This is Mother Love

If this is Mother Love, we all need a lot more of it

Rosita Sweetman is well and truly Amma’d after meeting the ‘hugging saint’

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Sunday November 18 2007

She’s tiny and a great deal earthier than they make her out to be in the brochures, with huge, lively eyes, a wonderful smile, and so far, in her 54 years on this earth, she’s estimated to have hugged somewhere around 28 million people worldwide.

She’s Amma, the ‘hugging saint’ from India, who recently made her fourth trip to Ireland, dispensing ‘darshan’ in the National Show Centre in north Dublin, which was transformed into a fragrant temple of Indian beauty with banks of fresh flowers, incense, a band playing sacred bhagans and the delicious aroma of Indian food wafting in from the kitchens.

Amma, ‘Mother’, whom followers believe is a living saint, a Mahatma, described by renowned primatologist and conservationist Dr Jane Goodall (not a woman given to hyperbole), as “God’s love in a human body”, sits crosslegged, facing the stream of people coming towards her for their hug, or ‘darshan’.

Men, women, teenagers, babies, grannies, grandads kneel, get a blast of that incredible smile, are reached for and pressed to Amma’s bosom. Many start shaking as tears flow almost immediately. “My job,” Amma says simply, “is to console.” Her quest is Universal Motherhood. Unconditional love for all.

Notebook in hand, I’m jammed in beside Amma, a whirring fan, and her chief Swami, there to translate. I’m terrified. What if she’s a swizz? What if she thinks I’m a swizz? And how exactly do you question a ‘Living Saint’?

Swami is waiting, pen in hand. Okay, what does Amma hope to achieve with her hugs?

A vigorous stream of Kerala from Amma, who continues to hug, kiss, pat, whisper, smile, console, is translated by the Swami as, “Mother says she doesn’t expect anything. She never tries to force anything. She is just trying to create a little space in people’s hearts so they then will have a little space for another person.”

Good answer.

“I’m just here to give,” says Amma.”If we all did that, we would have a heaven on earth! I know that is very difficult. It is a dream. But it’s nice to have a good dream.”

She smiles. “Love is the driving force of all life,” says Amma, holding a little girl to her. “Without love we cannot take our life to greater heights. But these days it’s as if we’re giving birth to orphans. The mother and the father are both looking for their freedom and the children are forgotten. Because the children don’t get love when they’re little, their hearts are closed. Even if they get love afterwards, their hearts can remain closed for ever.”

Mother Love, unconditional love, is the energy that cares for every living thing on earth, which is basically, what Amma has been doing for years.

Brought up in a poor fishing village in southern India, she did not have an easy start. Her parents, simple folk, were aghast at their hymn-singing “crazy girl” daughter, sharing the family food with starving indigents and preaching the joys of unconditional love; but, as her biography chillingly puts it, “neither repeated beatings nor her brother’s attempts to have her stabbed to death could stop her”.

She was turned into the family domestic and at one stage, things got so bad, Amma tried to die. Not that she blames her parents. They were simple people who just wanted their daughter to be normal,, be good, and get married like everyone else.

Amma, however, was having none of it, and the spirit that survived the ferocious childhood now runs one of the biggest humanitarian non-governmental organisations in the world, MAM, operating hospitals, laboratories, universities, schools, orphanages, free meals, legal aid, new homes for those affected by the tsunami (many houses were built while everyone else was still basically arguing).

Amma’s spirituality is practical. Yes you pray, and meditate and sing but you also get out there and help the poor, the downtrodden, the desperate. Some 97 per cent of the money raised by her charities goes to those in need.

Now it’s time for my hug. I kneel down, look into those sparkling eyes and am pulled forward, Amma leaning in to press her cheek, bruised black and purple from so many embraces, against mine, her hands, feather light, patting my back. The world falls away.

I was worried it was all going to be horribly soppy I hear gurgling laughter, and Amma is pressing her lips against my ear, her voice going, “Gurra gurra gurra gurra, ma, ma, ma ma”, and now a voice deep inside me, so deep I never even knew it existed, is going, “Release! Release!” and I feel something unwinding inside, a wonderful letting go, and the voice urging, “Let it go! Let it go!”

Then, Amma holds me up, laughing that wonderful silver laugh, smiling into my eyes, kissing my hands, as I stand up, am handed back pen, book, bag, scarf, and I walk back down the hall feeling as if I’d drunk Life itself, or Goodness itself, and I can’t stop smiling this enormous goofy smile, everyone I pass smiling back, knowing I’ve been Amma’d.

As I stumble back out into the rain-sodden reality of a November day in Ireland, I’m thinking, if this is Love, if this is Unconditional Mother Love, I want more. I want more!

Oh yes, I think we can definitively say she’s the real thing all right, and I’ve definitively been Amma’d.

Motherly hug is the best medicine

When a motherly hug is the best medicine

motheramma.jpg By Niamh Hooper

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Monday November 12 2007

With four hugs a day prescribed for survival, eight a day for emotional strength and 12 for growth, what would scientific research make of Amma?

Known fondly as The Hugging Saint, she is said to have hugged more than 26 million people from all races, religions and walks of life all over the planet. This week she’s in Ireland for a two-day hugathon.

Over the past few years, thousands of Irish people have made pilgrimages to see the visiting bones of St Anthony and the relics of St Teresa, so it’s a bit of a novelty having Amma arrive here — not in a dusty casket, but in a simple white sari, glowing with smiles and ready to dispense hugs until everyone who wants one has got one.

In her native India, 54-year-old Mata Amritananda Mayi often sits for 20 hours without a break and would hug up to 30,000 people in a day.

Power of a hug

Nobody, it seems, can resist. So what is it? Is it the hugs themselves or does the power come from this Indian woman who was abused as a child and is now esteemed as an Incarnation of the Divine Mother?

She’s also an internationally-recognised humanitarian and spiritual leader, and has been presented with numerous prestigious awards previously won by Nelson Mandela, the Dalai Lama and Kofi Annan.

Ever since I can remember, I’ve reckoned hugs and ice-cream are a panacea for all ailments. But, unlike Haagen Dazs, hugs contain no calories.

They’re 100pc wholesome, natural and free. They’re warm, comforting and can say all that needs to be said where words can’t.

Asked in interviews why she hugs, Amma has said that is like asking a river why it flows. “That is my character. My karma (destiny) is to console those who are sad.”

Often likened to Mother Teresa, Amma (which means mother) is regarded as the epitome of universal motherhood. Her message of love, compassion and tolerance has united people of all nationalities, religions and colours. But it is her willingness to be available to anyone who wants to meet for a hug that appeals most.

“Selfishness dominates the world. Everybody wants to take but nobody is willing to give. Hugging someone is a symbol of giving. It expresses love, of which there is not enough in this world,” she has said.

No matter where she goes, thousands of people will wait however long for their turn — it could be as much as six hours.

There are stories of miracles occurring in huggees. While I can’t say I noticed a miracle, it’s pretty powerful. Since I first had a hug with Amma four years ago, I’ve gone back every time she’s returned to Ireland.

My first experience of darshan, as this hugging blessing is called, was on a Saturday morning in a crowded RDS.

Everyone was in their socks and there was Hindi music playing. Amma was taking person after person into her lap or to her breast and holding them. Whispering words of Malayalam, the tongue of her native Kerala, she gently caressed and blessed them.

When I was about third from the top of the long queue, for no apparent reason my body started shaking and tears trickled down my cheeks.

Kneeling before this unique woman with the tiniest feet and the seriousness of a schoolgirl, she took me to her lap, uttered Kerala words which were lost on me and held me until the shaking subsided.

Scent of roses

My senses filled with her scent of roses and her dancing eyes looked deeply into mine, before she placed a sweet in my hand and released me beneath a shower of petals.

It’s hard to explain the feeling present when Amma is there — Antoine de St Exupery’s words in The Little Prince, “What is essential is invisible to the eye”, spring to mind.

When people join the queue, if they want to give Amma a donation they can give a flower (and as a sign of respect they do not smell the flower before presenting it).

The money from these and all the stalls goes to Amma’s NGO, which has special UN status. In addition to offering people living in poverty access to hospitals, universities, schools and housing, it provided a $23m programme after the 2004 tsunami.

More than 300 volunteers will be co-ordinating the fourth annual programme in Dublin, which includes the opportunity to receive an individual embrace.

The programme at the National Show Centre in Cloghran starts tomorrow at 9.30am. PS. Bring a cushion.

Darshan How does it work?

The facts

Born in the small village of Parayakadavu, near Kollam, in 1953, Amma’s schooling ended when she was nine and she began to take care of her younger siblings full-time.

Since 1981, she has been teaching spiritual aspirants all over the world. Deepak Chopra has described her as “the embodiment of pure love. Her presence heals”.

Yolanda King, daughter of Martin Luther King, said of Amma: “Her example of non-violence as a means of raising the human condition reminds me very much of my father and Ghandi.”

The Evidence

Medical professionals will attest that babies who are not touched enough can die from Failure To Thrive Syndrome. Hugs are an antidote to the adult equivalent.

A study conducted at Princeton University confirmed that babies who are frequently touched in a loving manner until they are 12 years old are much more likely to be intimate and loving in future relationships.

– Niamh Hooper