Indian ‘hugging saint’ won’t leave till everyone in queue has been embraced
By Hedy Khoo, The Electric Newspaper
March 31, 2009

SHE waited 16 hours for a hug that lasted mere seconds.

But for Filipina Evangeline Alivio, it was worth the long wait.

The 36-year-old civil servant flew here from the Philippines with 20 friends just to see the ‘hugging saint’ and to be embraced by her.

Said Madam Alivio: ‘I don’t mind the wait.’

Mata Amritanandamayi, the ‘hugging saint’ who is popularly known as Amma, which means mother in several Indian languages, is here to spread her message of love and to give hugs.

Held at the Suntec Convention Centre, the three-day event, which is organised by the local Amriteswari Society, has seen 12,000 people since Saturday morning.

From 10.30am to 3pm, then 7pm until 3.30am, anybody can be hugged by Amma.

Madam Alivio had waited from 10am on Saturday till 2am the next day for the hug.

She then stayed on until 4am to continue looking at Amma. She made her way back again yesterday to listen to her teachings.

‘It’s something in her face and her presence that touches me. She feels like a mother to me.’

Singaporean Lakshmi Velan, 27, who was recently retrenched, arrived at 8pm yesterday and was prepared to wait until 3am, or however long it takes to receive Amma’s hug.

‘I feel good and blessed when she hugs me. She is a divine being. No good things come without waiting and I am willing to wait for her hug,’ said Madam Velan.

She explained that the recession blues do not trouble her. ‘Amma makes me feel… content with what I have,’ she added.

At Amma’s last visit a year ago, she had queued for 51/2 hours at the Singapore Expo. People who arrive for hugs are issued a number before taking a seat inside the convention hall to wait their turn.

The Amriteswari Society said 5,000 turned up from 10.30am to 3pm yesterday, with 7,000 in the evening for the second session which started from 7pm.

The event will end only after Amma has hugged every one in the queue.

Yesterday evening, the 32,000sqft hall was packed as Amma spoke to the crowd in Malayalam, the language of Kerala state in India, as her aide translated her words into English.

One of Amma’s core followers, Miss Emmanuelle, 31, who declined to give her full name, is French. She has taken a year off from her work as a social worker in Paris to follow Amma on her travels.

She arrived in India in December and will return to Paris in October later this year. She said: ‘People are so pre-occupied by money and business that they forget how to love. Amma teaches about love, how to give love and to lead a simple life.’

Miss Emmanuelle declined to say if she has to pay for her own air fare, accommodation and living expenses or if these are taken care of by Amma’s society in India.

During this trip, Amma will be personally giving $100 provision vouchers, goody bags and her hugs to 50 needy people from two blocks of one-room rental flats in Woodlands.

The chairman of the Amriteswari Society said the gifts come from donations made to the society.

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Join the conversation! 7 Comments

  1. AS SWAMI SAID ONCE:
    “Amma cannot be described by words… She’s beyond all languages.”
    It’s an experience being in her presence.

  2. I also want to be a part of my divine mother’s troupe

  3. For people meeting Amma for the first time, these words are OK. But they seem like an attempt to understand someone who is beyond words. AMMA is everybody’s Mother and we are all her babies. She is so great..

  4. While ordinary people see just a hug, the wise person sees more. Any attempt to equate AMMA to anything in the world often falls short. AMMA herself has described her all-encompassing love and her hugs with the analogy -“Does anybody ask, why does the river flow?” or “Does anybody ask why the Sun shines?”
    Anyways, AMMA’s a phenomenon! One of a kind. A shining, auspicious Force of Nature! A beacon of light and a towering source of inspiration and strength unlike any other.

  5. Amma is truly one of a kind and I am truly, truly blessed to have received her hug in Singapore. It was my first time.
    Over a month ago, I had dreamt of Her. She was beaming, radiant, was laughing and tossed flowers in my direction as a blessing. Prior to this, I had only read briefly about her.
    I was bemused by the dream and called her Society here to ask if she would be visiting. They said ‘maybe not this year but you never know, she may decide at the last minute to visit Singapore.’
    On Friday, I came across an add announcing her program and I was so happy because I was due to leave Singapore on Sunday. I knew that no matter what, and how long it took, I had to receive my hug from Amma.
    Amma, thank you so much for your compassion and love and showing by example what unconditional love truly means. It was such a blessing to finally be able to see you!

  6. I saw Amma for the second time in Singapore on 28 & 31/03/09. It’s an experience that can’t be expressed in word… AMMA, u are so loving! AMMA’s hugs can’t be described in word. I really feel it. I miss AMMA so much. She is so great… I’m really happy to meet AMMA.

  7. The one who waits and walks and wiggles for 16 hours is someone to acknowledge but not for being extraordinary. It is the one who sits and hugs and sings and consoles and instructs with neither food nor drink for 20 plus hours (except what is given by devotees during darshan)…it is SHE who is the extraordinary one. It is she who gives us the stamina to wait 16 hours and the blessings to afford to travel to do so.

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