Celebrating the Glory That Is Amma
Amma's 51st Birthday Celebrations
Tuesday, 28 September 2004 — Amritapuri
 |
It was nearing three o'clock in the morning,
and Amma had been giving darshan for 14 hours
straight. "They are not singing in all the
languages," Amma suddenly said, referring
to the brahmacharis and brahmacharinis sitting
on the stage behind Her. "Get the microphone.
I will sing, and they can sing the chorus from
there."
And with that, Amma began to sing a song in
Tamil, "Ellamarikendra Kannanidam." The
8,000 or so devotees in the hall went wild. Within
seconds, everyone was clapping and singing along. |
During the next 30 minutes, Amma sang four Krishna
bhajans as She gave darshan—two in Tamil, one
in Marathi and one in Kannada. A brahmachari at Amma's
side right held Her microphone, and a brahmacharini
on Her left held Her bhajan books. Amma would sing
one line and then, as the response came, She would
embrace the next devotee in the queue and whisper in
his or her ear. Sometimes, Amma would completely lose
Herself in the singing, and hold a devotee in Her arms
for as many as three minutes, the whole time calling
out in song.
Amma was radiant. Her smile was a celebration of the
entire creation. It was the defining moment of Amma's
51st birthday.
Sleeping in his mother's arms at Amma's side was a
three-year-old boy named Appu. Perhaps this is why
Amma chose the Tamil bhajan "Chinni Kanna Chella
Kanna" as Her next song. The bhajan is actually
a lullaby sung to baby Krishna by Yashoda. As Amma
sang, She was in full Yashoda bhava, emphasising the
lyrics with Her hands, turning to sing directly to
the sleeping boy. "You enchant the whole world
with your smile," Amma sang. "Now, Lord of
the Universe, go to sleep."
Amma's third song was "Panduranga Vittala." It
is one of the most energetic bhajans in all of Amma's
songbooks. The song continues to build in tempo until
there is nothing the singer can do but repeat the name
of "Vittala" [Krishna] over and over again
as fast as he can. There was such a light in Amma's
eyes, as She did this. With one hand She held a young
man tightly to Her chest, with the other She rallied
everyone in the hall to sing out their hearts.
Perhaps the most memorable song was the last, "Banda
Krishna," a Kannada bhajan that proclaims "Krishna
has come and he spreads happiness and cheer. He enjoys
the company of his devotees and gopas." As Amma
sang, it was as if She were telling the story of what
was happening in that very moment.
Throughout all four songs, an 82-year-old ashram resident
was sitting at Amma's side. Actually, his name was
Krishna—although not many people know this because
he goes by a nickname. Amma turned to him and began
keeping time by slapping lightly on the top of his
bald head. Then, just as She had done to little Appu,
Amma began addressing him through the song, pointing
at him each time She called out "Bonda Krishna" [come
Krishna]. It was too much for him. Staring up at Amma
with folded hands, his eyes filled, and soon his cheeks
were wet.
When Amma finished the bhajan, the entire hall exploded
with applause. The devotees weren't cheering the songs.
They were cheering the glory that is Amma Herself,
claiming Her as their very own. To do so was why they
all had come.
—Sakshi
[Amma continued to give darshan till 5:30 in the
morning—16 hours straight of darshan, 19 and
a half hours straight on the stage.]
|