "Ute and Else" once He finds
that these two are the same girls who have been
writing to Him. He apologizes for not answering their
letters saying what a dirty sinner He is. Swami
lavishes attention on them and they are overjoyed.
They decide to spend two weeks in Tiru and each at

47
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

different times to undergo a fast and silence for three


days in the bungalow where they are staying. As each
one is fasting Swami really concentrates on them in
their absence and comments on their concentration
and dedication to this task they have undertaken on
their own volition. When they return, Swami is
pleased with their individual efforts. A young
Englishman named Charles appears later coming each
day with them but Swami never acknowledges him
whatsoever. As they are leaving to go to north India to
Brindavan, they ask what their sadhana should be.
Swami says that …

(following text missing …)

48
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

SECOND PART

49
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

50
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Tape 1, side A is missing

8 November 2002

Tape 1, Side B


Will: Yes, because he was just fanning. And I
remember one scene where Swami, when he was
fanning - this was in '78, Hilda had gone up to Sai
Baba's and then this guy and I had come back,
because it was Gurupurnima... Somebody gave him a
brand new set of clothes. So he looked, first time I'd
ever seen him perfectly clean. You know, I mean, he
never took a bath. I said,

- Swami, did you get a bath this year?

And he said,

- Oh, this beggar was just too busy."

51
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And his idea of a bath was walking in that ghat6 in the


main temple, walking in and walking out. That was
the bath for the year. And so, he said he was just too
busy. He just had too much to do. But he never
smelled or anything. His clothes smelled a bit musty,
but there was never an odor, never any foul smells or
anything. He smelled, just totally smelled like his
clothes were a little musty and that was it. ... And
then, when he looked, he had brand new clothes on,
he looked like a maharaja. I said,

- Swami, you look like a maharaja tonight." …

But the old clothes, he never threw anything away. A


big burlap bag held everything. And when we first
met him we were going out to the fields, Joan and I
were carrying each a burlap bag and everybody else
was carrying a burlap bag to Swami because he
smoked a pack of cigarettes. He threw the wrapper
down on the ground, and before he got up that
package was in that burlap bag. He never threw out
anything, he never threw out newspaper. Nothing was
thrown out, ever, including his clothing. Everything
was just stored in those bags. Don't ask me why; so
those bags, he said he didn't want them to (go) to the

6
Steps going down to the pond.

52
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

ashram, but he said those were his legacy to the town


of Tiruvannamalai.

He was not very happy with the people of


Tiruvannamalai. He said, "Don't take any money from
Tiruvannamalian people. They haven't been good to
this beggar.” He was pretty strict about that. But
basically… he asked Caylor to write that book
because the DMK was so horrible to him. They were
threatening everybody, and they cut off his food, cut
off everything; so, when the book came out, people
from other parts of India, like especially Bangalore
and Madras and other metropolitan areas, were
coming and giving him food, and things like that. So
he told Joan and I once,

- By you helping with the book, getting money


for the book published," he said, "you've helped this
beggar stay in Tiruvannamalai, and thereby this
universe itself.”

Now, … I remember this one real arrogant guy named


Albert who was a part of Hugo Meyers’ group; Hugo
Meyers, an homeopath who had an ashram over on
the other side of Tiruvannamalai. Albert used to be a
part of his group, he was just there. He went down, he
came to Swami, down to see Swami, and told him,

53
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- What? You sit around and do nothing. How do you


rationalise your existence?

After that, we came that night, Swami says he's rarely


met a person like Albert [laughing]. And Albert was
real cocky. He used to ride a big (bike). He always
had this, perfectly tanned body, always wearing the
little tin, the dhoti, hair coiffed up perfect and
perfectly pressed dhoti and, you know, these muscle
guys, and riding this big bike, macho, and stuff like
that.

Anyway, Swami had everybody come to see him.


Some people weren't so nice, but most people came
with devotion… And Swami was quite mystical.
Some guys went there three or four times and they
wanted to know what they should do in India. (About)
one of them, Swami put on his glasses and walked up
and down about five or six times – this was down in
the brass bazaar at night - and he said, "Oh, you
should go to visit all the Buddhist pilgrimage sites in
India." And then, he gave people all kinds of spiritual
advice. If you asked him anything like, "What is
kundalini?" he would just say,

- Ah, what does this filthy beggar know about


kundalini? That's for scholars and that's for
real yogis. …

54
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

We always had to be up and out by five thirty, at his


place, because he had to move out. He didn't like to go
past five thirty. And I remember once, Swami was
taking a nap, and Joan says, "Swami, it's time for all
good yogis to be up.” Swami says, "How about fake
(yogis)?” … So he was really, really quick. I mean, he
was, like, instant. He was totally in that instant
moment, he was just very, very alive. And that's why
he was always fun. You always felt so spontaneously
alive with him because he was always so charged, and
every time, I remember, we were going home, we
kind of like floated home because there was no cars or
buses or anything that ran over there, we just had to
walk about two miles, two or three miles from
Ramanashram. But he was really a ball of light, a ball
of fire. But we always had a lot of fun. He always
liked to laugh and he always made jokes. Jokes were
always about himself and how crazy he was. Once, I
remember, was in the dining hall there7. We were
corning to see him and I had been there in '96, I hadn't
been there in '95 because I had been very sick and
didn't have much money and everything. So I came in
'96 and it was the first time I came to that dining hall
and I came to the back… There were those little guys

7
In the Ashram.

55
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

in their green uniforms8. They seated me in the way


back. So Swami looks up and yells, "Will!" So I come
up. And every day, every day I was there, It was only
there for five, maybe six or seven days, Swami had a
mat put out right in the front of his little platform….I
think Richard came later.

(Addressing to Richard): Was that '96, or '97? 'That


was another year. You came, and then I said,

- Oh Swami, Richard's here.

And he said,

- Oh, come, have him bring up, come up.

And so Richard would come from the back, and there


were some other people I had. So Swami said, "Bring
him up, bring him up." And anyway, it was quite
lovely. And Swami said he was always grateful to
Joan and I (to have) helped him so much, so he said
we earned some very good karma for that. He said,
"You and Joan have earned" something.

8
The servants and workers in the Ashram.

56
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Interviewer: Richard, when were you in


Tiruvannamalai?

- Richard Schiffman: First year, maybe '77, or '78, or


something like that. And I had heard of Yogi
Ramsuratkumar, but I didn't know much about him. I
think I heard that Hilda had said something about
him…When we went down there, he was just sitting
under the shed and there were several people around
offering tea and things and he just sat there and called
us up and he had me sit right by him, and he was
stroking my hand and he was asking me,

- ”Who are you and what do you do and where


do you come from?”

And very sweet. He asked me my name, I said,

- Richard.

And he said,

- Richard the Crusader.

And I said,

- No, not the Crusader.

57
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And then friend Phil said,

- You mean Lion-Hearted.

And then Yogi looked at me and said,

- Lion-Hearted?

And I said

- No.

And he said

- No, no, no. Not Lion-Hearted. Crusader.


Then, we went to see him, sometimes, under the tree,
… sometimes outside the temple, and each time he
would see me he'd say,
- Oh, Richard the Crusader has come.
and he was very sweet. And I wondered why he was
calling me that, I mean, in the back of my mind. Well,
to fill you in a little, but when I first sat in his
presence, my thought was, Well, this is really the
Holy Land. You know, only in India does someone
who looks like a beggar, sitting on the street like that,
and yet people are revering him and seeing divinity in

58
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

this person, and I thought, ‘Well, this is really India.


This is the real India. Businessmen and well-dressed
people and everyone just coming to see him like that.’
So anyway, at the end of our week or so we took leave
of him, he was out at the tree and we started to walk
away and maybe got about fifty feet away when he
called me back, and he said,

- You're wondering why I called you 'the


Crusader.
And I said,
- Yes.
And he said,
- Because you've come back to the Holy Land.
which was sort of picking up on my thought. And then
he said,
- You're also wondering if Sai Baba is going to
speak to you.
which was interesting because I hadn't mentioned that,
but I was staying at Sai Baba's ashram and he hadn't
given me an interview at that stage, which wasn't
unusual. People stay years without getting called in.

59
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

But I was wondering if I would ever speak to Baba,


and he said,
- Don't worry. He'll talk to you as soon as you
get back.
And the day after I got back to Puttaparthi, Baba
called me in for private interview. So, and then,
another time I came back – many years later I came
and stayed in Ramanashram, and I was with a friend
and I wanted to introduce him to Yogi. So Yogi was
at that point staying in town, in a little house near the
(temple in) Sannadhi street. Word got around that we
were going to visit, and so before long we (arrive),
like, ten, eleven people (were) coming with us. And
so we went to the house and the attendant came out
and said,
- Can I help you?
and we said,
- Yes, we've come to see Yogi Ramsuratkumar.
So he went in and then he came out again and said,
- Yogi would like to know how many people?
So we counted and, I don't know, it was eleven or
whatever, and he went back, and then came out again
and said,

60
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- No, Yogi's resting, He can't see you.


So, of course, I was a little disappointed because he
had been so sweet to me the first time, and now he
wasn't even going to see us. So, we left, and then a
few days later my friend Ken and I were going to
leave Tiruvannamalai, so we were going to the bus
stand and we thought, “Well, let's take our leave in the
temple” - in the Shiva temple - so we went and had
darshan. We were leaving to go to the bus stand to
leave town, and out of the shadows, I don't know
where he came from, but Yogi just jumped out and he
went like this to both of us and then he ran away as
quick as he could. He just, kind of blessed us and ran
away. And that's the fellow who I wanted to take,
originally before this big crowd, came. And then, it
was explained to me that he doesn't like big crowds
and sometimes, like if there's one person who he's not
comfortable with, he won't let the group in. And, in
fact, there was one person with us, I later found out,
whom Yogi would never see, I mean refused to see.
And this person, when he found out we were going,
he thought, well, maybe I'Il get in. [all laugh]

- Will: Yeah, Swami was great.

- Interviewer: So, when, did you visit with him


just on two occasions?

61
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Richard: Once, I'm thinking probably in the


'70s … in the late '70s and then, the next time, maybe
in the '80s, mi-'80s, and then with Will, the last time,
in 96; it was probably February.

Well, also, I remember the first time I met him, he


gave me a bunch of grapes and said, "Feed
everybody." So I went and fed everybody… And I
didn't know what to make of him. I mean I had heard
he was a great yogi, and he would always say, "This
beggar doesn't know anything." I think I asked him
some spiritual question, to me Yogi said, "This beggar
doesn't know anything."

He didn't have the teaching, didn't act like. You know,


I mean, like Will said, he'd smoke and he was denying
that he knows anything, So, and I didn't know
anything about him. I mean I just had heard the name.
He was very sweet, and I felt good around him. He
was really kind to me. But beyond that I didn't know
what to think. But there was one time, what was it? I
think he had just said something like, "This beggar
doesn't know anything," and then I said,

- Well, have you seen, have you had darshan


with Satya Sai Baba?

62
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

I guess I was thinking, ‘maybe you should see Sai


Baba, you know [laughs]. And he said,

- Yes, this beggar has seen him.

And then I said,

- You've seen him in Puttaparthi? In his ashram?

And he said,

- No, this beggar has never been there.

And I said,

- Well maybe you've seen him in Whitefield

He said,

- No, this beggar never went to Whitefield."

And then I said,

- Well, Madras. He goes to Madras occasionally.

He said,

- No, this beggar never saw him in Madras.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Then, Swami, I said, maybe you had a vision or


something?

And he said,

- No, no, no. This beggar doesn't have visions.

And then I said,

- Well, where'd you seen him?

He said,

- I see him every day.

And I said,

- You mean, inwardly. You see him inwardly


every day?

He said,

- Yeah.

He pointed at the sun. [laughs] He said,

- I see him every day."

64
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

[long pause]

And then Will and I saw him that last time with, and
hang out with Brett9.

Brett and I were roommates at Ammichi's ashram.


We were the only people who could put up with each
other. [Will is laughing] I mean, Brett's great, I love
Brett, but we were kind of, a bit curmudgeons who
never, kind of, fit into the whole situation… He was
with Ammachi, he was there for a long time… He
wasn't there in the ashram the whole time... We ended
up going to Ammichi's at about the same time, and so,
we usually were roommates.

I mean, at one point we were actually in


Ramanashram’s quarters. We had the best room in the
house, but that last time with Will and Phyllis and
everything, I remember, it was really remarkable.
Going into that huge hall, and then he'd just be sitting
there, all alone, just kind of looking up, or saying
something. You know, maybe kind of like [laughing],
we'd touch the feet of the statue and then prostrate to
Yogi and it was just the very - strange, this huge,
empty hall with the dirt floor, and [laughing] like a

9
It must be Bret Carlson, who had passed some years in Ma Amritananda
Ma Ashram in California. Bret was (and is still) living in Tiruvannamalai at
that time.

65
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

surreal sort of situation. And then, Will and I don't


know if Phyllis was there that time, he called us out
once and he was talking about Northern Ireland and
different things.

- Will: Oh, yeah, because, remember what we


saw? That Irish guy was there who was leading some
tour, right? Remember? He was some Irish guy who
was leading some tour, and his people were there.
Was that guy from upstate there? The guy Jerry?
Yeah, Jerry was in that group, because he was in with
that Irish group. And Jerry had since come down a
few times at Ammichi's.

- Richard: I think you and I were sitting there


one day.

- Will: Yeah, well, we got to see him twice.


Yeah.

- Richard: And he started talking to us about the


Northern Ireland. I thought that was interesting. Yeah,
twice he called us, and once I asked him to bless - I
had all these crystals, Indian crystals, and I asked him
to bless them.

66
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

I think he didn't really like the idea. He kind of held it


over [Will laughing]. "This beggar doesn't believe in
those things." [all laughing]

- Will: "You keep it," you know? Every time


you wanted to give him a crystal, he said, "No, no.
You keep it."

- Richard: Well, I wanted him to bless it.

- Interviewer: Well, we’ve seen him bless


people. Professor Longaragi(?)? 10 The gentleman
from Madras? Who has a sister in Navidica (?)
Academy? 11 He's the sadhu who said that Yogi
Ramsuratkumar initiated him. And he has a staff, and
on two visits I saw him bring his staff and present it to
Yogi Ramsuratkumar, and Yogi Ramsuratkumar
would run his hands up and down it, both ways, and
cover the whole thing, and give it back to him. That
was really kind of interesting, to watch that.

- Richard: Yeah, well, he actually said - he held


the crystal up for a while and then, it's interesting that
a friend of mine who's kind of clairvoyant, I just gave

10
We correct : Prof. Rangarajan.
11
Here, it is a little bit funny. Actually, Sadhu Rangarajan was the Head of
the Sister Nivedita Academy in Madras…

67
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

him a rock and said, "Well, what do you feel in this


rock?" and he just kind of closed his eyes and said,
"Tiruvannamalai?" He said, “I feel Tiruvannamalai."
[Laughs]

- Will: The nicest times I had with Swami was -


my wife died in 1989, she had cancer and it depressed
me but we met a saint in Bombay… - it was fifteen
years before. He told us:

- Whatever you do, don't go for ayurvedic


treatment. Only go for naturopathic treatment.

But at that time she was in UP12… Anyway, she was


getting her treatment from Vansala13… So then
Swami was sitting down at the house, still down at the
house on Sannadhi Street, and so I went to see Swami
and - I think it really must be in ‘88 or '89, something,
I don't remember, or early 87'? And then, I went to see
Swami and he says,

- Will, you always come to see me.


12
Uttar Pradesh, one of the Indian states, in the North.
13
A town (we don’t know about it - Vansala, or Bansala?

68
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

So he says,

- Tomorrow I'm going to come and see you

So I was staying down at this Krishna Vrindavan


Lodge, down street. At that time it was the Udipi
Vrindavan Lodge. … They always have pictures of
Him and stuff up there. But one time it was mostly
hotel, and then a restaurant at the back. But, of course,
when Indians say "hotel," they mean "restaurant." But
anyway, so that time they had mostly lodge rooms, so
I was staying there. I had a room on the ground floor,
and every day, for about a week, or maybe six days.
Every morning Swami would come see me. I would
hear a little tap at the door about five thirty or quarter
to six. He'd come in and we'd just sit together …
usually for the average of four, five, six hours. Two of
us. So he would come in, then he would usually sit on
the bed and there was a chair, and then they always
have a little glass for water, and he would use that as
his ashtray. And most of the time he just sat around…
Oh, I'd like to hear him singing, he'd be singing Shri
Ram, Jai Ram, something like that. But he used to
like, he loved, to talk about J. Krishnamurti. You
know we talked about Krishnamurti. He had great
reverence for Krishnamurti.

69
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

He said that for years he had gone to his talks in


Madras, because Krishnamurti used to always give a
series of talks in Madras – not just one talk but a
series, because I went to see him, I had gone to his
talks. So he used to go there, and he said he'd take the
bus there, and get off the bus, and have a cigarette and
he'd go to the talks. And then he said, after the talks
he'd always try to get an interview with Krishnamurti,
but each time, the secretary would say he's not
available. So one time, one year, Swami said
Krishnamurti was way up on an upper balcony, and
Swami said:

- Oh, I’d like an interview with Krishnamurti.

So the lady says he's not available and so


Krishnamurti comes downstairs and just yelled at the
secretary,

- This (man) has been trying to see me for years,


and you always tell him I'm not available. It's
not true. I'm available."

So they talk, and Swami says,

- Well, Krishnamurti, I have always been, what is


the difference between Ramnam, saying the
Name of God, and what you're, saying?

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And Krishnamurti says there's absolutely no


difference. So, anyway, that was good. And then he
gave Swami a big hug. So that was really nice,
because Krishnamurti was always down on gurus …
And Swami himself told me - each of these teachers
come for a certain group - he thought that
Krishnamurti would more appeal to people who are
more in the mind state rather than in the devotional
state. The mind people, who have to explain
everything. Of course, Swami went way beyond what
they knew [laughing]…

When Krishnamurti died, because Krishnamurti died


in '93, '95? Maybe Krishnamurti died in the '80s, well,
maybe about '90'… But anyway, He said that he was
afraid that when Krishnamurti died, his teachings
would die. And he said his teachings were very, very
great, very great teachings, very direct. And he'd
always tell me, go through Krishnamurti's books.

It was interesting, somebody came once and he asked


him about Krishnamurti. The guy said, “You should
go to the talks." And at that time, Krishnamurti was
just finishing talks in Madras and he was going to go
to Bombay, so he told him, "Go to Bombay and see
Krishnamurti.” So the guy goes to the airport, and
who does he see at the airport? J. Krishnamurti.

71
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And anyway, the attendant left, so he walked over and


said, "Sir, what is your name?" And he said, "J.
Krishnamurti," And he said, "Oh God! I've always
wanted to talk to you." And so Krishnamurti talked to
him for a few minutes, but he said he felt just like the
whole universe disappeared…

So, anyway, he got a great blessing from that, but he


thought, “Boy, Swami's really got something here.”
He asked me to go and, I see him right, everything, all
the ducks there, lined up. So, and then somebody else
had came with this guy. There was a car and they
weren’t leaving, when Swami had his house, and of
course the owner saw him on the veranda, and he
didn't go in the house… in Sannadhi Street. He always
saw people on the veranda…. That's the only time I'd
ever gotten into the house. (In the front porch), that
was where all the common people got. But when
Hilda came, we were taken into the house.

And of course, Swami's bags, and then things were


like that much dust under it [laughing], like cleaning
brand new outfits with that much dust … But he said,
it wasn’t proper for Hilda to be out there because

72
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

people were urinating on that wall and he didn't want


Hilda… [laughing]. He. said we must accord her
some respect … So that was the only time I got in the
house. (It) was very, very sparse (inside). There was
nothing. Swami had a mat, his mat on the floor, and
there was no furniture, just piles of newspapers and
some bags, burlap bags. And totally untidy.
Completely untidy. But that's just the way he lived…

- Richard: Anyone live in that house?

- Will : No, no. Well, Parimal14. With Parimal. And


then one time there was a couple of young boys he
had who were his attendants for a short time. And I
hear they were orphans and they were attending them.
Swami was giving them food and stuff like that. One
of these little tykes, I think he was seven - the little
kid was like, really, "You can't see Swami." So then
Perumal came, then he saw this kid being real brusque
with me, so he took the kid aside and had a talk with
him, and after that the kid was really nice to me.
Every time he'd say, "Yeah, yeah, come on in!" The
kid would say, "No, you can't see Swami!" (What a)
shock. Then once, the kid was telling me I couldn't
see Swami and then Swami walked out and said, "It's
all right. He's all right." [laughing] But he was very,

14
We correct : Perumal (Sadaiyan).

73
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

very funny. So, getting back to that time, he'd come to


my room every day, and each day we would sit and
talk, just all kinds of topics, on any topic that I wanted
to discuss, or he wanted to discuss or anything like
that. And then there would be about ten o'clock or so,
maybe nine, ten o'clock, Swami would say, "Should
we go for something to eat?" And I'd say, "Yes,
Swami," and so we'd go, there was a restaurant in the
back. There was only one table we would sit at. It was
like the last table in the back. So he said, "Go see if
that's clear." Either it had just cleared or it was empty.
So then, when we'd go, all the people who were
serving the food would come over and touch his feet.
Bring the food and touch his feet. And then, when I
went to pay the bill, they wouldn't take any money.
When Swami would eat in the restaurant, that was
blessing enough. And it was very nice…

I remember one time, suddenly the Congress Party


people came and talked a couple hours to Swami
about, just in my room there, just Swami and I and the
Congress Party people. And he always liked the
Congress Party…

- Interviewer: They were speaking in Tamil or


something?

74
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Will: Yeah, a little bit. Mostly in English. But


even, sometimes when people would come and they
spoke - you see, Swami’s native tongue was Hindi.
Anyway, most of the time, whenever they came, even
if they spoke Hindi, he would insist they talk English.
But on rare occasions, somebody who was like a big
Northem, some guy came from some big government
official in the North, and he was on leave or
something, his family was from there, so they spoke
in Hindi, but the rest of the time he was always
speaking in English. But Swami had a big thing, his
big thing was names. If you wanted to know anything
about anybody, where these people came and they
were interested in marriage or their matrimonial
(affairs), "Just tell me. Read the names." And then, if
he'd hear the names he would say, "Stop. That's the
one. Only concentrate. Don't … forget the rest." So
once, somebody wrote us a letter saying they were
having a hard time at the school, and we had lived at
this guy's house before we came to India, because
Joan's parents used to live in the DC area. So anyway,
the guy was writing… the teacher was having an
affair with the principal, and it was no good and …
He was really upset. And Swami just (showed) the
letter and he said, "Can I see the handwriting?" And
he'd just glance at it. That's it. He told us all about the
guy. He said, "What's the guy's name?” And he said,
"Let me see the handwriting." He said, "I got it." He

75
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

described him perfectly. Absolutely. Right down to


the feet. And anybody who came with a problem to
heal, he'd always just say, "Tell me the name." And
then he would be like writing it in the air in Hindi.
Because that was his name. That was just my
assumption, because Tamil wasn't - Swami spoke very
bad Tamil [laughing]. It was very rustic Tamil; it
wasn't the high, refined Tamil. And the Tamil I know
was all street Tamil, for ordering stuff like that.
Anyway, so he always used to say, "Tell me the
name", and whoever came, he really always
concentrated on the name. And a couple of times
somebody came … I remember, one girl came from
Canada, and she had a niece who was very young, just
like a newborn, but it had some very significant health
problems, and Swami said, "Is it possible to change
the name?" And he said, "No, no, the parents
…They'll never call him anything else”… He said,
"Well, you call him Such-and-such. I'm giving a new
name, and you call her that." … The name was big
thing. Supposedly your name has like a vibration in
the universal who you are. It has a vibration …with
your soul that's taken that vibration. Some people
would come and this German guy came, Swami came,
he's a very, very, very high guy, and he had a
tremendous amount of mystical experience, I mean
real, real yogi experiences, this guy, really.... And so
Swami looked at him and says, "That's not your given

76
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

name." And he said, "Yeah, you're right." He says, "I


was born in, Germany but we moved to Canada
during World War II, so my mother didn't want the
Canadians to have an association with the German
name, so she started Io call me Henri." So Swami
says, "Please use your regular name. Please use your
real name." And anybody who came, if you weren't
using your given name, Swami knew it. He just said,
"That is not your correct name. Please use your name
given."

We have all these females who are always


changing their name. They think they're going to
change their karma. Your karma's in no way in Tom,
Dick, or Harry [laughs]. But anyway, he was really,
always a stickler for that. Sometimes he would write
to me in Hindi. You know, just, he would write it out
in Hindi, on paper. And he did a whole series actually
in bronze for me… in my house upstate… One night
he just said, "I’m going to make some drawings for
Will." And he just did all these beautiful (things). He
made about ten, he made at least ten, these ten sheets.

……….. ? …”Five, five, five.” And then Joan said,

- Well what does that mean

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Oh, that’s the number of marriage.

But he wasn’t listening to Joan.

- There is a fire on the hill. Don't worry. Don't


have any fear. It won't hurt your. You are in
Tiruvannamalai. All is well.

And he runs all these things like this. He was always


saying that the hill was fire. Because, the hill, that
Shiva temple on the hill, is a fire temple. Oh, I wanted
to just go back, so Swami and I are walking, so we go
to breakfast, down, when he was coming to my room.
Then he would say, "Will, shall we go to the temple?"
And I'd say, ''Sure, Swami, let's go to the temple." So
he would take my hand and we'd walk hand-in-hand
to the temple and he would be singing Shri Ram, Jai
Ram, Jai Jai Ram. I felt like I was walking on another
level. Wow! Just holding his hand, him singing Shri
Ram, Jai Ram, I mean we were just walking on
another plane of existence. And then, when we got
near, where all that stuff, that big area in front of the
temple all burned down, but they all these big, kind of
ancient palms and stuff like that. And these little
ladies would come, I mean I would have tears in my
eyes; their devotion to Swami was so fantastic. They
would have be selling these little beads, and then,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

each little lady they would put a garland, one of her


little garlands around Swami's head, and she would be
in tears and she'd go down and touch Swami's feet.
That would just like move me to tears. These people
had such absolute, simple devotion. There was no
bullshit; there was no intellect, just total, complete
devotion. Sometimes we'd go out to the market, and
sometimes these people would stop Swami and
Swami would talk and say, "Yeah, sure," and I'd give
it to them and he’d say,

- Will, you know, these people have no money.


We must help them in some way or other.

And whatever he had he just gave them. Never a


thought of needs.

But then, sometimes we'd go into the inner sanctum,


Swami and I together, and then we'd go around and sit
together, we'd walk around those trees by the side of
the temple there and then we'd go and sit in the very
back of the temple, way in the back, around the other
side, where the Ganesh is, always pulling around the
other side, just the two of us. And he'd be telling me
about the history of Tiruvannamalai and the city, and
how the temple got built and how everybody got a
boon from God… That was a really special time, just
the two of us together.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And every day, for five days, or six days, he came


very single day. And just the two of us, hanging out,
just like brothers. This was, boy, this was a golden
opportunity, it was just so nice because you could just
be so one-on-one with Swami. It was just completely
nice. I'd never had such a good experience before.
Because most gurus, they’re pretty standoffish. They
don’t give you much of their time. But here he was,
freely sharing his time with me. I wrote him a letter in
84, because Hilda was gonna go in '84, and I wanted
to come and spend a month before Hilda came. And
he wrote a letter back to me saying, there's no need to
come. There's no need. This beggar can't spend any
time with you if you do come, that there's no need. He
says when it is necessary, and he said it's very rare for
this beggar to spend so much time with (somebody).
But he said, when you are in need, this beggar will be
there. But now, there's no need. And then, he told me
some word, there's something he wrote for me a long
time ago, I remember it was in the early '70 when I
met him… And then, he said, there's no need to be
here. Just - and he put this in big letters – remember
the Father all the time. So, I showed the letter to
Hilda… She said, "Oh, yeah, he's saying …. (?)

Well, the next time I went back because Joan was


very sick. She'd gone to Tiruvannamalai, and she was

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

staying at the same hotel. And she was very ill at that
time. Anyway, she went twice. Once she went with
Arveni (?), and he was a guy who lived in Bombay, he
used to be a follower of Krishnamurti. And, anyway,
… Arveni’s comment, you know, seeing Swami,
"Why doesn't he ever bathe?" [laughing] He couldn't
figure that one out. But then, once, when we're done,
we’re talking, we'd mentioned (the) name (of) the
father of Krishnamurti, and he’d been very nice to us.
So Swami said, “Oh, yes. He's one of the few people
of Krishnamurti’s disciples who is living the
teaching." And so we told that to Arveni, and he was
really amazed, quite happy that somebody was staying
in that house (?)… But anyway, Joan was at that
same hotel, when she was very ill, and he would come
every day. And then, she was staying up in her room,
and it's not proper for a man to come into a lady's
room or anything like that, so she would come and
meet him at the restaurant. So then Perumal, or one of
the guys, would come up, and she would come and be
just talking in the restaurant with him. And he was
very, very compassionate, very loving, very kind, and
everything like that.

Interviewer: And so Yogi Ramsuratkumar knew


that your wife had cancer?

Will: Yeah. Yeah, yeah.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Interviewer: Did he give any instructions about


that?

Will: No. At that time, in fact, she was taking


Tibetan medical treatment up in Vansala. Anyway, I
was up there, and then she got really ill and we
brought her down to the hospital. We found a hospital
in Bombay. So that's where she died. And I
telegrammed every single day, there was either a
telegram or the speed post came in two days, saying
what her condition was. And then, when she died, we
took the ashes down and He held the ashes and we put
them up on the (?). But he had a whole bunch of
people, I remember, there were about a dozen people
in a sort of waiting room, and He said, "Oh, this
beggar's busy tomorrow." But he actually cleared
them out. He said, "Please come back in about an
hour." But he made them all leave.

[End of tape]

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

[Tape 2, face A]

8- 9 November 2002

Tape 2, Side A

So Swami booted everybody out, and then he had


them come back in one hour, and then he quietly
talked to us about Joan passing, and although I sent
him some letters and telegrams … anyway, we had
the body cremated, in a Bombay crematorium, and
then brought the ashes down. So Swami then said,
"Come early morning," and the next morning we
came about six a.m., and spent an hour and Swami
just sat and held the ashes - we had them in a small
stainless steel can - and he held the ashes for at least
an hour. He didn't say a word. He was just making
various kinds of hand gestures, just quietly with the
ashes. And then he said,

- Okay, you can start.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And so then we went up the hill, up near


Skandashram, overlooking the main temple. (It
would) be a good place to have her ashes scattered.

And then that was next year, then I went (in) ‘90, and
Ma Devaki was there and these two other ladies were
there, and they both, they were both sadhu ladies, one
lady from Finland and one lady from Spain. (One)
was Kirsti. But anyway they were there, and they'd
been there since the ’70. So Ma Devaki was there, but
that time she was still living in Coimbatore and she
was a professor. And so, I was coming down there
one day, and I’m there, and Swami's there, and the
two ladies. I get the feeling Swami was going to give
me something. He walks in, so he's looking around, he
says,

- Nobody knows this beggar. Nobody knows this


beggar. There's only one person who does know
this beggar, and that's Will.

And he goes inside and he brings back this sketch that


somebody sent, kind of a rough sketch of Swami with
his fan. I say, "Swami, it's beautiful, but I have this
huge painting from Wendel He goes back in, next
thing he comes out, he has these two fans, tied
together with a string he’s carried for ten years.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Will, would you like these, Swami then asks.


Can you keep it nicely?

- Aw, I’ll keep it very nicely.

So then, I had it at my house upstate, it was really,


really nice, but I saw him carry those, he carried that
fan for ten years. So I felt really lucky. I thought,
‘Wow, this is a great blessing.' And he said,

- You know, Will, I couldn't give you that fan


before.

And then, you know, I didn't ask him why, or


anything. You don't look a gift horse in the mouth.
You just say, "Oh, wow." I was like, floored when he
was walking out with that fan. And I went, and then I
even bought a little hard suitcase, I didn't care what
Amali (?) said, it wouldn't get squashed if I had all
soft luggage. And so, I have this, I have a fan in my
bag, and I saw Aruna (?), that little lady on the bed
who was kind of sick…, that little French lady… So
she was a one-time devotee of Yogi Ramsuratkumar,
but that Om Swami had poisoned her mind. So she
saw me carrying that fan in the bag. I was coming
back to my room at the ashram there, and she said,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

"What have you got in that bag?" "Oh, nothing."


Made this [sound effect of zipping by] right by her,
because I didn't want to go into Swami giving me that.

Anyway, Swami's very, very gracious, and once, Ma


Devaki was coming, she was a real devotee of God,
and I remember Swami said would she ever get
married, and she said no. If she did ever get married,
she would marry the person she loved, she wouldn't
have any arranged marriage. … He was kind of
teasing her… Swami is very funny at times. So, then
she kept coming more regularly, more regularly, more
regularly, more regularly, and then finally she just
wanted to move in, move to Tiruvannamalai. She was
having a lot of the photos and stuff that were taken
and there was a guy down at the ashram, that very
wealthy guy … He inherited the Nutrine sweet's
fortune. Nutrine sweets makes almost all the candy for
India. He inherited that whole fortune, but a couple of
years after being that situation, his wife, his kids died
within a month. And his mother and father died within
a month. So he was left with this huge fortune, and
then he decided, you know, death is in the end
anyway. And so he moved to Tiruvannamalai, gave
up, gave his brother control of the money, interest in
the company. Then he adopted a daughter, some local
girl, as a daughter, and at that time he was finding a
lot of the pictures of Swami and the calendars and

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

stuff and I remember Ma Devaki going to his house


and talking to him about various things, and her
coming over and they wanted the prints and he said to
her, “I’ll get the prints." He had a very good camera.
He was taking some photos.

So he was living in Tiruvannamalai, and he drives a


nice car. But he was a very sweet, humble guy. So I
asked him if he was still coming to see Yogi
Ramsuratkumar, he said no, there was too much of a
(?) there. Anytime there is a (function) there tends to
be like a zoo-like atmosphere. But Swami was very
good, actually, at containing the zoo-like atmosphere
because he was relatively unknown, and he always
said, the really great ones don't need to have their own
ashram. They just don't need it. They just don't need
it. They're content, they're doing what they're doing
whether you know about them or not. They're still
doing what they're doing, You have no impact on
them. They're not interested in the publicity. They
have no need for it. There's no need for it. There's no
social need, there' s no spiritual need. And I guess I’m
a person like that, who always felt, if you're doing
your thing, then you don't have to draw attention to
yourself. I mean if you're really, really doing your
thing, whatever it is, and no matter who you are, in
what field you are, if you're really doing your thing,
then you don't, if you're really, really seriously doing

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

it, in any way, shape or form, then you don't need all
the attention. Attention is not necessary. And that's
what he was doing.

And somebody came, this little girl Shanti, Hilda


raised - was born with a third eye. So, she came down
to see Yogi Ramsuratkumar, there were over twenty-
six people. Swami didn't want to see them all, he only
wanted to see Hilda, Shanti and Vali, and, of course
me, because I was like the mediator. I had set up all
the things with her, with him. Anyway, while he said,
"Oh, can I see the letter?" So again, he just goes,
"Okay, I got it." He just touched it. "Oh, okay, I got
it." He says,

- Oh, we must write a letter, a thank you to


Hilda.

So he wrote a letter, he had Joan write a letter, "I just


want to thank you for all your help," and mentioned
Yogi Ramsuratkumar, and then Swami signed it "Your
son, Yogi Ramsuratkumar." So then Hilda gets the
letter, and then I’m hearing, this is a year or so later,
because I was in India a year, and then I came back
and everybody said, when Hilda got that letter she
was in ecstasy for weeks. She said,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- My God, a really great yogi has written me.


This is a great, great yogi.

And she had that read twenty or thirty or forty times.


"Read that letter over again to me. Read that letter."
And then she had written a letter to us, but thanking
Yogi Ramsuratkumar. So then, Swami had us, he had
us read that letter to him thirty or forty times. He says,

- Oh, what did that letter say again? Oh please,


read that letter to this beggar again.

It was just a very short letter. So then Hilda said, "Oh,


I've got to meet Yogi Ramsuratkumar."

So then we came back and we met Hilda in New York


and then Hilda says,

- Will, this is somebody I have to meet. I have to


meet this yogi. He's a great yogi.

So, but then when Hilda saw him, she says,

- Will, he's way, way off the charts. I mean, he is


so far out. He is just so far out.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And then she mentioned like the Brotherhood of the


Great white body and every other yogi.

- Oh, he's way, way beyond all of that stuff.

But I remember talking with Swami. We talked about


every kind of subject you ever imagined. We talked
about Castaneda and all that stuff.

- Oh Will, you should go see Don Juan.

I said,

- think he's dead, Swami.

- Okay. Go see Castaneda.

I said,

- Well, nobody knows what he looks like."


[laughing]

But Castaneda used to come and see Hilda. But, you


know, nobody ever saw his picture. He would never
allow his picture to be taken. And somebody asked
Castaneda, have you ever seen anybody with that, you
know, in that egg and all that thing, the way he

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

described Don Juan's aura, and like that? He said,


"Yeah, Hilda."

So he was really impressed. But apparently from what


he saw, the light around her was the same as the light
around Don Juan. But I told,

- You know, Swami some of the Don Juan stories


and all that...”

and this beggar says,

- Oh, Will, you should go down and see Don


Juan. Go spend time with Don Juan"

But I go,

- "Swami, he's dead." [laughing]

But I always kind of liked those stories.

… He read all the books on J. Krishnamurti's life.


There was some new book, he says,

- Oh, this beggar's has read it.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And he tells me to read the books on Krishnamurti.


He was very interested in Krishnamurti. He told
"Have you read that book?" and I said no. And he
said,
- You know, we don't know what Krishnamurti's
life is. He's very secretive in his life. There may
even be women involved. We don't know."
[laughter]

So, but he always thought Krishnamurti had a great


teaching, was a great presence. And really, really
impressed by Krishnamurti. And I remember that guy,
Franklin Jones, Da Avatar. He thought Krishnamurti
was some throwback, spiritual throwback. He called
Krishnamurti a spiritual anachronism. And I thought,
boy, well, Da Free John, he's not free and, he's a
John…

We went to see Krishnamurti, we went to Madison


Square Garden, and we went to Carnegie Hall. And
each time, Krishnamurti would come out, and before
he started his talks, he'd always stare long and hard at
Hilda, and Shanti and Vali. I'd tell Swami that. He
said,

- He never stared at you?

I said,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- No, not that I’m aware, Swami." [laughing]

Swami's always very playful. I always liked it.

Well, when you can get somebody who, on that level,


is willing to talk to you, and it's always kind of
interesting, if they're willing to talk to you one-on-
one, you're kind of blown away by the fact that … But
I always felt very free, and I always felt free to speak
my mind and ask him any questions, express any
doubts or anything. He always gave really good
answers, not weird stuff, not negative stuff, but
always just very direct answers.

Last time we were there, with Richard, was it '90. I


think '99, and then Swami would say,

- Will, how many cigarettes are you smoking?

- Oh, we're not smoking, Swami.

- Will, how many cigarettes again are you


smoking?

And then I said,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Swami, whenever I have the urge to smoke, I


smoke through you.

He just cracked up. He really liked that answer. So


sometimes I used to write him a letter saying, “This
beggar, this and this and this.” … Swami once told
me,

- Will, when I get your letters, I don't know


whether they’re from me or from you.
[laughing]

[long pause] But he was profoundly interested in


politics. And I remember when Indira Gandhi was
assassinated, Swami took that very seriously. And
there was some word got back, when Hilda heard that
- Hilda was never really interested in politics. She
never had that interest in all that stuff. But somebody
asked Swami what he was doing and he said, well,
part of his mission was to work with the politicians,
because they had so much negation, (so much)
negative thinking on them, dislike and hatred and all
that, that to keep them away from that; their focus was
to receive a higher energy. And I remember when I
went down to see Swami, when I got there, I think the
year when Bill Clinton was elected. When was that?

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

'92? So I was down at Swami's house, in Sannadhi


Street, and for some reason Swami wasn't around. I
don't know why, where he was that time, but I went,
and Perumal was there. But somebody came and they
translated with Perumal, because Perumal didn't speak
any English. Se he was one of Swami's attendants for
about twenty-five years, or over that. Anyway, he said
Bill Clinton was a good man, and then I understood,
when Swami said somebody was a good man, he
means he could work with the energy. That's what
that, kind of like, DONG. Okay, that's what he means,
when he says they're a good man, he can work with
the energy. I remember, once, Swami talking about
Nixon. And he said he was the most clever President
we've ever had, but he didn't mean clever in a good-
way, you know. Clever in a manipulative, scheming
way. But he was smart, he was clever, but he wasn't -
you know, Swami never said - and then there was, the
same time, that guy write the letter about the Waldorf
School, and Swami said he felt that was the best
system of education he had ever heard of. (He knows
about it), because we told him this guy taught at
Waldorf School, where Rudolph Steiner's stuff was.
He said, Oh, this is the best system of education that
Swami's ever heard of, and he said, somebody coming
out of a Waldorf school will never turn into another
Nixon. So he wrote that in a letter. We said, No,
please don't write that in your letter [laughing].

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Because Nixon was like a crafty, calculating,


scheming, paranoid nut. Did you guys see that movie
Anthony Hopkins played Nixon? It was Nixon; it was
called Richard Milhouse or something like that. Quite
a good old movie… But anyway, Swami never liked
Nixon. He never thought Nixon was a good guy. He
liked the Kennedys. He said there was something
different there, in that they couldn't be bought, that
they think they had so much money they couldn't be
bought, so they could run on principle rather than
something like that.

So he was always very direct, but the trouble was that


if you didn't know him, you just saw like this guy
sitting up there doing weird things, smoking and
acting funny or something like that. But, for me it was
much more intimate, I saw a much more intimate side
of him, actually relate to him, and have him relate to
me as a person. It was really a very unique
'experience. I'd never have the grace to have that with
another person, but this must go back from past lives
here, because we seemed, we could talk. The minute
you try to concoct anything like this it falls to shreds.
But if it happens spontaneously, then you just flow
with it, that's all. You don't think anything about it and
you don't realize it was so extraordinary until you kind
of sit back, kind of, like, look at how other people

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

have experienced … didn't quite have the same level


or something. But I just felt I was very lucky just to
have these experiences at that level of intimacy, and
the level of openness. He felt comfortable having me
around, and I felt comfortable being around him. But
sometimes I'd go there and … once I went there and
said, "Swami, I’m here for two weeks, can I come
back in the evening, and kind of pack my stuff away in
Tiruvannamalai?" Then I come the next day and he
says, "Good seeing you." And this is a bad omen
when (he says this).

- Nice seeing you, Will. Good we met.

- Thank you. But Swami, I’m here for two weeks.

- Do as you like. But this beggar feels you should


go to Puttaparthi.

[laughing] I had to drag myself on the bus to go to


Puttaparthi. ‘But’, that was his always bottom line:
"Do as you like, but this beggar feels …” … But he
was always very direct, and he never really went in. I
observed him pretty closely, he never wanted
anybody, he was never interested in anybody
worshiping him, at all. Oh, sometimes he would say,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

"Oh, this beggar … doesn't have any boundaries."


And if they truly believed who he was, then they
wouldn't have to come, because there is no boundary.
He doesn't have any limits of being here or there or
whatever, being in form. So I remember Caylor asked
him a question, which was a very interesting question.
He said "What is the difference between realized
beings?" And so he says, there is no difference. One
such a being has gone beyond identification with the
body, then it's the role he has had to play. And he said
he had played, he said he came to play a beggar and
he had to play it perfectly… But it was interesting,
when people asked all these kind of esoteric
questions, he's so beyond mind, you know, that kind
of like, mental hullabaloo stuff we go through. I
mean, he was up working, he was working in the
cosmic spheres, or whatever, and all that was just like
extremely… he had no …

Then it was just like kindergarten. You ask some


question about, you know, oh, why do we (behave
with) the earth like that? You know, you're some
high-tech archaeologist. It's like a child's question.
You can't even relate to it. You can't answer. In the
West we have this idea, this overdevelopment of
intellect and underdeveloprnent of heart, and stuff like
that. But Swami was also a very passionate person,
very moving… People did small things for him - that

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

lady brought that food.. And I remember, once,


Swami was out of his body, he asked Caylor, he said ,

- Sit by his body for three days.

I don't know where they were, in Tiruvannamalai


someplace, and Swami said he was leaving his body
for three days, and Caylor was just to watch the body,
to make sure nothing happened to that body. And
then, when Swami came back in the body after three
days, he just looked at Caylor and he had tears of
gratitude that Caylor had done this for him. He didn't
expect it, he just had such gratitude.

He was also very moved by his dogs. He was very


much upset that Sai Baba died, that Sai Baba was
taken away by the dog collector in Tiruvannamalai.
And Swami was, like, upset for a week. He was
saying, "He took my dog, he took Sai Baba, he took
them." And you could just feel that he was feeling all
the suffering the dog had gone through.

He had two dogs, actually, One, he had Satya Sai


Baba, and I remember the second one was definitely
by the pound. I don't know what happened to the first
one, but that dog used to be a character, because
Swami lived in the temple, he would spend a lot of
time in the temple, and every time the dog saw Swami

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

he would go, "W-o-o-o, w- o-o-o-o, w-o-o-o-o."


[laughing] And of course, the Brahmins hate dogs.
They'd pick up stones, they'd hit the dogs with all
kinds of stones. So that dog was really in great peril,
because every time it saw Swami, it would just really
howl its head off. And every time it came, it would
always follow Swami around the temple. Since we
were with Swami, he would follow us home to our
compounds and stay overnight, and then after a while
it was, constantly, not only in the temple but hanging
around Swami every single day, and that's when he
took it and he fed it. And, once, somebody pushed that
dog down the stairs, those big stairs that were at the
top of that thing, and Swami was really, really mad.
He wasn't mad but… he took the dog in his lap and he
was stroking the dog's paw for about an hour, and he
said,

- Oh, Sai Baba, you're gonna be all right. You're


gonna be all right. You're gonna be all right.

He was very very touching to this dog.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

9th November 2002


New York City

When I came to see Yogi Ramsuratkumar after


visiting Ammachi in 1990 - I came in January or
February - I said I'd seen Ammachi and he said,
“Oh”. He was very happy that I'd seen Ammachi and
then he told me that, when he'd met Ammachi and he
thought that she was the Divine Mother. But then later
on we had talked with the Ammachi people and said
that some devotees were there, and they said that he
did a full prostration before Ammachi and then she
had him come up on stage and sit with her when she
gave the program down in Tiruvannamalai15. So, that's
how I know. And there's supposedly a picture of them
together, but that person was the photographer but she
was not able to find that picture at Ammachi's ashram.
She had misplaced it. But I would have loved to get a
copy of that picture. That was in 1990, but I had a

15
We have always to take care of what is said by people that want other
Masters to be less than theirs…. It is childish behaviour. Other people say
something else … And nobody has any picture of this meeting. As Will,
many would want to get a copy…

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

feeling that she was in '88 or '89, because I know she


did two trips to Tiruvannamalai.

Interviewer: You also mentioned an interesting


story about, we were talking about Paremal16 and who
he was. You mentioned an interesting story regarding
Caylor.

Will: Perumal. Perumal. Yeah. Caylor had


bought him a cow, and Swami wasn't very happy
about that because it took him away from Swami for a
couple of years. And Perumal was such a good, right-
hand person to Swami that the other guys were always
kind of incompetent. When he sent Perumal out to do
something, it got done. But the other people,
Durai(?)17 and George, they weren't very, they weren't
as reliable… Caylor had this idea, I don't know where
he got the money. I'm not sure of the story about how
he got the money, and a cow is a couple thousand
rupees, not cheap. So anyway, Perumal then had the
idea that he would buy this. He gave money to
Perumal to buy a cow. He bought the cow, and then
he was selling milk for about two or three years. Then

16
Perumal. Mistake from the interviewer or from the typewriter who does
not know about Adaiyan Perumal. So we correct in Will’s aswer.
17
It must be another mistake from the interviewer who did not understand
the name correctly. We don’t know any Durai or so. At that time, Perumal,
George and Jagannathan were the three with Yogiji.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

after that the cow dried up, and then Perumal came
back to Swami. I remember seeing Perumal riding
around on his bicycle and delivering the milk and
stuff like that.

Interviewer: So he actually just left Yogi


Ramsuratkumar’s company for several years.

Will: Well, he came occasionally and he didn't


totally break off contact, but it wasn't the same level
of devotion and service that he had before. I mean,
same level of devotion but not level of service,
because he was distracted. And Swami was always
very powerful [laughing]. And then Swami just said,
"Oh, he has a cow now.” Swami just didn't seem
pleased with that. It wasn't a thing that he was very
pleased with Caylor for doing that.

Interviewer: You had also mentioned Yogi


Ramsuratkumar corresponding with an American.

Will: Well, He was actually Dutch. His name


was Sri Raman, and he used to raise horses. When I
met him he was eighty and that was at Sai Baba's. He
had gone down to see Yogi Ramsuratkumar. I wasn't
there when he met him, but then, as a result, he
always called Yogi Ramsuratkumar "the old fox." So
then, once, we got a letter there - when Joan and I

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

were hanging out with Swami, we were going to the


field every day with him, and a letter came and it was
addressed to "The Old Fox." "Dear Old Fox," and
then Swami signed it. He had Joan write the letter
back, and he signed it "The Yellow(?) Fox." Anyway,
we sent it back on. And the funny story is Swami
blessed the letter. You know, any time he did anything
he really put a lot of effort into that… Joan said,

- Could I carry it back?

So Swami said,

- Sure, but keep it in a newspaper.

So she said,

- No, no, it'll be all right. I'm just going to keep it


in my hand.

(It was then) a long walk from the town - from the
railway station into the town was probably like half an
hour walk. And it was very hot. So her fingers were
sweaty, and it made a hole in the envelope. And
Swami saw that, and Swami was really mad. He said,

- What? You spoiled this.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

So then he drew something, he made like a circle


around the hole and did something, but he told Joan it
would never be the same. It could never be the same.
So he always said that when he put, wrote a letter, he
always put something into it. And whenever you got a
letter from him you just felt really such joy and
happiness come over you. And I was lucky to get a
bunch of letters from him over the years. And one I
have framed, that he sent me when I wanted to come
in '84 and he said it wasn't necessary to come but,
quote, remember." But that was, he always, he was
very, very upset, because you have to do everything
exactly his way. Once he sent Joan and I to the post
office to mail something. Three or four steps after, we
stopped, and we're turning back to ask him a question.
He said,

- Once this beggar sends you, you don't turn


back. You don't break the momentum of what this
beggar is doing.

So he was very strict. We were going to ask him, How


do you want it sent? And whatever, and whatever, and
whatever, but he just was very furious… We take the
things very casually, but what he does, everything is
very serious. Really, everything. There is no waste of
energy with him.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

When Hilda came in '78, after Joan had gone away -


she’d gone back to the States because her vacation
was up, Hilda was supposed to come - Swami had me
book a hotel, book a bunch of rooms near the temple
when he was down on Sannadhi Street. Anyway, then
he came and then he called me the night, like the
whole day Hilda was coming. He called me, like I
used, I'd tell him eleven and then waited, and he
wasn't there, and so Perumal said, “oh, you know,
come and stay and stay and stay. He's coming.” And
then, it was like one o'clock and we didn't know when
Hilda was coming in. So, at one o'clock in the
afternoon, I was sitting up on the platform, Swami
comes and says,

- Tell me, you'll tell me whenever Hilda's here. I


want you to give me notice as soon as she
comes. And then I want you to bring her here
immediately.

And he spoke with such power at that time that every


atom in my body was vibrating. It was like, don't
screw this up. I had never just seen him radiate such
power before. I mean, just, my body. Every atom. I

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

felt like when I walked away, my whole body was just


completely tingling. So I thought, “boy, don’t screw
this up [laughing].

So anyway, Hilda said, when she was at the bus - they


were coming from Madras - she said she felt like a set
of big ears was just listening to her. And then she
came in about eleven o'clock. She got in about eleven
o'clock, but she was very tired, so I went over
immediately and I told Swami she's here. So, then, I
had a taxi waiting there. Swami gave me very specific
instructions. Only seven people can be here, when
Hilda's here, excluding me. When I went to the room
where Hilda was, there were exactly seven people
there. I said, "Hilda, Swami has given me very, very
explicit instructions. Only seven people could come,
exactly seven of us." So we walked in, and there was
seven people. So, Shanti and Vali and Hilda and a
couple of other people. And then I came and we
knocked. So we came outside of Swami's little gate
there and Hilda was standing there.

- Wow! she says, This whole area is just filled


with such golden lights.

She was really impressed. She says,

- Really. Amazing golden lights.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And then Swami came in, and he was very gracious,


he came in and sat down. And for a long time he just
sat on the ground, and Hilda brought one of these
little, it was like, little folding chairs. They're like
what you take to the beach or something. They are
quite low, you sit low in them. But she had a hard
time sitting for a long time. She's very healthy but she
just couldn't sit, cross-legged and stuff like that, or sit
on the floor for a long time, so she had that little chair.
So she sat before Swami and he looked at her. He
didn't say a word for half-hour, forty-five minutes, he
didn't say one word. He just looked at her, and he just
kept looking at her, and looking above her and
everything. Then after a half- hour he said,

- Hilda, how do you feel?

Because she was really tired. They'd been travelling


all day. And she says,

- Swami, I feel like I've just gotten up in the


morning.

So he says, "Oh," and he just had a big smile, and then


everybody went around the room, "What is your
name?" "What is your name?" "What is your name?"
"What is your name?" Then Shanti and Vala came up

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

and then he had them just sit before him and asked
them some questions. The girls, one was about eleven,
one was nine, and both very, very advanced souls.
And Swami just gave them a lot of attention. And
then, he was always having me to do the interpreter,
because he understood my English. He was very used
to my pronunciation and everything, and even when I
wrote he said he could always read my handwriting,
even though nobody else could. But I wrote this
letter. And Hilda looked in and "Will, that's not
readable." And she made me type it, and so Swami
was surprised it was a typed letter, and I couldn't type,
somebody else typed it. And anyway, so Swami said,

- Will, there's no problem. I can read your


handwriting, there's no problem.

[end of side A]

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

[Tape 2, Face B missing]

110
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

9 November 2000

[Tape 3, Side A]

... you know, your son has a good job, he works here."

He said,

- It’ll be fine. Don't worry about anything like


that. Don't worry that he does not work for the
government or anything like this. You have a
very successful stand here.

And, as we were leaving, the guy was looking at me


with just such appreciation in his eyes for bringing
Swami into his shop. [laughing]

Then there was another guy we used to go down to.


There was a shop called the Shri Sundra Tea Shop,
and that's just down the road, go down to that car
street, down, and then you make a right and there's the
bank down there and stuff like that. I don't know if
Shri Sundra Tea Shop is still there, I think something
else is there now, but anyway, the guy was from

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

North India, so Swami would go over there and they


would sometimes speak in Hindi. And the guy really
made really, really great tea. He made one of the best
teas in Tiruvannamalai, and plus he made homemade
milk sweet palgoa, which is like that milk candy.
They keep boiling down milk, and then it becomes
like this little sweet, white cream. And it's really,
really rich. But it's really, really good. And it's hard to
find anything that's, quote, such gourmet in
Tiruvannamalai [laughs]. So we'd go in there, and
then that man would also make chapattis, because he
was North Indian, and Swami (is) North Indian (and)
liked chapattis. So Swami would always get the
chapattis so they were, they would get real, real soggy
so he could gum them…

Right at the end of that car street there was a statue of


Gandhi. So on Gandhi's birthday, every year, Swami
used to go down and sit there by the statue and chant,
"Gandhi ki jai, Gandhi ki jai”, or something, just
chant the whole day about Gandhi. And he, Gandhi,
was also a good devotee of Ramnam. And when he
died he was saying, "Ram, Ram, Ram, Ram, Ram."
Swami always liked that about him. He thought
Gandhi was a great guru and really could benefit
India. Swami was always very kind of concerned
about the destiny of India, that they had, there was the
right political people. That was a real big concern of

112
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

his. That was always on his mind. Who was going to


be the best? Who could serve India?

- Interviewer: Any other saints that Yogi


Rarnsuratkumar had talked about?

- Will: Well… there was a guy who used to come


from Tindivanam, some yogi. Tindivanam is down by
Pondicherry. And this guy was a poet. He was a Tamil
poet. He used to come and he would just go on, he
had hours and hours of poetry dedicated to Yogi
Ramsuratkumar. But Swami knew he was coming. He
kind of disappeared… And so Swami would say, "Oh
my God, that yogi's coming," and he would zip off or
he couldn't, he would be trapped. It was really very
funny. But this guy would always praise. Swami
didn’t hear his praise because he didn’t want have
any. It was good for other people, he didn't care. That
wasn't what, didn't help him do what he was going to
do.

There's a very funny story. There was a guy who came


with Swami, and he ran a little photography shop
down in Tiru, and he was always complaining these
various yogis were coming and asking him to take

113
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

free photographs of them sitting by some crematorium


or by some graveyard or something, and he was
saying it cost him a lot of money, and he wasn't
getting paid for these photos or anything. And then
Swami would say it's a great blessing to serve these
yogis. Don't mind the cost. It's a great blessing. You'll
see. And then later, that guy had so much business
that he owned all the photograph shops in town. He
expanded a chain, so every photographic shop in town
he owned. Swami just told him what was what, and
don't nickel and dime your stuff, you're getting great
grace from all this stuff. Don't, don't be petty. And the
same with those people who served him at that
restaurant, Udipi Brindaban Lodge. They own pretty -
all the restaurants now in Tiruvannamalai are under
their control. Most of the restaurants. The big
restaurants are all under their control. They expanded
that much… (I mean) their family. They expanded all.
And they were the few people that really served
Swami day and night and day and night…. Before,
they were on the main street, and then Swami and I
and Joan would go in there and they would serve us
meals and stuff like that. And they always had a big
picture of Yogi Ramsuratkumar, and Vishnu and all
this stuff. But they were always, they would give him
coffee, they would usually run over there, the kid
would always run over there, or Perumal would run
over there. And of course there was never an account.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

You know, Swami (had) an account. And somebody


would come and pay it. But then, when Swami got
that house, a lot of money started coming, so he paid
the shops in advance, at that point. So he had a credit
line, rather than a debit line [laughs]. Which was
really fun, because…

I remember once, there was a group of people come


and Swami had ordered like one of those really bright
lanterns that pump full of kerosene. And so, all the
people had left, we had to have the lantern on real
bright all night because Swami said he paid for it and
we couldn't waste it... This was when he lived in the
bazaar, when he was still down in the bazaar…

But my kind of relationship was different. It was


Swami and I were talking. It was just a different kind
of relationship than most people had with him. I’m
thinking about it now because I just kind of took it for
granted then. But now I’m thinking, Wow! This is
pretty unusual. Most people didn't get that
opportunity, or weren't that lucky, or whatever. So we
could just sit around, we would sit with Swami and
we'd talk for hours and hours and hours. Just the two
of us, mostly. And then sometimes Joan was there.
And Joan was always the quiet type. She never really
answered, never asked anything but sometimes she
would think. But once there was a funny story:

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

She rolled out a mat. He just was living down in the


bazaar there, at nights. He said,

- Please roll out my mat.

and he gave very explicit instructions how to roll out


this little ratty mat. And she didn't do it properly. So
then he said,

- Stop!

So he went and did it. He said,

- Please Joan, sit down.

So, she was sitting there, and I guess internally she


was boiling, really boiling mad. So Swami looks over
and says,

- Will, Joan thinks this beggar is very arrogant.

She told me later, “I was thinking exact that same".

So anyway, there were no secrets with Swami. I


always was out in the open, I always thought, “Well,
these people really know every thought, so you can't
hide anything from them, so there's no pretending to

116
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

be little Mr. Goody Two Shoes.” There were all these


people go around and then all of a sudden they're so
holy. Ah, bullshit, they don't live a life like that. That's
all fake. And the saints know it. They're not fooling
anybody. They're sure as hell not fooling me, and I’m
not even a saint. So I always have to laugh at those
kind of people… But anyway, Joan was a good soul,
really. A really good soul. But Swami was really
amazing. A lot of times I wouldn't see him for a year,
and I didn't write, and I got thinking. So one time, my
house upstate I was just like, Oh man, these people
are bugging me and it’s just too much politics and I
just want to get the hell out of here. Maybe I’ll move
to California. So anyway, I go to see Swami, he's
down at the house, and I go in the gate, and he looks
at me, I’m the only one there. He takes a look at me
and he says,

- Will, I don't like that thought you're having.

I didn't say a word. My first day there, my first one


minute there. So he greets me and he says,
- I don't like that thought. Please change that
thought. That thought is disturbing this beggar.

(The thought was that) I didn't want to be at my place


upstate. So he said,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- This beggar is only happy when you're there.

That was the first thing. He didn't have to ask me what


the thought was. I knew what the thought was. This is
how attuned he was. You couldn't pull any punches.
There was absolutely no way.

So another time I remember, after Joan died, I was at


the Ramana ashram the next year and, during lunch
time, all these very, very attractive young German
girls were kind of parading around. I thought, “Gee,
maybe I should get remarried.” The same evening
we're down the town, Swami looks at me and says,

- Oh, you want to get remarried.

- Oh no, no, Swami.

It was like a cloud on a clear day, wafting through the


air. No, no, no, no, no. It was like Boom, like Aah-h-
h. So after that I tried to watch really my thoughts, not
to have those kinds of thoughts. Really, he knew. I
mean he just knew.

And there's some funny stories. There was a guy who


was a plastic surgeon and his wife from Texas.
Actually it was up on the hill, and I met them at
Ammichi's and then I met them at Tiruvannamalai

118
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

again. I saw them up on the hill wandering around, so


they said,

- Hey, isn't there some yogi down in town?

So I’m thinking, “Ah, I don't know.” I really would


have liked them to talk with him. So then I gave them
the address and everything and we went down there to
see Swami and he was busy. There were a lot of
people. Swami said,

- "I'm too busy to see you.

And so then they said,

- Oh, Will sent us.

And he said,

- Oh, Okay. Come back in an hour.

So then he saw them for two hours. So the next day I


go there and they say, "Gee, we had," and then they
saw Him the next day and they said, "It was so
wonderful, Thank you so much for sending me to see
Swami.” Then I went the next day and I walk in the
door and five minutes later Swami says,

119
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- "Time to leave." [laughs]

And I’m like, Oh no. What did I do? And that was
really funny.

And there was another story. There was this guy


named Tom Sawyer who's a friend of Richard and
who's from D.C. He's a bit of a psychic nut. He's
always a little on the very psychic side. He heard
voices and he heard that Sai Baba didn't want him to
work anymore. Since then he's just been a lazy
bastard. But he's really psychic, and he does have
some insights and all that. So he went down to see
Yogi Ramsuratkumar, and Swami came to the gate
and he took one look at him and says,

- I'm sorry. It's not possible for me to see you.

He was turning away, and he said,

- But I know Will.

This thought came to him very quickly. And Swami


says,

- Oh, you know Will, Okay, come in.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

(Swami) gave him a two-hour interview. (He) said it


was the best two hours of his life.

So then there's another story. A couple from


California went down, and again, that little vestibule
was totally full of people. And these people, I forget
their names, I met them at Ammachi's. So anyway
they came to the door and Swami said,

- Oh, I’m sorry. It's all booked up,

and so Swami talked to them for half an hour at the


gate. He didn't ever open the gate. He talked to them;
he gave them an interview for half an hour and kept
everybody else waiting. …

Then this story where somebody came and… they


said, “somebody came from such-and-such,
someplace or other in America”. Swami said,

- Do you know Will?

And they said no, and he said

- Sorry, you shouldn't be here.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

So, anyway…but I thought, “well, at least I’m lucky,


Swami remembers who I am.” It's really nice if the
guru can remember you. That's really a great blessing!

I met him actually in ’73. That was the first time I met
him. But he claimed me in ’71. Because we all went,

- Swami, we didn’t meet till ’73.

He said,

- No, no, we met in ‘71.

Because Caylor went to talk to Swami about us, and


that was the end of ’71. But Swami already knew who
we were. So it was ’71. He always just said it was ’71,
and he wouldn’t take ’73 for an answer. By my book,
by my calendar he was not interested in all that, it was
’71.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Interviewer: There was another saint who used


to come down to see him, from Brindivan ?

- Will: Sri Pad. P-a-d. And he was a saint up


there in Brindivan18. I never met him. I went to his
ashram, he was out some place or else. But anyway,
he came down to Tiru, and I knew of somebody who
was his disciple, and he said every time he came to
Tiru he saw Swami and they would walk around the
hill together, and he said whenever he walked with
Swami it was always like he was walking in a
different world, because you're just in a different
consciousness. And somebody sent me e-mail, maybe
Veronica. There's a lady named Veronica Schwartz,
she lives in Fairfield and she was a Maharishi person.
But she lived in India for a while, ten or twelve years.
She spent a couple of years in Tiruvannamalai, and
she had this boyfriend who was like a stellar yogi. He
(was) for five years at Ammachi's. He used to go up to
Virupaksha cave, and he would have himself locked
in the Virupaksha cave for fifteen hours a day. His
name was Bernard. Even Ammachi said, when she
first met him, she said, "Give me ten people like
Bernard and (I’ll do) the rest." Anyway, so she went
down and she used to say that sometimes she'd have a

18
We think that the word was not well understood or transcribed. It must be
Vrindavan.

123
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

big fight with Bernard. So one time she went down to


Swami, and Swami said, "Hold your ground, and
don't give in every time. You have a right to disagree.
You have a right to (have) your opinion. He's not
always right." Then somebody asked Ammachi, this
Bernard guy used to come back and forth from
Tiruvannamalai to Ammachi's ashram. So he asked
her about seeing Yogi Ramsuratkumar, and she said,
"Go as often as you can to see him. Spend as much
time as you can." So, he was very, very impressed,
you know. She was very impressed by this, who he
was and what he was about.

When we were with Swami, when we were hanging


out, I was spending all that time with Him. We lived
in India from '73 until '75, a year and that’s when we
spent most of the time with Swami. And I remember
once, we were by the railway station, where the
farmer's field is, and this man came and Swami was
off someplace or other, and so we talked to this man
for about an hour, because Swami went to this
woman's house. This man, he worked for All India
Railways, and he was like a union representative. So

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

he said every year they would always had their


conferences, they'd make a note to have a conference
in some holy place; they'd have a pilgrimage at the
same time. They're pretty clever. So he’d seen almost
all the saints in India, and he liked Swami the best
because he thought he was the most carefree and the
most joyous happy. And this was a very intense
country. And he said whenever he went to the gurus
he never asked for anything. He always made it a
point never to ask for anything specific. So he went
and only asked for their grace. Please just give him
their grace. And he had two sons; they were both in
university in the States, one at Purdue and one some
place else. And he didn't have to pay for any of it.
They paid everything. So, at any rate, there was a lot
of wisdom in this guy. And so I thought that was a
very good (person), he said he'd been to place on the
railway line. So he always liked Swami the very best.
He said he was the most happy and carefree. And
Swami said,

- Well, what can this beggar do for you?

and he would just say,

- Give me your grace, Swami, that's all I want, is


your grace.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And that's the smart thing. When you go to these


saints' you gotta know how to praise, and so.

There was a story … there was a guy named David


Rothman, very, very smart guy, a very very successful
lawyer in Francisco. But anyway, he went to see
Swami, and there was a group of people at the time
we went, and they were seeing Swami. So Swami
went around the room and asked everybody what they
want. And everybody said, I want this and that, and
this guy said,

- "I just want whatever you want to give me."

And Swami says,

- All right.

He says,

- I’ll make all your decisions for you.

That's pretty smart. [laughs] So, he was a lawyer,


your classic always making decisions… So anyway,
this guy is really wealthy. He’d come to the city, he'd
usually come to New York. So his daughter took over
his apartment and he moved to Lake Tahoe for tax
purposes. (It’s) across the line in Nevada, so he

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

doesn't have to pay California taxes. And also his


firm, where he was a full partner, he resigned, and he
got a big severance from them. Plus they said we’ll
keep you on retainer for fifty thousand a year, as a
consulting attorney. We want to pick your brain. And
he was a mediation attorney. So then, he and three
other guys, formed like a mediation Company of their
own, and they were real, real successful. He'd come
and he'd only stay at the Plaza in New York. That's
four hundred a night. But that was back in the old
days. That was in the '80s. He would come to Hilda's
class and he would take my wife and I out to dinner
sometimes, we'd come over to the Plaza. Of course I
never had a suit coat or anything, and he'd say, "Oh, I
don't have an extra suit coat so but there's some in the
dining room. You can't go in without a suit coat."
But…

(Here a page is missing, page 16 of this side of the tape)

Every time we went to see Him, Joan and I were


there, and Him, and a new person would come, He
would instantly get up and walk, either run away,
literally run, not really fast but, or He’d do a very,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

very quick walk…Usually, you blink and He was


gone. In any direction. But He was just out of there.
He explained this once; because, he said, he always
had to make an adjustment for that third person, for
that what'd I say? Let's say, if the three, you and I and
Swami were sitting together, and X comes there.
Well, Swami would then get up and leave but he'd
come back ten minutes later and he would sit, because
he had made the adjustment. Because if he didn't
make the adjustment he said he couldn't be there. And
then he would always say, it's this beggar's madness.
And you could not change the subject on Him. Let's
say, if you were talking to Swami on a certain subject,
you couldn't just jump over to another subject. Caylor
used to do that, and Swami would yell at him. He'd
say it was like derailing a freight train. He had so
much momentum that the energy going in that
direction, you just can’t jump over here. He would
make that point over and over again to Caylor: please
don't do that to Him. That was just not the way He
operated. You had to play by his rules, and his rules
were: you stayed on that subject until that subject was
over. Then, perhaps, after there was an interval, you
could introduce another subject. But you just couldn't
go jumping around.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Swami was a very complicated being. You are not


dealing with a simple thing, you're dealing with
somebody who is highly, highly complex and light
years out, and we can't even fathom it so. There's just,
like, endless ramifications about; every time you cross
a line, you knew you crossed a line [laughs]. He let
you know very quickly that you crossed the line, and
BOOM, that was it. And once you got the correction,
you made the adjustment. But, that was His rules. And
every time, and no matter who it was, it wouldn't
matter if this person knows Swami for twenty years
came and sat down again, He would jump up and run
away. Didn't matter. Just because He said He had to
make an adjustment.

And I remember Hilda came. She went to Sai Baba’s


and then she came back (in 1978). Hilda, Shanti, and
Vali came back, and she wanted to have some more
conferences with Swami. Swami had us, "Please tell
her. Please come and see me before Hilda comes." So
I went there. At normal times he would come out
around eleven. Usually around eleven, before eleven,
he was in his house, or he was at the temple. But he
would come over to those stairs by the house and sit
there. It wasn't before eleven. Anyway, I came over
around quarter of eleven, and I was going to tell him,
"Hilda's coming over around two." So I waited and

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

waited and waited and waited, and no Swami. So


then, I think Perumal came, and I said, "Oh, Perumal,
I’m waiting for Swami. I want to tell him Hilda's
coming at two." So I go back to the hotel. So Hilda
says, "Will, let's go right now." Now I can't argue with
Hilda. She said, "I saw Swami's face, which means
he's telling me to come." So we get in front of his
house. And just then Swami is walking by, coming
back to his house from someplace. I don't know where
he'd been. Anyway, then he goes, and then he looks at
me and he says,

- Can't you do anything right?

And I’m like, Oh God! I'm between a rock and a hard


place. And so Hilda said, "I should go." I said, "No,
no, please, Hilda. Don't go. That’ll make it worse." So
then she comes, so we wait ten minutes in the
rickshaw. Perumal was inside, and Perumal explained
that I'd been waiting for hours and hours and hours
and hours but he never showed. So then he came out
and he says,

- Oh, I’m so sorry.

He says,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Please excuse this beggar's manners, Hilda.


Please come in.

and he says,

- So sorry. My mistake. This beggar's madness.

And that was a big relief. But I thought, ‘Oh, man,


I’m cooked! ' Cause he was like, really like, Whoa!

So the whole thing with these people, their quality of


being, it makes you be absolutely on your toes, I mean
absolutely. You have to be at peak performance or
else you get squashed like a bug. But that's pretty
much, and it makes you feel very alive and very
concentrated and very one-pointed. You're not just
hanging out. This one of Hilda's kids came. He was
like a hanger-outer, and Swami came the first day and
he said, “oh”; he wanted to just come and hang out
with Swami for three months. And Swami just looked
at him and after about an hour he said,

- Well, we've met. You don't have to come back


any more.

And that was it.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

He would never say, "Time to leave," he would


always say, “This beggar will take leave," which
means, "time to go." But in no uncertain terms. And
he was very strict.

There was a lady who came from Ammachi, some


Russian-Jewish woman, but she's a bit nutty. I think
she came to the ashram and she came down, I think
when Swami had his house over on, remember when
he had darshan, he had darshan at that house, where
he lived, for a year, couple years… Sudhama House,
Sudhami sisters, whatever19. So she went over there,
and apparently Swami told her to sit, here. And, she
didn't listen. So she got up, he said, "Please sit here,"
and he pointed right there. She sat there, then she got
up and she wanted to ask a question, so she marched
right over to Ma Devaki and she said, "I wanna ask
Swami a question." So she was again directed to sit
down and return to her seat, which she did. A few
minutes later, she got up again, to come over again to
ask Ma Devaki she had some question for Yogi
Ramsuratkumar. And at that point, Swami said that he
would be leaving her now. And in no uncertain terms.
She was not smart enough to follow the protocol.
How hard is it? You come to see a master, they ask
you to do something simple. She couldn't follow it.

19
Sudama. Sudama sisters.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Then there was several times when people would


come, and Swami, especially when he was sitting up
on that little platform up there, he would tell people,
"You sit here," and he would guide them. He would
physically come over and put them here and say, "You
sit here. You sit here. You sit here, and you sit here."
He would guide everybody where he wanted you to
sit. And a lot of times he was very funny, because at
night, he had a little candle, but the candle was always
away from him, so it was hard to see is face. All you
could see was the glow of his cigarette. And that light
was so he could see the faces. And I remember several
times people coming and them just constantly getting
up, and constantly wanting to change seats, and
Swami would get up and often physically back and
put them in their seat and say, "This is your seat.
Right here. Please don't leave it." And sometimes
they still didn’t get it. He didn't actually dismiss
anybody, but when he wanted you to sit, that's where
he wanted you to sit. You had no choice in that
matter. And it wasn't up for discussion.

[end of tape]

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

[Tape 3, face B missing]

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

[Tape 4, Side A]

We begin with the text only where it concerns Yogi


Ramsuratkumar.

Interviewer: Do you have any recollections of


stories of Yogi Ramsuratkumar on Arunachala?

Will: There's a very funny story. There's this


very, very gorgeous girl I met at Ammachi's, and
she'd come to Tiruvannamalai, and she was wandering
up on the hill, and it was a very hot part of the day.
And Swami just appears out of nowhere and says,

- You shouldn't be in this hot sun. Take some


shade. Go find some shade.

And then disappears.

And so Perumal used to tell me that he and Swami


used to walk around the hill a lot, especially in
the'50s. I mean, Swami came there in '59. And for a
long part of that time Swami would just spend most of

135
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

his time up on the hill, and wandering around the hill


and everything like that. And there are certainly all
the pictures they were all taken up on the hill. And
they would eat, they would camp out there, they
would practically live on the hill, and then Perumal's
wife would bring them up food and stuff like that.
And so he kind of shied away from town, I think until
later. And of course the temple was always one of his
main spots, his main habitats. Sometimes we'd see
him in the temple. Maybe we'd just spend the whole
day with him, and then maybe we'd go back later, and
then he'd be at the temple. And then, as soon as he'd
see us in the temple grounds, he would just look up,
he'd grab all his stuff and just, run. And then I'd ask
him about that and he always said he had to always
constantly make adjustments, and so he was doing'
something then. That work couldn't be interfered with.
So then he'd have to go out and make an adjustment.
But especially the temple. He always said the temple
was, like, where he … before the ashram was there,
where he kind of did most of his work. Because
there's a large grounds, you have twenty-five square
acres there, and there's a lot of places, little niches you
can hide and not be noticed and not have anybody
bother you or anything like this. And so I think he did
a lot of his, like his kind of cosmic work, and that was
like his work area. And so when people saw him, he
wasn't really keen on having a conversation or having

136
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

any social interaction at that point. I mean that was as


far as I could figure it out.

- Interviewer: He would go to specific places


up on Arunachala?

- Will: He just kind of wandered around a lot,


and… oh, somebody just sent me this …oh, Bharatiya
sent me … she used to be Bernard’s girlfriend. She
sent me this email, and apparently there’s this one
story of Swami sending some guy (who) came to see
him and, he asked, “what should I do?” And Swami
said, "Oh, go for a walk around the hill." But the guy
got on an inner path and went by someplace, really
close to the mountain, and he came, he said there was
some, like, newspapers around there and stuff like
that, and there were some kind of habitations that he
didn't see anybody around, but he just figured
somebody must be living there. And so he came back
to see Swami and said,

- Hey, you know, I had this interesting


experience. I came upon this cave that looked
like it was inhabited because of newspapers and
everything.

And (Swami) says,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Oh yeah, there's some yogi there. He’s seven


hundred and some years old…He says, You
know, we shouldn't bother those kinds of people
anyway.

There's various stories that somebody came and once


asked him, very specifically, about, Arunachula being,
quote, "a holy mountain." Oh, he said, it didn't matter
this hill or that hill, that they're all the same. But that
was the story he gave to somebody else… But then
again, I remember sometimes people would come.
There was one guy, who used to come from Vellore,
or someplace around there, who was a loony guy. I
never met him. Anyway, he would go and he would
always make a pilgrimage to the top of the mountain,
and he would always come to Swami first to get a
blessing before he did this. And Swami would be
really concentrating his whole day on whether that
guy made it or not, or what he was. And then, be
relieved when the guy came down and then gave him
a report of what happened and what he experienced
and everything like that. But I never went to the top of
the mountain… I know Caylor's been to the top many
times, of the mountain. I've never been to the top. It's
too much strain to go over there and too much
walking, and I've never known the way and there are
certain paths you have to come to go up there. I've

138
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

never done it…Did we have to go on the mountain?


No, no. We were always just down in town…

Sometimes Swami asked me specifically to go around


the hill. So then sometimes I'd cheat and have to take
a rickshaw or ride a bike. [laughs] So, I said,

- "Swami, I went around the hill but I got a bike


to go on."

He says,

- "All right. You went around the hill. That's


enough."

But he would make a specific request. Because


sometimes I'd be really out of it, or really tired, or
whatever, I'd just say, I’d get a rickshaw and take it
around the hill and say, "Well, I've been around the
hill." [laughing]

… after this, the conversation goes on others ashrams


and saints in Tiruvannamalai … Vilananda, Pundiswami
… Let us take just the interesting passages :

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

… And that was the big thing Swami kept saying, that
once you go beyond body consciousness,
identification with the body, then you’ve gotten
someplace. Other than that, you don’t have anything.
Ultimate freedom is to be beyond body
consciousness…. Swami was very much of that thing.
Once you went beyond body consciousness … He
didn’t really say these things, he just kind of hinted.
He never had a teaching per se. Well, he did. He
actually had a main teaching. His main teaching was
… every time we came to see him initially, and
everybody who came, he usually gave them the same
advice and it was always the same, “Find your
master. Serve them well…” That was it. That was it.
But (when) you think about it, that was pretty solid.
There is no bullshit in there. It’s all real simple, and
he seemed to think, and it was his opinion that you
couldn’t do it by yourself, that that was delusional.
You could not, because as Ramana kept saying, is the
ego going to turn himself – is the thief going to turn
himself into the police? Of course not. The ego wants
to keep stealing. The ego wants to keep surviving, so
it does all this crazy stuff…

The conversation continues on Pundiswami, then about


some Sadhu Om :

140
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

… And then we'd come down and see Swami, and


we'd ask him about Pundiswami. And he said he
hadn't been, but he thought there was something there
from Pundiswami. He said, "This beggar feels that
there's something there.” And sometimes, Swami
wasn't very specific about things, but he kind of gave
YOU a hint that it was okay, you know. We're in
town, we'd go there. And there was another place that
he used to send people to. When Aruna was there, she
was this French lady who lived in Tiru since '.69 - she
died recently, a couple years ago, about two years
ago. She used to go down and see Swami, and she was
in kind of a bad element. There was this guy who was
teaching Tamil, kind of classical Tamil, and he was
this called Sadhu Om, and he has this place as you go
down to Swami's, there's a little samadhi there at
Sadhu Om's place. They serve meals for foreigners,
and stuff like that. He was very jealous of Yogi
Ramsuratkumar. He used to really badmouth him, and
after that, Aruna - her name was Alaheinz (?) got kind
of poisoned, but Swami used to tell her, go down to
Haji's tomb.

Now the conversation goes on Hajii’s tomb…

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

… Once, Swami met somebody there, and they went


in the tomb. They went in the tomb together. And
Swami liked that place … He always said that place
is very powerful, and he told Aruna not to go there too
much because, you know, you might have a stray
thought that you didn’t accidentally intend to think
but it could still be fulfilled, because it might be
subconscious or something…

Then Will speaks of Narikutti Swami and his master


Yogaswamigal from Ceylon etc… we skip it.

In Tiruvannamalai, it's like a … that whole energy is


very unforgiving. It's very stark. It's very demanding,
very, there's not softness there. It's all kind of harsh,
harshness, a strictness, maybe that's the thought-form
of the yogis. There's no fooling around. You should
attend to the business there, with your meditation and
all that stuff. But that was always my experience, and
then I'd talk to other people, who had been there for a
long, long lime, and they would all concur that that
was pretty much … high vibrations. Of course, when
Joan and I were there with Swami, we had nothing but
when you get that kind of personal attention, it takes
you into another dimension. You know, it's not the
harshness of somebody who's loving and
compassionate and sweet and hilarious. You just feel
like you're on top of your game. But other than that, I

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

found Tiru to be a very harsh place. And without


Swami there, ameliorating circumstances there …

I remember Richard and I went to see that Lakshman,


that guru next door, the guy in the fancy house with
the satellite dish on his house Lakshman and Saradha.
Just the next door of the Ashram… If you’re facing
toward the hill on the ashram, the’re on the left side.
You go down and there’s a row of houses, it’s the big,
fanciest house down there …

Afterwards, Will speaks of other people, and of some


Daskalos from Cyprus to whom Will went, and who said,

(looking at) a picture of (Satya) Sai Baba,

- One big hang-up. He wants adoration, and it’s


like living in a gilded cage.

Looking at Ammachi picture, he says,

- Now. This is how everybody should be.

Then he looked at Yogi Ramsuratkumar’s picture:

- Oh, he’s merged with the Father.”

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Then he continues to speak about Daskalos… a part that


we skip.

[end of tape]

144
MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Tape 4 side B

The conversation continues, speaking of Daskalos …


Then :

- Interviewer: Speaking of things that may be


considered miraculous, do you have any stories you
want to relate about Yogi Ramsuratkumar and things
that might be labelled miracles?

- Will: Well, there was one story. I didn't hear


this first-hand; I heard it second or third-hand. But
anyway, some couple came, and they had a young kid,
and the kid was born with a club foot. So they bought
it down, in the first week after the birth. And Swami
rubbed both legs for about a half-an-hour. A year later
they came back and they said they couldn't remember
which leg was bad. And I remember a lot of times he
would stroke my arms, sometimes he would sit there
and stroke my arms fifteen or twenty minutes. I felt
like a different person when I left, each time. When he
put that energy, it was like he was rearranging every
atom in my being. And I was very lucky, because, the
last years, when I went in the '90s, every time he used
to start stroking the arm, and things like this, and … I
don’t know how to call these experiences, but they're
the best kind of miracles, because they're not outward,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

they're kind of inward, it just felt like, more kind of


using his delight and transforming the vibrational,
who you are into something much more refined. But
each time, I remember going there and feeling…

Usually I'd go Ammachi and I'd had some nice


experience, and then I'd go to see Swami and it was
like the whole experience was tweaked(?) way out.
Then I'd feel like, completely different after I walked
out of there. I mean really just a few days. I’ll be there
three or four days. And I felt completely, completely
different. Everything with him was so subtle. And I
remember asking him about him sitting in the big hall
and what was happening in there, and he said he
wanted to create an atmosphere so even the densest
person could feel something in the air, so that's what
he worked, he worked, a couple years just sitting there
every day. And he was working to just purify that
atmosphere, and bring that vibration to such a high,
high, high state that even the most densest person on
earth could walk in there and feel that, hey, there's
something there that's, that's beyond me.

And that's what he did…Because he was working


with these elemental forces and blessing that place
with such a power, absolutely astounding. And I'd
really like to go there with a real, real super good,
clairvoyant and have them see really what they saw,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

what their take on the place was, because every time I


go there I'd just feel more familiar with the place, that
he's left something there; to have something that's like
a transformative vibration. And all's you have to do is
walk into it and stay there for a while and be open,
and something will happen to you. But to me that's the
great miracle, not pulling something out of a hat or
materializing something, like Sai Baba, is to me
extraneous. There's no point to it. You see it once all
right, it blows your mind. But after that, what's the
point? Are you transformed? No, it’s a trap.

After some words on some other people, the transcription


stops, at page 4. The rest is missing….

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Excerpts from missing parts

1) p. 3 and for of some face of some tape. Only


the pages 1 and 2 for this face are missing
(tape was spoiled and was stopped).

- Interviewer: Was the light on?

- Will: No, there was no lights in there. Usually


we just had a candle going.

- Interviewer: This was before the pumped up


kerosene lanterna…

- Will: Yeah, yeah., That was just a rare thing.


Sone big group would come and he'd only ordered
that for one night, but there was some group, about
twenty people.

- Interviewer: You'd lay down and he'd still keep


talking?

- Will: Yeah. Or sometimes he was silent, but


always something. Swami always looked like he was
real, real busy doing something. Like he was really

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

busy. Sometimes his eyes closed and just you could


almost see him doing stuff. Even though he was silent.
And then you'd wait. We'd never kind of disturb him,
because we knew he looked like he was really busy.
So, it wasn't our place to interfere with that… When
he (seemed) relaxed a little more, then we could bring
up whatever we wanted to talk about or issues and it
really wasn't ever personal stuff. I never really asked
him much personal because I didn't think it was
important. But just like, more kind of interested in that
overview of things, how he thought things worked.
This is the smartest man I have ever, the most aware
man I have ever talked to in my whole life. I mean,
we were talking; I mean, I had a three years of
graduate work in political science, history, all this
stuff, economics, whatever. And he knew more about
politics than anybody I ever talked to in my life. I
mean, he just knew. He said he knew he was behind
all the bad stuff that was going on in the world. He
knew who was… we talked about China, we talked
about everything. He knew just the intricacies of all
these governments, and how they worked and who
was in charge, and all that. He was absolutely
astounding, completely astounding in how much he
really knew. And there was just never any end to it.
He knew, you know… At that time the DMK party
was a coalition, and that Karunanidhi was the head of
it. But there was a coalition of the Christian, kind of

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

fundamentalist preachers, who were down there to


convert those heathen Indians into Christians, and
supposedly that was like a back door for the CIA to
get in there, to do all that stuff. They used those
Christian missionaries to do a lot of their spy work.
And Caylor had actually met a couple guys; one guy
in particular was a spy. He said he was army
intelligence, and he was coming around to just nose
around South India and stuff like that. The guy is a
spiritual seeker. But he told Caylor out-and-out, he
was, army intelligence. And you get i lot of things like
that. So Swami was always a little wary about these
Christian things. He thought they made a coalition
because the DMK was the outcast, and the Christians
and the Muslims, that was kind of a very shaky
political thing. But they all hated the Hindus, so they
would do anything to get back at the Hindus, to get
revenge on the Hindus. So he was always very leery
about that whole party, that whole concept, and to
what lengths they would go to, to stoop to take
advantage of people, to threaten people.

[rest of tape is empty, because it was spoiled]

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

2) page 4 or some face of some tape

…was sitting there, and Hilda always told her never,


ever to let on what she was thinking, or ever show any
kind of emotion. But when she came to Yogi
Ramsuratkumar, she sat before him and her mouth
just like dropped. She was just staring at him. Hilda
kept saying,

- What do you see, Vali? What do you see?

And she kept saying,

- Light.

So she was really impressed. So, anyway, she said,

- How big is the aura?

And she says,

- Well, it goes from horizon to horizon.

So she was really impressed.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

If Hilda said: “he was good, he was good.” Hilda is a


yogi herself, really advanced. Her experiences were
just nothing short of miraculous. Se was meditating
five hours a day. Oh, I started this very funny story.
Hilda had written, well, actually this guy had shown,
when we lived in, we went away from Tapovanarn,
we went to Madras for about seven or eight months at
Theosophical Society. During that time Caylor had
gotten involved with some kind of guy who was
claiming to be enlightened and he was really just a
goddamned black magician. But anyway, so we all
got kind of drawn into this. So this guy wanted to get
some LSD and he thought that LSD was the key to
enlightenment. So we all kind of, involved in that, and
anyway, he had kind of designs on my wife, this guy.
Anyway, so he split us up. We were gone for about
four months. She's gone. She went to live with him.
And so I went to Tiruvannamalai, and I thought I was
going crazy. I thought about killing myself. And then
I went to see Swami, and I wrote him a letter and he
sent me a telegram: Come if you think some help is
here. And so I went there, and I thought I was just
going out of my mind because I hadn't slept for days, I
hadn’t eaten for days, and he just took both of my
hands, he held both of my hands, just like this, his
hands over my hands together. And I was totally
normal after that. And the, he just told me to be quiet.
Silence is the greatest power. Don't think about

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

anything. Don’t worry. Just don't think about


anything. Just, in silence is the greatest power. So
then, within about a month, Joan came back. I said,

- Should I write a letter?

- No, no, all we need is silence.

He really is a great master. In the meantime, I had


gotten myself this little, it was little… I had my
doubts. So I wrote Hilda a letter. So then Hilda wrote
me a response, and then Swami

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

3) Pages 17 and 17 of some face of some tape

- Interviewer: And then?

- Will: I don't know. It's curious to see what they


look like…

- Interviewer: And they came down just recently,


when he was very ill?

- Will: Yeah. Yeah. That was just before, a


couple months before he died, they came down. But
he sent them very quickly back. He sent them pretty
quick. I don't know if it was to Anandashram. But that
was usually where he sent people. And it was very
funny because he always used to send Kirsti up there.

She shouldn't be thinking, “Oh, Swami's my


guru…”She'd come down and she'd say, "Oh, time to
go to Anandashram [laughing] The other one, the
other lady, the Spanish lady, Rosario? He also sent her
to Anandashram. Once she came with her sister, and
her sister is from Spain. So anyway, every time Kirsti
would come, Swami would say,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Kirsti, don't you ever want to go back to


Finland?

- No!

- But (are there not people who) miss you in


Finland?

- No.

He was pretty funny.

- Interviewer: Do you have any recollections of


Yogi Ramsuratkumar talking about Papa Ramdas,
outside of his reference to his Father?

- Will: Well-yeah, I remember he told some


stories about Ramdas, Papa Ramdas. He was there on
the ashram... Whenever he got a picture of Papa
Ramdas, he would just end up staring at it for hours
and hours and hours and hours. And then when Hilda
carne, she said a very interesting thing. She said,

- Will, you want to know something? she says.


He is standing on Papa Ramdas' shoulders. He’s way,
way, way, way beyond Papa Ramdas.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

And, also you have to say: realization isn't a fixed


realization. It's not like that. It's not like an end game.
It's like this infinite consciousness, infinite being. And
that's what I heard him, when I was on this LSD trip. I
say, “Ah, (it’s) helping, is it?" and the voice came, it
said, "As far as you can go, as much as you can take."
So, she said there is infinity… You go to the next
level and the next level and the next and next, next,
next, next, next. And so it's just constantly going.

- Interviewer: Did he talk about things such as


receiving the mantra from Papa Ramdas, or anything
along those lines?

- Will: Well, we just talked about, generally. He


always just said he thought the name of Ram was
enough. That's all you had to do. And he would say, if
anybody chants the name of Ram, that's enough. And
he didn't put down anything, but he just said that
chanting Ramnam was all that somebody could do.
And then he told me about etheric markers; he said
that, like that name of Ram has been repeated so many
times, it's like, in the air. He said - I mean, basically,
what I figured out - he said, his work is in the air. And
Hilda actually confirmed that, too. She said,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Will, he's really not working on this plane, he's


working in the air and he's like all the ethereal

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

3) Other missing parts but used in the book


“Under the Punnai Tree”:

Gnanananda had just passed. That was the time we


were spending twenty-four hours a day with Swami,
and we were walking down the street when a car
stopped. There was a twenty-minute conversation that
happened and Swami turned to us and told us to get in
the car. Next thing we know, we're in Tapovanum20!
We had a room there, and Swami stayed in the room
with us, but then after a while he was sleeping on the
veranda. At one point he seemed to get annoyed, and
finally he said we should clear out - he said he
couldn't juggle two things at the same time. So then
we decided to go to the Theosophical Society in
Madras.

We never met Gnanananda Giri. He had just passed


his body, and that's why his disciples were coming to
get Swami-because Swami used to go there, and every
time he would come to Tapovanum, Gnanananda
would call him and say, "Spend one more day."
Sometimes it would be weeks, weeks, weeks, weeks,
and he’d want to get out of there. So then, he would
just sneak out!

20
Tapovanam

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

But while we were there, right alter Gnanananda died,


everybody was vacating the ashram. They were all
going back to their native places. The devotees were
concerned because everybody was abandoning ship,
so they had him come as kind of a stopgap measure.
They were sweet people, and Swami said to everyone,

- "No, no, no. Gnanananda Giri is still here.


He’s still here. Don't leave. Don't go. This is
your place. You've been here twenty, thirty
years. Why are you going back to Delhi or
Bombay or whatever?

And so he told everybody not to leave, but he changed


the format. Gnanananda was very, very strict. They
never sang bhajans. They did have the
(Vedic])chanting- mantras, in a certain meter, in an
almost martial style. Swami was singing, and he got
them to sing bhajans every morning at four o'clock
when they woke up. He’d then tell them to put in
more melody; they didn't have to be so rigid.

“Swami did give us food training, just to be around


him every day and to be always thinking of how could
we serve him: what exactly is he going to need next?

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

How are we going to respond? There was always an


anticipation of what would be the next thing he would
want.

Hilda used to say: “Will and Joan are the only ones
who show me the proper respect. They know what the
proper respect is, and the rest of you don’t have a
clue.” They argued with her. They had differences of
opinion. I always said what I thought but I never
challenged her, lie, “You’re wrong.” But people did
all the time. They just didn’t have any idea that when
you were around somebody who has that wisdom and
intelligence – that level of awareness – you’re not in a
position to argue with them. You shouldn’t be in a
position to argue with them, anyway; it shows your
stupidity, your egotism, your grossness. It’s not
something you should be proud of! You should be
really humble about your own stupidity. I found that
quite the contrary with some people’s actions around
saints.

I remember a lot of times we would go and buy big


bags of puffed rice for Swami. It was very funny
because Swami was staying at one of the little shops
that closed at night, and he carried this bag of rice
around. There was a little mouse that came every

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

night to get the puffed rice, and Swami just laughed.


That was so cute, this little mouse. Anybody else
would have freaked out with a mouse eating from
their food, but he would just say,

- Oh, we have a visitor, now.

He never made a big thing out of it. Oftentimes we


brought out our little blankets and we just laid
down on the concrete there with him, with just a
candle going. We never fell asleep, though.

Everything I got from Swami was always Prasad.


It was his way of sharing on a material plane –
always kind of fun and very loving and giving. I
never took it lightly; I just always felt this was a
great blessing from him. He didn’t have to do any
of it. We were just lucky to be there and to be on
the receiving end. The fans he gave me were the
greatest gifts. I don’t let anyone touch them. He
just said,

- You can have these fans. Would you like these


fans?

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

But the greatest gift, I think, is not any physical


Prasad but the gift of consciousness – his blessing.
That’s the greatest gift.

At that time I didn’t really believe it, but now I see


that people from Russia are coming to India like
crazy. Swami was kind of a visionary into the future,
and now I can see that it’s possible, not through him
directly but through his disciples, that some change in
consciousness will happen just because of his name.
People have a contact, or they experience something
to perpetuate who he was in the body by transforming
their normal being around his model – not in the sense
of becoming who he was, but just to take what he has
given and add that into their mix. That would be a
good key for personal transformation as well as for
transforming the earth, because he said that if you’re
in this for personal transformation, it’s not enough.
That’s just too limited. Too selfish.

The real work of devotees is to transform the earth –


to take this vibration that he has given and then try to
project that out. I have my own personal way of
tuning to his vibration – who he was and what he was
about – and then trying to project that out.
Transformation, that’s what the whole think is about.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

It’s not me personally taking liberation for myself. It’s


long term meditation, long-term prayer, long-term
spiritual practice. He has been the vehicle of
transformation, and he always said that if people
would chant “Yogi Ramsuratkumar”, then they could
tune in to who he was on some level, and that would
be transformational – a vibrational transmission.

What’s remarkable about these beings like Yogi


Ramsuratkumar is the amount of light that their body
has to sustain and can sustain without going out of
consciousness – into samadhi or something like that –
and still be functional on earth.”

He was very adamant that the name Ram is all you


need, but he wasn’t pushing anything down anybody’s
throat. He always said he tried to go to the path of
whoever came to him. If they wanted to come and talk
about Marx, he talked about Marx. He didn’t divert
their path, he only tried to go with what they were
interested in. He was very flexible that way. Once
Joan and I were out in the field with him and we were
asking,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Why are saint incarnated in India,


particularly?

- Well, he said, in this yuga India has always


been the playground of the saints because
where else in the world, even though you’re a
nobody, with nothing, will they give you food
and shelter and honor you and revere you?
There’s not other country in the world.”

He said that’s why the saints always incarnate, take


birth in India. In this country or in Russia they would
be locked up in some mental institution – treated like
freaks. He also said that there was a lot of persecution
of the saints, especially in the Middle Ages in Europe.
He said that’s why the saints love to come to India
and keep incarnating there over and over and over
again, because that reverence is always there for them.

Swami had one love. It was lemons. He loved lemons.


We call them limes. So whenever I went to the bazaar
to get (something for him), it wouldn’t be flowers, it
would be lemons, because every time anybody came,
he always gave them a lemon. I have so many dried-
out lemons that he gave me – all gifts from him! I
never ate them, I kept them and they just shrank and

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

shrank. Any time I would bring lemons, he always


had a big smile on his face, like I knew what he
wanted.

Once I went to Ammachi’s ashram, and I knew I was


going to see Swami in Tiruvannamalai, so I bought a
lemon and took it to her. Ammachi was giving
darshan and I said: “Could you bless this for Yogi
Ramsuratkumar?” She took the lemon, closed her
hand around it, and then she gave it to me; I had never
seen her do this before.

Swami was at Sudama house, and I came up for


darshan in a long queue. At the time Swami’s hearing
was really bad. For a couple of years he had a hard
time hearing everybody, and then it got better. His
hearing became normal again. So, I brought this
lemon from Ammachi and put it directly into Swami’s
hand. His eyes got really bright, and then he started
smelling it, taking deep breaths even – just relishing
it, you could tell. He didn’t say a word.

Then a big smile came over his face. I said to Ma


Devaki, “Tell him this lemon is from Mata
Amritanandamayi.” She got the name wrong and
Swami said, “Ammachi!” He looked over with a big
smile and he said,

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

- Oh, Will’s brought this beggar something very


fine.

Big smile! He just kept sniffing at it, smelling it. He


totally ignored everybody else and was just sniffing
this lemon for a long time; every time he sniffed he
had this big smile on his face. Then, he walked up and
down. At that time when he was giving darshan he
would pace up and down, with the people on either
side. Every time he walked past me he had this
beautiful, big broad smile because I’d brought him
something nice.

He told us why the scriptures were being interfered


with. He said that in the old days the scriptures were
in the air, and all you had to do was be silent and you
could tune in to the scriptures and “hear” them. He
could feel it, he could live it. But now there is
electromagnetic interference from the TVs, from the
radios, from the short waves, the cellphones, from all
the static we’re putting in the air electronically, and
it’s interfering with the scriptures – it’s a big
impediment. He says that’s why the dharma is falling,
because people can no longer hear the scriptures when
they are quiet.

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

He said that, because of nationalism and the new


global consciousness, there had to be a new reality, a
new set of scriptures for the behaviour of nations, not
just for people. He thought that was e very important
thing that has to be done, but he didn’t ever say how,
or when, or where this was going to come. Once he
made a comment to somebody from Hilda’s group,

- Your satellites are interfering with this


beggar’s work.

He was so sensitive that he could feel what the


influence of the satellites was and what they were up
to.

He would do this every day (peering at the Sun


through a crack between his fingers). He was
connected with the sun. The central Sun – the light
behind the whole universe. That’s the energy he
worked with, for hours on end. He was murmuring,
not a prayer, but repetitions – a mantra, or something.
It was just like he was communicating with
something.

Once a devotee came back from seeing Sri


Shankaracharya of Kanchipuram. He said that the

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MEETINGS WITH YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR

Sankaracharya said “Do you go to see Yogi


Ramsuratkumar?” The devotee said, yes, then the
Shankaracharya said:

- Next time you come, you bring Yogi


Ramsuratkumar!

Then he said,

- Oh, he belongs to the sun!

The big Sun. I asked Hilda about that and she said:
“That’s his path – light. His whole path is just light.”

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