Pure Dance
31 August 2001, Amritapuri
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It is natural to feel a bit reserved among strangers or in
big crowds. And when you are in an ashram, you would imagine
that you would have to behave with a certain decorum. But
when the Guru Herself tells you to drop your shyness and embarrassment,
stand up and dance... well, even if at first it is only from
obedience, you try.
That's what happened on Onam this year.
Amma had finished Her satsang, and everyone was expecting
Her to begin giving darshan. That's the normal pattern for
this yearly festival: She gives darshan until lunchtime, and
then stops so that She can feed Her children. They approach
Her by the thousands, and She gives each and every one their
Onam day prasad.
But you could tell something was different this year when
Mother leaned over to whisper to the Swami sitting next to
Her, and his face broke into a big smile. It was after that
that She looked out at the sea of upturned faces, and encouraged
the four or five thousand people gathered there to stand up
and dance.
To dance with Her. Indeed, Amma is not one who simply tells
us what to do. She shows us. So there was nothing surprising
when, last Friday morning, She Herself took up Her handbells
and started dancing.
And what a treat it was. We have all seen pictures of Amma
dancing in ecstasy, years ago. We may have even heard the
tinkling of ankle bells from the open windows of Mother's
room, late, late at night, and pictured Her dancing alone.
On foreign tours, even today, Mother sometimes dances with
retreatants: after they form a large circle, Mother starts
dancing along the inner circumference, passing each person
until She returns to the point where She had started dancing.
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But on Onam in 2001, with thousands of Her children gazing
from the floor of the huge new auditorium, Mother danced,
there on the stage.
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The music was irresistible. The musicians - singers and instrumentalists
- launched into a traditional Kerala boat song, only the words
had been replaced with lyrics about Amma. The beat was lively,
but moderate. With a lovely smile, Amma began marking the
tempo with Her handbells. The smile remained as She moved
gracefully from left foot to right, to left, to right, there
in place, just in front of Her pitham
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In less than a minute, it was clear that the dance was not
proceeding in quite the way it had started: Mother smiling,
tempo moderate, all "in order".
Mother was no longer smiling: now Her expression made a smile
trivial. There was a transparent clarity: radiance. Her eyes
were closed, and did not open for the next ten minutes.
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Unseeing, She danced on, circling gradually to Her left, never
missing a beat, ringing Her bells, stepping from one foot
to the other, in a world of Her own. Down below, standing
shoulder to shoulder, Her children danced too. Lacking handbells,
they clapped, many raising their hands high above their heads.
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Like Her, they moved rhythmically from one foot to the other.
But unlike Her, most of them kept their eyes open... for who
could resist so stunning, and so rare, a sight as Amma dancing,
Her brilliant white sari billowing from Her raised arms and
Her brass bells flashing before Her darkly beautiful Face?
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The tempo increased. Mother was no longer facing the crowd.
Nor was She in front of Her pitham The circle She had begun
to make was growing and was surrendering to something too
free to conform to geometry. People around Her began to move
away. They had already pulled Her pitham out of the way, and
now they shifted their harmoniums and microphone stands, and
dragged sound and electrical cords to the side, letting nothing
impede the flow of Her Dance.
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Faster. Eyes still closed. No longer on the carpet. Near
the edge of the stage. A brahmachari jumps down to the ramp
beside the stage and another joins him. They clasp hands and
make a "fence" lest Mother come too near the edge.
Some brahmacharinis appear, arms upraised, alert, ready. No
one wants to touch Amma, or to inhibit Her dance, but care
must be taken as She, oblivious, comes within inches of the
edge.
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She is brilliance silhouetted against a dark sea of exuberant
dancers. Seen from the other direction, She is pure white
Dance backed by rich colour. Her entire Form is movement,
except Her Face, which is the embodiment of a stillness we
don't know, a joyful Mystery. Can it be that the music is
growing even faster? Yes and Her bells never miss a beat as
She raises Her Hands above Her Head, and by Her arms Her utterly
peaceful Face is framed.
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It is too much. A brahmachari slides Mother's asana near
Her, an invitation to sit. The musicians stop.
But Mother doesn't.
Can five thousand people be so silent that you hear only
the gentle tinkle of two brass bells held in soft brown Hands?
Yes. For a full sixteen beats.
Then the clapping of thousands of pairs of hands returns,
the music stumbles back in, and devotees who were reserved
before are swept up in the divine dance. Only the careful
watchers at the edge of the stage are not moving. Their stillness
is a counterpoint to the dancing mass behind them and the
shining Grace before them: they embody shraddha, sacrificing
the excitement of joining in to concentrate on keeping Mother's
Body safe.
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Two minutes more of dancing and suddenly, without allowing
the cadence to diminish, Mother sits down. Not on the small
carpet they had placed nearby; not on Her pitham; not front
and centre. No; She simply sits on the bare floor about six
inches from the edge of the stage, very close to the east
corner. Sits still. Silent. In the midst of stillness and
silence.
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Her Face an unmoving Mystery.
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