Hugging saint visit to Coralville

Tuesday, July 3, 2007 4:24 AM CDT
‘Hugging saint’ pays visit to Coralville

CORALVILLE (AP) — Amma, the world renowned humanitarian, visited Coralville on Monday, drawing more than 2,000 people hoping to meet the “hugging saint.”

Amma, whose actual name is Mata Amritanandamayi, is a 53-year-old woman from India who attracts followers who seek out her embrace, which many consider to be a blessing or have healing qualities.

“If you are in the right frame of mind and really receptive, it is like eating or drinking something you have never had before,” said Kamal Bijlani, 46. “Many people cry or spontaneously feel very happy, or it just brings up great emotion in them.”

Bijlani, originally from India, is one of the thousands that tour with Amma.

Among the crowd that gathered Monday in a conference hall at the Coralville Marriot Hotel was Mayor Jim Fausett and Lt. Gov. Patty Judge.

After a brief group meditation, gatherers sat at Amma’s feet and one-by-one came up to get a hug.

Raj Solanki and his partner, Tracy Gonzalez, traveled from Fairfield so their 3-year-old son, Makaiah, could meet Amma.

“I hear she has a really big heart and gives great hugs and we wanted to share that love,” Gonzalez said.

Judge said she was pleased that Iowa could host a visit from Amma, who has a reputation for making an impact in humanitarian efforts, disaster relief and building homes for the needy.

“It is not often we host someone of such international importance, especially someone who has done so much to bring the world together and improve the lives of millions of people,” Judge said.

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An appeal for some Catholics


An appeal for some Catholics

Some find Indian guru better for their souls than the Church

In June, the Indian guru Mata Amritanandamayi visited California, touring the Bay Area and Los Angeles, and spending several days at a center dedicated to her teachings in Castro Valley. She is called the “Hugging Saint” because, said the June 18 San Francisco Chronicle, for 35 years she “has dedicated her life to giving people big hugs,” embracing over 25 million people around the world

By hugging, Amma (“mother,” as she is called), teaches selflessness, according to a web page dedicated to her. “If you want to learn about serving the world selflessly, sit by Her side one evening as She embraces 12,000 people,” it says. (Pronouns referring to Amma are capitalized.) She teaches silence, beginning “Her birth itself” when “She entered this world in silence.” She teaches “renunciation, but only in the midst of a lifetime of refusing to consider Her own comfort.” Amma’s every breath bears “testament to Her inability to see any man, woman or child as different from Her own Self.”

Amma has an appeal for some Catholics. Musician Prashant Michael Rao is one of the former Catholics to take Amma as his guru. In California for Amma’s tour of the state, Rao, 56, shared with the Chronicle his reasons for exchanging Holy Mother Church for the Hugging Saint’s “Universal Motherhood.”

Rao, a native of Bangladesh, said as a Catholic he “used to go to church every Sunday. I did everything that Catholics do until I went to boarding school when I was 13,” he said, when he entered a Muslim school.

As a teenager, Rao was “influenced by the 1960s sort of philosophy that had nothing to do with religion — it was more to do with spirituality. And so I dropped my Catholicism. I like the path of yoga and meditation.”

As a follower of Amma, Rao said his goal is to transcend the ego and the body — as have “saints” like Amma, because “they live from their essence and know they are one with everything.” One has to know himself completely, said Rao, by stopping “the chatter” and stopping “thinking.” Masters like Amma “tell us that there is nothing to find. There is only stuff to remove. There are clouds to remove so that you can see that the sun is shining. There are doors to open so that you can see that it’s daylight outside.”

Rao is not alone. According to a 2001 Reuters article, Catholic nuns in France went to see her. In 2004, Eric Perez, 33, a former Catholic, said he found in Amma a unique spirituality. “She’s the feminine face of God,” he told the New York Daily News. “This is the true meaning of religion.” Another former Catholic, Bill Gasko, 65, told the Chronicle during Amma’s 2005 visit to the Bay Area, Amma was “like Christ becoming a reality.”

However, Amma does not claim such high honors for herself alone. “Everyone is an avatar,” she said in 2005. “Everyone is self-realized. Everyone is enlightened. My god is people. My god is creation.”

California Catholic Daily