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{{Short description|Indian spiritual guru (1926–2011)}}
{{NPOV}}
{{Redirect|Sathyanarayana Raju}}
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{{Use Indian English|date=June 2024}}
PLEASE DO NOT POST THE THOUGHT FOR THE DAY.
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2024}}
{{Infobox Hindu leader
| name = Sathya Sai Baba
| image = Sri_Sathya_Sai_Baba_at_Brindavan_Ashram.jpg
| alt = Sathya Sai Baba
| caption =
| religion = ]
| sect = ]
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1926|11|23|df=y}}
| birth_place = ], ], ] (present-day ], ])
| institute = {{Plainlist|
* ]
* ]
}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|2011|4|24|1926|11|23}}
| death_place = Puttaparthi, Andhra Pradesh, India
| birth_name = Ratnakaram Sathyanarayana Raju
| founder = Sri Sathya Sai International Organization<br/>
Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust
| guru = <!-- The teacher (if any) -->
| philosophy = Love All, Serve All.
Help Ever, Hurt Never.
| nationality = Indian<!-- ] -->
| signature = Sathya_Sai_Baba_Signature_1.jpg}}
{{Hinduism small}}


'''Sathya Sai Baba''' (born '''Ratnakaram Sathyanarayana Raju'''; 23 November 1926{{spaced ndash}}24 April 2011)<ref name="BBC obit">{{Cite news |publisher=BBC News |title=Obituary: Indian guru Sai Baba |date=24 April 2011 |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-13153536 |quote=Satya Sai Baba was born Sathyanarayana Raju on 23 November 1926}}</ref> was an Indian ] and philanthropist.<ref name="babb83">{{Cite journal|last1=Babb|first1=Lawrence A.|title=Sathya Sai Baba's Magic|journal=Anthropological Quarterly|date=1983|volume=56|issue=3|pages=116–124|doi=10.2307/3317305|jstor=3317305}}</ref><ref name="das15">{{Cite journal|last1=Das|first1=M. K.|title=Televising religion: A study of Sathya Sai Baba's funeral broadcast in Gangtok, India|journal=Anthropological Notebooks|date=2015|volume=21|issue=3|pages=83–104|url=http://www.drustvo-antropologov.si/AN/PDF/2015_3/Anthropological_Notebooks_XXI_3_Kumar%20Das.pdf}}</ref> At the age of 14, he said he was the ] of ]<ref name="RichardWeiss">{{Cite journal|last1=Weiss|first1=Richard|date=December 2005|title=The Global Guru: Sai Baba and the Miracle of the Modern T|url=http://www.nzasia.org.nz/downloads/NZJAS-Dec05/7_2_2.pdf|journal=New Zealand Journal of Asian Studies|volume=7|issue=2|pages=5–19|access-date=5 January 2010|archive-date=18 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110718121924/http://www.nzasia.org.nz/downloads/NZJAS-Dec05/7_2_2.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="kent" /> and left his home saying "my devotees are calling me, I have my work."<ref name="sailovepeace">{{Cite news | title =Love, peace divinity| newspaper=] | date = 30 April 2011| url=https://www.deccanherald.com/features/love-peace-divinity-2411547|access-date = 30 April 2011}}</ref><ref name="Singleton, Mark| Goldberg, Ellen">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GSpnAQAAQBAJ&q=sai+baba+god+incarnate+academic+studies&pg=PT208|title=Gurus of Modern Yoga|isbn=978-0199374953|last1=Singleton|first1=Mark|last2=Goldberg|first2=Ellen|year=2013|publisher=Oxford University Press }}</ref><ref name="BabbLawrence">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B8bMjUt6AqIC|title=Redemptive Encounters: Three Modern Styles in the Hindu Tradition|last=Babb|first=Lawrence A.|publisher=]|year=1991|isbn=978-0520076365|page=164}}</ref>
PLEASE DO NOT DEFACE SATHYA SAI BABA'S PAGE.


Sai Baba's believers have credited him with miracles such as ] of '']'' (holy ash) and other small objects (rings, necklaces and watches),<ref name="time.com">{{Cite magazine |url=https://time.com/archive/6595641/sathya-sai-baba-the-man-who-was-god-is-dead/ |title=Sathya Sai Baba: The Man Who Was God Is Dead |last=Thottam |first=Jyoti |date=26 April 2011 |access-date=27 May 2024 |magazine=Time}}</ref> spontaneous and miraculous healings, ]s, ], ] as well as being omnipresent, ] and ].<ref name="news.bbc.co.uk">{{Cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/this_world/3813469.stm |title=Sai Baba: God-man or con man? |last=Datta |first=Tanya |date=17 June 2004 |access-date=7 December 2020 |publisher=BBC News}}</ref> His devotees believe these to be signs of his divinity, while other individuals have asserted that these acts were based on sleight of hand or had other explanations and as such, were not supernatural.<ref name=quack>{{Cite book|author=Johannes Quack|title=Disenchanting India: Organized Rationalism and Criticism of Religion in India |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=55wFpydSZ8oC&pg=PA120 |year=2012 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0199812608 |pages=120–}}</ref><ref name=CNNSingh>{{Cite news|title=Indian spiritual guru dies at 85|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/04/24/india.spiritual.guru.death/ |access-date=7 December 2020 |newspaper=CNN |date=24 April 2011 |orig-year=Sunday (Easter Day)|author=Harmeet Shah Singh}}</ref><ref name=Palmer116>Palmer, Norris W. "Baba's World". In: {{Cite book| last1 = Forsthoefel| first1 = Thomas A.| editor-last = Humes| editor-first = Cynthia Ann| title = Gurus in America| place = Albany, NY| publisher = State University of New York Press| year = 2005| isbn = 0791465748 }}</ref>
THERE IS A LINK TO THE THOUGHT FOR THE DAY UNDER "EXTERNAL LINKS"


In 1972, Sathya Sai Baba founded the ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=SSSCT - Home |url=https://www.srisathyasai.org/pages/index.html |access-date=9 December 2022 |website=www.srisathyasai.org}}</ref> Its goal was "to enable its members to undertake service activities as a means to spiritual advancement".<ref name="srisaiorg"/> Through this organisation, Sathya Sai Baba established a network of free general<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sri Sathya Sai General Hospital, Prasanthi Nilayam |url=https://www.sssgh.org/ |access-date=9 December 2022 |language=en-US}}</ref> and ],<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences |url=https://sssihms.org/ |access-date=9 December 2022 |website=Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Prasanthigram |url=https://prasanthigram.sssihms.org/ |access-date=9 December 2022 |website=Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Prasanthigram |language=en-US}}</ref> free medical clinics,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sssmh |url=https://www.sssmh.org.in/ |access-date=9 December 2022 |website=www.sssmh.org.in}}</ref> drinking water projects,<ref>{{Cite web |title=SSSCT - Anantapur Project |url=https://www.srisathyasai.org/pages/sai-anantapur.html |access-date=9 December 2022 |website=www.srisathyasai.org}}</ref> schools, universities,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Learning (SSSIHL) |url=https://www.sssihl.edu.in/ |access-date=9 December 2022 |website=Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Learning (SSSIHL) |language=en-GB}}</ref> ]s, auditoriums, and education technology.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sri Sathya Sai Vidya Vahini |url=https://learning.srisathyasaividyavahini.org/ |access-date=9 December 2022 |website=learning.srisathyasaividyavahini.org}}</ref><ref name=funeral>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-13204914|title=Thousands flock to funeral of India guru Satya Sai Baba|publisher=BBC News|date=27 April 2011}}</ref><ref name=deccanheraldlegacy>{{Cite web|url=http://www.deccanherald.com/content/156315/sai-babas-legacy.html|title=Sai Baba's legacy|work=Deccan Herald|date=24 April 2011}}</ref><ref name="toigovernments">{{Cite news| url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Sai-Baba-did-everything-govt-could-not/articleshow/8076153.cms | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131001140943/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-04-25/india/29470992_1_sathya-sai-baba-whitefield-ashram-god | url-status=live | archive-date=1 October 2013 | work=] | title='Sai Baba did everything govt could not'}}</ref>
http://en.wikipedia.org/Sathya_Sai_Baba#External_links
http://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Sathya_Sai_Baba#Comments_by_anon
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<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: ] -->'''Sathya Sai Baba''' (born Sathya Narayana ] on ] ] -or later than ]<ref>Nagel, Alexandra (note: Nagel is a critical former follower) ''Een mysterieuze ontmoeting... :Sai Baba en mentalist Wolf Messing''/''A mysterious meeting... :Sai Baba and mentalist Wolf Messing'' published in Tijdschrift voor Parapsychologie/Journal for parapsychology 368, vol. 72 nr 4, Dec. 2005, pp. 14-17 (Dutch language): ''"Sai Baba was in 1927 one year old - or not yet born (a discussion exist about his birth year.)"'' Dutch original: ''"Sai Baba was in 1927 één jaar oud - of nog niet eens geboren (er bestaat discussie over zijn geboortejaar.)"''</ref>- with the family name of "Ratnakaram" <ref> ''Miracles are my visiting cards - An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, an Indian mystic with the gift of foresight believed to perform modern miracles'' (1997 revised and updated edition published by Sai Towers, ], India) ISBN 81-86822-32-1 </ref>) is a ] ] often described as a ] <ref>'''Reference 1:''' Woodhead, Linda & Fletcher Paul. ''Religion in the Modern World: Traditions and Transformation''. Routledge (UK), ISBN 0415217849: ''"By far the most famous Godman of today is Sathya Sai Baba"'' (p. 29);<br>'''Reference 2''' Lochtefeld, James G. Ph.D. ''The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism'' Vol. I ISBN 082393179-x, New York Rosen 2002: From the entry godman, ''"One contemporary example of such a godman is Sathya Sai Baba"''</ref> and a ] worker <ref>] German article published in Materialdienst der EZW, 47 Jahrgang, 1 February 1984, Translation by Linda W. Duddy and is reprinted by their permission, on the website of the ], a Christian Anti-Cult Site: ''" Sai Baba has an unrivaled reputation as a miracle worker. He »materializes« watches, talismans, sweets, flowers, crucifixes, books, photographs, and, above all, holy ashes (vibhuti) with a wave of the hand. Miraculous cures with help from the ashes, or from Baba himself as the surgeon, and even the resurrecting of the dead are attributed to him."''</ref>. According to the ], there are an estimated 1,200 Sathya Sai Baba Centers in 130 countries world-wide <ref></ref>. The number of Sathya Sai Baba adherents is estimated between 6 million to 100 million <ref>'''Reference 1:''' estimate of 10 million;<br>'''Reference 2:''' Brown, Mick; ''Divine Downfall'' in ] UK Newspaper (28 Oct. 2000): ''"The guru Sai Baba has left India only once, yet his devotees across the world are estimated at up to 50 million."'';<br>'''Reference 3:''' Nagel, Alexandra "De Sai Paradox", 1994, nr. 29. published by the Free University Amsterdam, (1994): ''"Beyerstein (1992:3) estimates the amount at 6 million; Riti & Theodore (1993:31) at 30 million, Sluizer (1993:19) is talking about 70 million and Van Dijk's (1993:30) estimate is "between 50 and 100 million.'"''</ref>. Several hundred books and media articles have been published about Sathya Sai Baba.


By virtue of his sizeable influence, many feel Sai Baba provides an example of "the phenomenon referred to as mahagurus; that is, gurus with a global reach."<ref name="mahaguru">{{Cite web
]Sathya Narayana Raju was born into a poor ] family in the remote village of ] located in ], ]. In the ] he proclaimed to be the ] of ] and subsequently took the ]'s name. Sathya Sai Baba claims that he is the second in a series of three ]s (incarnations) of ] ] (the future incarnation being ] <ref>'''Reference 1:''' Gurupournima Day, 6 July 1963, Sathya Sai Baba, Sathya Sai Speaks III 5, 19., : ''"After the ritual was over, they were so pleased that they conferred even more boons on the sage. Shiva said that they would take human form and be born in the Bharadwaja lineage, thrice: Shiva alone as Shirdi Sai Baba, Shiva and Shakthi together at Puttaparthy as Sathya Sai Baba, and Shakthi alone as Prema Sai, later. "''<br>'''Reference 2:''' The Extended Interview given by Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba to the Senior Editor, Sri R.K. Karanjia of Blitz News Magazine in September of 1976, : ''"The previous Avathar, Shirdi Baba, laid the base for secular integration and gave mankind the message duty is work. The mission of the present Avathar is to make everybody realize that the same God or divinity resides in everyone. People should respect, love and help each other irrespective of color or creed. Thus all work can become a way of worship. Finally, Prema Sai, the third Avathar will promote the evangel news that not only does God reside in everybody, but everybody is God. That will be the final wisdom which will enable every man and woman to go to God. The three Avathars carry the triple message of work, worship and wisdom."''</ref>). He claims that he is an embodiment of love with ] attributes such as ], ] and ]. <ref>SSB as quote in Narayana Kasturi's authorized biography ''Sathyam Sivam Sundaram'' Vol 3 page 315: ''"I am all deities in one. You may endeavour your best for thousands of years and have all mankind with you in your search. But you cannot understand My Reality."'' page 136 <br> ''"God can do anything. He has all power in the palm of His Hand. My Body, like all other bodies, is a temporary habitation; but, My Power is eternal, all-pervasive, ever-dominant." Christmas Day Discourse, Bombay 1970. page 305 "In his speech at the Patel Stadium in Bombay, Sathya Sai Baba said, " I know all that happens to all because I am everyone. This current is in every bulb I illumine every consciousness. I am the inner motivator in each one of you."''</ref>.
|url = https://muse.jhu.edu/chapter/116246|title = Gurus in America|publisher = ]|date = 27 June 2005|access-date = 27 June 2005}}</ref> Citing the number of Sai Centres (over 2000 in 137 countries),<ref name="bbtsai">{{Cite news | title =Sathya Sai Baba Life and Legacy| newspaper=] | date = 25 April 2023| url=https://barbadostoday.bb/2023/04/25/btcolumn-sathya-sai-baba-life-and-legacy/amp/|access-date = 25 April 2023}}</ref> the scope of service and charitable works (free hospitals, drinking water projects), social sphere and influence of devotees (royalty, celebrities, high ranking politicians along with a total number of devotees estimated to be from 6 to 100 million worldwide) as well as being seen as a global "movement extending in some very surprising ways."<ref name="mahaguru"/>


== Biography ==
Sathya Sai Baba teaches the unity of all major world ]s and says that they all lead to ]. He preaches a foundation of five basic human values: Truth, Right Conduct, Peace, Love and Non-Violence.
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: ] -->Sathya Sai Baba's followers report many, sometimes spectacular, ]s of various kinds which they attribute to him. He is observed to allegedly manifest ] (holy ash) and small objects (rings, necklaces and watches) daily. Sathya Sai Baba explained the phenomenon of manifestation as an act of divine creation, but refused to have his ] investigated under experimental conditions because he felt that the approach used by critics was improper <ref>The Extended Interview given by Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba to the Senior Editor, Sri R.K. Karanjia of Blitz News Magazine in September of 1976, : ''"However, as I have said again and again, those who want to understand Me are welcome here. It is the spirit of the investigation that is important. Foreign parapsychologists have come here and examined Me in such a positive and constructive spirit. You have seen their reports. They do not write letters or make public demands. Narasimhiah's approach was improper; that is why I rejected it. If it were not so, he would have been welcome."''</ref>. Critics claim that these materializations are done by ]. <ref>: ''"All this helps explain why there has never been any official action against Sai Baba in India, despite the dozens of ex-believers who insist that his claims to divinity mask a wholly human craving for the bodies of the ashram's young men and boys. The stories are endless, and endlessly alike, concerning mostly boys and men from their midteens to their mid-20s."''<br>'''Reference 2:''' Velde, Koert van der in ] newspaper 6 Sept. 2000 <br>'''Reference 3:''' ] press release issued on 15 September 2000, ''"Furthermore, the Organization is deeply concerned about widely-reported allegations of sexual abuse involving youths and children that have been levelled at the leader of the movement in question, Sathya Sai Baba."'' <br>'''Reference 4:''' Brown, Mick article in ] UK Newspaper (28 Oct. 2000): ''"In April, Glen Meloy - a retired management consultant and a prominent Californian devotee of some 26 years standing - received a letter from an American woman who had read The Findings on the Internet. Her 15-year-old son, she said, had also been abused. Included in the letter was a four-page statement from the boy himself alleging multiple sexual abuse."''</ref>. In the ''India Today'' magazine (dated December 2000) no complaints had been filed against the Guru, by any alleged victim, in India <ref>'''Reference 1:''' ] December 04, 2000 ''"As of now, there are no complaints that have been filed in India...Controversy could well be Sai Baba's middle name. He has been dogged by various kinds of allegations in the past-though none of them has ever been proven."''<br>'''Reference 2:''' Goldberg, Michelle, Untouchable? (25 July 2001) in ] : ''"All this helps explain why there has never been any official action against Sai Baba in India, despite the dozens of ex-believers who insist that his claims to divinity mask a wholly human craving for the bodies of the ashram's young men and boys."''</ref>. It was also reported, in this same ''India Today'' magazine, that the coterie that surrounds Baba dismissed the allegations by denouncing them as "Anti-Hindu" attacks made by foreigners <ref>] December 04, 2000 </ref>. According to Mick Brown, due to the public disclosure of allegations, there was a rash of defections from Western countries and Sweden <ref>Brown, Mick article in ] UK Newspaper UK (28 Oct. 2000): ''"There has been a rash of defections from Sai Baba groups throughout the West. In ] the central group has closed down, and so too has a school based on the Human Education Values programme devised by educationalists at the Puttaparthi college."''</ref>. In face of the allegations, the Sathya Sai Central Trust is still the largest recipient of foreign donations (as recently as 2001 <ref>George Iype article on Rediff.com (August 16, 2003)</ref>) and ] and Michelle Goldberg both expressed the opinion that the allegations have not seemed to impact the Guru's following <ref>'''Reference 1:''' Aitken, Bill, Miracle of Welfare (November 27 2005) : ''"To add to the chagrin of these voluble detractors, who have criticised his career in print and on the Internet with malicious intensity for at least a generation, is the ongoing booming growth of his mission. The more they rail against the saint, the greater, it seems, is the number of people who flock to have his darshan...Even negative assessments of the Sai movement have to concede that its growth has been phenomenal and that, remarkably, there has been no missionary effort involved. It has increased by spontaneous identification, where individuals have been drawn to the persona and teachings of the Sai saints, a voluntary outpouring of faith that has occurred in an amazingly short period."''<br>'''Reference 2:''' Goldberg, Michelle, Untouchable? (25 July 2001) in ] : ''"Given all this, one might suspect that Sai Baba's following would be in decline. Yet when one looks around Puttaparthi, there seem to be enough bright-eyed converts to replace every defector, enough denial to obscure even the most well documented allegations and, perhaps most of all, enough fierce belief to trump ordinary moral judgments."''</ref>.


===Early life===
Sathya Sai Baba's followers and the organizations he founded are involved in many service projects around the world. He is providing free education through his schools, free healthcare through two state-of-the-art ]s in ] and ] and two water projects serving thousands in the Indian states of ] and ]. ], where Baba was born and still lives, was originally a small village where one can now find an extensive ] complex, a World-Religions Museum (''Chaitanya Jyoti''), a ], a railway station, an airport and more. High ranking Indian politicians, like the current President Dr. ], ] (Former finance minister and current Prime Minister), and ] (Former Prime minister) have been official guests at the ashram in Puttaparthi. Some quarters of the Indian government consider Sai Baba to be a "national treasure" <ref>Sri Sathya Sai Baba - A Living Legend - An Embodiment Of Love For All Mankind, Letter from A.B. Vajpayee (the then Prime Minister of India), </ref>.


Sathyanarayana Raju was born on 23 November 1926 to Namagiriamma (Easwaramma) and Peddavenkama Raju Ratnakaram, to a ]-speaking ] family,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.indiatoday.in/india/south/story/a-phenomenon-called-sathya-sai-baba-132676-2011-04-25|title=A phenomenon called Sathya Sai Baba|last=Rao|first=A. Srinivasa|website=India Today|date=25 April 2011 |language=en|access-date=22 November 2019}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6fHFLQDOEuYC&q=bhat+raju|title=Winged Faith: Rethinking Globalization and Religious Pluralism through the Sathya Sai Movement|last=Srinivas|first=Tulasi|year= 2010|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=978-0231520522|pages=54|language=en}}</ref> a community of religious musicians and balladeers,<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/35458340.pdf|title=Sathya Sai Baba as Avatar: "His Story" and the History of an Idea|last=Spurr|first=Michael James|website=University of Canterbury}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GSpnAQAAQBAJ&q=Bhat+raju&pg=PT368|title=Gurus of Modern Yoga|last1=Singleton|first1=Mark|last2=Goldberg|first2=Ellen|year=2013|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0199374953|language=en}}</ref> in the village of ] in ] of ] (present-day ], India).<ref name="BabbLawrence" /><ref>Haraldsson, Erlendur, Miracles are my visiting cards – An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, (1997 revised and updated edition published by Sai Towers, Prasanthi Nilayam, India), p. 55, {{ISBN|8186822321}}</ref><ref name="Eade">{{Cite book|year=2002|editor-last=Eade|editor-first=John|editor2-last=Mele|editor2-first=Christopher|title=Understanding the City|publisher=Wiley|language=en|doi=10.1002/9780470693582|isbn=978-0470693582}}</ref> His birth was purported by his mother Easwaramma to be of a ].<ref name="RichardWeiss"/><ref name="BabbLawrence"/> He was the fourth among the five children of his parents.
==History and origins==
{{mergefrom|History and origins of the Sathya Sai Baba movement}}
See ''Main article ]''


Sathya Sai Baba's siblings included elder brother Ratnakaram Seshama Raju (1911–1985), elder sisters Venkamma (1918–1993) and Parvathamma (1920–1998), and younger brother Janakiramaiah (1931–2003).<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-04-22/india/29463028_1_sathya-sai-baba-satyajit-trust-affairsnephew|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130103170839/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-04-22/india/29463028_1_sathya-sai-baba-satyajit-trust-affairsnephew|url-status=dead|archive-date=3 January 2013|newspaper=]|title=Vaastu dosham at hospital he built, say Sai kin|date=25 April 2011}}</ref>
Sathya Narayana was born into a poor ] family in the remote village of ], located in ], ], India, as the son of Pedda Venkappa Raju and mother Eshwar Amma. According to professor Narayana Kasturi in his book ''Easwaramma'', who also wrote Sathya Sai Baba's authorized biography, Sathya was born and conceived through a ]. After recovering from an unexplained illness in his teens the young Sathya claimed to be the ] of the ] ] in the ]. According to his own assertion and the biography by Kasturi (which the British journalist Mick Brown of the ] called a ]), he stopped going to school in the town of Uravakonda on October 20, 1940 to start his mission. However, he is listed in the 1942 school record of the nearby village Bukkapatnam. Though the exact year on which he started his mission full-time is uncertain, it is a fact that in the ] he took the fakir's name. Kasturi's biography mentions several miracles by and signs of divinity of the young Sathya. According to Howard Murphet, in his book ''Sai Baba Man of Miracles'' (see picture) , the young Sathya was a vegetarian and was known for his aversion to animal cruelty and compassion for the poor, disabled and elderly. According to Kasturi and to Sathya Sai Baba himself, the young Sathya composed ] spontaneously (even as young as 8 years of age) and was talented in drama, dance, music and poetry. In a discourse in 1963 he claimed to be a reincarnation of ] and ] in 1963. <ref>http://www.sathyasai.org/discour/1963/d630706.htm ''Shiva Shakthi''] Gurupournima Day, 6 July 1963, (Sathya Sai Baba, Sathya Sai Speaks III 5, 19.)</ref>. In the same discourse SSB said that ] was an incarnation of Shiva and that his future reincarnation ] would be a reincarnation of Shakti. In contrast, Kasturi’s biography/hagiography stated that Shirdi Sai Baba was to be Shakti incarnated and that Prema Sai Baba was to be an incarnation of Shiva.


As a child, Sathya was described as "unusually intelligent" and charitable, though not necessarily academically inclined, as his interests were of a more spiritual nature.<ref name="BabbLawrence"/><ref name=Palmer99 /> He was uncommonly talented in devotional music, dance and drama.<ref name=Palmer99 /><ref name="kent">{{Cite book | last = Kent | first = Alexandra |title =Divinity and Diversity: A Hindu Revitalization Movement in Malaysia |publisher = Nordic Institute of Asian Studies | year = 2005 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=26sVhUo_aM4C&pg=PA37 |pages = 37–39| isbn = 978-8791114403}}</ref> From a young age, he has been purported to have been capable of materialising objects such as food and sweets out of thin air.<ref name="AlexandraKent">{{Cite journal|last=Kent|first=Alexandra|date=1 January 2000|title=Creating Divine Unity: Chinese Recruitment in the Sathya Sai Baba Movement of Malaysia|journal=Journal of Contemporary Religion|volume=15|issue=1|pages=5–27|doi=10.1080/135379000112116|s2cid=143315480|issn=1353-7903}}</ref>
In the late ] he attracted Western spiritual seekers and became increasingly popular. One of those spiritual seekers was the Hollywood screenwriter ], who wrote in his 1971 book called ''Baba'' that "For any episode of Baba's childhood, there are countless contrasting versions and, at this point, the author discovered that it was no longer possible to separate the facts from the legend." According to Schulman, contrasting versions about Baba's childhood may be due to the fact that he needed interpreters to interperet other interpreters (as in the case of his interview with Baba's sister). Schulman concluded that what the translators said may well have been quite different from what was actually said <ref>Schulman, Arnold ''Baba'' 1971, pp. 122-124, ISBN 670-14343-x </ref>


===Proclamation===
Sathya Sai Baba had several sisters, one older brother, the late Seshama Raju, and one younger brother, the late R. V. Janaki Ramaiah. <ref> article on 18 Oct. 2003 in ] retrieved March 2006 </ref>
]
<ref> article on 18 Oct. 2003 in ] retrieved March 2006 </ref>
Almost everything known about Sathya Sai Baba's early life stems from the ] that grew around him; these were narratives that hold special meaning<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sri Sathya Sai Global Council {{!}} Prasanthi Nilayam |url=https://www.srisathyasaiglobalcouncil.org/ |access-date=9 December 2022 |website=Sri Sathya Sai Global Council |language=en}}</ref> to his devotees and are considered by them to be evidence of his divine nature.<ref name="BabbLawrence"/><ref name="UrbanHugh74" /><ref name="Palmer99">{{Cite book|url=https://muse.jhu.edu/book/4991|title=Gurus in America|last=Palmer|first=Norris W.|publisher=]|year=2005|isbn=978-0791465745|editor-last=A. Forsthoefel|editor-first=Thomas|place=Albany, NY|page=99|chapter=Baba’s World: A Global Guru and His Movement|editor-last2=Ann Humes|editor-first2=Cynthia|chapter-url=https://muse.jhu.edu/chapter/116246}}</ref>


According to these sources, on 8 March 1940, while living with his elder brother Seshama Raju in ] (a small town near ]) 14-year-old Sathya was stung by a scorpion.<ref name="sailovepeace"/><ref name="AlexandraKent"/> He lost consciousness for several hours<ref name="kent"/> and in the next few days underwent a noticeable change in behaviour. There were "symptoms of laughing and weeping, eloquence and silence." It is claimed that then "he began to sing ] verses, a language of which it is alleged he had no prior knowledge."<ref name="RichardWeiss"/> Doctors concluded his behaviour to be ].<ref name="RichardWeiss"/> Concerned, his parents brought Sathya back home to ] and took him to many priests, doctors and exorcists. One of the exorcists at ], a town near Puttaparthi, went to the extent of torturing him with the aim of curing him. Having shaved Raju’s head, he cut three crosses on his skull, then poured acid into the wounds. At this point, his parents called a stop to it.<ref name="sailovepeace"/>
==Beliefs and practices==
{{mergefrom|Beliefs and practices in the Sathya Sai Organisation}}


On 23 May 1940, Sathya called household members and reportedly materialised sugar candy (''])'' and flowers for them. His father became furious at seeing this, thinking his son was ]. He took a stick and threatened to beat him if Sathya did not reveal who he really was, the young Sathya responded calmly and firmly "I am Sai Baba", a reference to ].<ref name="RichardWeiss"/><ref name="kent"/> This was the first time he proclaimed himself to be the reincarnation of Sai Baba of Shirdi{{snd}}a saint who became famous in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in ] and had died eight years before Sathya was born.<ref name="RichardWeiss"/> It was then he came to be known as 'Sathya Sai Baba'.
:''Main article ]''


Several months later Sai Baba, on 20 October 1940, told his parents that he had "come to this world with a mission to re-establish the principle of Righteousness (]), to motivate love for God and service to fellow man."<ref name="saimission">{{Cite news|title =SRI SATHYA SAI AVATAR AND HIS MISSION| newspaper=]| date = 10 November 2023| url=https://indiannews.nz/2023/11/10/sri-sathya-sai-avatar-and-his-mission/|access-date = 10 November 2023}}</ref> Further elaborating in a letter (dated 25 May 1947) to his older brother Seshma, he stated "I have a task to foster all mankind and ensure for all of them lives full of bliss. I have a vow to lead all who stray away from the straight path, again into goodness and save them... to remove the sufferings of the poor and grant them what they lack."<ref name="saimission"/> Personally stating, "I do not belong to any place. I am not attached to any name. I have no ‘mine’ or ‘thine’."<ref name="bbtsai"/>
===Miracles and ashrams===
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===First mandir and development of Puttaparthi===
Sathya Sai Baba resides much of the time in his main ] called '']'' (abode of peace) at Puttaparthi. In the hot summer Baba leaves for his other ashram called ''Brindavan'' in ] (sometimes called Kadugodi), a town on the outskirts of ]. He regularly visits ]. He has left India only once for a visit to ] in ].
]
In 1944, a ] for Sai Baba's devotees was built near the village of ]. It is now referred to as the "old mandir".<ref name="bowen">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fJwQAAAACAAJ|title=The Sathya Sai Baba Community in Bradford: Its Origin and Development, Religious Beliefs and Practices|last=Bowen|first=David|date=1988|publisher=Department of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Leeds|isbn=978-1871363029|language=en}}</ref> The construction of ], the current ashram, began in 1948 and was completed in 1950.<ref name="BabbLawrence"/><ref name="bowen"/> In 1954, Sai Baba established a small free general hospital in the village of Puttaparthi.<ref name="TheHinduNewspaper">{{Cite news |url=http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/features/saibaba/stories/2005112300270300.htm |title=Sri Sathya Sai 80th year of Advent |newspaper=The Hindu |date=23 November 2005|access-date=10 January 2010|location=Chennai, India}}</ref> He won fame for his reputed mystical powers and ability to heal.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/apr/24/sri-sathya-sai-baba-dies|title=Sai Baba, spiritual guru to millions, dies at 85|author=Jason Burke|newspaper=the Guardian|date=24 April 2011}}</ref> In 1957, Sai Baba went on a tour of North India, visiting temples in Delhi, Srinagar, Kashmir and Rishikesh.<ref name="Eade"/>


===Stroke, prediction of reincarnation and sole foreign tour===
He is a prolific orator about religious topics in his native language ] and he is regarded by some as an excellent speaker. Apart from his claim to be Shirdi Sai Baba, Satya Sai Baba also asserts that he is an ] of God, a reincarnation of Lord ], of Sri ], the ] purna avatar (full divine incarnation), Lord ], and ]. But he also says that everybody else is God and that the difference is that he is aware of this and others are not. <ref> </ref> He says that he is omniscient, omnipotent, and able to create matter from mere thought. He also stresses he is free from desires. Sai Baba claims to be pure, divine love.


In 1963, it was asserted that Sai Baba suffered a stroke and four severe heart attacks, which left him paralysed on one side. These events culminated in an event where he apparently healed himself in front of the thousands of people gathered in Prashanthi Nilayam who were then praying for his recovery.<ref name="BabbLawrence"/>
Sathya Sai Baba can be seen in person performing what followers believe to be miracles daily in the form of materializations of small objects, for example food, jewelry such as bracelets, rings, watches and especially ] (holy ash) and "kum kum" (the red-colored powder used by Hindus to make the ritual mark between the eyebrows). He says that he can ] diseases of his devotees sometimes by his spiritual power and sometimes by taking on the disease himself. <ref> </ref>. There is numerous ] that supports this claim. Followers attribute many miracles to him which they claim have witnessed in his presence. There are international claims, from Sathya Sai Baba's followers and neutral observers, that vibuthi, kumkum, turmeric powder, holy water, brass statues of deities, sugar candy, fruits, herbs, amrita (a fragrant, nectar-like honey), gems and coloured string spontaneously manifest on the altars and pictures of Sathya Sai Baba in the privacy of their own homes. <ref>'''Reference 1:''' Nair, Yogas, "Raisins, ash raise eyebrows", The Post April 19, 2006, : ''"Golden raisins falling out of a Lord Hanuman statue, sweet honey oozing from his chest and grey ash scattered on Sai Baba pictures. These were some of the mysterious sights that greeted a Phoenix crystal healer and businesswoman when she arrived at her clothing factory on the morning of Hanuman Jayanthi (Hanuman's birthday) on Thursday...She said the picture of Sai Baba had also "shed tears" which 'tasted salty'. 'I was overwhelmed by everything that was happening. However, I accepted it as a blessing and reaffirmed my faith in God.' She said during auspicious days such as Ganesha Pooja and Shivarathri, kungoo (scared red ash), turmeric, sugar candy and coloured strings, appeared on deities of Lord Ganesha and Shiva...I visited Govender at her factory yesterday (Tuesday) and was greeted by mounds of unscented ashes around Baba's photographs. Honey was "oozing" out of a Hanuman statue and raisins appeared scattered around it. A deity of Lord Shiva also appeared to materialise a blue crystal."''<br>'''Reference 2:''' Brown Mick, The Spiritual Tourist, Ch: The Miracle In North London, pp. 29-30, 1998 ISBN 158234034X<br>
''"I had no idea what to make of the pictures. To have applied the vibuthi to the glass would have been possible, perhaps, although I could not imagine how. The vibuthi was too evenly distributed to have been applied with a brush or sponge. The pictures did not seem to me to have been tampered with in any way. Rather, the vibuthi seemed to have grown on the surface of the glass, just as Mr. Patel said it had. Even if placing vibuthi on the glass might have just about been possible, to have placed it between the picture and the frame, as was the case with some of the portriats, seemed to me to be too complicated and troublesome. It seemed preposterous to imagine Mr Patel and his family bent over frames and sheets of glass, fiddling with ash and screwdrivers. Anyway, why would anyone contrive such a spectacle? There was no apparent profit or gain to be had from it for Mr Patel. A large sign near the pictures urged visitors not to give money, but to 'leave only your troubles'"''.<br>
''"What other motive could he have had? It had, if anything, caused him considerable personal inconvience. His house was no longer his own. He entertained a constant stream of visitors and enquiries; he was required to maintain the shrine in proper order. He had long ago abandoned any thoughts of installing a snooker-table as he had originally planned. Besides, Mr Patel did not strike me as a man capable of deceit. His manner was humble, self-effacing, patently sincere. 'I am deeply blessed,' he said. Even questioning his account of the miracle I felt mean-spirited, a prisoner of rationalist thought. Perhaps it was better simply to accept it for what Mr Patel said it was, for what it seemed to be - the sparkle of holy ash enlivening the dreary suburb of Wealdstone. I walked away from Mr Patel's house with my head reeling, Austin at my side. His face still wore the same absorbed half-smile I had noticed when he was sitting in the ante-room."''<br>
''"'So what did you think?' I asked."''<br>
''"He walked along in silence for some moments, mulling it over. 'Well, if it's not a miracle,' he said at last, 'it's a wonderful fairy tale.'"''<br>
''"I told friends about the vibuthi-covered portriats; they looked at me in a bemused, eyebrow-arching sort of way. It couldn't be true, because such things simply don't happen, do they? But then they hadn't seen it, and I had."''<br>
''"The phenomenon of vibuthi appearing on photographs was not confined to Mr. Patel's house. I began to hear accounts of similar manifestations at houses and temples in Leicaster, in New York, Canada, Australia and, of course, in India. Shortly after the article appeared I received another telephone call, from someone I had nver met, inviting me to another house, also in North London, where vibuthi was said to be manifesting in even greater quantities than at Mr. Patel's."''<br>
''"As soon as I stepped inside I was assailed by the familiar sweet smell of vibuthi...The vibuthi was everywhere as material evidence. Its profusion was staggering; its sweet smell penetrated every corner of the house."''<br>'''Reference 3:''' Pillay, Prinella ''Divine blessing: It's a miracle, says family''
March 17, 2004 in the newspaper ''Post'' South Africa <br> "In what is being described as a divine blessing, a staunch Sai Baba-devoted Isipingo family is experiencing what they say are miracles in their home - with the formation of ashes and kungum around their prayer place and walls, and the appearance of candy and honey dripping freely from the eyes of a Sai Baba statue. Widowed Rani Naicker, 50, a factory worker of Egret Crescent, Lotus Park, who shares a rented home with her three children, factory workers Sagren, 21, and Kumaran, 24, unemployed Nicole, 25, and her (Nicole's) three-year-old daughter Shenay, said they were blessed a day after the kavady festival in February, when Sagren noticed ashes forming on the top of a poster which featured Sai Baba's head. Since then, the family claims, there has been an overflow of ashes, kungum, turmeric powder, sugar candy and pink sweets, including the continuous dripping of sweet honey from a statue. These have mysteriously materialised. Ashes have also formed on several pictures of Sai Baba, Shridi Baba, Mother Mary and on the frame of a picture of Naicker's late husband, Manny Naicker."<br>'''"Reference 4"''' "House of Miracles", Sunday 24 Mar 2002, Durban news, ''Sunday Times'' <br>Devotees and tourists seeking cures for ailments and help with domestic problems have been flocking to a Durban home said to be blessed by the miracles of Sai Baba.<br>Kay Pillay, 59, owner of the home in Silverglen, Chatsworth, said the miracles began 11 years ago when honey started forming on a framed picture of Sai Baba.<br>"We knew it was the miracle of Baba, because we heard of it happening elsewhere. Soon we saw ash on the walls, kungu (coloured powder), turmeric powder, holy water, brass statues of deities, sugar candy, dates, prunes, cloves and coloured string representing the different deities," said Pillay. He said brass figurines representing deities appeared on auspicious religious days.<br>...Visitors can see honey dripping across a framed picture of Sai Baba, and two red velvet-covered throne-like chairs with a little stool from which ashen footprints lead to a burning lamp. On the floor are offerings of sweetmeats by devotees.<br>Pillay said every Wednesday and Saturday Baba's footprints are washed from the carpet and everything is cleaned. The following day, the powder and footprints reappear.</ref>


On recovering, Sai Baba stated, "I am Shiva-Sakthi, born in the ] (lineage) of ], according to a boon won by that sage from ] and ]. Siva was born in the gotra of that sage as Sai Baba of Shirdi; Shiva and Sakthi have incarnated as Myself in his gotra now; Sakthi alone will incarnate as the third Sai (Prema Sai Baba) in the same gotra in ] district of Karnataka State."<ref name="BabbLawrence"/> He stated he would be born again eight years after his death at the age of 96, but died at the age of 84.<ref>{{Cite news| url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-13180011 | publisher=BBC News | title=Satya Sai Baba, Indian guru, dies at 84 | date=24 April 2011}}</ref>
The ]ic psychology professor Erlendur Haraldsson wrote that he did not get Sathya Sai Baba's permission to study him under controlled circumstances but investigated and documented the guru's alleged miracles and manifestations by interviewing witnesses first-hand and compiling results from a questionnaire given to a sampling of 29 people, including 7 former followers. According to the people that Haraldsson interviewed, and the results to his questionnaire, many extraordinary miracles were attributed to Sathya Sai Baba such as ] (both indoors and outdoors), ], physical disappearances, changing granite into sugar candy, changing water into another drink, changing water into gasoline, producing objects on demand, changing the color of his gown into a different color while wearing it, multiplying food, healings, visions, dreams, making different fruits appear on any tree hanging from actual stems, controlling the weather, physically transforming into various deities and physically emitting brilliant light. These people also claimed that Sathya Sai Baba materialized many substances from his hand such as vibuthi, lost objects, statues, photographs, Indian pastries (both hot and cold), food (hot, cold, solid and fluid), out of season fruits, new banknotes, pendants, necklaces, watches and rings <ref> ''Miracles are my visiting cards - An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, an Indian mystic with the gift of foresight believed to perform modern miracles'' (1997 revised and updated edition published by Sai Towers, India) ISBN 81-86822-32-1; Chapters 7-20.</ref>. Haraldsson wrote that the biggest materialized object that he saw was a mangalasutra necklace, 32 inches long, 16 inches long on each side <ref> ''Miracles are my visiting cards - An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, an Indian mystic with the gift of foresight believed to perform modern miracles'' (1997 revised and updated edition published by Sai Towers, India) ISBN 81-86822-32-1 pp. 43: ''"Immediately thereafter Sai Baba waved his hand again for two or three seconds, the palm turned down, and then quickly closed it. His arm was approximately horizontal to the ground, which was not a position favourable for allowing an object to fall from his sleeve. We observed at close range as Sai Baba loosened the grip on his fist so that he could hold the large, bulky necklace that appeared in his hand. It was a mangalasutra, a traditional piece of jewelry for a woman given at her wedding. It was 32 inches long, 16 inches each side, and it contained nine kinds of stones arranged in nine groups, each group interspaced by a gold bead. Attached to it was a picture of Sai Baba set in a golden rosette frame an inch and a half in diameter...The necklace was too large to be hidden in a man's fist, particularly Baba's small hand. Its sudden appearance left those present amazed."''</ref>. Haraldsson wrote that some miracles attributed or performed by the Baba resemble the ones described in the ], but also with some differences. According to Haraldsson, although healings certainly figure into Sai Baba's reputation, his impression is that healings do not play a prominent role in SSB's activities as in those of Jesus <ref> ''Miracles are my visiting cards - An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, an Indian mystic with the gift of foresight believed to perform modern miracles'' (1997 revised and updated edition published by Sai Towers, ], India) ISBN 81-86822-32-1 pages 231, 239-241 </ref>


On 29 June 1968 Sai Baba began his only overseas trip to ] and ], returning to India on 15 July 1968.
One important practice in his ashrams is '']'' (spiritual sight). During ''darshan'' Sathya Sai Baba walks among his followers. He may listen to a few chosen persons, accept letters, or materialize and distribute '']'' (sacred ash of Lord Shiva). Sathya Sai Baba claims that his '' darshan'' has spiritual benefits for those who attend it and this is consistent with Hindu beliefs regarding spiritual preceptors. Usually people wait hours to get a good place for ''darshan''. Sathya Sai Baba sometimes invites people for a group interview with him in a room in the 'ashram's mandir' (Hindu temple). Sathya Sai Baba says he performs these miracles to attract people and then to transform them ]. He also makes assurances of divine protection to his devotees. Followers report help from Sai Baba in difficult or dangerous situations as well as in dreams. Followers consider it a great privilege to get such an interview. Sometimes a person from this group is invited for a private interview. When asked about the divinity of Sathya Sai Baba, many of his followers readily attest to it by accounting anecdotes about the numerous miraculous occurrences and strange coincidences they have experienced.


===Teachings=== ===Later years===
Sathya Sai Baba preaches love and the unity of all ] and asserts that people who follow him do not in the least need to give up their original religion. He even discourages it.
His teachings are sometimes seen as completely ] (uniting all religions) and sometimes as Hindu. He teaches among others a rather traditional form of Hinduism that has come from many ]s and movements including '']'', often drawing from other religions like ], ], ] and ]. One of the Christian influences can be felt in the institution of regular Sunday School sessions for devotees. Sai Baba often makes discourses on important religious figures such as Hindu saints, ] or ] and putting into practice the values they taught. He says that he has come to restore ] in, and encourage the practice of the teachings in the ]. Several books and discourses by him, such as the book ''Ramakatha Rasavahini'' teach the literal interpretation of ] and advocate the practice of Hindu ].


In 1968, he established Dharmakshetra or the Sathyam Mandir in ]. In 1973, he established the Shivam Mandir in ].
Across the globe local Sathya Sai Baba groups assemble to sing '']s'' (Hindu devotional songs), study Sathya Sai Baba's teachings, do collective community service (called ''seva''), and teach ''Education in Human Values'' (Sai '']''). Baba's movement is not ] <ref>Knott, Kim Dr. ''South Asian Religions in Britain'' page 766, Table 22.1 ''Principal Sectarian movements in Britain and their primary characteristics'' in the ''Handbook of Living Religions'' edited by John R. Hinnels (1997), second edition, ISBN 0140514805 </ref> and Baba discouraged publicity for him in a public discourse in 1968. <ref>Public discourse by Sathya Sai Baba on November 23, 1968 (also published in Samuel Sandweiss 1972 book ''Sai Baba: The Holy man and the psychiatrist'' Part II ''Coming Home'') : ''"The Lord has no intention to publicize Himself. I do not need publicity, nor does any other Avatar of the Lord. Avatars need no advertisement"''</ref>
Bhajans are sung at nearly every meeting with the names of the traditional Hindu deities as well as saints and prophets of other religions occasionally replaced by Baba's name.


He inaugurated the Sundaram, a new ashram and temple in ] on 19 January 1981.
Sathya Sai Baba organisation advocates the five basic human values. These values are '']'' (truth), '']'' (right conduct, living in accord with natural law), '']'' (non-violence), '']'' (love for God and all his creatures) and '']'' (peace).


On 6 June 1993 there was an ]. While reports vary, the official narrative is that four men (devotees) entered Sai Baba's residence under the premise of wanting to give him a telegram. When their path was obstructed, they stabbed two of the Baba's assistants to death, injuring two others.<ref name="saiescape">{{Cite news |url=https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/indiascope/story/19930630-satya-sai-baba-escapes-attack-811237-1993-06-29 |title=Sathya Sai Baba escapes attack|date=29 June 1993|last=Rai|first=S |work=]}}</ref> Hearing the commotion Sai Baba sounded the alarm and police were dispatched to his residence. Upon arriving, the police report stated the four youths had locked themselves in Sai Baba's living room and the officers tried to break the door down. "The four were shot when they opened the door and attacked the police."<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/who-is-sri-sathya-sai-baba-101102|title=Who is Sri Sathya Sai Baba?|agency=Press Trust of India|date=24 April 2011|publisher=]|access-date=25 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/religion-obituaries/8471342/Sathya-Sai-Baba.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/religion-obituaries/8471342/Sathya-Sai-Baba.html |archive-date=11 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |title=Religion Obituaries; Satya Sai Baba |newspaper=The Telegraph |date=24 April 2011 |location=London}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Sai Baba remained unharmed during the incident,<ref name="saiescape"/> and later in a discourse cleared things up saying there was no bid on his life.<ref name="saidna"/> Many aspects of the event remain unsolved and ambiguous.<ref name="saidna">{{Cite news |url=http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_sathya-sai-baba-escaped-murder-attempt_1535839 |title=Sathya Sai Baba escaped murder attempt|date=25 April 2011|last=Madhusoodan|first=M K |work=]}}</ref><ref name="saimystery">{{Cite news |url=https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/special-report/story/19930715-sai-baba-assassination-attempt-by-disciples-remains-mystery-811306-1993-07-14 |title=Sai Baba assassination attempt by disciples remains mystery|date=14 July 1993|last=Rai|first=S |work=]}}</ref>
Other primary teachings are:
*Service and charity (]) to others.
*Love for all creatures and objects
*Putting a ceiling (limit) on one's desires.
*Developing virtues of character like compassion, patience, sense control etc.
*Everything that has been created is ] (illusion), only God is real.
*Every creature and object is God in form, though most do not experience this as their reality.
*]
*Detachment from the material world
*] - Baba teaches three meditation techniques, focus and concentration on the chosen name and form of God by repetition, called ]; repeating the ] mantra; and ] (inner concentration on light).
*Inclusive acceptance of all religions as paths to realizing the One (God).
*Importance of ] (devotion) to God and ] and other ] (spiritual exercise) to foster this devotion.


Another concern for Sai Baba's immediate safety arose on 17 January 2002 when an unknown man (later identified as Somasundaram) entered the Whitefield Ashram with an air pistol. He was apprehended by volunteers and handed over to police without incident.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/sai-baba-escapes-murder-attempt-at-darshan/cid/905018|title=SAI BABA ESCAPES MURDER ATTEMPT AT DARSHAN |author=HABIB BEARY|date=17 January 2002|work=Telegraph India|access-date=17 January 2002}}</ref>
==Organizations==
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: ] ]] -->


In March 1995, Sai Baba started a project to provide drinking water to 1.2&nbsp;million people in the drought-prone Rayalaseema region in the ] of ].<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-andhrapradesh/water-projects-cm-all-praise-for-satya-sai-trust/article27563258.ece|title=Water projects: CM all praise for Satya Sai Trust|author=Staff Reporter|date=13 February 2004|work=The Hindu|access-date=9 October 2019|language=en-IN|issn=0971-751X}}</ref> In April 1999 he inaugurated the Ananda Nilayam Mandir in ], Tamil Nadu.
Sathya Sai Baba is the figurehead to a number of educational institutions and charitable hospitals, most notably the ] and the ], located within or near the main ashrams and Anantapur town. These organizations provide free education and free health care to the public. They are private, non profit institutions and their admission criteria are not published, admissions being decided on individual merits as decided by Sai Baba or his executives. Many of the patients are devotees from India and abroad.


In 2001 he established another free super-speciality hospital in ] to benefit the poor.
The trust organization has made large contributions to drinking water projects for the whole of the ] district in Andhra Pradesh and ].


===Old age, illness and death===
His ] (formerly called Education in Human Values) programme seeks to found schools in all countries with the explicit goal to educate children in the five human values and spirituality. Schools have already been founded in ], ], ], the United States, and several in India. A highly successful pre-school in New Zealand has been studied as a model for public New Zealand schools to follow {{fact}}.


In 2003, Sai Baba suffered a fractured hip when a student standing on an iron stool slipped and the boy and stool both fell on him. After the incident he gave ] from a car or his porte chair.<ref name="ibnlive.in.com82-2">{{Cite web|url=http://ibnlive.in.com/news/sai-baba-turns-82-is-still-going-strong/52860-3.html?from=search-relatedstories|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100825055515/http://ibnlive.in.com/news/sai-baba-turns-82-is-still-going-strong/52860-3.html?from=search-relatedstories|url-status=dead|archive-date=25 August 2010|title=Sai Baba turns 82, is still going strong|last=Balakrishnan|first=Deepa|date=23 November 2007|publisher=]|access-date=6 January 2010}}</ref> After 2004, Sai Baba used a wheelchair and slowly began to make fewer public appearances.
] ]]


On 28 March 2011, Sai Baba was admitted to the Sri Sathya Sai Super Speciality Hospital in ] after he complained of giddiness and slowing of the heartbeat.<ref name="nieaftersai"/><ref>{{Cite news| title = Sai Baba in stable condition: Hospital| newspaper = ]| date = 5 April 2011| url = http://www.hindustantimes.com/Sai-Baba-in-stable-condition-Hospital/Article1-681433.aspx| access-date = 24 April 2011| url-status = dead| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110509014742/http://www.hindustantimes.com/Sai-Baba-in-stable-condition-Hospital/Article1-681433.aspx| archive-date = 9 May 2011| df = dmy-all}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news | title = Baba's health condition 'stable' | newspaper = ] | date = 6 April 2011 | url = https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/Babas-health-condition-stable/articleshow/7880002.cms | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20121105042319/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-04-06/hyderabad/29388337_1_vital-parameters-condition-crrt | url-status = live | archive-date = 5 November 2012 | access-date = 24 April 2011}}</ref> Initially his condition improved and on 4 April it was reported all his vital parameters were near normal,<ref name="tisaibe">{{Cite news| title =Sathya Sai Baba Better Still on Ventilator| newspaper=] | date = 4 April 2011| url=
All the local ''Sai Samithis'' (Sathya Sai Baba groups) are part of a hierarchical structure called the ]. The chairman of the organisation is Michael Goldstein of the USA. The logo of the Sathya Sai organization is a stylized lotus flower with the text of the five human values, highly influenced by not only ] but also ] and ], in its petals. This text version has replaced the old logo with the symbols of the 5 or 6 ]s in the petals.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bengaluru/sathya-sai-baba-better-still-on-ventilator/articleshow/7859107.cms
|access-date = 4 April 2011}}</ref> however over the course of the following weeks, multiple organ failure set in and his condition progressively deteriorated. He died on Sunday, 24 April at 7:40 IST, aged 84.<ref>{{Cite news | title = Spiritual leader Sathya Sai Baba passes away | newspaper = ] | date = 24 April 2011 | url = https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Spiritual-leader-Sathya-Sai-Baba-passes-away/articleshow/8070443.cms | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120209205945/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-04-24/india/29468573_1_sai-baba-sathya-sai-central-trust-puttaparthi | url-status = live | archive-date = 9 February 2012 | access-date = 24 April 2011}}</ref>


Sai Baba had predicted that he would die at age 96 and would remain healthy until then.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Redemptive Encounters: Three Modern Styles in the Hindu Tradition|last=Babb|first=Lawrence A.|publisher=University of California Press|year=1991|isbn=978-0520076365|page=|quote=His present incarnation, he says, ... He will die at the age of ninety-six, but his body will stay young until then.|url=https://archive.org/details/redemptiveencoun0000babb/page/166}}</ref> After he died, some devotees suggested that he was referring to that many ], as counted by Telugu-speaking Hindus, rather than ],<ref>Mohammed Shafeeq. However it was soon clearly shown that the lunar reckoning does not work. Post. Durban: 27 April 2011. pg. 4</ref> and using the ] of ], which counts the year to come as part of the person's life.<ref>Sri Philip M. Prasad, Malayalam Daily. Kerala, India: 25 April 2011. "What Baba has foretold was indeed correct. According to the Roman calendar he has completed 85 years. But one can note that generally in all of Baba's discourses Baba had been referring to the star (lunar) basis in calculations. In Indian astrology there are 27 stars in a month starting with Aswathy and ending with Revathy. Accordingly a year of 12 months is composed of 324 days. Sai Baba was born on 23 November 1926. From that day till his death day, 24 April 2011 there were a total of 33,899 days. If this is divided with 324, we get 95 years and 54 days. Accordingly, under the star basis of calculation he was in his 96th year having completed 54 days when he left his physical body."</ref> Other devotees have spoken of his anticipated ], ] or ].<ref>''The Hindustan Times'', New Delhi: 25 April 2011.</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Narayan |first1=Sreejith |title=Sai, Thy Kingdom Come | year = 2012| isbn = 978-1623148423 | url =http://www.saikingdom.com}}</ref>
The ] was founded in ] and is mainly involved in charities such as the ] water project. The trust has tax exempt status and is a major recipient of donations from abroad though Baba and his organizations never solicit donations. All donations and expenditures are recorded which are documented by the bank holding the sums {{fact}}.


===Funeral and mourning===
The ] is the official publisher of the ''Sathya Sai Organisation''. It publishes the international monthly magazine called ]. In various nations similar publication trusts maintain in their own native language.


Sathya Sai Baba's body lay in state for two days and was ] with full state honours on 27 April 2011.<ref name="news9">News 9, 24 April 2011, 16:00 IST</ref> An estimated 500,000 people attended the burial. Political leaders and prominent figures attending included then Indian Prime Minister ], ] president ], Gujarat Chief Minister ] (who later became Prime Minister of India), cricketer ] and ]s ] and ].<ref>{{Cite news | title =Sathya Sai Baba gets a tearful farewell at his Puttaparthi home | newspaper=] | date = 27 April 2011 | url=http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/sathya-sai-baba-last-rites-in-puttaparthi/1/136399.html|access-date = 27 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2011/04/201142452416203714.html |title=Indian guru Sai Baba dies in hospital – Central & South Asia |publisher=Al Jazeera English |access-date=24 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_sathya-sai-baba-buried-in-puttaparthi_1536633 |title=Sathya Sai Baba buried in Puttaparthi |publisher=DNA |date=27 April 2011 |access-date=27 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://ibnlive.in.com/news/final-farewell-to-sathya-sai-baba-today/150310-3.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430163330/http://ibnlive.in.com/news/final-farewell-to-sathya-sai-baba-today/150310-3.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=30 April 2011|title=Tearful farewell to Sathya Sai Baba |publisher=] |date=27 April 2011 |access-date=27 April 2011}}</ref>
==Opposition, controversy, and allegations==
{{NPOV-sect}}
SSB has been and still is the target of criticism by skeptics, ex-followers and other critics that question his claims to perform miracles and other paranormal feats. For example, in ] the ] ] and then vice chancellor of ] Dr. ] who founded and chaired ''The Committee to Investigate Miracles and Other Verifiable Superstitions'' publicly challenged Sathya Sai Baba to perform his miracles under controlled circumstances, a challenge which Sathya Sai Baba ignored. He justified this by saying that the approach by Narasimhaiah was improper <ref>'''Reference 1:''' The Extended Interview given by Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba to the Senior Editor, Sri R.K. Karanjia of Blitz News Magazine in September of 1976, : ''"However, as I have said again and again, those who want to understand Me are welcome here. It is the spirit of the investigation that is important. Foreign parapsychologists have come here and examined Me in such a positive and constructive spirit. You have seen their reports. They do not write letters or make public demands. Narasimhiah's approach was improper; that is why I rejected it. If it were not so, he would have been welcome."''<br>
'''Reference 2:''' Haraldsson, Erlendur PhD ''"Miracles are my visiting cards - An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, an Indian mystic with the gift of foresight believed to perform modern miracles"'' (first published in 1987, 1997 revised and updated edition) ISBN 8186822321 chapter ''The Critics'' pages 204-205</ref>. The committee exposed a boy called ''Sai Krishna'' as a fraud, that the committee alleged had Sathya Sai Baba's patronage <ref>Haraldsson, Erlendur PhD ''"Miracles are my visiting cards - An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, an Indian mystic with the gift of foresight believed to perform modern miracles"'' (first published in 1987, 1997 revised and updated edition) ISBN 8186822321 chapter ''The Critics'' pages 204-205</ref>. Sai Baba said, in one of his rare interviews with the press, that he had absolutely no connection to the exposed ''Sai Krishna'' and that there are people who masquerade as devotees who attempt to make money using his name <ref>The Extended Interview given by Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba to the Senior Editor, Sri R.K. Karanjia of Blitz News Magazine in September of 1976: : Karanjia: ''"Thank you, Baba, you have answered the question beautifully. Now to Narasimhiah's unanswered point regarding the bogus Sai Krishna or Pandavapura exposed by his committee as a fraud and a cheat. He alleges that the boy had your patronage."''<br>Sathya Sai Baba: ''"I can assure you there is absolutely no connection between him and Myself. His people have several times attempted to arrange a meeting between us, but we have refused their requests. Of course, thousands of people, as you saw this morning, come here for darshan. There are others also who masquerade as My disciples or make money using My name. As this happens not only here but in other states and even abroad, we cannot do anything about it. They expose themselves sooner or later, as did this boy. I have absolutely no connection or relationship with such people."''</ref>. According to Erlendur Haraldsson, the formal challenge from the committee came to a dead end because the negative attitude of the committee was obvious and perhaps because of all the fanfare involved. As a result of this episode, a public debate raged for several months in Indian newspapers <ref>Haraldsson, Erlendur PhD ''"Miracles are my visiting cards - An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, an Indian mystic with the gift of foresight believed to perform modern miracles"'' (first published in 1987, 1997 revised and updated edition) ISBN 8186822321 pp. 206, chap. "The Critics: ''"In May of 1977 the committee let it be known that it would be going to Brindavan at a certain time in the hope that Baba would receive them. Off they went, in two busloads that included the committee members, journalists, photographers, and some other interested people, their expedition first being widely publicized. The guards at the gate at Brindavan did not let the grup enter the premises, with the exception of the only two women of the committee, Dr Vinoda Murthy...and Dr. Anupama Niranjana. But they would not go in unless all the committee were admitted. Dr. Sundar Rao, an old devotee of Sai Baba, told the committee that Baba had instructed the guards not to let them and their entourage in and that he would not come out of his building until the committee left. There was never any investigation. The only formal challenge from the scientific community in India came to a dead end. Perhaps all the fanfare had not been the wisest way to ensure Baba's cooperation. The negative attitude of the committee was obvious, but Baba might not have participated in any investigation, regardless of how he had been approached. The episode started off a widely publicized controversy that raged in the newspapers for several months."''</ref>


Political leaders who offered their condolences included the then Indian Prime Minister ],<ref name="news9"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.mirchi9.com/news/2011/04/24/l-k-advani-reaction-on-sathya-sai-babas-death-tv9/|title=L.K.Advani Reaction on Sathya Sai Baba's Death :TV9 – Mirchi 9 – Telugu News &#124; Andhra News &#124; Hyderabad &#124; Andhra &#124; India &#124; Brain &#124; Studies &#124; University|publisher=Mirchi9.com|access-date=24 April 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120323040616/http://www.mirchi9.com/news/2011/04/24/l-k-advani-reaction-on-sathya-sai-babas-death-tv9/|archive-date=23 March 2012}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://70mmonline.com/WatchMovie.aspx?movieid=9086&movieName=L.K.Advani%20Reaction%20on%20Sathya%20Sai%20Baba's%20Death|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111018100215/http://70mmonline.com/WatchMovie.aspx?movieid=9086&movieName=L.K.Advani%20Reaction%20on%20Sathya%20Sai%20Baba's%20Death|url-status=dead|archive-date=18 October 2011|title=L.K.Advani Reaction on Sathya Sai Baba's Death, TV9 – L.K.Advani Reaction on Sathya Sai Baba's Death at|publisher=70mmonline.com|access-date=24 April 2011}}</ref> then Nepali Prime Minister ]<ref>{{Cite web |date=25 April 2011 |title=Nepalese PM condoles Sathya Sai Baba's demise |url=https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/nepalese-pm-condoles-sathya-sai-babarsquos-demise/article23047961.ece |access-date=4 October 2022 |website=www.thehindubusinessline.com |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=25 April 2011 |title=Nepalese PM condoles Sathya Sai Baba's demise |url=https://www.deccanherald.com/content/156421/nepalese-pm-condoles-sathya-sai.html |access-date=4 October 2022 |website=Deccan Herald |language=en}}</ref> and Sri Lankan President ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.asiantribune.com/news/2011/04/26/world-has-lost-great-spiritual-leader-sri-lankan-president-mahinda-rajapaksa|title=World has lost a great spiritual leader – Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa|work=asiantribune.com}}</ref> Cricketer ], whose birthday was that day, cancelled his birthday celebrations.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://cricketnext.in.com/news/sachin-mourns-sai-babas-death-on-his-bday/56827-13.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110426031545/http://cricketnext.in.com/news/sachin-mourns-sai-babas-death-on-his-bday/56827-13.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=26 April 2011|title=Sachin mourns SaiBaba death on his b'day|date=24 April 2011|work=IBNLive}}</ref> '']'' newspaper reported that "Sai Baba's phenomenal mass appeal lay in his unswerving commitment to communal harmony, his encouragement of charitable activity and public-spiritedness, and his own example in building educational and health care institutions that focused on meeting basic needs on a large scale."<ref>{{Cite news | title =Sai Baba, his life and legacy| newspaper=] | date = 26 April 2011 | url=https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/Sai-Baba-his-life-and-legacy/article14808978.ece|access-date = 2 April 2011}}</ref>
In the 1995 TV documentary ''"Guru Busters"'', by UK's ], Sathya Sai Baba was accused of faking his materializations and a videotape was supplied alleging fraud. The same videotape was mentioned in the Deccan Chronicle, on November 23rd 1992, on a front page headline ''"DD Tape Unveils Baba Magic"''. Erlendur Haraldsson stated that he and his associates carried out a careful analysis of the videotape shown in the ''"Guru Busters"'' documentary and mentioned by the Deccan Chronicle. Haraldsson stated that the videotape's quality and resolution left much to be desired and limited the inferences that could be drawn from it. Haraldsson claimed that Dr. Wiseman took the video to a company that specialized in coroporate fraud, and which possessed some of the world's best equipment designed to enhance poor quality videotapes. According to Haraldsson, after the videotape was enhanced using a three-fold process, the resulting tape contained no firm evidence of fraud. The same company analyzed several still frames from the videotape, enhanced and enlarged them and the images still did not reveal any further information <ref>Haraldsson, Erlendur PhD "Miracles are my visiting cards - An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, an Indian mystic with the gift of foresight believed to perform modern miracles" (first published in 1987, 1997 revised and updated edition) ISBN 81-86822-32-1: pp. 295-301: Chap. 31 "Public Reaction": ''"On Sathya Sai Baba's Birthday, 23 November 1992, the Deccan Chronicle of Hyderabad published a story with this front-page head-line: 'DD TAPE UNVEILS BABA MAGIC'...We carried out a careful analysis of the tape supplied by Mr. Nair. Sai Baba is seen standing on the podium of the hall. Several people are seated at the back of the podium, facing the audience. A large and apparently heavy memento (probably 18 inched by 18 inches at its base) is brought in by an assistant, Mr. Radhakrishna Menon (RM). The memento, held with four hands by Sai Baba and RM, is handed over to the architect who designed the building, Mr. R. Chakrapani. Immediately after he receives it, Sai Baba makes a circular sweeping movement with his right hand, in which appears suddenly gold-coloured ornament or necklace, which he places around the neck of Mr. Chakrapani. This whole sequence of events takes about 17 seconds...The quality and resolution of the tape leaves much to be desired and limits the inferences that can be drawn from it. Dr. Wiseman took the videotape to a company which specialises in investigating corporate fraud. This company posesses some of the world's best equipment designed to enhance poor quality videotape. The technician kindly offered to enhance the videotape in question. The videotape was run thorugh a real time Snell & Wilcox Kudos Noise Reducer. The machine carries out three operations. First, it removes via recursive filters the random noise on the tape caused by repeated copying. Second, it imporves the graininess of the video by median filters and finally enhances any edges on the video through edge enhancement filters. After all this the video is certainly easier to watch, and did not contain much of the random noise present on the copy provided by the Deccan Chronicle. However, the resulting tape still did not reveal further information about the incident. In short, the reason for Sai Baba's hand movements still appears unclear and is open for various interpretations, but the tape contained no firm evidence of fraud. The company also analysed several still frames taken from the video. These were scanned into a computer and run through an Improve image processing system (developed by the Home Office in Britain). Again, the images were enhanced via median filters and certain areas of the frames were enlarged. The resulting photographs show the crucial moment as Sai Baba's hands touch under the memento, but do not reveal any further information...The statement made by the Deccan Chronicle that Sai Baba takes the gold chain form his personal assistant is not corroborated by the tape or the picture they print."''</ref>.
]
Many spiritual figures expressed their sentiments at Sai Baba's passing.
] said, "Sri Sathya Sai Baba was the one who opened the path of ] and ] to millions of his devotees. Sathya Sai Baba’s life was his message.”<ref>{{Cite news | title =Sai Baba's life was his message: Mata| newspaper=] | date = 25 April 2011 | url=https://indianexpress.com/article/news-archive/web/sai-babas-life-was-his-message-mata/|access-date = 25 April 2011}}</ref>


], Founder of the ], issued this statement. "Baba will continue to live in the hearts of millions of devotees... his message of 'Satya Dharma Shanti Prema' which has transcended all barriers of ] and ]."<ref>{{Cite news | title =Sri Sri Ravi Shankar condoles the death of Sai Baba| newspaper=] | date = 24 April 2011 | url=https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/sri-sri-ravi-shankar-condoles-the-death-of-sai-baba-453795|access-date = 24 April 2011}}</ref>
The magazine ] published on 4 December 2000 a cover story about the Baba and the allegations of fake miracles quoting the magician ] who considered the Baba a fraud. ], a skeptic and amateur magician, asserted that he has been investigating Sathya Sai Baba since 1968 and believes the guru to be a cheater and ]. Premanand also displayed, in the 2004 ] documentary ''Secret Swami'', that he could duplicate some of the same acts that SSB presents as miracles; such as materializations by ] and the production of a ] from his mouth. However, one must note that Premanand's lingams were much smaller then Sai Baba's (Sai Baba's lingams are larger then a lemon).


The ] expressed shock over the demise of Sathya Sai Baba.<ref>{{Cite news | title =Dalai Lama condoles Sai Baba's death| newspaper=] | date = 26 April 2011 | url=https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/chandigarh/dalai-lama-condoles-sai-baba-s-death/|access-date = 2 April 2011}}</ref> In a message he said, “I am saddened by the passing away of Sri Sathya Sai Baba,
The British journalist Mick Brown discussed, in his 1998 book "The Spiritual Tourist", that the letters, from attending doctors, provided in the ] magazine (published by Premanand) about SSB's claim of resurrecting Walter Cowan, as described in the books ''My Baba and I'' by the follower John Hislop and in SSB's authorized biography by Kasturi, was probably untrue <ref>Brown, Mick ''The Spiritual Tourist'' 1998 Bloomsbury publishing ISBN 158234034 Chapter ''In the House of God'' pp. 73 - 74 </ref>. In this same book, Mick Brown also related his experiences with manifestations of vibuthi, from Sathya Sai Baba's pictures in houses in London, and felt that these miraculous manifestations were not fraudulent or the result of trickery <ref>Brown Mick, The Spiritual Tourist, Ch: The Miracle In North London, pp. 29-30, 1998 ISBN 158234034X See ] section.</ref>.
the respected spiritual leader. I would like to convey my condolences and prayers to all the followers, devotees and admirers of the late spiritual leader."<ref>{{Cite web
|url = https://tibet.net/his-holiness-the-dalai-lama-mourns-the-demise-of-sri-saithya-sai-baba/|title = His Holiness the Dalai Lama Mourns the Demise of Sri Saithya Sai Baba|publisher = tibet.net|date = 26 April 2011|access-date = 29 May 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web
|url = http://news.outlookindia.com/item.aspx?719929|title = Dalai Lama Mourns Sri Sathya Sai Baba's Death
|publisher = outlookindia.com|date = 25 April 2011|access-date = 29 May 2011}}</ref>


The Government of ] declared 25 and 26 April as ]. The state government of ] (where ] is located) announced a four-day State Mourning period and decided to honour Sai Baba with a State Funeral.<ref>{{Cite news | title =Sathya Sai Baba dead, to be buried on Wednesday| newspaper=] | date = 24 April 2011 | url=https://indianexpress.com/article/india/latest-news/sathya-sai-baba-dead-to-be-buried-on-wednesday/|access-date = 24 April 2011}}</ref><ref name="news9"/>
On ], ] four people who were armed with knives were killed after they had intruded in Sai Baba's bedroom. The intruders had killed two aides of Sai Baba. The incident was widely published in the Indian press. SSB claimed in his 1993 ] discourse on ] that jealousy among his followers was behind the incident, without giving a detailed explanation of the events <ref>Guru Purnima Discourse, July 3rd 1993, Keep Truth as Your Aim: </ref>. The former Secretary of the Home Minister of Andhra Pradesh, ] who came from of a police background expressed in the BBC documentary his belief that the four assailants in 1993 had unnecessarily and illegally been shot by the police. Both Premanand and Nair wanted the case to be re-opened and believed that it had been silenced to prevent revelations about illegal practices by Sathya Sai Baba and his organizations. According to Kevin Shepherd, the former national leader of the Sathya Sai movement in Norway ] expressed the opinion that SSB was an accomplice to the 1993 murders, among others based on information given to him by his friend ]. <ref>Shepherd, Kevin R.D. ''"Investigating the Sai Baba Movement: A Clarification of Misrepresented Saints and Opportunism"'' (2005) ISBN 0952508931 page 293</ref>


===Anomalies and possible unnatural death===
The debates about Sathya Sai Baba were fueled by a document published in 2000 called ''"The Findings"'' <ref>Goldberg, Michelle in ] 25 July 2001: ''"They're not new, either. In 1970, Tal Brooke published a book called 'Lord of the Air', later renamed 'Avatar of Night', a vivid, detailed account of his mind-blowing days as a questing young acolyte and his total disillusionment on learning of his guru's sexual rapacity. Yet it's only recently, thanks in large part to the Internet, that various victims, their parents and defecting officials from within the Sai Organization have banded together to direct the energy they once poured into worshiping their master toward bringing the man down. It all started with a document called "The Findings," published in late 2000 by long-term devotees David and Faye Bailey, whose marriage was arranged by Sai Baba."''</ref>,
written by David and Faye Bailey (former followers who together wrote three books on Sathya Sai Baba <ref>"Bailey, David, A Journey To Love, 1996 ISBN 8186822046<br>
Bailey, David, A Journey To Love Book 2: Love and Marriage, 1988 ISBN 8186822607<br>
Bailey, Faye, Another Journey To Love: Experiences with Sathya Sai Baba, 1998 ISBN 8186822402"</ref>), in which they described their disillusionment with the guru <ref>Brown, Mick in ] 28 October 2000 <br>"The Findings is a chronicle of shattered illusions."</ref>. ''The Findings'' led to a flood of allegations and fierce debates on the internet about the guru <ref>Brown, Mick in ] 28 October 2000 <br> ''"In recent months, an extraordinary storm of allegations have appeared - spurred by a document called The Findings Originally published in document form, The Findings quickly found its way on to the internet, where it has become the catalyst for a raging cyberspace debate about whether Sai Baba is truly divine or, as one disenchanted former devotee describes him, 'a dangerous paedophile'."''</ref>. According to an article in ] in the year 2001, a great part of the Findings contains testimonies of sexual harassment and sexual abuse <ref>Goldberg, Michelle in ] 25 July 2001 <br> ''"Most of 'The Findings' consists of testimony of sexual harassment and sexual abuse."''</ref>. Apart from that, Faye wrote, in The Findings, that an unnamed college student requested David's help to stop SSB from sexually abusing other students <ref>Goldberg, Michelle in ] 25 July 2001 <br>''"Whilst still at the ashram, the worst thing for me -- as a mother of sons -- occurred when a young man, a college student, came to our room, to plead with David, 'Please Sir, do something to stop him sexually abusing us,'"'' Faye writes. ''"These sons of devotees, unable to bear their untenable position of being unwilling participants in a paedophile situation any longer, yet unable to share this with their parents because they would be disbelieved, placed their trust in David; a trust which had built over his five years as a visiting professor of music to the Sai college."''</ref>. The Findings contain allegations of fakery, claims that SSB does not heal sick people and allegations of financial irregularities with charity projects, such as the Super Specialty Hospital and water project <ref>Brown, Mick in ] 28 October 2000: ''"It contains allegations of fakery, con-trickery and financial irregularities in the funding of the hospital and over a Sai Baba project to supply water to villages around the ashram, which is habitually trumpeted as evidence of his munificence."''</ref>. David Bailey previously wrote, in his two books about SSB, that he personally witnessed manifestations, healings, miracles and was saved from a nasty car accident by Sathya Sai Baba <ref>"A Journey to Love (page 45), David Bailey: ''"Another man sat to my left between me and His chair. Swami smiled and waved His right hand in the air and a gold ring with nine stones just appeared from nowhere. 'For you', He said to the man on my left. 'It won't fit', He added, trying to push the ring on to the fourth finger on his left hand. 'Try', He said to the man, and then to several others sitting in the room. No way would it go past his knuckle, so Swami held the ring with his two fingers, slipped it off and blew on it once, then slipped the ring back on...a perfect fit. Then He smiled and waved His hand in the air again. It seemed, in slow motion, that a gold bracelet with a watch in it dropped from the centre of His palm...'For you', He said to one of the ladies. 'Check the time', He added...it was correct!"<br>
A Journey to Love (page 80), David Bailey: "He waved His right hand in the air, and, slowly, from about 4 inches under His hand, in mid-air, appeared the most beautiful Japamala (rather like a set of rosary beads, with 108 beads) in silver and crystal."''<br>
A Journey to Love (page 65), David Bailey: ''"Swami waved His right hand in the air in a clockwise circular motion and under His hand in mid-air appeared the most astonishingly huge diamond ring. 'Give me the fourth finger of your left hand. It will fit.' He slid it on and it was fantastic, a perfect fit. I could not believe my eyes."''<br>
A Journey to Love (page 104), David Bailey: ''"I have seen (and there are countless recorded incidents) of Him touching critically ill people in wheelchairs, with cancer, etc., and they were healed."''<br>
A Journey to Love (page 78, 79), David Bailey: ''"Swami had called this Indian family along with a very, very elderly lady, who was in a wheelchair. The family started to push her towards Swami, when He apparently said, 'No, walk!' This lady got up from out of the wheelchair, the first time for 15 years we discovered, and walked elegantly up to the interview room and entered inside. This next part I saw. The door closed, and, as Swami had promised He would talk to me, I knew I must wait. I went in and the elderly lady was sitting on the floor. I sat next to her. Swami made some vibuthi for us, and then took the Australians in for their private interview. What happened next was a moment that I shall never forget in all my life. Swami invited the Indian family into the inner room. The two sons came to help the elderly lady up off the floor. 'No no' Swami said, 'Bhagavan here.' He raised His hands in the air, palms pointing down towards her, and I find the following few moments very difficult to put into words. As I was sitting beside her I felt exactly what happened. Energy poured out of His hands in a kind of circular motion, it was not like an elecrtical energy, it was sheer love, so powerful it was almost a glimpse of Heaven. I burst into floods of tears, I couldn't help it, the feeling was so beautiful. The elderly lady got up like a three year old and went into the inner room."''<br>
A Journey to Love, Book 2 (page 52, 53, 55), David Bailey: ''"...I was so tired, I could hardly see the road ahead. Faye had left for Australia, so I was driving alone. Well, I don't remember driving into the Welsh village - I must have dropped off to sleep. The next thing I knew was the car stopping two inches away from windows of a double glass fronted shop to my left, and a large delivery lorry two inches to my right. This lorry had been delivering lots of plastic dustbins, seed trays, etc. My eyes opened to see all of this in mid air, as I had obviously driven straight into them like one of the old Laurel and Hardy films. This activated my sense of humour, and I immediately laughed, before realising the reality of the situation. My car had neatly parked with expert precision. Two inches either way and there would have been a nasty accident. There was no damage to anything and I was unhurt...If I had taken the train I might have been late, but very much alive!!!! Because of my thoughtlessness I needed the love that flows through Swami to save me, even though my little voice had told me what to do....I held his hand, and when a quiet moment came whispered, 'Swami, thank You for saving my life!' He looked down at me and I melted with the love that poured through Him and He very slowly said, 'Yes...I know.'"</ref>.


From the time Sai Baba was admitted to hospital on 28 March, questions and allegations arose about his care and subsequently the role of his personal aide, Satyajit Salian. Police sources said, "Satyajit did not feed Sai Baba proper food and gave him lot of sedative drugs, resulting in the deterioration of the latter’s health, leading up to Sai Baba's death."<ref name="saiaide">{{Cite news | title =Satyajit blamed for Sathya Sai Baba's death? Aide gets death threats | newspaper=] | date = 26 April 2011 | url=https://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/satyajit-blamed-for-sathya-sai-babas-death-aide-gets-death-threats/|access-date = 26 April 2011}}</ref> Doctors from the Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, who treated Sai Baba, neither confirmed nor denied that ] drugs were given to him prior to his admission to the hospital following respiratory problems. Later assessment from doctors noted lack of food had led to muscular weakness.<ref name="saivent">{{Cite news | title =Sathya Sai Baba better, still on ventilator| newspaper=] | date = 4 April 2011| url=
SSB is alleged to give "oilings" between the scrotum and anus, on the genitals, above the genitals, on the chest or on the head. One must note that this is a ] ritual that was and is practised in some schools of ]. It is said to be done in order to awaken a flow of ] power to the energy centres in the human body. The testimonies of sexual abuse of young men were shown in TV documentaries, including ''"Seduced by Sai Baba"'' by Denmark's national television, and documentary film ''"Secret Swami"'' by BBC. The ] article referred to a signed ] in their possession by the Jens Sethi, a German man, who claimed to have been sexually abused as an adult by the Guru. The magazine wrote that although Sethi filed a criminal complaint in ], he did not file one in India. The TV documentary "''Seduced By Sai Baba''", produced by Denmark's national television and radio broadcaster ] aired in ], ] and ]. Al Rahm said in the ''Secret Swami'' programme that he talked with the highest leader in the USA (Dr. Michael Goldstein) about the alleged sexual abuse of his son by Baba, who was 18 at the time. According to Al Rahm, the leader responded by saying that he hated the idea of having wasted 25 years of his life and that he accepted SSB's statement ''"Swami is pure"'' as the truth. Dr. Goldstein, the International Chairman of the ''Sri Sathya Sai Organisations'', stated in the BBC documentary ''Secret Swami'', that although he felt that Sathya Sai Baba was not above the law, it was against his ''"heart and conscience"'' to believe the allegations because he had personally observed Baba interact with students very frequently, in very informal circumstances, and he had never seen anything inappropriate, ominous or anything indicative of fear or apprehension <ref>Secret Swami Programme, June 2004, </ref>. ], a prominent follower and co-founder of the ], stated in the documentary that his admiration for the Baba will not change even if the charges of ] and ] were proved beyond all doubt <ref>Secret Swami Programme, June 2004, </ref>. According to the journalist Michelle Goldberg of ] the fact that the Baba has high ranking Indian politicians as his supporters and the charity works done by the various organizations associated with the Baba help to explain why he has not been brought into a court of law in India. The Indian consulate website states that crime victims must file charges with the police. In the ''India Today'' magazine (dated December 2000) no complaints had been filed against the Guru, by any alleged victim, in India <ref>'''Reference 1:''' ] December 04, 2000 ''"As of now, there are no complaints that have been filed in India...Controversy could well be Sai Baba's middle name. He has been dogged by various kinds of allegations in the past-though none of them has ever been proven."''<br>'''Reference 2:''' Goldberg, Michelle, Untouchable? (25 July 2001) in ] : ''"All this helps explain why there has never been any official action against Sai Baba in India, despite the dozens of ex-believers who insist that his claims to divinity mask a wholly human craving for the bodies of the ashram's young men and boys."''</ref>.
http://m.timesofindia.com/articleshow/7859107.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
|access-date = 4 April 2011}}</ref> Citing death threats and possible harm to his well being from within the ashram community (after being one of two trust members allowed to sign checks from a multi billion dollar account), as well as from outside, a senior police officer said Sathyajit was provided police protection.<ref name="saiaide"/><ref name="scaregiver">{{Cite news | title =Threat to life of Sai Baba's caregiver & personal doctor| newspaper=] | date = 26 April 2011| url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/threat-to-life-of-sai-babas-caregiver-personal-doctor/articleshow/8085008.cms|access-date = 26 April 2011}}</ref>


On 10 April, direct relatives expressed wonder as to why they were kept in the dark and knew nothing about Sai Baba's state of health. "It is almost two months since Baba stopped taking food we were not told about it."<ref name="nieaftersai"/> Family members said they were livid about the secrecy around Sai Baba's health and medical treatments and as to why the trust was not allowing anyone direct contact with him except for Sathyajit, his personal attendant.<ref name="secrecyhealth">{{Cite news | title =Secrecy about Sai Baba's health angers kin| newspaper=] | date = 6 April 2011 | url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/Secrecy-about-Sai-Babas-health-angers-kin/articleshow/7879413.cms|access-date = 6 April 2011}}</ref> They only saw him from a distance in the ICU on April 2 after raising a furore.<ref name="secrecyhealth"/> It was on 28 March, when Sai Baba complained of giddiness and slowing of the heartbeat that he was taken to hospital.<ref name="nieaftersai">{{Cite news | title =After Sathya Sai Baba, who?| newspaper=] | date = 10 April 2011 | url=https://www.newindianexpress.com/magazine/2011/Apr/10/after-sathya-sai-baba-who-243289.html|access-date = 10 April 2011}}</ref>
Kennedy Dominic, a journalist for The British newspaper ], reported in August 2001 that three men had died after placing hope in Sathya Sai Baba. According to the Times articles Michael Pender, an HIV infected man who overdosed on drugs more than once, complained to a friend that he had been repeatedly sexually molested by the guru. Pender apparently committed suicide in a hostel for the homeless in North London. Aran Edwards, a British national, was described as ''"quite an ill person, mentally unstable and needed orthodox help"'', by David Bailey. Edwards was encouraged to write letters to the guru to help solve his ''"psychological problems"''. Edwards had never traveled to see the guru first-hand. David Bailey said that he eventually told Edwards, ''"Wake up. He doesn't even read these letters."'' Edwards was so distraught about the situation, he decided to commit suicide. Edwards was found hanging from a staircase in his home in Cardiff, London. Andrew Richardson, another British national, hurled himself off a bank building in Bangalore, India. Two letters were found on his body in which he said he was in a deep depression. He expressed a desire to see Sai Baba and Mother Teresa. <ref>Dominic Kennedy , The Times British News, 'I sought peace and couldn't find it'
& 'Three die after putting faith in guru' : ''"The Times has learnt that three Britons have apparently taken their lives after placing hope in India's most popular holy man. One of them had complained of being repeatedly sexually molested by Sai Baba at his ashram in Puttaparthi near Bangalore. Michael Pender, an HIV-positive student, was found dead at a London hostel after taking alcohol and painkillers. He had already tried to commit suicide at the holy man's headquarters. Aran Edwards hanged himself at home in Cardiff after joining a Sai Baba support group and being encouraged to write to the guru to solve his psychological problems. Mr Edwards sent a flurry of anxious letters but was devastated after receiving no replies and being told that the guru did not read his mail.<br>Mr Pender, known as 'Mitch,' was found dead after taking tablets in the lonely bedroom of a hostel for the homeless in Highbury, North London. He was 23. ...He tried to commit suicide in the ashram. He had overdosed on drugs more than once. He had some strange, very powerful experiences there...<br>'He was quite an ill person, mentally unstable and needed orthodox help. In the end, he wrote a couple of dozen or more letters to Sai Baba. The group had told him this was what to do. He used to ring me from phone boxes pleading with me. There were 35 phone calls, I suppose . . . he was absolutely desperate that I should talk to Sai Baba for him because he was in such a state and had written all these letters which he had sent out and hadn't had a reply. Could I please help because I was Sai Baba's right-hand man?' At the end I said, 'Wake up. He doesn't even read these letters'. He was so distraught about the situation, he decided to commit suicide.' Aran Edwards, a single man, was found hanged from a staircase at his home in Cardiff, on April 19, 1999. He was 37. A suicide verdict was recorded by the coroner.<br>On September 19, 1996, Mr Richardson travelled to Bangalore and hired a taxi at the railway station to one of the city's tallest buildings, the State Bank of Mysore. Mr Richardson flung banknotes and travellers' cheques in the air, ran into the bank and up the stairs to the eighth floor, where he smashed a window and leapt 84ft to the ground, killing himself. He was 33. Two letters were found on his body. One to Sai Baba outlined his quest for spiritual enlightenment. The second was a suicide note saying he was in a deep depression: 'I came to India in search of peace but could not find it.' His mother, Deirdre, at her home near Pietermaritzburg, said: 'Andrew wanted to see Sai Baba, but was also heading to Calcutta to see Mother Teresa . . . All he wanted to do was work with the poor.'"''</ref>


On 21 April, the ''Deccan Herald'' reported an allegation stating Sathya Sai Baba had died 20 days prior and that his death was not being announced in order to get money from Indian and foreign devotees.<ref name="saibe96">{{Cite news | title =Sai Baba's devotees believe he will live for 96 years| newspaper=] | date = 21 April 2011| url=
SSB did not give a detailed public rebuttal to the accusations of sexual abuse. In his Christmas 2000 discourse SSB said that people disseminate false negative stories about him because they have been bribed <ref>Discourse by SSB on 25 December 2000 ] English translation:<br>"Welcome to the mourners' club," e-mails ex-Sai Baba devotee (worshipper) Leo to his new fellow-sufferers. He does not want his name in the newspaper. "For me it's now been a week since I'm an ex, and that after eleven years." As a result of all the rumors that he heard and in spite of Sai Baba's prohibition, he took a look on the internet. "It was shocking. I could no longer dismiss it as a conspiracy of negative forces and disappointed devotees." He is now in mourning. "Baba was not only my father and mother but also the founder of my world view. I've torn up all his photos."Dutch original '''' <br>”Welkom bij de club der rouwenden', e-mailt ex-Sai Baba-devotee (vereerder) Leo, aan nieuwe lotgenoten. Hij wil zijn naam niet in de krant. ,,Voor mij is het nu een week dat ik ex ben, en dat na elf jaar.'' Naar aanleiding van alle geruchten die hij hoorde, nam hij ondanks Sai Baba's verbod een kijkje op internet. ,,Schokkend was het. Ik kon het niet meer afdoen als een complot van negatieve krachten en teleurgestelde devotees.'' Hij is nu in de rouw. ,,Baba was niet alleen mijn vader en moeder maar ook de grondlegger van mijn wereldbeeld. Ik heb al zijn foto's verscheurd.''”</ref>. In the years 1999 and 2000 SSB has repeatedly belittled the internet and discouraged its use <ref>Discourse by SSB on October 15, 1999, (pdf file): ''"Some of the elders sitting at the Verandah are indulging in gossip; it is finding its way into the internet. (…) Swami has nothing to do with the internet. Not only now, even in future also. You should not indulge in such wrong activities."''<br>Discourse by SSB on September 26, 2000, (pdf file): ''"Internet is like a waste paper basket...I have already told you about internet, radio, video etc. We have seen so many people who have been exposed to these media. But, what is their effect? All transient, passing clouds that come and go. It is an utter waste of time. It is all business oriented. That is not our aim. Do not hanker after internet: turn to the innernet. Concentrate on inner vision."''</ref>. In 2003 SSB had an accident that injured his hip, according to the official of the Sathya Sai Organisation, Michael Goldstein. ], SSB sometimes uses a wheelchair. <ref> </ref>
https://www.deccanherald.com/india/sai-babas-devotees-believe-he-2409274
|access-date = 21 April 2011}}</ref>


On 28 April 2011, four days after the passing of Sai Baba, '']'' printed a story questioning the time of Sai Baba's death. A firm making freezer boxes claimed the one in which Sai Baba was kept was ordered on 4 April, partial payment was also made at that time. The freezer box arrived in ] on 5 April. Sai Baba was admitted to hospital on 28 March but his condition had officially worsened on 15 April. "The order was placed by Rajendranath Reddy of ] according to sources, the powerful ] had a role in ordering the freezer box."<ref name="saianomoly">{{Cite news | title =So, did Sai Baba die on April 24? | newspaper=] | date = 28 April 2011 | url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/so-did-sai-baba-die-on-april-24/articleshow/8103613.cms|access-date = 28 April 2011}}</ref>
There are a couple of claims that Sathya Sai Baba can change into a woman instantaneously. For example, in a Dutch article entitled ''"De Wonderdoener"'', Keith Ord claimed that he personally experienced Sathya Sai Baba literally transform his genitals from male to female. Keith Ord said that Baba was not a ] but, from one moment to the next, completely changed from male to female, with the corresponding genitals of each. Keith Ord felt this ] transformation was a type of ] and expressed the opinion that Sai Baba lives on another level than mere mortals <ref>Dutch original by Piet van der Eijk under the title "De Wonderdoener" in the magazine HP/De Tijd, dated 31/1/1992, pages. 46-50: English Translation: ''"Keith, (26), says that when he had been chosen for a personal meeting, Sai Baba said to him that he thought too much about girls. But on another occasion Baba went further. "Suddenly he pulled down my trousers and tried to excite me sexually. He took my hand and put it on his genitals. Then I noticed that Sai Baba was dual-gendered: not that he was half-female half-male, not a hermaphrodite, no, from one moment to the next he changed from male into female, completely with the appropiate genitals. Don't ask me how this is can be, but that is how I experienced it. It must be some sort of miracle too. Obviously Sai Baba lives on another level from mere mortals." This is what Keith Ord tells us and we only repeat it."''<br>Original Dutch: ''"Keith, (26), vertelt dat Sai Baba hem zei, toen hij was uitverkoren voor een persoonlijke ontmoeting, dat hij teveel aan de meisjes dacht. Maar op een volgende gelegenheid ging Baba verder. "Onverhoeds trok hij mijn broek naar beneden en probeerde hij mij seksueel op te winden. Hij nam mijn hand en legde het op zijn geslachtsorgaan. Toen merkte ik dat Sai Baba tweeslachtig was: niet dat hij half-vrouw half-man was, geen hermafrodiet, nee, van het ene ogenblik op het andere veranderde hij van man in vrouw, compleet met de geslachtsorganen die daarbij horen. Vraag me niet hoe dat kan, maar ik heb het zo ervaren. Het moet ook een soort wonder zijn. Kennelijk leeft Sai Baba toch op een ander niveau dan gewone stervelingen." Dit is wat Keith Ord ons vertelt en wij geven het maar door."''</ref>. Alexandra Nagel, in her Dutch article, ''De Sai Paradox'', also related the story of Tal Brooke, as taken from his book ''Avatar of the night'', in which Brooke related an account from a man named "Patrick" who alleged that Baba had a vagina and that he had coital sex with the guru <ref>Brooke, Tal, Avatar of the night, ISBN 193004500x, Chap. 8, pp 125-132</ref>. These puzzling accounts have led Alexandra Nagel to the conclusion that Baba is a ]. {{fact}} Nagel argued, in her ] Dutch language article, ''De Sai Paradox'', published by the ] press, that this alleged ] may be related to Baba's claim to be the incarnation of both the male and female aspects of God, Shiva and Shakti respectively <ref>Nagel, Alexandra (note: Nagel is a critical former follower)''De Sai Paradox: Tegenstrijdigheden van en rondom Sathya Sai Baba/The Sai Paradox contradictions of and surrounding Sathya Sai Baba'' from the magazine ''Religieuze Bewegingen in Nederland, 'Sekten' ''/''Religious movements in the Netherlands, 'Cults/Sects' '', 1994, nr. 29. published by the ], (1994) ISBN 9053833412 : English translation ''"With this last remark it becomes plausible why Sai Baba's sexual acts, as Brooke and Ord told them, have been largely remained unknown: the majority of the devotees is not open enough to understand the symbolism or to accept it. It is totally unclear whether Swallow knew about Sai Baba's acts with young men and his hermaphrodism. From the way in which she portrayed Baba as an incarnation of Shiva, one could infer that she would have found it normal and appropriate that those events take place. Because Baba shows in his private surroundings his side of the 'supreme lover' and combines this in addidition with Shiva-Shakti, the male-female form."''<br> Reference: Swallow, Deborah A. 1982 ''Ashes and Powers: myth, rite and miracle in an Indian God-man's cult''. In Modern Asian Studies jaargang 16 (1) pp.123-158.<br>Dutch original: ''"Middels deze laatste opmerking wordt aannemelijk waarom Sai Baba's sexuele handelingen zoals Brooke en Ord ze naar voren hebben gebracht, grotendeels onder de oppervlakte zijn gebleven: het merendeel van zijn devotees is niet open genoeg om de symboliek te kunnen begrijpen of te accepteren. Totaal onduidelijk is evenwel of Swallow kennis heeft genomen van Sai Baba's handelingen met jongemannen en zijn tweeslachtigheid. Uit de wijze waarop zij Baba als een incarnatie van Shiva heeft geportretteerd, zou afgeleid kunnen worden dat ze het niet meer dan normaal of passend zou vinden dat die gebeurtenissen plaatsvinden. Want Baba toont in de privé-omgeving zijn kant van 'opperste geliefde' en combineert dit bovendien met Shiva-Shakti, de man-vrouw vorm."'' Referentie: Swallow, Deborah A. 1982 ''Ashes and Powers: myth, rite and miracle in an Indian God-man's cult''. In Modern Asian Studies jaargang 16 (1) pp.123-158.</ref>.
According to Lakshmi, the owner of Kumar and Co International (freezer box) company, her colleague Ganesh called Rajendranath to confirm the purchase for Sai Baba. "He confirmed the same and told Ganesh not to discuss the matter with anyone."<ref name="saianomoly"/>


Within two months of Sai Baba's death, Chetana Raju, his niece alleged that she was facing death threats from some trust members.<ref>{{Cite news | title =Sathya Sai Baba's niece claims threat to life from trustees| newspaper=] | date = 20 June 2011 | url=https://www.indiatoday.in/india/south/story/sai-babas-niece-claims-life-threat-136011-2011-06-20|access-date = 20 June 2011}}</ref>
According to the journalist Sacha Kester, in a 2003 article in the Dutch newspaper ], Sathya Sai Baba is a good example of a swindler. According to Kester, "''the sorrow of those who after years of devotion saw through his deception is indescribable. The jewels and watches that he materializes are hidden in his chair. Followers who make large donation are given preferential treatment. He advises ill people not to take their medicine. He invites good looking young boys for a private interview to grope in their underwear and then to invite them to satisfy him orally."'' <ref>Kester, Sacha Sacha Kester “Ticket naar Nirvana”/”Ticket to Nirvana”, article in the Dutch Newspaper ] 7 January 2003<br> '''English translation:'''“Those are according to most Indians real holy men. Lonely souls who retire in the Himalaya, or who wander with their shabby possessions and live from the alms given to them by believers. They do not perform trick, like materializing ash out of nothing, and they are not looking for followers who can pay a lot of money to reach nirvana.<br>Not only hippies travel to India. Nurses, bank clerks, managers, and house wives: everybody who is looking for spiritual food, who has not managed to process the loss of the church or who has devoured books like the ], everybody can buy a ticket to India.
<br> (..)<br>But where to start among the many holy men? There are naked men who stand near a temple and whisper a mantra into your wear if you give them a coin. And there are celebrities who travel through the whole world and have a small office in every big city.
<br>But here too, answers are difficult to get. “You westerners always get it wrong”, Suranya Chakraverti says. “Either you ridicule a real guru and say that it is all hogwash or you do believe in spirituality and then choose for a swindler”
<br>A good example of the last category is Sai Baba: the man with the hair cut that would have made the ] jealous. He has million of followers who believe that he is god himself and the sorrow of those who after years of devotion saw through his deception is indescribable. The jewels and watches that he materializes are hidden in his chair. Followers who make large donation are given preferential treatment. He advises ill people not to take their medicine. He invites good looking young boys for a private interview to grope in their underwear and then to invite them to satisfy him orally. br>’Devastation. Devastation’, writes Hans de Kraker on a website where former follower have published their to stories as warning to others. ‘The facts, the truth, that for which we all travelled to India, is calling us now. The truth is calling for help’<br>Thus finding a guru is a precarious matter. In the book Karma Cola a German economist tells author ], “It is my opinion that quality control has to be introduced for gurus. Many of my friends have become crazy in India.” “
<br> '''Dutch original ''' “Het zijn niet alleen hippies die naar India trekken. Verpleegsters, bankbedienden, managers en huisvrouwen: iedereen die op zoek is naar geestelijk voedsel, die het verlies van de kerk niet weet te verteren of boeken als De Celestijnse Belofte heeft gevreten, iedereen kan een ticket naar India kopen.<br>(..)<br>Maar waar te beginnen in dit woud van heilige mannen ? Je hebt naakte kerels die bij een tempel staan en je een mantra in de oren fluisteren als je ze een muntje in de handen drukt. En er zijn beroemdheden die de hele wereld afreizen en in elke grote stad een kantoortje hebben. <br>(..)<br>Maar ook hier zijn de antwoorden moeilijk te vinden.’Jullie westerlingen weten altijd de plank mis te slaan’, zegt Suranya Chakraverti. ‘Of jullie maken een echte goede goeroe belachelijk en zeggen dat het allemaal zweverig gelul is. Of jullie geloven wel in spiritualiteit en kiezen vervolgens voor een oplichter.’<br>Een goed voorbeeld van die laatste categorie is Sai Baba: de man met het kapsel waar de Jackson Five jaloers op zouden zijn geweest. Hij heeft miljoenen volgelingen die geloven dat hij god zelf is en het verdriet van degenen die na jaren van devotie zijn bedrog doorzagen, is onbeschrijvelijk. De juwelen en horloges die hij materialiseert zitten verstopt in zijn stoel. Volgelingen die fors doneren krijgen een voorkeursbehandeling. Hij raadt zieken af hun medicijnen te nemen. En hij nodigt knappe jonge jongens uit voor een privé-interview, om vervolgens in hun onderbroek te graaien en hen uit te nodigen hem oraal te bevredigen. <br>‘Verwoesting. Verwoesting’, schrijft Hans de Kraker op een site waar ex-volgelingen hun verhaal als waarschuwing voor anderen hebben gepubliceerd. ‘De feiten, de waarheid, dat waarvoor wij allemaal naar India reisden, roept ons nu. De waarheid schreeuwt om hulp.’
<br>Het vinden van een goeroe is dus een hachelijke zaak. In het boek Karma Cola zegt een Duitse econoom tegen auteur Gita Mehta: ‘Ik vind dat ze een kwaliteitscontrole voor goeroes moeten invoeren. Veel van mijn vrienden zijn gek geworden in India.’”</ref>


In 2015, Ganapathy Raju, Sathya Sai Baba's first cousin alleged that Sai Baba was murdered. He believes Satya Sai passed away on 29 March and not as officially declared on 24 April 2011. Elaborating, "Baba was a victim of a well planned conspiracy and pre-planned hi tech murder" (adding) that the trust members had ordered a glass coffin and two truckloads of flowers even when Baba was unwell."<ref name="cousingana">{{Cite news | title =Puttaparthi Sai Baba death a planned murder, says first cousin
The critical former follower Glen Meloy described him as 'a demented demonic force' <ref>Brown, Mick ''Divine downfall'' 28 Oct. 2000
| newspaper=] | date = 25 April 2015 | url=https://www.thehansindia.com/posts/index/Andhra-Pradesh/2015-04-25/Puttaparthi-Sai-Baba-death-a-planned-murder-says-first-cousin/146845?infinitescroll=1|access-date = 25 April 2015}}</ref>
: ''"Whether he is divine, 'a demented demonic force', as Glen Meloy now describes him, or simply the most accomplished fakir and confidence trickster, Sai Baba has said nothing publicly about the allegations laid against him."''</ref>. ], an ] ] Christian wrote in his book ''Avatar of the Night'' that SSB is a ] and the ], as (according to him) was predicted in the ].
Ganapathy also alleged that trust members were behind silencing the real date of Sai Baba's death in order to buy time to "usurp the huge wealth of the trust fund" asserting that properties worth hundreds of millions of dollars have "changed hands".<ref name="cousingana"/>
Dr Aiyar, Sai Baba's personal physician, was heavily criticized for not maintaining any medical records of Sai Baba.<ref name="drerr">{{Cite news | title =Threat to life of Sai Baba's caregiver & personal doctor| newspaper=] | date = 26 April 2011| url=
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/threat-to-life-of-sai-babas-caregiver-personal-doctor/articleshow/8085008.cms
|access-date =26 April 2011}}</ref>


Ganapathy Raju's main ideas of interest laid with the medical treatment and drugs given to Sai Baba, primarily by Satyajit Salian.<ref name="cousingana"/><ref name="saiaide"/> Prof Shyam Sunder, who had been involved with ] since 1968, also raised concerns about harassment and exploitation from Satyajit as numerous allegations by devotees and workers in ] arose saying Satyajit would intimidate and physically abuse them.<ref name="concerns"/> Like Ganapathy, Sunder also alleged that "Satyajit and his associates had been administering sleeping pills to Sai Baba for over six years. Though Sai Baba resisted the pills after his return from Brindavan at Whitefield, ], in 2006, he was forced to take them... and within a few months, Baba became sluggish and weak."<ref name="concerns">{{Cite news | title =Sai Baba's Death Sparks Succession Rumour| newspaper=] | date = 25 April 2011| url=https://www.indiatoday.in/india/south/story/sai-babas-death-sparks-succession-rumour-132713-2011-04-25
===Stances by devotees and proponents===
|access-date = 25 April 2011}}</ref> Satyajit also controlled if and when the doctors would see Sai Baba,<ref name="concerns"/> and within two days of Sai Baba's passing, ] reported that Satyajit (who was a paid employee of the ashram and "had no say whatsoever in the trust affairs or activities,")<ref name="pradeshnews">{{Cite news | title =Baba's aide Satyajitto be shown the door?| newspaper=] | date = 28 April 2011| url=https://www.greatandhra.com/articles/special-articles/babas-aide-satyajit-to-be-shown-the-door-28705|access-date = 28 April 2011}}</ref> was given authority to sign checks from the multi billion dollar trust account.<ref name="saiaide"/><ref name="scaregiver"/>
] (a Sai Devotee, expert in comparative religion and author of the book ''"Sathya Sai Baba: A life"'') stated that Sathya Sai Baba's reputation has only increased despite negative stories being published against the Guru, by rationalists, critics and skeptics, for at least a generation. Aitken contended that critics are so distemperate in their dislike that their vituperation comes across as near comical. Aitken also expressed the opinion that the BBC is ultimately governed by the Anglican establishment and does not criticize public icons like the Queen, who happens to be the head of the Anglican church. Aitken felt that the Church of England can have no objection to programmes that weaken perceived threats, such as the Sai Movement <ref>Aitken, Bill, Miracle of Welfare (November 27 2005) </ref>.


==Beliefs and practices of devotees==
In an interview with an ''Asian Voice'' correspondent, Mr Ashok Bhagani, a trustee of the Sai Organisation in the UK, said that he believed the allegations in the ''Secret Swami'' BBC documentary were completely factless and baseless and have never been proved. Mr Bhagani also stated that when devotees are selected by Baba for a private interview, there is always someone else present in the room, and this is especially the case when women and children meet him <ref>New Allegations Of Abuse Against Sai Baba by Payal Nair, Asian Voice, June 26th 2004: </ref>. Navin Patel, a biochemistry student at the Sathya Sai Arts College in Bangalore during the 1970s, told ''Asian Voice'' that he visited Baba's ashram many times and studied at Baba's college long enough to know the allegations are untrue. Patel claimed the ''Secret Swami'' BBC documentary was very misleading and was based on only two westerners who had their own monetary agendas. Patel expressed the opinion that western journalists were bashing Baba collectively <ref>New Allegations Of Abuse Against Sai Baba by Payal Nair, Asian Voice, June 26th 2004: </ref>.
{{Main|Sathya Sai Baba movement}}


Sai Baba was known for the quotes, in reference to his universal message, "Love All, Serve All" and "Help Ever, Hurt Never."<ref name="87bhajan">{{Cite news | title =87-hour bhajan program to pay tributes to Sai Baba| newspaper=] | date = 26 October 2012| url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/allahabad/87-hour-bhajan-programme-to-pay-tributes-to-sai-baba/articleshow/16970633.cms|access-date = 26 October 2012}}</ref><ref name="Leslie-Chaden2004">{{Cite book|author=Charlene Leslie-Chaden|title= A compendium of the teachings of Sri Sathya Sai Baba|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9798186822196/mode/2up| access-date=24 April 2011|year=2004|publisher=Sai Towers Publishing| page=526|isbn=978-8178990422}}</ref><ref name="Architectural digest">{{Cite book|title=Architectural digest|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YcxUAAAAMAAJ|access-date=24 April 2011|year=1994|publisher=Conde Nast Publications}}</ref> In Prashanti Nilayam, his devotees believed in seeking the spiritual benefit of Sai Baba's '']'', scheduled for morning and afternoon each day, as a form of devotion. Sai Baba would interact with people, accept letters or call groups and individuals for interviews.<ref name="sailand">{{Cite news| title =The Land of Illusion. Inside Sathya Sai Baba's fiefdom| newspaper=]| date = 1 June 2010| url=https://caravanmagazine.in/reportage/land-illusion|access-date = 1 June 2010}}</ref> Devotees considered it a great privilege to have an interview and sometimes a single person, group or family was invited for a private interview so they could ask for answers to spiritual questions or for general guidance.<ref name="kent"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/emeralds-desperation-mother-sathya-sai-baba-200301081601873.html|title=Emeralds and desperation: My mother and Sathya Sai Baba|last=Neutill|first=Rani|website=www.aljazeera.com|access-date=29 April 2020}}</ref>
The secretary of the Puttaparthi ashram, K. Chakravarthi, refused to comment on the accusations. Anil Kumar, Sathya Sai Baba's principal translator, believes that the controversy is part of Baba's divine plan and said that every great religious teacher has had to face criticism in his/her lifetime. Kumar said that allegations have been levelled at Sai Baba since childhood, but with every criticism Baba becomes more and more triumphant <ref>Brown, Mick ''Divine downfall'' 28 Oct. 2000
: ''"When the Telegraph Magazine contacted K Chakravarthi, secretary of the Puttaparthi ashram, he said, 'We have no time for these matters. I have nothing to say' and terminated the call.'...Sai Baba's principal English translator, Anil Kumar, was more forthcoming. Every great religious teacher, he said, had faced criticism in their lifetime. Such allegations had been levelled at Sai Baba since childhood, 'but with every criticism he becomes more and more triumphant'. Kumar said he considered the controversy 'all part of divine plan. It's a paddy field with husks around the rice. Eventually all the unwanted parts will go to leave the true substance inside.'"''</ref>.


Internationally, his devotees gather daily, or weekly on Sundays or Thursdays or both, for satsangs, spiritual discourses and ],<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.sathyasai.ca/ |title=Sri Sathya Sai Baba Organization in Canada – Home Page |publisher=Sathyasai.ca |date=1 May 2006 |access-date=7 January 2010}}</ref> prayer,<ref name="saius">. The Sathya Sai Baba Central Council of the United States of America (2006)</ref> spiritual meditation, service to the community (Seva),<ref name="saito">{{Cite web|url=http://www.sathyasaitoronto.org/ |title=The Sri Sathya Sai Baba Centre of Toronto – York |publisher=Sathyasaitoronto.org |access-date=7 January 2010}}</ref> and to participate in "Education in Human Values" (SSEHV)<ref name="saius"/> known as "''Bal Vikas''" (Blossoming of the Child).
Thorbjørn Meyer, in a letter to the DR, called the allegations undocumented and untrue. In the ''Seduced'' documentary, Peter Pruzan stated that he believed Sathya Sai Baba is not a pedophile nor does he perform conjuring tricks. Pruzan claimed that he personally experienced Sathya Sai Baba's ''"wholly extraordinary powers"'' both in Baba's presence as well as in Denmark <ref>"Seduced" TV documentary produced by ] broadcasted on January 30, 2002 at 8:05 pm. </ref>.


Devotees still receive Sai Baba's Divya Darshan at his Mahasamadhi shrine, a white marble edifice decorated with flowers, in Sai Kulwant Hall (]), where he was laid to rest.<ref name="mahasai">{{Cite news | title =Sai Baba's 'maha samadhi' opened to public| newspaper=] | date = 15 July 2011| url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/sai-babas-maha-samadhi-opened-to-public/articleshow/9234047.cms|access-date = 15 July 2011}}</ref><ref name="sairest">{{Cite news | title =Baba will rest in discourse hall| newspaper=] | date = 26 April 2011| url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bengaluru/baba-will-rest-in-discourse-hall/articleshow/8084819.cms|access-date = 26 April 2011}}</ref>
Lewis Kreydick, in a sworn and videotaped deposition <ref>Alaya Rahm vs. Sathya Sai Baba Society, filed in the Superior Court of California on January 6th 2005, County Of Orange - USA, Case No. 05cc01931: ''"Videotaped deposition of Lewis (Kryshna) Kreydick, taken on behalf of the defendents, at 2677 North Main Street, Suite 820, santa Ana, California, commencing at 10:07 a.m., on Thursday, March 16th, 2006, reported by Sharon E. Gonzalez, CSR, No. 4501, a Certified Shorthand Reporter in and for the State of California"''</ref>, said that he did not believe Alaya Rahm's sexual abuse allegations against Sathya Sai Baba because he had a very close relationship with Alaya during the time the alleged misconduct occurred. Kreydick testified that Alaya shared private information with him that he had not divulged to his own parents. Some of this information included Alaya's sexual activities with girls. Kreydick also testified that Alaya shared all the details to each of the interviews he had with Sathya Sai Baba in 1995 and 1997, and Alaya never made any comments suggesting wrongdoing, impropriety or sexual misconduct. Kreydick said that Alaya was very happy, smiling, laughing and full of self-confidence after his interviews. Kreydick further testified that he was present in some of these interviews in which Alaya was later to claim to have been sexually abused <ref>Alaya Rahm vs. Sathya Sai Baba Society, filed in the Superior Court of California on January 6th 2005, County Of Orange - USA, Case No. 05cc01931:<br>''"10:43:37: Well, not right away. But on the trip, we got to be very close, and he told me a lot of things about what he was up to.<br>10:43:55: A. Well, we talk about a lot of things. And on the trip, he shared a lot more things. We got to be very close on this trip.<br>10:45:45: Q. Did he share with you during that trip that -- and he was 16 years old when he went with you to India?<br>10:45:56: A. Yeah.<br>10:45:56: Q. Did he share with you that at that time, he was sexually active?<br>10:46:01: A. Yeah, he did.<br>10:47:03: A. He told me, but now -- it was so long ago, I can't remember. But he was 14 or 15 that he started his occasional relationships. And he was very active.<br>10:47:15: Q. Did he indicate to you whether he had shared the fact that he was sexually active with his parents at tht time?<br>10:47:21: A. I don't think he told his parents. We were just real close. And I don't even feel good about telling you about this now. It was kind of a personal thing between us. But he liked talking to me and I liked talking to him. And he wanted to know, really, the right thing to do.<br>11:04:30: Q. When Alaya came out of that interview, describe for me his demeanor.<br>11:04:44: A. Well, he was carrying an orange robe that Baba had given him. And he had gotten a ring there also. And he was very happy.<br>11:04:57: Q. Was he smiling?<br>11:04:59: A. Smiling, laughing, talking, and full of self-confidence.<br>11:35:09: Q. Did Alaya ever express to you during these discussions that he didn't want to go back to see Sai Baba?<br>11:35:18: A. No. To the contrary. He was one of the most excited guys to go on this trip.<br>11:43:07: Q. And did Alaya tell you about those interviews when you arrived in India?<br>11:43:16: A. He told me -- he told me about the interviews.<br>11:43:20: Q. What did he tell you?<br>11:43:21: A. He told me that it's just been phenomenal how Baba's pulled our group in and given us all the attention. And he already at that time, you know, made some jewelry for them. And given them a lot of attention. He was very happy. He was very happy that I was back there.<br>11:43:39: Q. Did he tell you that Sai Baba touched him inappropriately in any way.<br>11:43:48: A. No.<br>11:43:49: Q. Did he -- did Alaya express any concerns to you, or refuse to talk to you about what had happened? Anything like that?<br>11:43:57: A. Not at all.<br>11:44:02: A. No. He wanted to bring me up to date. He wanted to fill in what I had missed, okay. And so he told me everything. And then, of course, I was there for all the rest of the interviews. I didn't go into most of the interviews. But after the interviews, we would share what happened.<br>11:46:36: A. No. He shared almost every day what happened with Baba because, see, I wasn't in most of the interviews and he was in most of the interviews. So after -- we would get together every day that we had an interview. We were there for six weeks. And he had had 14 interviews in those six weeks. So after the interview, we'd get together with at the Rahm's apartment, and we would just find out from people that were in the interview what happened, and we would share with everybody. Because we were kind of a nuclear family. Then after that Alaya would talk to me in the garden right next to the place, and tell me even more things. Because some of the private interviews he had with Baba, he just didn't want to share with, all the details with his family.<br>11:52:22: Did Alaya say, this is a secret. I'm really -- I don't want you to share this with anybody?<br>11:52:30: A. No, no. He told me things he wouldn't tell his parents. But that wasn't one of the things that he wouldn't tell his parents.<br>11:53:17: Q. And did he seem excited and happy about his encounters with Sai Baba?<br>11:53:22: A. He was over the moon about thes encounters. And he loved sharing with me because I loved to hear it with Sai Baba. And I really liked Alaya a lot. And I was happy he was getting all this attention. It was very good for him.<br>11:53:34: Q. So you and Alaya would speak privately almost every day?<br>11:53:38: A. Every day, yeah, at least. And we'd talk to each other going to Darshan and coming back. We talked to each a lot.<br>11:53:46: Q. So you and he spent quite a bit of time alone?<br>11:53:49: A. We hung out. We hung out -- we didn't mean to be alone, but sometimes you are alone. We included everybody else, but a lot of times, we were just by ourselves.<br>13:48:36: Q. When you heard that Alaya Rahm was alleging that he had been sexually molested by Sai Baba during his '95 and '97 trips to India, were you shocked?<br>13:49:16: A. I couldn't believe it.<br>13:49:21: Q. Why not?<br>13:49:21: A. Well, I just, it was just out of the realm of possibility, as far as I am concerned.<br>13:49:30: Q. And was it because of your own personal observations of Alaya Rahm after his interviews with Sai Baba?<br>13:49:37: A. Yeah. He was very happy. Nothing was -- and he shared everything with me. We were so close. I don't know what's happened actually."''</ref>. Kreydick's statements in his depositions are supported by eulogistic talks that were given by Alaya Rahm and his family at Sai Conferences shortly after the alleged misconduct was said to have occurred. The talks were recorded on audio cassettes, distributed through Sai Centers and transcribed <ref>''Reference 1:'' Transcript to USA Sai Regional Conference August-30/31-1997 <br>''Reference 2:'' Transcript to the 21st North & Mid Central Region Sai Conference </ref>.


Sai Baba was a ] for spiritual as well as moral reasons and his followers have adopted the diet.<ref name="Leslie-Chaden">Leslie-Chaden, Charlene. (2004). ''A Compendium of the Teachings of Sri Sathya Sai Baba''. Sai Towers Publishing. pp. 633-636. {{ISBN|978-8178990422}}</ref><ref>Schweickert, Tina K. (2005). ''Tread Softly: Sathya Sai Baba's Teachings on Nature and the Environment''. pp. 92-93. {{ISBN|978-0974866819}}</ref> He stated that "meat eating fosters animal qualities in man making him descend to the demoniac level; it is a heart-rending sight to see cows being slaughtered to serve as food for man."<ref name="Leslie-Chaden"/> Sai Baba and many devotees have heavily criticised ] as unethical.<ref name="Leslie-Chaden"/>
===Self-Dismissed Court Case===
Alaya Rahm (an alleged victim who gave was interviewed in the ''Seduced by Sai Baba'' documentary, the ''Secret Swami'' programme, the ''India Today'' magazine and the ''Divine Downfall'' interview) filed a court case against the Sathya Sai Baba Society, seeking money damages. The case, ''Alaya Rahm vs. Sathya Sai Baba Society'', was filed in the Superior Court of California on January 6th 2005, County Of Orange - USA, Case No. 05cc01931. Alaya Rahm filed his case 2 days before the statute of limitations was to expire <ref>California's statute of limitations : ''"Present law provides that the statute of limitations is tolled against a sexual perpetrator until the plaintiff's twenty-sixth birthday, or until within three years, after majority, she or he discovers or reasonably should have discovered that incurred psychological injury or illness was caused by the sexual abuse (Section 340.1(a), as amended 1994)."''; Alaya Rahm's birthday is January 8th 1979, as stated on court documents.</ref>. The plaintiff (Alaya Rahm) self-dismissed his own case on April 19th 2006 and therefore the counter-suit was also dismissed. No offers of settlement were made in this case and no money or other considerations were paid for the dismissal of these cases. This case was dismissed ''"]"'' <ref>Filed Superior Court of California - County of Orange - Central Justice Center; Apr. 20 2006, Case No. 05CC01931; Trial Date: April 28, 2006, Time: 9:00a.m., Dept.: C15, TO ALL PARTIES AND THEIR ATTORNEYS OF RECORDS: PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the above referenced matter has been settled in its entirety. The plaintiff has agreed to dismiss his complaint, with prejudice, and the cross-complainant has agreed to dismiss its cross-complaint, with prejudice. No economic consideration has been paid in exchange for either of these dismissals. Dated April 19, 2006. ''"With Prejuidice"'' legal definition, </ref>. This means that all parties in the case entered into a final and binding agreement that would prevent them from pursuing the same matter in any court of law (in the USA or in India).


==Ashrams and mandirs==
===Parliamentary, governmental and political issues and responses===
In an official letter released to the general public, in December 2001, A.B. Vajpayee (the then Prime Minister of India), P.N. Bhagawati (Former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of India), Ranganath Mishra (Chair Person, National Human Rights Commissioner of India and Former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of India), Najma Heptulla (President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union; UNDP Distinguished Human Development Ambassador) and Shivraj V. Patil (Member of Parliament, India; Formerly of the Lok Sabda & Union Minister) all signed a letter that called the allegations against Sathya Sai Baba ''"wild, reckless and concocted allegations made by certain vested interests"'' and that they ''"unequivocally condemned"'' the allegations as ''"baseless and malicious"'' <ref>Sri Sathya Sai Baba - A Living Legend - An Embodiment Of Love For All Mankind, Letter from A.B. Vajpayee (the then Prime Minister of India), </ref>.


===Prasanthi Nilayam (Abode of Highest Peace)===
The Indian President ] and the former Indian Prime Minister ], as well as other Indian dignitaries, visit the ashram and pay their respects to Sathya Sai Baba.
{{Main|Prasanthi Nilayam}}
]
], where Sai Baba was born and lived, was originally a small, remote South Indian village in ]. It was here that ] (Abode of Highest Peace) was established.<ref name="radiosaipra"></ref> After 2 years of construction it was inaugurated on 23 November 1950, Sai Baba's 25th birthday.<ref name="vahiniprashanti"/> It succeeded the "old mandir" which was created in 1944.<ref name="vahiniprashanti"></ref><ref>Bowen, David (1988). The Sathya Sai Baba Community in Bradford: Its origins and development, religious beliefs and practices. Leeds: University Press. {{ISBN|1-871363-02-0}}.</ref><ref name="murphetmiracle">{{Cite book |last=Murphet |first=Howard |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BPsVFqhclS0C |title=Sai Baba: Man of Miracles |date=1971-01-01 |publisher=Weiser Books |isbn=978-0-87728-335-5 |language=en}}</ref> ] is painted blue, yellow, and pink "communicating the message of the harmony of spirit, intellect, and heart respectively; for blue stands for spirit, yellow for intellect, and pink for heart (love). The rich harmony of the three does result in Santi (peace) and Prasanti (supreme peace); and that really is the message of the Prasanthi Mandir."<ref name="sathyasaihistory"></ref>
In 1954 a free general hospital was constructed in ] and soon after a medical hospital was constructed in 1957 inside the ashram.


Poornachandra Auditorium was built in 1973. Seating around 15,000 people in its enclosed 60 x 40-metre area, it is where cultural programmes (plays/dance/music), conferences and yagnas during ] take place. Sathya Sai Baba's living quarters were upstairs above the stage area.<ref name="sssplaces"></ref>
In the year 2000 ] withdrew its co-sponsorship of an educational conference at ] and stated the reasons, in a press release issued on 15 September, as "''Certain decisions were taken by the ISSE without consultation, such as plans to hold some of the sessions at the Ashram of the Sathya Sai movement in Puttaparthi, and the inclusion of some speakers in the conference programme without their previous consent. Furthermore, the Organization is deeply concerned about widely-reported allegations of sexual abuse involving youths and children that have been levelled at the leader of the movement in question, Sathya Sai Baba''" <ref>Unesco Press Release, September 2000, </ref>. In the year 2003, Unesco removed this press release from their site.


Sai Kulwant Hall was inaugurated by Sathya Sai Baba on July 9, 1995. The hall can accommodate up to 20,000 people and it was here that Sai Baba gave darshan everyday from that time forward.<ref name="touristinfo">. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130108090859/http://www.tourisminap.com/puttaparthi/sight_see.php|date=January 8, 2013}}. tourisminap.com.</ref> Sai Kulwant Hall is where Sai Baba was laid to rest. A white marble edifice stands as his Mahasamadhi shrine and devotees still have his Divya darshan here daily.<ref name="sairest"/>
Former MP ] of the ] asked, in the parliament in 2002, whether a travel warning was appropriate due to the reports of sexual abuse <ref>Colman, Tony 26 February 2002 ''Tony Colman SAI BABA AND SEXUAL ABUSE OF CHILDREN'' ] </ref>. Since 2002, neither Tony Blair nor the Parliament ever issued a travel warning against Sathya Sai Baba. Nor has the British Government released any official statement regarding this matter.


The ashram itself houses a shopping centre, book stores, library and reading room, multiple accommodations such as dormitories and rooms, banking/ATM facilities, media and Radio Sai facilities, a bakery, emergency medical services and three food courts – North and South Indian as well as Western canteens.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Prasanthi Nilayam |url=https://www.srisathyasaiglobalcouncil.org/prasanthi-nilayam |access-date=9 December 2022 |website=Sri Sathya Sai Global Council |language=en}}</ref>
Tom Sackville, a former Home Office Under-Secretary of State and current chairman of the anti-cult organisation Family Action Information and Resource (FAIR), has expressed concern about the alleged ] of children by devotees who volunteer at public schools and propagate the ''Educare''/''Education in Human Values'' teachings and asserted that this should be forbidden by law <ref>British law against Sai Baba sought, by Rashmee Z. Ahmed, The Times Of India, September 5 2001: </ref>.


]
On ], ] the ] answered a question from ], then a ], about no EU funding going to organizations associated with Sathya Sai Baba, due to allegations of sexual abuse <ref></ref>. The Commission answered that the Sathya Sai Trust never received, and was not receiving, any funding from the European Commission.


In the encompassing area around ] there is an extensive university complex, a specialty hospital, and two museums: the ''Sanathana Samskruti'' or Eternal Heritage Museum, sometimes called the Museum of All Religions, and the ''Chaitanya Jyoti'', devoted exclusively to the life and teachings of Sai Baba; the latter has won several international awards for its architectural design.<ref name="TheStar2005-04-02">{{Cite web |last=Krishnamoorthy |first=M. |title=Enlightening experience in India |work=The Star Online |date=2 April 2005 |url=http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2005/4/2/features/9982154&sec=features |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050412101614/http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=%2F2005%2F4%2F2%2Ffeatures%2F9982154&sec=features |url-status=dead |archive-date=12 April 2005 |access-date=6 January 2010 }}</ref> There is also a planetarium, a railway station, a hill-view stadium, an administrative building, an airport, an indoor sports stadium and more.<ref>Places to see at Puttaparthi. </ref> High-ranking Indian politicians such as the former president ], former prime minister ], Andhra Pradesh former chief minister ] and ] chief minister ] have been official guests at the ashram in Puttaparthi.<ref>''The Hindu'', "A 5-point recipe for happiness" 24 November 2006 </ref><ref>''The Hindu'', "Warm welcome to PM at Puttaparthi",12 February 2004 {{usurped|}}</ref>
A travel advisory by the ], in which neither Sathya Sai Baba or other persons are mentioned, warns US citizens traveling to ] of unconfirmed reports of inappropriate sexual behavior toward young male devotees by a prominent local religious leader <ref>''United States Department of State'' website: ''"U.S. citizens should be aware that there have been unconfirmed reports of inappropriate sexual behavior by a prominent local religious leader at an ashram or religious retreat located in Andhra Pradesh. Most of the reports indicate that the subjects of these approaches have been young male devotees, including a number of U.S. citizens."'' (Retrieved Feb 2006)</ref>.


==See also== ===Brindavan Ashram===
*] - Links and info about Sathya Sai Baba's biographer.


Established on 25 June 1960, the Brindavan Ashram is located in Kadugodi, a village close to ] and 24 kms from the city centre of ], ].<ref name="karnataka1">{{Cite web |title=Sai Baba Ashram, Whitefield, Bangalore |url=https://www.karnataka.com/bangalore/sai-baba-ashram-whitefield/ |access-date=17 December 2013 |website=Karnataka.com |date=17 December 2013 |language=en}}</ref> It occupies around 50 acres of land and was known as the summer home of Sai Baba as he would spend about three months here every year.<ref name="karnataka1"/>
==References and Footnotes==
Notable features are Sai Ramesh Krishan Hall, where darshan and bhajans were held, Trayee Brindavan, Sai Baba's personal residence and the Brindavan Campus of the Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Learning.
<div class="references-small">
In its adjacent areas are the Sri Sathya Sai General and Super Specialty Hospital (]), Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Sai Central Trust and an old age home, Sri Sathya Sai Vriddhashram.<ref name="karnataka1"/><ref name="sathyaorg9">{{Cite web |title=Brindavan|url=https://www.srisathyasai.org/pages/saibrindavan.html |access-date=9 November 2022 |website=srisathyasai.org |language=en}}</ref> All services at the hospitals are still free.
<references />
</div>


===Sai Shruti Ashram===
==Sathya Sai Baba's Presence in Popular Culture==
Sathya Sai Baba's name is mentioned on the popular incense ].


Located in ], atop the ] in south Indian state of ], Sai Shruti ashram was often visited by Sai Baba for a few days in the months of April and May. It holds no accommodations or extra curricular facilities.<ref name="shruti">{{Cite web |title=Sai Abodes|url=https://www.srisathyasai.org/pages/sai-abodes.html|access-date=23 November 2023 |website=srisathyasai.org |language=en}}</ref>
==Bibliography==
===Books By Sathya Sai Baba===


Sai Baba resided much of the time in his main ], ''Prasanthi Nilayam'', at Puttaparthi. In the summer he often left for ''Brindavan'', in Kadugodi, ], a town on the outskirts of ]. Occasionally he visited his Sai Sruthi ashram in ].<ref>The ashrams of Sathya Sai Baba. Referenced from the official Sathya Sai Organization website, </ref>


==Recognition==
===Selected Books By Followers===
]
*Baskin, Diana ''"Divine Memories of Sathya Sai Baba"'' (1990) ISBN 1878599003
On 23 November 1999, the Department of Posts, ], released a postage stamp and a postal cover in recognition of the service rendered by Sai Baba in addressing the problem of providing safe drinking water to the rural masses.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.srisathyasai.org.in/Pages/Service_Projects/Anantapur.htm |title=SSSCT-Service Projects – Water Supply – Anantapur |publisher=Srisathyasai.org.in |date=23 November 1999 |access-date=7 January 2010 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304054843/http://www.srisathyasai.org.in/Pages/Service_Projects/Anantapur.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> Another commemorative stamp was released on the occasion of what would have been his 88th birthday during November 2013.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-andhrapradesh/postal-stamp-on-sathya-sai-baba-released/article5385073.ece|title=Postal stamp on Sathya Sai Baba released|date=24 November 2013|work=The Hindu|location=Chennai, India}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/Postal-department-to-release-stamp-on-Sathya-Sai-Baba/articleshow/26168869.cms|title=Postal department to release stamp on Sathya Sai Baba|work=The Times Of India}}</ref>
*Goldthwait, John ''"Purifying the Heart"'' (2002) ISBN 81-7208-339-4
*Guillemin, Madeleine ''"Who Is In The Driving Seat?"'' (2000) ISBN 0-9583617-0-3
*Hislop, John ''"My Baba And I"'' ISBN 81-7208-050-6
*Kasturi, Narayana ''"Sathyam Sivam Sundaram"'' Part I (first published in 1961), II, III, IV (zip file, 787 kb)
*Krystal, Phyllis ''"The Ultimate Experience"'' ISBN 81-7208-038-7
*Mazzoleni Don Mario ''"A Catholic Priest Encounters Sai Baba"'' (1994)ISBN 0962983519
*Murphet, Howard ''"Man of Miracles"'' (1971) ISBN 0333-91770-7
*Padmanaban, Ranganathan ''"Love Is My Form"'' Sai Towers (2000) ISBN 81-86822-76-3
*Sandweiss, Samuel H. ''"The Holy Man ... And The Psychiatrist"'' (1975) ISBN 0-9600958-1-0
*Sandweiss, Samuel H ''"Spirit And The Mind"'' (1985) ISBN 81-7208-056-5
*Thomas, Joy ''"Life is a Game – Play it"'' ISBN 81-7208-175-8
*Schulman, Arnold ''"Baba"'' (1971) Out of print. ISBN 670-14343-x
*(Note: Hundreds of English books have been written by followers)


In January 2007, an event was held in ] organised by the Chennai Citizens' Conclave to thank Sai Baba for the 2&nbsp;billion water project which brought water from the ] in Andhra Pradesh to Chennai city. Four chief ministers attended the function.
===Books by skeptics and critics===
<ref>{{Cite web |title=Gumby – Pictures, Sounds, and Videos |url=https://www.everwonder.com/david/gumby/about.html |access-date=9 June 2022 |website=www.everwonder.com}}</ref>
*Beyerstein, Dale ''"Sai Baba's miracles: an overview"'', Published by Basava Premanand, Podanur, India, (1994)
*Brooke, Tal ''"Lord of the Air"'', first published in 1976 with a revised edition was released in 1990. Revised and renamed ''"Avatar of the Night"'' (1999) ISBN 193004500x
*Brooke, Tal ''"Riders of the Cosmic Circuit"'' (1986) ISBN 0745912176
*] ''"The Murders in Sai Baba's bedroom"'' (2001)
*Priddy, Robert ''"The End of the Dream"'', published and edited by Basava Premanand, Podanur, India, (2004)
*Shepherd, Kevin R.D. ''"Investigating the Sai Baba Movement: A Clarification of Misrepresented Saints and Opportunism"'' (2005) ISBN 0952508931


==Sathya Sai International Organization==
===Other Books===
{{Main|Sri Sathya Sai International Organization}}
*Brown, Mick ''"The Spiritual Tourist"'' Bloomsbury Publishing (1998) ISBN 1-58234-034-X
*Haraldsson, Erlendur PhD ''"Miracles are my visiting cards - An investigative inquiry on Sathya Sai Baba, an Indian mystic with the gift of foresight believed to perform modern miracles"'' (first published in 1987, 1997 revised and updated edition) ISBN 81-86822-32-1


]
==External links==
The Sri Sathya Sai International Organization was founded in the 1960s by Sathya Sai Baba.<ref name="srisaiorg">{{Cite web|url=http://www.srisathyasai.org.in/Pages/Sai_Organisations/Sai_Organisations.htm|title=SSSCT- Sri Sathya Sai Seva Organisation|work=srisathyasai.org.in}}</ref> Initially called the "Sri Sathya Sai Seva Samithi",<ref name="saiindia">{{Cite web|url=http://www.saibabaofindia.com/sai_baba_centers.htm|title=Sai Baba Of India – Sri Sathya Sai Baba Centers – Sai Baba organisation worldwide|work=saibabaofindia.com}}</ref> it was established "to enable its members to undertake service activities as a means to spiritual advancement."<ref name="srisaiorg" /> In 2020, Sri Satya Sai Central Trust was granted ] status by the ].<ref>{{Cite news|url= https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/andhra-pradesh/un-body-confers-special-status-on-sri-sathya-sai-central-trust/article32950161.ece|website= ]|title= UN body confers special status on Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust|date= 27 October 2020}}</ref>
===Official Sathya Sai Baba Websites===
*
*
*
*
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*


The ] reports that there are an estimated 1,200 Sathya Sai Baba Centres in 114 countries.<ref name="TheStarOnline84">{{Cite web |url=http://thestar.com.my/metro/story.asp?file=/2009/12/3/north/5212802&sec=North |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110521155709/http://thestar.com.my/metro/story.asp?file=%2F2009%2F12%2F3%2Fnorth%2F5212802&sec=North |url-status=dead |archive-date=21 May 2011 |title=Sai Baba turns 84 |publisher=Thestar.com.my |date=3 December 2009 |access-date=6 January 2010 }}</ref><ref name="SathyaSaiNumbers">{{Cite web|url=http://www.sathyasai.org/organize/content.htm#SaiOrg|title=The Sai Organization: Numbers to Sai Centres and Names of Countries|publisher=Sathyasai.org|access-date=6 January 2010}}</ref> However, the number of active Sai Baba followers is hard to determine.<ref name="BabbLawrence" /> Estimates vary from 6&nbsp;million<ref> cites ]. ''Exploring New Religions''. London, UK: Cassells (1999) (10 million)<br />*Brown, Mick (2000-10-28). "Divine Downfall". ''The Daily Telegraph''. . Retrieved 2007-03-12<br />*Edwards, Linda (2001). A Brief Guide to Beliefs: Ideas, Theologies, Mysteries, and Movements. Westminster John Knox Press. {{ISBN|0664222595}}.</ref> up to nearly 100&nbsp;million.<ref>'']'', , 14 May 2011, p. 110.</ref> In India itself, Sai Baba drew followers predominantly from the ], the urban sections of society who have the "most wealth, education and exposure to Western ideas."<ref name="UrbanHugh74">{{Cite journal|last=Urban|first=Hugh B.|author-link=Hugh Urban|year=2003|title=Avatar for Our Age: Sathya Sai Baba and the Cultural Contradictions of Late Capitalism|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=33|issue=1|page=74|doi=10.1016/S0048-721X(02)00080-5|s2cid=143800572|issn=0048-721X|eissn=1096-1151}}</ref> In 2002, he said he had followers in 178 countries.<ref name="nyt1dec2002">{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/01/world/a-friend-in-india-to-all-the-world.html?pagewanted=1|title=A Friend in India to All the World|last=Bradsher|first=Keith|date=1 December 2002|work=The New York Times|access-date=13 January 2010}}</ref><ref name="Palmer97-98">Palmer, Norris W. "Baba's World". In: {{Cite book|last1=Forsthoefel|first1=Thomas A.|editor-last=Humes|editor-first=Cynthia Ann |title=Gurus in America|url=https://archive.org/details/gurusamericasuny00fors|url-access=limited|place=Albany, NY|publisher=State University of New York Press|year=2005|pages=–98|isbn=978-0791465745}}</ref>
===Websites of critical former followers, skeptics and other critics===
* Extensive website that contains opinions and videos of alleged materializations, webmaster Reinier van der Sandt.
*
*
* Multi-lingual, critical website of ex-followers, webmaster Lionel Fernandez.
* Conny Larsson's English section on the Scandinavian website of critical former followers.


Sathya Sai Baba founded a large number of schools and colleges, hospitals, and other charitable institutions in India and abroad, the net financial capital of which is usually estimated at {{INR}} 400&nbsp;billion (US$9&nbsp;billion).<ref>
===Websites of Devotees and Proponents That Address Allegations===
{{Cite news|url=http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics/nation/sathya-sai-baba-passes-away-leaves-behind-rs-40000-cr-worth-empire-with-no-clear-succession-plan/articleshow/8075953.cms|title=Sathya Sai Baba passes away, leaves behind Rs 40,000-cr worth empire with no clear succession plan
* A comprehensive, Pro-Sai website by Gerald Joe Moreno that examines the allegations made by ex-followers, skeptics and critics of Sathya Sai Baba, with extensive links to Pro/Anti Sai Sites.
|newspaper=] | date=25 April 2011 |quote=Sai Baba leaves behind a wide network of charitable institutions, hospitals, schools, colleges, which some estimate to be worth about Rs 40,000 crore}}</ref><ref name="it">{{Cite magazine|title=Up in the Heir: The secret world of Sathya Sai Baba's Rs 40,000 cr empire |author=Amarnath K. Menon |magazine=] |url=http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/story/sathya-sai-baba-health-scare-assets-transition/1/135354.html |date=25 April 2011 |access-date=9 June 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110424073421/http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/story/sathya-sai-baba-health-scare-assets-transition/1/135354.html |archive-date=24 April 2011 }}</ref><ref name="dh">{{Cite news| title =Sai Baba's death leaves question mark on Rs 40,000 crore empire| author =Indo-Asian News Service| newspaper = ]| url = http://www.deccanherald.com/content/156224/sai-babas-death-leaves-question.html| date = 24 April 2011|access-date =9 June 2011| author-link =Indo-Asian News Service}}</ref> However, estimates as high as {{INR}} 1.4&nbsp;trillion (about US$31.5bn) have also been made.<ref>{{Cite news| title =Sathya Sai Baba trust worth Rs 1.4 lakh crore?|publisher =]| url =http://ibnlive.in.com/news/sathya-sai-baba-trust-worth-rs-14-lakh-crore/150273-3.html| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20110430001702/http://ibnlive.in.com/news/sathya-sai-baba-trust-worth-rs-14-lakh-crore/150273-3.html| url-status =dead| archive-date =30 April 2011| date =26 April 2011| access-date =9 June 2011}}</ref>
* A Pro-Sai website by Ram Das Awle that gives a devotee's interpretation to the allegations made against Sathya Sai Baba.
* A Pro-Sai website that discusses the controversy surrounding Sathya Sai Baba.


===Time line of developments, schools, projects and charities===
===Other Websites===
*
* Article on the disagreement and antagonism between apologists and critics on the website of M. Alan Kazlev.
* Biographical overview of the early years from the book ''Love is my Form''.
* (pdf file) Leaflet dispersed by , which is based at the ]. INFORM in an independent charity that is funded by Mainstream Churches. Their Patrons and Governers are Bishops, Priests or members of Orthodox Churches: (pdf file).
* - supplier of books, CDs, DVDs, videos and other items


In 1950 ], his ] ashram completed construction and with in 4 years, a general hospital in ] was established (1954). Over a decade later in 1968 the first education project, a college for girls was set up in ]. The ], a charitable trust that undertakes social welfare projects and acts as an umbrella for many seva projects was begun in 1972. In 1976 another general hospital in Whitefield, outside of ] was completed followed by a boys' college in ] in 1978. The inauguration of the ] (] campus), happened on 22 November 1981.
===Media Articles===
*
* ] by Sri R.K. Karanjia (September ])
* (pdf file) An article published in the British Medical Journal about a Doctor's experience with a miraculous cure of one of his patients who claimed Sathya Sai Baba cured him. (]])
* Mick Brown's article about the sexual abuse allegations in ] newspaper UK (]])
* The Island (Sri Lankan Newspaper) by Dr. A. N. Sataya (]])
* front page article in ] (]])
* The Times Of India (]])
* Michelle Golberg's major article in ] online magazine (]])
* The Week India (]])
* ] by Dominic Kennedy (]])
* ] by Dominic Kennedy (]])
* ] by Dominic Kennedy (]])
* ] (]])
* article in the ] by Keith Bradsher (]])
* In response to the allegations against Sathya Sai Baba: Letter from A.B. Vajpayee (the then Prime Minister of India), P.N. Bhagawati, Ranganath Mishra, Najma Heptulla and Shivraj V. Patil (]])
* The Times of Zambia by Dennison Chisunka (]])
* ] by V. N. Vedanta Desikan (]])
* article by Bettina Vilmun, translated from the Danish daily national newspaper ] (]])
* ] by Alka Rastogi (]])
* A collection of various articles about Sathya Sai baba on the ] news website. (]])
* ]'s article about Sathya Sai Baba and the controversy surrounding the Guru. (]])
* article in the ] Followers of Shirdi Sai Baba in the ] filed a suit, in the court of ], to restrain people from claiming others are a reincarnation of Shirdi '']''. The case is still pending. (]])
* New India Press by Hiramalini Seshadri (]])
* Post (in South Africa) by Yogas Nair (]])


In 1991, Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences was completed.
{{wikiquote}}


The ] drinking water project launched in 1995 would be the first of many water projects taken up by Sai Baba, others included the ] & ] drinking water projects (2001), the ] water project in 2002 and the East & West ] water projects completed in 2007.
{{Hinduism}}
A decade later, another Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences began operations in ] along with the Sri Sathya Sai Super Specialty Hospital in Whitefield, offering free medical services.
In 2009 the construction of ] campus began.<ref name="saijourney">{{Cite news | title =Sai Baba's Journey| newspaper=] | date = 25 April 2011| url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/sai-babas-journey/articleshow/8076411.cms|access-date = 25 April 2011}}</ref>


Years after Sai Baba's passing, Vivek Kumar wrote, "the things that he executed were out of his love towards humanity. He provided free education, healthcare and water to people who never even dreamt of getting it."<ref name="youdidntknow">{{Cite news | title =Things You Didnt Know About Sri Sathya Sai Baba| newspaper=] | date = 22 November 2013| url=
{{Persondata|NAME=Sathya Sai Baba|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Sathya Narayana Raju Ratnakram|SHORT DESCRIPTION=]n ]|DATE OF BIRTH=], ]|PLACE OF BIRTH=], ]|DATE OF DEATH=|PLACE OF DEATH=
http://m.timesofindia.com/articleshow/7859107.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
}}
|access-date = 22 November 2013}}</ref>

===Classification of organisation===

Sources often describe Sai Baba's following as a "movement".<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kent|first=Alexandra|date=1999|title=Unity in Diversity: Portraying the Visions of the Sathya Sai Baba Movement of Malaysia|jstor=40800435|journal=Crossroads: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies |volume=13–2 |issue=2 |pages=29–51}}</ref><ref name="clarke2006">{{Cite encyclopedia |surname=Kent |given=Alexandra |title=Sai Baba movement |pages=545–547 |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements |year=2006 |editor-surname=Clarke |editor-given=Peter B. |editor-link=Peter B. Clarke |place=London; New York |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0415267076}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Sahoo|first=Ajaya Kumar|title=Reconstructing Religious and Cultural Identity of Indians in the Diaspora: The Role of Sri Sathya Sai Baba Movement |jstor=23621024|journal=Sociological Bulletin|volume= 62| issue = 1 |date= January–April 2013 |pages= 23–39 |doi=10.1177/0038022920130102|s2cid=152184838}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.americamagazine.org/content/all-things/death-god-man-sai-baba-dies-85|title=Death of a God-man? Sai Baba Dies at 85|last=Clooney|first=Francis X.|date=2011|work=America Magazine}}</ref>
Sathya Sai Baba claimed to be the reincarnation of ] whose followers considered to be an ] of ].<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WA12nHRtmAwC&pg=PA307 |author=Chryssides, George D. |title=Historical dictionary of new religious movements |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |year=2012|isbn=978-0810861947 }}</ref> While ] was known to combine Islamic and Hindu teachings, Charles S. J. White, of ] at Washington D.C., observed in 1972 that with Sathya Sai Baba, "there is no discernible Muslim influence."<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=White|first1=Charles S. J.|title=The Sai Baba Movement: Approaches to the Study of India Saints|journal=The Journal of Asian Studies|date=1972|volume=31|issue=4|pages=863–878|doi=10.2307/2052105|jstor=2052105|s2cid=163018087 }}</ref> Stephanie Tallings, in The Harvard international Review, noted Sai Baba's following is drawn from people of all religions, ethnicities, and social classes.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Tallings|first=Stephanies|date=Summer 2000|title=Avatar of Stability: Sai Baba's Teachings|url=https://www.jstor.org/publisher/hir|journal=Harvard International Review|volume= 22| issue = 2|pages=14–15}}</ref> In contrast, Sai Baba's following is also regarded by many scholars to be of a Hindu persuasion.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Babb|first1=L. A.|editor1-last=Hawley|editor1-first=J.S.|title=Saints and Virtues|date=1987|publisher=University of California Press|location=London|isbn=978-0520061637|pages=168–186|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RGv2wOUl0pMC|chapter=Sathya Sai Baba's Saintly Play}}</ref><ref>Alexandra Kent Divinity and diversity: a Hindu revitalization movement in Malaysia, NIAS, 2005</ref><ref>Handoo, Jawaharlal in ''Asian Folklore Studies'', Vol. 48, No. 2 (1989), pp. 326–332 reviewing Lawrence A. Babb's book ''Redemptive Encounters. Three Modern Styles in the Hindu Tradition'' </ref><ref>Nagel, Alexandra (note: Nagel is a critical former follower) "De Sai Paradox: Tegenstrijdigheden van en rondom Sathya Sai Baba"/"The Sai Paradox contradictions of and surrounding Sathya Sai Baba" from the magazine "Religieuze Bewegingen in Nederland, 'Sekten' "/"Religious movements in the Netherlands, 'Cults/Sects' ", 1994, nr. 29. published by the ] press, (1994) {{ISBN|9053833412}}<br/> Dutch original: "Ofschoon Sai Baba gezegd heeft mensen van allerlei religieuze gezindten te helpen terug te gaan naar oude waarden en normen, en ofschoon zijn logo de symbolen van de andere grote godsdiensten bevat, is de sfeer rondom Sai Baba duidelijk hindoeïstisch gekleurd. Alle moslim-elementen bijv. waarvan verondersteld zou kunnen worden dat hij die zou hebben meegenomen uit zijn leven als Sai Baba van Shirdi, heeft hij laten vallen. Het enig echt herkenbare wat hij van Shirdi Baba nog heeft, is het veelvuldig gebruik van as, – wat hij dan niet uit een dhuni haalt zoals Shirdi Baba deed, maar materialiseert (of tevoorschijn goochelt)"</ref>

Lawrence A. Babb, of the Amherst College in Massachusetts, labelled Sai Baba movement as a cult in the 1980s, calling it "deeply and authentically Hindu..." and noted, "The most striking feature of this cult, however, is the extremely strong emphasis given to the miraculous."<ref name="babb83" /> However, a scholarly review says Babb misapplies the word "cult", responding, "the so-called 'cult' of Satya Sai Baba seems to possess all such characteristics which are, according to the author, central to a religious movement."<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Handoo|first=Jawaharlal|date=1989|title=Reviewed Work: Redemptive Encounters. Three Modern Styles in the Hindu Tradition by Lawrence A. Babb|url=http://asianethnology.org/downloads/ae/pdf/a759.pdf|journal=Asian Folklore Studies|volume= 48| issue = 2|page=327|doi=10.2307/1177938|jstor=1177938}}</ref> Deborah A. Swallow, of the University of Cambridge, referred to it as a cult and said that the "ritual and theology, then, unlike Sai Baba 's, is distinctly Hindu in form and content."<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Swallow|first1=D. A.|title=Ashes and Powers: Myth, Rite and Miracle in an Indian God-Man's Cult|journal=Modern Asian Studies|date=2008|volume=16|issue=1|pages=123–158|doi=10.1017/S0026749X0000072X|jstor=312277|s2cid=146729990}}</ref> However John D. Kelly, a professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago, wrote about Hindu missions in Fiji that the Sathya Sai Organization (which is part of the movement) rejected the label Hindu. According to Kelly, they see their founder as the "living synthesis of the world's religious traditions" and prefer to be classified as an ] movement. He observed that the Sai Baba mission is a Hindu mission that is as active as Christian or Muslim missions.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Kelly|first1=J.D.|editor1-last=van der Veer|editor1-first=P.|title=Nation and Migration: The Politics of Space in the South Asian Diaspora|date=1995|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press|location=Philadelphia |isbn=978-0812215373|pages=43–72|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bvTHlLRZL8UC|chapter=Bhakti and Postcolonial Politics: Hindu Missions to Fiji}}</ref> In a 2001 scholarly book, Tulasi Srinivas notes, "The Sathya Sai global civil religious movement incorporates Hindu and Muslim practices, Buddhist, Christian, and Zoroastrian influences, and "New Age"-style rituals and beliefs.' And in the appendix of the book (p.&nbsp;349) lists 10 scholarly authors/researchers in both Europe and America who all refer to it as a New Religious Movement (NRM).<ref>{{Cite book|title=Winged Faith: Rethinking Globalization and Religious Pluralism through the Sathya Sai Movement|last=Srinivas|first=Tulasi|publisher=Columbia University Press|date= 2010|isbn=978-0231149334}}</ref>

While scholars often refer to it as either a "]" (NRM)<ref name="clarke2006" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Pereira |first=Shane N. |title=A New Religious Movement in Singapore: Syncretism and Variation in the Sathya Sai Baba Movement |jstor=23677933|journal= Asian Journal of Social Science|volume= 36| issue = 2|pages= 250–270 |year=2008|doi=10.1163/156853108X298699}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Ekacha|first=Sanitsuda|date=2001|title=Keeping the Faith: Thai Buddhism at the Crossroads|journal=Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions|volume= 9| issue = 2|pages=126–128|doi=10.1525/nr.2005.9.2.126}}</ref> or as a ],<ref name=das15/><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Swallow|first1=D.A.|chapter=Living Saints and Their Devotees|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f1gkAQAAIAAJ&q=sathya+sai+baba+cult|date=1976 |editor=Jonathan Webber |title=Research in Social Anthropology, 1975–1980: A Register of Theses Accepted for Higher Degrees at British Universities, 1975–1980 |pages=385–386 |publisher=Royal Anthropological Institute|isbn=978-0900632334}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Misunderstanding Cults: Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field |title-link=Misunderstanding Cults |publisher=] |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-8020-8188-9 |editor-last=Zablocki |editor-first=Benjamin |editor-link=Benjamin Zablocki |pages=3–5 |language=en |chapter=Introduction: Finding a Middle Ground in a Polarized Scholarly Arena |editor-last2=Robbins |editor-first2=Thomas |editor-link2=Thomas Robbins (sociologist)}}</ref> it has been noted by Eugene Gallagher, a noted professor of religious studies, that in more modern times "'New Religious Movement', is the classification preferred by most academics, who see 'cult' as a pejorative term.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Gallagher|first=Eugene|date=November 2007 – February 2008|title="Cults" and "New Religious Movements"|jstor=10.1086/524210|journal=History of Religions|publisher= University of Chicago Press|volume= 47| issue = 2/3|pages=205–220|doi=10.1086/524210|s2cid=161448414}}</ref>

A secret report from the ] from the 1990s stated a "worldwide mass religious movement"<ref name="saioncia"/> was emerging around Sathya Sai Baba, who many devotees viewed as a full incarnation of God.<ref name="saioncia">{{Cite web|url=https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP96-00792R000400280002-2.pdf |title=Cultural Trends Study – India's Sai Baba Movement|website=CIA}}</ref> On a local scale, the report states that the extensive appeal of Sai Baba's doctrine "of a harmonious, multi-religious and multi-ethnic ] has the potential to counterbalance the appeal of ] chauvinists and ethnic separatists"<ref name="saicia">{{Cite news |last=Laskar |first=Rezaul |date=23 January 2017 |title=CIA files: 'Alleged miracle worker' Sathya Sai Baba could start world religion |url=https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/cia-thought-sai-baba-s-movement-would-become-a-worldwide-religion/story-HSkb4izaItHFlTkXS6cUBP.html |work=]}}</ref> Globally, the report concluded that the Sai Baba movement is likely to “become another worldwide religion”, via its current wealth and assets, social contributions and activity in the political domain, thus allowing expansion even after Sai Baba's death.<ref name="saicia"/><ref name="saioncia"/> Adding scope to the movement, the report addresses the claim that Sai Baba is the ] (the tenth Avatar of ]) who is to "create a new world of peace and justice", which the CIA operative compares to the return of ].<ref name="saicia"/><ref name="saioncia"/>

== Criticism ==
=== Accusations ===
Accusations<!-- Please do not change this wording, this has been agreed on the talk page. If you don't agree on it read the discussion there. --> against Sathya Sai Baba by his critics over the years have included ], ], ], ] in the performance of service projects, and ].<ref name="news.bbc.co.uk"/><ref name=Palmer116/>

In 1972, ] made the first public criticism of Sathya Sai Baba<ref name="srisathyasaibabaandthepress">Ruhela S.P., ''Sri Sathya Sai Baba and the Press'', pp. 1–5, 1997 {{ISBN|8175330414}}</ref> when he looked into a claim publicly narrated by one devotee<ref name="srisathyasaibabaandthepress" /> that Sai Baba had created a new model of a ] watch, and found the claim to be untrue.<ref name="sathyasaibabasgrace">Ruhela S.P., ''How to Receive Sri Sathya Sai Baba's Grace'', pp. 277, 2006 {{ISBN|8171820891}}</ref><ref name=OutlookSingh>{{Cite web|title=The Spell Breaker|url=http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?262445|publisher=Outlook|access-date=16 October 2013|author=Rahul Singh|date=2 November 2009}}</ref>

In April 1976, ], a ], ] and then ] of ], founded and chaired a committee "to rationally and scientifically investigate miracles and other verifiable superstitions". Narasimhaiah wrote Sai Baba three widely publicised letters challenging him to perform his miracles under controlled conditions. The letters were ignored.<ref name="haraldsson204">Haraldson, ''op. cit'', pp&nbsp;204–205</ref> Sathya Sai Baba said that he ignored Narasimhaiah's challenge because he felt that a scientific approach to spiritual issues was improper, adding that "Science must confine its inquiry only to things belonging to the human senses, while ] transcends the senses. If you want to understand the nature of spiritual power you can do so only through the path of spirituality and not science. What science has been able to unravel is merely a fraction of the cosmic phenomena..."<ref name="blitz">Interview given by Sai Baba to ] of ''Blitz'' news magazine in September 1976 </ref> Narasimhaiah's committee was dissolved in August 1977. Narasimhaiah held the fact that Sai Baba ignored his letters to be an indication that his miracles were fraudulent.<ref>Haraldsson, pp 209</ref> As a result of this episode, a ] raged for several months in Indian newspapers.<ref>Haraldsson, ''op. cit.'', pp. 206</ref>

Indian rationalist ], who began campaigning against Sathya Sai Baba in 1976, unsuccessfully attempted to sue him in 1986 for violations of the ], citing Sai Baba was "producing gold necklaces out of thin air without the permission of a Gold Control Administrator".<ref name=bbca1/> When the case was dismissed, Premanand unsuccessfully appealed on the grounds that claimed spiritual power is not a defence recognised in law.<ref name=bbca1>{{Cite news|author=Tanya Datta|title=Sai Baba: Goan or con man?|date=17 June 2004|publisher=] |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/this_world/3813469.stm | access-date=4 January 2010}}</ref>

In the early 1990s, the ] created a secret report that stated the Sai Baba movement is “likely to eventually become another worldwide religion”.<ref name="saicia"/><ref name="saioncia"/> The CIA operative who wrote the report concluded it by stating, “there is always the possibility, too, that the movement will collapse if Sai Baba is convincingly demonstrated to be a fraud.”<ref name="saicia"/><ref name="saioncia"/>

A 1995 TV documentary ''Guru Busters'', produced by filmmaker Robert Eagle for the UK's ], accused Sai Baba of faking his materialisations.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.eagletv.co.uk/projects/guru-busters.html |title=Eagle & Eagle |publisher=Eagletv.co.uk |access-date=7 January 2010}} </ref> The clip from the film was mentioned in the '']'', on 23 November 1992, in a front-page headline "DD Tape Unveils Baba Magic".<ref>Haraldsson, ''op. cit.'', pp.&nbsp;295–301</ref>

Claims of Sai Baba resurrecting American devotee Walter Cowan in 1971 have been discussed by British journalist Mick Brown in his book ''The Spiritual Tourist'' from 1998,<ref name="spiritualtourist">Mick Brown, ''The Spiritual Tourist'', 1998, Bloomsbury Publishing, {{ISBN|158234034X}} "In the House of God", pp.&nbsp;73–74</ref><ref>Hislop, John S. ''My Baba and I'' 1985 published by Birth Day Publishing Company, San Diego, California {{ISBN|0960095888}}, "The Resurrection of Walter Cowan", pages&nbsp;28–31</ref> and subsequently by ], who interviewed doctors attending Cowan at the hospital; these physicians reported that Cowan had been dangerously ill but had not died.<ref name="lane2014">{{Cite book |last1=Lane |first1=David |author1-link=David C. Lane |title=The Mystical: Exploring the Transcendent |date=2014 |publisher=Mt San Antonio College |isbn=978-1565431737 |pages=62–63}}</ref>

Brown also related his experiences with alleged manifestations of ] (sacred ash) from Sai Baba's pictures in houses in London, which he felt were not fraudulent or the result of trickery.<ref name="touristmiracle">Brown Mick, ''The Spiritual Tourist'', "The Miracle in North London", pp.&nbsp;29–30, 1998 {{ISBN|158234034X}}</ref> With regards to Sai Baba's claims of omniscience, Brown wrote, "sceptics have produced documentation clearly showing discrepancies between Baba's reading of historical events and biblical prophecies, and the established accounts."<ref name="spiritualtourist"/>

The '']'' in 2001 reported that Sai Baba told his adherents not to sign on to the internet,<ref name="VS">{{Cite web|url=https://vancouversun.com/news/staff-blogs/sai-baba-holy-man-sex-abuser-both|title=Sai Baba: Holy man? Sex abuser? Both?|date=26 April 2011|language=en|access-date=9 October 2019}}</ref> while encouraging them, rather, to surf the "inner net".<ref name="itallege">{{Cite news | title =Allegations of sexual molestation continue to dog Sai Baba| newspaper=]| date = 4 December 2000 | url=https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/cover-story/story/20001204-allegations-of-sexual-molestation-continue-to-dog-sai-baba-778528-2000-12-03|access-date =26 November 2012}}</ref>

===Allegations of abuse===
In January 2002, a documentary produced by Denmark's national television and radio broadcast company, ] (DR), called ''Seduced By Sai Baba'', analysed videos of public manifestations of Sai Baba and suggested that they could be explained as ].<ref name="seduced">{{Cite video|people=Øyvind Kyrø, Steen Jensen |title=Seduced by Sai Baba |medium=Documentary |publisher=] |date=2002 |url=http://dr.dk/Salg/DRsales/Programmes/Documentary/Society_and_Social/20070629133445_3_1_3_1_1_1_1_1_1_1_1_1_1_1.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100204010039/http://www.dr.dk/Salg/DRsales/Programmes/Documentary/Society_and_Social/20070629133445_3_1_3_1_1_1_1_1_1_1_1_1_1_1.htm |archive-date=4 February 2010 }}</ref> The documentary also presented interviews with Alaya Rahm, former devotee of Sathya Sai Baba, where he alleged abuse by Sathya Sai Baba.<ref name="news.bbc.co.uk"/> As a result, in 2002 the parliament of the United Kingdom discussed the danger to male children of British families intending to visit the ashram of Sathya Sai Baba in case of individual audiences with the guru.<ref> UK Parliament official web site</ref>

In 2004, the ] produced a documentary titled ''The Secret Swami'' as part of its series "The World Uncovered".<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/this_world/3791921.stm |title=Programmes &#124; This World &#124; Secret Swami |publisher=BBC News |date=11 June 2004 |access-date=7 January 2010}}</ref> One central theme of the BBC documentary was again Alaya Rahm's sexual abuse allegations against Sathya Sai Baba.<ref name=bbcd>{{Cite video|people=Eamon Hardy, Tanya Datta|title=Secret Swami|medium=Documentary|publisher=BBC News|date=2004 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/this_world/3791921.stm | access-date=4 January 2010}}</ref> This documentary interviewed him together with Mark Roche, who had spent 25 years of his life since 1969 in the movement and alleged abuse by Sai Baba.<ref name=bbcd/> The show also featured allegations from Sai Baba critic Basava Premanand. Premanand stated in the documentary that, in his opinion, Sai Baba faked his materializations.<ref name="news.bbc.co.uk"/>

===Posthumous Trust issues===

After Sai Baba's death, questions about the manner in which the finances of the organization were going to be managed led to speculations of impropriety, with reports stating that suitcases containing cash and/or gold had been removed from his personal lodgings.<ref name="dh" /><ref>{{Cite news| title =What's inside Sathya Sai's personal chamber?| publisher = ]|url =http://zeenews.india.com/news710182.html| date =2 June 2011| access-date =9 June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news| title =Trust hesitant on unlocking Sai Babas residence| author =Express News Service| publisher = ]| url =http://ibnlive.in.com/news/trust-hesitant-on-unlocking-sai-babas-residence/155644-60-114.html| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20110603112010/http://ibnlive.in.com/news/trust-hesitant-on-unlocking-sai-babas-residence/155644-60-114.html| url-status =dead| archive-date =3 June 2011|date =31 May 2011| access-date = 9 June 2011}}</ref>

On 17 June 2011, officials from the Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust opened his private residence in the presence of government, bank and tax department officials.<ref>Deccan Herald, Tuesday 17 June. 2011, "Huge amount of gold, silver, cash found in Sai Baba's Chamber" http://www.deccanherald.com/content/169535/huge-amount-gold-silver-cash.html.</ref> In the private residence, which had been sealed since his death, they inventoried 98&nbsp;kg of gold ornaments, approximate value Rs 21 ] (US$4.7m), 307&nbsp;kg of silver ornaments, approximate value Rs 16&nbsp;million (US$0.36m), and Rs 116&nbsp;million (US$2.6m) in cash. The cash was deposited into the Sai Trust's account at the State Bank of India with payment of government taxes (thus transferring them from religious gifts to Trust assets.) The gold and other items were inventoried, assessed, and placed in secure storage. In July, district authorities inventoried an additional Rs 7.7&nbsp;million (US$0.17m) in valuables in another 4 rooms.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Assets-worth-Rs77L-seized-at-Sai-ashram/articleshow/9081602.cms|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130928224408/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-07-03/india/29733031_1_satya-sai-baba-precious-metals-diamond-ring|url-status=live|archive-date=28 September 2013|newspaper=]|title=Assets worth Rs 77L seized at Sai ashram|date=3 July 2011}}</ref> The total value of these items is believed to exceed 7.8&nbsp;million US dollars.<ref name="hindustan times">{{Cite news|url=http://www.hindustantimes.com/Treasure-island-Sai-Baba-s-gold-trove/Article1-710596.aspx|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110618095123/http://www.hindustantimes.com/treasure-island-sai-baba-s-gold-trove/article1-710596.aspx|url-status=dead|archive-date=18 June 2011|title=Treasure island: Sai Baba's gold trove|date=17 June 2011|publisher=]}}</ref> Also inventoried at Yajurmandir were thousands of pure silk sarees, dhotis, shirts, 500 pairs of shoes, dozens of bottles of perfume and hairspray, watches, a large number of silver and gold "mangala sutrams", and precious stones such as diamonds. There were also 750 saffron and white robes of the type Sai Baba wore.<ref name="500 pairs">{{Cite news|url=http://www.telegraphindia.com/1110618/jsp/nation/story_14130452.jsp|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130203204543/http://www.telegraphindia.com/1110618/jsp/nation/story_14130452.jsp|url-status=dead|archive-date=3 February 2013|title=Open sesame! Baba & his chamber of secrets|author=G.S. Radhakrishna|date=17 June 2011|newspaper=]|location=Calcutta, India}} and </ref> In July 2011, a similar opening of his Bangalore-area ashram tallied 6&nbsp;kg of gold coins and jewellery, 245&nbsp;kg of silver articles and Rs 8&nbsp;million in cash. These items and goods are believed to have been donated over the years by Sai Baba's devotees from all over the world as religious gifts.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/Three-day-count-at-Babas-ashram-yields-treasure/articleshow/9305840.cms|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130815224317/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-07-21/bangalore/29798927_1_brindavan-revenue-officials-ashram|url-status=live|archive-date=15 August 2013|newspaper=]|title=Three-day count at Baba's ashram yields treasure|date=21 July 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.deccanherald.com/content/178661/perfumes-sarees-form-sai-babas.html,|title=Perfumes, sarees form Sai Baba's inventory|work=Deccan Herald}}</ref>

In 2012 Satyaji (Sai Baba's former personal attendant) came forward with a noterised signed, yet unknown, document from Sai Baba, dated from 1967 entailing Sai Baba had "no personal right on the multi-crore spiritual empire built by him". In the letter Sai Baba stated, "Whatever is given to me is under my management, supervision and control as a trustee to be used for public charitable purposes. This declaration I am making so that nobody can claim, under or through me, in the family properties if any."<ref name="saidocu">{{Cite news | title =45-year-old document adds new twist to Satya Sai Baba's empire| newspaper=] | date = 2 September 2012 | url=https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/45-year-old-document-adds-new-twist-to-satya-sai-babas-empire-115103-2012-09-02|access-date = 2 September 2012}}</ref> Reports stated that for some time Sai Baba's nephew, R.J. Ratnakar Raju was trying to gain control over the trust, whose assets and properties worth hundreds of millions of dollars, led to a conflict between him and the other trust members.
The ] however, never makes the intake or expenditure details of funds into the trust public.
"Nobody really knows who the members are in the trust and whether if; or any, changes are made at any point of time."<ref name="saidocu"/>

===Responses===
Sathya Sai Baba rejected any allegations of misconduct.<ref name=funeral/> During a speech in December 2000, he used the analogy of ] and ], saying, "in those days there was one Judas, but today there are thousands."<ref name="sai2000"/> Addressing the allegations, he said that out of jealousy, hate and fear, many devotees were being bought to speak against him, having been offered money to say nasty things.<ref name="sai2000">{{Cite news| date=26 December 2000 |title= Sai Baba lashes out at detractors |url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/sai-baba-lashes-out-at-detractors/articleshow/534425761.cms |newspaper=The Times of India}}</ref>

His followers have also defended him publicly and attested to what they believed to be his character. These include ],<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.the-week.com/25nov27/currentevents_article10.htm |title=Miracle of Welfare |access-date=9 September 2006 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060909111636/http://www.the-week.com/25nov27/currentevents_article10.htm |archive-date=9 September 2006 }}</ref> and Anil Kumar, former principal of the Sathya Sai Educational Institute.<ref name="divine">Brown, Mick (28 October 2000). "Divine Downfall". ''The Daily Telegraph''.</ref>

Gunnar Otis, professor of psychology, considered Sathya Sai Baba the only god-man he had
come across who appeared entirely genuine. Using superhigh-speed 16&nbsp;mm film and examining frame by frame (each frame being only a fraction of a second thus no possibility of 'hand being faster than eye'), showed "clearly a gap between Sai Baba's hand and the place the vibhuti poured from." Thus concluding that Sai Baba's materializations were not sleight of hand or trickery. Observing flashes of light during materializations, he hypothesized these were holes into other ] from which the objects appeared.<ref name="empiresoul">{{Cite book |last1=Roberts|first1=Paul|chapter=We Should Share Our Sex Energies|url=https://archive.org/details/empire-of-the-soul-some-journeys-in-india-by-paul-william-roberts|date=2002 |editor=RAINCOAST |title=Empire of the Soul - Journeys in India|pages=150–155 |publisher=Summersdale Publishers Ltd|isbn=1840241888}}</ref> Dr. Otis also used ] to photograph Sai Baba's ]. The pictures "showed a massive egg of pure gold light extending several feet all around Sai Baba’s physical form, sometimes shooting out to surround devotees. One picture taken during a darshan when Baba had stood still for longer than usual ... showed an aura that spread out in vast rays beyond the entire temple compound."<ref name="empiresoul"/>

In an open letter in December 2001, Prime Minister ],<ref name=Palmer97-98 /> Chief Justices ] and ], and Members of Parliament and ] said that they were "deeply pained and anguished by the wild, reckless and concocted allegations" against Sathya Sai Baba, and called him "an embodiment of love and selfless service to humanity".<ref name="letterpmindia"></ref>

In a 2015 article, writer ] said Sai Baba "definitely emanated ] and could perform extraordinary actions defying explanation. No matter what is said about him, I can only speak for myself, and I have never had any reason to doubt that he is what he said he is.”<ref name="pwrmg">{{Cite news | title =From Saddam Hussein to Christopher Hitchens, Paul William Roberts on the remarkable people he's encountered| newspaper=] | date = 29 August 2015 | url=https://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/from-saddam-hussein-to-christopher-hitchens-paul-william-roberts-on-the-remarkable-people-hes-encountered|access-date = 15 July 2020}}</ref>

==Publications and documentaries==

Sathya Sai Baba authored 15 books, known as "Vahinis" (river or stream), originally written in ] and translated into English by Prof. ].<ref> Vahinis</ref> His public discourses were collected and published into book form known as the "Sathya Sai Speaks" series. There are 42 volumes in total, beginning in 1953 and ending in 2010.<ref> Sathya Sai Speaks</ref> During the summer months (from 1972 until 2002), Sai Baba gave discourses to his students at the Brindavan university campus in ]. These were collected to create a 15 volume series known as the "Summer Showers" series.<ref> Summer Showers</ref>

There is a large known collection of Bhajans (spiritual songs) written and sung by Sai Baba as well as countless numbers of books about him written by devotees and critics.

Sathya Sai Baba has also been featured in various documentaries and films.

*1973 '''' by ]
*1974 '''' by ] who continued to make several documentaries about Sathya Sai Baba spanning from the 1970s until the 1990s.
*1975 '''' Narrated and hosted by ] of ] fame.<ref> The Man of Miracles: Sathya Sai Baba</ref>
*1975 ''''
*1990 '''' by Victor J. Tognola from ].<ref> Who Is Sai Baba?</ref>

===Popular culture===

In a 1995 X-Files episode, "]" (season 2, episode 21), during a conversation about vibhuti (sacred ash) Sai Baba's name is cited and mentioned. A fictious character, Dr. Burk elaborates, "In 1979, I witnessed a ] named Sai Baba create an entire feast out of thin air."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.generationterrorists.com/cgi-bin/x-files.cgi?ep=2x21|title=THE X-FILES The Calusari (2x21)|access-date=20 June 2024}}</ref>

==References==
{{reflist}}

==Further reading==
* {{Cite book|author=Samuel H. Sandweiss|title=Sai Baba the Holy Man and the Psychiatrist|isbn=978-0960095810|year=1975|page=|publisher=Birth Day Publishing Company |url=https://archive.org/details/saibabaholymanps0000sand/page/240}}
* {{Cite book|author=John S. Hislop|title=My Baba and I|isbn=978-0960095889|year=1985|publisher=Birth Day Publishing Company |url=https://archive.org/details/mybabai00hisl}}
* {{Cite book|author=Phyllis Krystal|title=Sai Baba: The Ultimate Experience|isbn=978-0877287940|year=1994|page=260|publisher=Red Wheel Weiser }}
* {{Cite book|author=Don Mario Mazzoleni|title=A Catholic Priest Meets Sai Baba|isbn=978-0962983511|year=1994|page=|publisher=Leela Press |url=https://archive.org/details/catholicpriestme00mazz/page/285}}
* {{Cite book|author=Erlendur Haraldsson|title=Modern Miracles: An Investigative Report on These Psychic Phenomena Associated With Sathya Sai Baba|isbn=978-0803893849|year=1997|page=|publisher=Hastings House |url=https://archive.org/details/modernmiracles00erle/page/315}}
* {{Cite book|author=Vladimir Antonov|title=Sathya Sai Baba – The Christ of Our Days|isbn=978-1438252766|year=2008|page=38|publisher=CreateSpace }}
* {{Cite book|author=Tommy S. W. Wong|title=How Sai Baba Attracts Without Direct Contact|isbn=978-1448604166|year=2009|page=108|publisher=T.S.W. Wong }}
* {{Cite book|author=Tulasi Srinivas|title=Winged Faith: Rethinking Globalization and Religious Pluralism Through the Sathya Sai Movement|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=978-0231149334|year=2010|page=430}}
* {{Cite book|author=David Smith|title="Hinduism" Religions in the Modern World: Traditions and Transformations|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0415858809|year=2016}}

==External links==
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Commons category}}
*
* {{Internet Archive author |sname=Sathya Sai Baba}}

{{Sathya Sai Baba}}
{{Hindu reform movements}}
{{Modern yoga gurus}}
{{Religious pluralism}}

{{Authority control}}


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Indian spiritual guru (1926–2011) "Sathyanarayana Raju" redirects here. For other uses, see Sathyanarayana Raju (disambiguation).

Sathya Sai Baba
Sathya Sai Baba
Personal life
BornRatnakaram Sathyanarayana Raju
(1926-11-23)23 November 1926
Puttaparthi, Madras Presidency, British India (present-day Andhra Pradesh, India)
Died24 April 2011(2011-04-24) (aged 84)
Puttaparthi, Andhra Pradesh, India
NationalityIndian
Signature
Religious life
ReligionHinduism
Institute
Founder ofSri Sathya Sai International Organization
Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust
PhilosophyLove All, Serve All. Help Ever, Hurt Never.
SectSathya Sai Baba movement
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Sathya Sai Baba (born Ratnakaram Sathyanarayana Raju; 23 November 1926 – 24 April 2011) was an Indian guru and philanthropist. At the age of 14, he said he was the reincarnation of Shirdi Sai Baba and left his home saying "my devotees are calling me, I have my work."

Sai Baba's believers have credited him with miracles such as materialisations of vibhuti (holy ash) and other small objects (rings, necklaces and watches), spontaneous and miraculous healings, resurrections, clairvoyance, bilocation as well as being omnipresent, omnipotent and omniscient. His devotees believe these to be signs of his divinity, while other individuals have asserted that these acts were based on sleight of hand or had other explanations and as such, were not supernatural.

In 1972, Sathya Sai Baba founded the Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust. Its goal was "to enable its members to undertake service activities as a means to spiritual advancement". Through this organisation, Sathya Sai Baba established a network of free general and super speciality hospitals, free medical clinics, drinking water projects, schools, universities, ashrams, auditoriums, and education technology.

By virtue of his sizeable influence, many feel Sai Baba provides an example of "the phenomenon referred to as mahagurus; that is, gurus with a global reach." Citing the number of Sai Centres (over 2000 in 137 countries), the scope of service and charitable works (free hospitals, drinking water projects), social sphere and influence of devotees (royalty, celebrities, high ranking politicians along with a total number of devotees estimated to be from 6 to 100 million worldwide) as well as being seen as a global "movement extending in some very surprising ways."

Biography

Early life

Sathyanarayana Raju was born on 23 November 1926 to Namagiriamma (Easwaramma) and Peddavenkama Raju Ratnakaram, to a Telugu-speaking Bhatraju family, a community of religious musicians and balladeers, in the village of Puttaparthi in Madras Presidency of British India (present-day Andhra Pradesh, India). His birth was purported by his mother Easwaramma to be of a miraculous conception. He was the fourth among the five children of his parents.

Sathya Sai Baba's siblings included elder brother Ratnakaram Seshama Raju (1911–1985), elder sisters Venkamma (1918–1993) and Parvathamma (1920–1998), and younger brother Janakiramaiah (1931–2003).

As a child, Sathya was described as "unusually intelligent" and charitable, though not necessarily academically inclined, as his interests were of a more spiritual nature. He was uncommonly talented in devotional music, dance and drama. From a young age, he has been purported to have been capable of materialising objects such as food and sweets out of thin air.

Proclamation

Sathya Sai Baba at the age of 14, soon after proclaiming he was the reincarnation of Shirdi Sai Baba

Almost everything known about Sathya Sai Baba's early life stems from the hagiography that grew around him; these were narratives that hold special meaning to his devotees and are considered by them to be evidence of his divine nature.

According to these sources, on 8 March 1940, while living with his elder brother Seshama Raju in Uravakonda (a small town near Puttaparthi) 14-year-old Sathya was stung by a scorpion. He lost consciousness for several hours and in the next few days underwent a noticeable change in behaviour. There were "symptoms of laughing and weeping, eloquence and silence." It is claimed that then "he began to sing Sanskrit verses, a language of which it is alleged he had no prior knowledge." Doctors concluded his behaviour to be hysteria. Concerned, his parents brought Sathya back home to Puttaparthi and took him to many priests, doctors and exorcists. One of the exorcists at Kadiri, a town near Puttaparthi, went to the extent of torturing him with the aim of curing him. Having shaved Raju’s head, he cut three crosses on his skull, then poured acid into the wounds. At this point, his parents called a stop to it.

On 23 May 1940, Sathya called household members and reportedly materialised sugar candy (prasad) and flowers for them. His father became furious at seeing this, thinking his son was bewitched. He took a stick and threatened to beat him if Sathya did not reveal who he really was, the young Sathya responded calmly and firmly "I am Sai Baba", a reference to Sai Baba of Shirdi. This was the first time he proclaimed himself to be the reincarnation of Sai Baba of Shirdi – a saint who became famous in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in Maharashtra and had died eight years before Sathya was born. It was then he came to be known as 'Sathya Sai Baba'.

Several months later Sai Baba, on 20 October 1940, told his parents that he had "come to this world with a mission to re-establish the principle of Righteousness (Dharma), to motivate love for God and service to fellow man." Further elaborating in a letter (dated 25 May 1947) to his older brother Seshma, he stated "I have a task to foster all mankind and ensure for all of them lives full of bliss. I have a vow to lead all who stray away from the straight path, again into goodness and save them... to remove the sufferings of the poor and grant them what they lack." Personally stating, "I do not belong to any place. I am not attached to any name. I have no ‘mine’ or ‘thine’."

First mandir and development of Puttaparthi

Puttaparthi, A.P.

In 1944, a mandir for Sai Baba's devotees was built near the village of Puttaparthi. It is now referred to as the "old mandir". The construction of Prasanthi Nilayam, the current ashram, began in 1948 and was completed in 1950. In 1954, Sai Baba established a small free general hospital in the village of Puttaparthi. He won fame for his reputed mystical powers and ability to heal. In 1957, Sai Baba went on a tour of North India, visiting temples in Delhi, Srinagar, Kashmir and Rishikesh.

Stroke, prediction of reincarnation and sole foreign tour

In 1963, it was asserted that Sai Baba suffered a stroke and four severe heart attacks, which left him paralysed on one side. These events culminated in an event where he apparently healed himself in front of the thousands of people gathered in Prashanthi Nilayam who were then praying for his recovery.

On recovering, Sai Baba stated, "I am Shiva-Sakthi, born in the gotra (lineage) of Bharadwaja, according to a boon won by that sage from Siva and Sakthi. Siva was born in the gotra of that sage as Sai Baba of Shirdi; Shiva and Sakthi have incarnated as Myself in his gotra now; Sakthi alone will incarnate as the third Sai (Prema Sai Baba) in the same gotra in Mandya district of Karnataka State." He stated he would be born again eight years after his death at the age of 96, but died at the age of 84.

On 29 June 1968 Sai Baba began his only overseas trip to Kenya and Uganda, returning to India on 15 July 1968.

Later years

In 1968, he established Dharmakshetra or the Sathyam Mandir in Mumbai. In 1973, he established the Shivam Mandir in Hyderabad.

He inaugurated the Sundaram, a new ashram and temple in Chennai on 19 January 1981.

On 6 June 1993 there was an assassination attempt on Sai Baba's life. While reports vary, the official narrative is that four men (devotees) entered Sai Baba's residence under the premise of wanting to give him a telegram. When their path was obstructed, they stabbed two of the Baba's assistants to death, injuring two others. Hearing the commotion Sai Baba sounded the alarm and police were dispatched to his residence. Upon arriving, the police report stated the four youths had locked themselves in Sai Baba's living room and the officers tried to break the door down. "The four were shot when they opened the door and attacked the police." Sai Baba remained unharmed during the incident, and later in a discourse cleared things up saying there was no bid on his life. Many aspects of the event remain unsolved and ambiguous.

Another concern for Sai Baba's immediate safety arose on 17 January 2002 when an unknown man (later identified as Somasundaram) entered the Whitefield Ashram with an air pistol. He was apprehended by volunteers and handed over to police without incident.

In March 1995, Sai Baba started a project to provide drinking water to 1.2 million people in the drought-prone Rayalaseema region in the Anantapur district of Andhra Pradesh. In April 1999 he inaugurated the Ananda Nilayam Mandir in Madurai, Tamil Nadu.

In 2001 he established another free super-speciality hospital in Bangalore to benefit the poor.

Old age, illness and death

In 2003, Sai Baba suffered a fractured hip when a student standing on an iron stool slipped and the boy and stool both fell on him. After the incident he gave darshana from a car or his porte chair. After 2004, Sai Baba used a wheelchair and slowly began to make fewer public appearances.

On 28 March 2011, Sai Baba was admitted to the Sri Sathya Sai Super Speciality Hospital in Puttaparthi after he complained of giddiness and slowing of the heartbeat. Initially his condition improved and on 4 April it was reported all his vital parameters were near normal, however over the course of the following weeks, multiple organ failure set in and his condition progressively deteriorated. He died on Sunday, 24 April at 7:40 IST, aged 84.

Sai Baba had predicted that he would die at age 96 and would remain healthy until then. After he died, some devotees suggested that he was referring to that many lunar years, as counted by Telugu-speaking Hindus, rather than solar years, and using the Indian way of accounting for age, which counts the year to come as part of the person's life. Other devotees have spoken of his anticipated resurrection, reincarnation or awakening.

Funeral and mourning

Sathya Sai Baba's body lay in state for two days and was buried with full state honours on 27 April 2011. An estimated 500,000 people attended the burial. Political leaders and prominent figures attending included then Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi (who later became Prime Minister of India), cricketer Sachin Tendulkar and Union Ministers S. M. Krishna and Ambika Soni.

Political leaders who offered their condolences included the then Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, then Nepali Prime Minister Jhala Nath Khanal and Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa. Cricketer Sachin Tendulkar, whose birthday was that day, cancelled his birthday celebrations. The Hindu newspaper reported that "Sai Baba's phenomenal mass appeal lay in his unswerving commitment to communal harmony, his encouragement of charitable activity and public-spiritedness, and his own example in building educational and health care institutions that focused on meeting basic needs on a large scale."

Sri Sathya Sai Baba Mahasamadhi at Prasanthi Nilayam

Many spiritual figures expressed their sentiments at Sai Baba's passing. Mata Amritanandamayi said, "Sri Sathya Sai Baba was the one who opened the path of love and compassion to millions of his devotees. Sathya Sai Baba’s life was his message.”

Ravi Shankar, Founder of the Art of Living, issued this statement. "Baba will continue to live in the hearts of millions of devotees... his message of 'Satya Dharma Shanti Prema' which has transcended all barriers of caste and religion."

The Dalai Lama expressed shock over the demise of Sathya Sai Baba. In a message he said, “I am saddened by the passing away of Sri Sathya Sai Baba, the respected spiritual leader. I would like to convey my condolences and prayers to all the followers, devotees and admirers of the late spiritual leader."

The Government of Karnataka declared 25 and 26 April as days of mourning. The state government of Andhra Pradesh (where Prasanthi Nilayam is located) announced a four-day State Mourning period and decided to honour Sai Baba with a State Funeral.

Anomalies and possible unnatural death

From the time Sai Baba was admitted to hospital on 28 March, questions and allegations arose about his care and subsequently the role of his personal aide, Satyajit Salian. Police sources said, "Satyajit did not feed Sai Baba proper food and gave him lot of sedative drugs, resulting in the deterioration of the latter’s health, leading up to Sai Baba's death." Doctors from the Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, who treated Sai Baba, neither confirmed nor denied that sedative drugs were given to him prior to his admission to the hospital following respiratory problems. Later assessment from doctors noted lack of food had led to muscular weakness. Citing death threats and possible harm to his well being from within the ashram community (after being one of two trust members allowed to sign checks from a multi billion dollar account), as well as from outside, a senior police officer said Sathyajit was provided police protection.

On 10 April, direct relatives expressed wonder as to why they were kept in the dark and knew nothing about Sai Baba's state of health. "It is almost two months since Baba stopped taking food we were not told about it." Family members said they were livid about the secrecy around Sai Baba's health and medical treatments and as to why the trust was not allowing anyone direct contact with him except for Sathyajit, his personal attendant. They only saw him from a distance in the ICU on April 2 after raising a furore. It was on 28 March, when Sai Baba complained of giddiness and slowing of the heartbeat that he was taken to hospital.

On 21 April, the Deccan Herald reported an allegation stating Sathya Sai Baba had died 20 days prior and that his death was not being announced in order to get money from Indian and foreign devotees.

On 28 April 2011, four days after the passing of Sai Baba, The Times of India printed a story questioning the time of Sai Baba's death. A firm making freezer boxes claimed the one in which Sai Baba was kept was ordered on 4 April, partial payment was also made at that time. The freezer box arrived in Puttaparthi on 5 April. Sai Baba was admitted to hospital on 28 March but his condition had officially worsened on 15 April. "The order was placed by Rajendranath Reddy of Bangalore according to sources, the powerful Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust had a role in ordering the freezer box." According to Lakshmi, the owner of Kumar and Co International (freezer box) company, her colleague Ganesh called Rajendranath to confirm the purchase for Sai Baba. "He confirmed the same and told Ganesh not to discuss the matter with anyone."

Within two months of Sai Baba's death, Chetana Raju, his niece alleged that she was facing death threats from some trust members.

In 2015, Ganapathy Raju, Sathya Sai Baba's first cousin alleged that Sai Baba was murdered. He believes Satya Sai passed away on 29 March and not as officially declared on 24 April 2011. Elaborating, "Baba was a victim of a well planned conspiracy and pre-planned hi tech murder" (adding) that the trust members had ordered a glass coffin and two truckloads of flowers even when Baba was unwell." Ganapathy also alleged that trust members were behind silencing the real date of Sai Baba's death in order to buy time to "usurp the huge wealth of the trust fund" asserting that properties worth hundreds of millions of dollars have "changed hands". Dr Aiyar, Sai Baba's personal physician, was heavily criticized for not maintaining any medical records of Sai Baba.

Ganapathy Raju's main ideas of interest laid with the medical treatment and drugs given to Sai Baba, primarily by Satyajit Salian. Prof Shyam Sunder, who had been involved with Prasanthi Nilayam since 1968, also raised concerns about harassment and exploitation from Satyajit as numerous allegations by devotees and workers in Prasanthi Nilayam arose saying Satyajit would intimidate and physically abuse them. Like Ganapathy, Sunder also alleged that "Satyajit and his associates had been administering sleeping pills to Sai Baba for over six years. Though Sai Baba resisted the pills after his return from Brindavan at Whitefield, Bangalore, in 2006, he was forced to take them... and within a few months, Baba became sluggish and weak." Satyajit also controlled if and when the doctors would see Sai Baba, and within two days of Sai Baba's passing, The Times of India reported that Satyajit (who was a paid employee of the ashram and "had no say whatsoever in the trust affairs or activities,") was given authority to sign checks from the multi billion dollar trust account.

Beliefs and practices of devotees

Main article: Sathya Sai Baba movement

Sai Baba was known for the quotes, in reference to his universal message, "Love All, Serve All" and "Help Ever, Hurt Never." In Prashanti Nilayam, his devotees believed in seeking the spiritual benefit of Sai Baba's darshan, scheduled for morning and afternoon each day, as a form of devotion. Sai Baba would interact with people, accept letters or call groups and individuals for interviews. Devotees considered it a great privilege to have an interview and sometimes a single person, group or family was invited for a private interview so they could ask for answers to spiritual questions or for general guidance.

Internationally, his devotees gather daily, or weekly on Sundays or Thursdays or both, for satsangs, spiritual discourses and devotional songs, prayer, spiritual meditation, service to the community (Seva), and to participate in "Education in Human Values" (SSEHV) known as "Bal Vikas" (Blossoming of the Child).

Devotees still receive Sai Baba's Divya Darshan at his Mahasamadhi shrine, a white marble edifice decorated with flowers, in Sai Kulwant Hall (Prasanthi Nilayam), where he was laid to rest.

Sai Baba was a lacto-vegetarian for spiritual as well as moral reasons and his followers have adopted the diet. He stated that "meat eating fosters animal qualities in man making him descend to the demoniac level; it is a heart-rending sight to see cows being slaughtered to serve as food for man." Sai Baba and many devotees have heavily criticised factory farming as unethical.

Ashrams and mandirs

Prasanthi Nilayam (Abode of Highest Peace)

Main article: Prasanthi Nilayam
Chaitanya Jyoti Museum devoted to the life and teachings of Sathya Sai Baba

Puttaparthi, where Sai Baba was born and lived, was originally a small, remote South Indian village in Andhra Pradesh. It was here that Prasanthi Nilayam (Abode of Highest Peace) was established. After 2 years of construction it was inaugurated on 23 November 1950, Sai Baba's 25th birthday. It succeeded the "old mandir" which was created in 1944. Prasanthi Nilayam is painted blue, yellow, and pink "communicating the message of the harmony of spirit, intellect, and heart respectively; for blue stands for spirit, yellow for intellect, and pink for heart (love). The rich harmony of the three does result in Santi (peace) and Prasanti (supreme peace); and that really is the message of the Prasanthi Mandir." In 1954 a free general hospital was constructed in Puttaparthi and soon after a medical hospital was constructed in 1957 inside the ashram.

Poornachandra Auditorium was built in 1973. Seating around 15,000 people in its enclosed 60 x 40-metre area, it is where cultural programmes (plays/dance/music), conferences and yagnas during Dasara take place. Sathya Sai Baba's living quarters were upstairs above the stage area.

Sai Kulwant Hall was inaugurated by Sathya Sai Baba on July 9, 1995. The hall can accommodate up to 20,000 people and it was here that Sai Baba gave darshan everyday from that time forward. Sai Kulwant Hall is where Sai Baba was laid to rest. A white marble edifice stands as his Mahasamadhi shrine and devotees still have his Divya darshan here daily.

The ashram itself houses a shopping centre, book stores, library and reading room, multiple accommodations such as dormitories and rooms, banking/ATM facilities, media and Radio Sai facilities, a bakery, emergency medical services and three food courts – North and South Indian as well as Western canteens.

Hill View Stadium in Prashanthi Nilayam with statues of Hanuman, Krishna, Shirdi Sai Baba, Shiva, Buddha, Christ, Zarathustra

In the encompassing area around Puttaparthi there is an extensive university complex, a specialty hospital, and two museums: the Sanathana Samskruti or Eternal Heritage Museum, sometimes called the Museum of All Religions, and the Chaitanya Jyoti, devoted exclusively to the life and teachings of Sai Baba; the latter has won several international awards for its architectural design. There is also a planetarium, a railway station, a hill-view stadium, an administrative building, an airport, an indoor sports stadium and more. High-ranking Indian politicians such as the former president A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Andhra Pradesh former chief minister Konijeti Rosaiah and Karnataka chief minister B. S. Yediyurappa have been official guests at the ashram in Puttaparthi.

Brindavan Ashram

Established on 25 June 1960, the Brindavan Ashram is located in Kadugodi, a village close to Whitefield and 24 kms from the city centre of Bangalore, Karnataka. It occupies around 50 acres of land and was known as the summer home of Sai Baba as he would spend about three months here every year. Notable features are Sai Ramesh Krishan Hall, where darshan and bhajans were held, Trayee Brindavan, Sai Baba's personal residence and the Brindavan Campus of the Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Learning. In its adjacent areas are the Sri Sathya Sai General and Super Specialty Hospital (Whitefield), Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Sai Central Trust and an old age home, Sri Sathya Sai Vriddhashram. All services at the hospitals are still free.

Sai Shruti Ashram

Located in Kodaikanal, atop the Palani Hills in south Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Sai Shruti ashram was often visited by Sai Baba for a few days in the months of April and May. It holds no accommodations or extra curricular facilities.

Sai Baba resided much of the time in his main ashram, Prasanthi Nilayam, at Puttaparthi. In the summer he often left for Brindavan, in Kadugodi, Whitefield, a town on the outskirts of Bangalore. Occasionally he visited his Sai Sruthi ashram in Kodaikanal.

Recognition

A 1999 stamp devoted to the Sri Sathya Sai Water Supply Project

On 23 November 1999, the Department of Posts, Government of India, released a postage stamp and a postal cover in recognition of the service rendered by Sai Baba in addressing the problem of providing safe drinking water to the rural masses. Another commemorative stamp was released on the occasion of what would have been his 88th birthday during November 2013.

In January 2007, an event was held in Chennai Nehru Stadium organised by the Chennai Citizens' Conclave to thank Sai Baba for the 2 billion water project which brought water from the River Krishna in Andhra Pradesh to Chennai city. Four chief ministers attended the function.

Sathya Sai International Organization

Main article: Sri Sathya Sai International Organization
Sathya Sai Baba on a 2013 stamp of India

The Sri Sathya Sai International Organization was founded in the 1960s by Sathya Sai Baba. Initially called the "Sri Sathya Sai Seva Samithi", it was established "to enable its members to undertake service activities as a means to spiritual advancement." In 2020, Sri Satya Sai Central Trust was granted Special Consultative status by the United Nations Economic and Social Council.

The Sathya Sai International Organization reports that there are an estimated 1,200 Sathya Sai Baba Centres in 114 countries. However, the number of active Sai Baba followers is hard to determine. Estimates vary from 6 million up to nearly 100 million. In India itself, Sai Baba drew followers predominantly from the upper-middle-class, the urban sections of society who have the "most wealth, education and exposure to Western ideas." In 2002, he said he had followers in 178 countries.

Sathya Sai Baba founded a large number of schools and colleges, hospitals, and other charitable institutions in India and abroad, the net financial capital of which is usually estimated at ₹ 400 billion (US$9 billion). However, estimates as high as ₹ 1.4 trillion (about US$31.5bn) have also been made.

Time line of developments, schools, projects and charities

In 1950 Prasanthi Nilayam, his Puttaparthi ashram completed construction and with in 4 years, a general hospital in Puttaparthi was established (1954). Over a decade later in 1968 the first education project, a college for girls was set up in Anantapur. The Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust, a charitable trust that undertakes social welfare projects and acts as an umbrella for many seva projects was begun in 1972. In 1976 another general hospital in Whitefield, outside of Bangalore was completed followed by a boys' college in Puttaparthi in 1978. The inauguration of the Sri Sathya Sai University (Puttaparthi campus), happened on 22 November 1981.

In 1991, Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences was completed.

The Anantapur drinking water project launched in 1995 would be the first of many water projects taken up by Sai Baba, others included the Medak & Mahabubnagar drinking water projects (2001), the Chennai water project in 2002 and the East & West Godavari water projects completed in 2007. A decade later, another Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences began operations in Bangalore along with the Sri Sathya Sai Super Specialty Hospital in Whitefield, offering free medical services. In 2009 the construction of Sri Sathya Sai University campus began.

Years after Sai Baba's passing, Vivek Kumar wrote, "the things that he executed were out of his love towards humanity. He provided free education, healthcare and water to people who never even dreamt of getting it."

Classification of organisation

Sources often describe Sai Baba's following as a "movement". Sathya Sai Baba claimed to be the reincarnation of Sai Baba of Shirdi whose followers considered to be an avatar of Shiva. While Sai Baba of Shirdi was known to combine Islamic and Hindu teachings, Charles S. J. White, of The American University at Washington D.C., observed in 1972 that with Sathya Sai Baba, "there is no discernible Muslim influence." Stephanie Tallings, in The Harvard international Review, noted Sai Baba's following is drawn from people of all religions, ethnicities, and social classes. In contrast, Sai Baba's following is also regarded by many scholars to be of a Hindu persuasion.

Lawrence A. Babb, of the Amherst College in Massachusetts, labelled Sai Baba movement as a cult in the 1980s, calling it "deeply and authentically Hindu..." and noted, "The most striking feature of this cult, however, is the extremely strong emphasis given to the miraculous." However, a scholarly review says Babb misapplies the word "cult", responding, "the so-called 'cult' of Satya Sai Baba seems to possess all such characteristics which are, according to the author, central to a religious movement." Deborah A. Swallow, of the University of Cambridge, referred to it as a cult and said that the "ritual and theology, then, unlike Sai Baba 's, is distinctly Hindu in form and content." However John D. Kelly, a professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago, wrote about Hindu missions in Fiji that the Sathya Sai Organization (which is part of the movement) rejected the label Hindu. According to Kelly, they see their founder as the "living synthesis of the world's religious traditions" and prefer to be classified as an interfaith movement. He observed that the Sai Baba mission is a Hindu mission that is as active as Christian or Muslim missions. In a 2001 scholarly book, Tulasi Srinivas notes, "The Sathya Sai global civil religious movement incorporates Hindu and Muslim practices, Buddhist, Christian, and Zoroastrian influences, and "New Age"-style rituals and beliefs.' And in the appendix of the book (p. 349) lists 10 scholarly authors/researchers in both Europe and America who all refer to it as a New Religious Movement (NRM).

While scholars often refer to it as either a "New Religious Movement" (NRM) or as a cult, it has been noted by Eugene Gallagher, a noted professor of religious studies, that in more modern times "'New Religious Movement', is the classification preferred by most academics, who see 'cult' as a pejorative term.

A secret report from the Central Intelligence Agency from the 1990s stated a "worldwide mass religious movement" was emerging around Sathya Sai Baba, who many devotees viewed as a full incarnation of God. On a local scale, the report states that the extensive appeal of Sai Baba's doctrine "of a harmonious, multi-religious and multi-ethnic India has the potential to counterbalance the appeal of Hindu chauvinists and ethnic separatists" Globally, the report concluded that the Sai Baba movement is likely to “become another worldwide religion”, via its current wealth and assets, social contributions and activity in the political domain, thus allowing expansion even after Sai Baba's death. Adding scope to the movement, the report addresses the claim that Sai Baba is the Kalki Avatar (the tenth Avatar of Vishnu) who is to "create a new world of peace and justice", which the CIA operative compares to the return of Jesus Christ.

Criticism

Accusations

Accusations against Sathya Sai Baba by his critics over the years have included sleight of hand, sexual abuse, money laundering, fraud in the performance of service projects, and murder.

In 1972, Abraham Kovoor made the first public criticism of Sathya Sai Baba when he looked into a claim publicly narrated by one devotee that Sai Baba had created a new model of a Seiko watch, and found the claim to be untrue.

In April 1976, Hossur Narasimhaiah, a physicist, rationalist and then vice-chancellor of Bangalore University, founded and chaired a committee "to rationally and scientifically investigate miracles and other verifiable superstitions". Narasimhaiah wrote Sai Baba three widely publicised letters challenging him to perform his miracles under controlled conditions. The letters were ignored. Sathya Sai Baba said that he ignored Narasimhaiah's challenge because he felt that a scientific approach to spiritual issues was improper, adding that "Science must confine its inquiry only to things belonging to the human senses, while spiritualism transcends the senses. If you want to understand the nature of spiritual power you can do so only through the path of spirituality and not science. What science has been able to unravel is merely a fraction of the cosmic phenomena..." Narasimhaiah's committee was dissolved in August 1977. Narasimhaiah held the fact that Sai Baba ignored his letters to be an indication that his miracles were fraudulent. As a result of this episode, a public debate raged for several months in Indian newspapers.

Indian rationalist Basava Premanand, who began campaigning against Sathya Sai Baba in 1976, unsuccessfully attempted to sue him in 1986 for violations of the Gold Control Act, citing Sai Baba was "producing gold necklaces out of thin air without the permission of a Gold Control Administrator". When the case was dismissed, Premanand unsuccessfully appealed on the grounds that claimed spiritual power is not a defence recognised in law.

In the early 1990s, the Central Intelligence Agency created a secret report that stated the Sai Baba movement is “likely to eventually become another worldwide religion”. The CIA operative who wrote the report concluded it by stating, “there is always the possibility, too, that the movement will collapse if Sai Baba is convincingly demonstrated to be a fraud.”

A 1995 TV documentary Guru Busters, produced by filmmaker Robert Eagle for the UK's Channel 4, accused Sai Baba of faking his materialisations. The clip from the film was mentioned in the Deccan Chronicle, on 23 November 1992, in a front-page headline "DD Tape Unveils Baba Magic".

Claims of Sai Baba resurrecting American devotee Walter Cowan in 1971 have been discussed by British journalist Mick Brown in his book The Spiritual Tourist from 1998, and subsequently by Erlendur Haraldsson, who interviewed doctors attending Cowan at the hospital; these physicians reported that Cowan had been dangerously ill but had not died.

Brown also related his experiences with alleged manifestations of vibhuti (sacred ash) from Sai Baba's pictures in houses in London, which he felt were not fraudulent or the result of trickery. With regards to Sai Baba's claims of omniscience, Brown wrote, "sceptics have produced documentation clearly showing discrepancies between Baba's reading of historical events and biblical prophecies, and the established accounts."

The Vancouver Sun in 2001 reported that Sai Baba told his adherents not to sign on to the internet, while encouraging them, rather, to surf the "inner net".

Allegations of abuse

In January 2002, a documentary produced by Denmark's national television and radio broadcast company, Danmarks Radio (DR), called Seduced By Sai Baba, analysed videos of public manifestations of Sai Baba and suggested that they could be explained as sleight of hand. The documentary also presented interviews with Alaya Rahm, former devotee of Sathya Sai Baba, where he alleged abuse by Sathya Sai Baba. As a result, in 2002 the parliament of the United Kingdom discussed the danger to male children of British families intending to visit the ashram of Sathya Sai Baba in case of individual audiences with the guru.

In 2004, the BBC produced a documentary titled The Secret Swami as part of its series "The World Uncovered". One central theme of the BBC documentary was again Alaya Rahm's sexual abuse allegations against Sathya Sai Baba. This documentary interviewed him together with Mark Roche, who had spent 25 years of his life since 1969 in the movement and alleged abuse by Sai Baba. The show also featured allegations from Sai Baba critic Basava Premanand. Premanand stated in the documentary that, in his opinion, Sai Baba faked his materializations.

Posthumous Trust issues

After Sai Baba's death, questions about the manner in which the finances of the organization were going to be managed led to speculations of impropriety, with reports stating that suitcases containing cash and/or gold had been removed from his personal lodgings.

On 17 June 2011, officials from the Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust opened his private residence in the presence of government, bank and tax department officials. In the private residence, which had been sealed since his death, they inventoried 98 kg of gold ornaments, approximate value Rs 21 crores (US$4.7m), 307 kg of silver ornaments, approximate value Rs 16 million (US$0.36m), and Rs 116 million (US$2.6m) in cash. The cash was deposited into the Sai Trust's account at the State Bank of India with payment of government taxes (thus transferring them from religious gifts to Trust assets.) The gold and other items were inventoried, assessed, and placed in secure storage. In July, district authorities inventoried an additional Rs 7.7 million (US$0.17m) in valuables in another 4 rooms. The total value of these items is believed to exceed 7.8 million US dollars. Also inventoried at Yajurmandir were thousands of pure silk sarees, dhotis, shirts, 500 pairs of shoes, dozens of bottles of perfume and hairspray, watches, a large number of silver and gold "mangala sutrams", and precious stones such as diamonds. There were also 750 saffron and white robes of the type Sai Baba wore. In July 2011, a similar opening of his Bangalore-area ashram tallied 6 kg of gold coins and jewellery, 245 kg of silver articles and Rs 8 million in cash. These items and goods are believed to have been donated over the years by Sai Baba's devotees from all over the world as religious gifts.

In 2012 Satyaji (Sai Baba's former personal attendant) came forward with a noterised signed, yet unknown, document from Sai Baba, dated from 1967 entailing Sai Baba had "no personal right on the multi-crore spiritual empire built by him". In the letter Sai Baba stated, "Whatever is given to me is under my management, supervision and control as a trustee to be used for public charitable purposes. This declaration I am making so that nobody can claim, under or through me, in the family properties if any." Reports stated that for some time Sai Baba's nephew, R.J. Ratnakar Raju was trying to gain control over the trust, whose assets and properties worth hundreds of millions of dollars, led to a conflict between him and the other trust members. The Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust however, never makes the intake or expenditure details of funds into the trust public. "Nobody really knows who the members are in the trust and whether if; or any, changes are made at any point of time."

Responses

Sathya Sai Baba rejected any allegations of misconduct. During a speech in December 2000, he used the analogy of Jesus Christ and Judas Iscariot, saying, "in those days there was one Judas, but today there are thousands." Addressing the allegations, he said that out of jealousy, hate and fear, many devotees were being bought to speak against him, having been offered money to say nasty things.

His followers have also defended him publicly and attested to what they believed to be his character. These include Bill Aitken, and Anil Kumar, former principal of the Sathya Sai Educational Institute.

Gunnar Otis, professor of psychology, considered Sathya Sai Baba the only god-man he had come across who appeared entirely genuine. Using superhigh-speed 16 mm film and examining frame by frame (each frame being only a fraction of a second thus no possibility of 'hand being faster than eye'), showed "clearly a gap between Sai Baba's hand and the place the vibhuti poured from." Thus concluding that Sai Baba's materializations were not sleight of hand or trickery. Observing flashes of light during materializations, he hypothesized these were holes into other dimensions from which the objects appeared. Dr. Otis also used kirlian photography to photograph Sai Baba's aura. The pictures "showed a massive egg of pure gold light extending several feet all around Sai Baba’s physical form, sometimes shooting out to surround devotees. One picture taken during a darshan when Baba had stood still for longer than usual ... showed an aura that spread out in vast rays beyond the entire temple compound."

In an open letter in December 2001, Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Chief Justices P. N. Bhagwati and Ranganath Misra, and Members of Parliament and Najma Heptulla said that they were "deeply pained and anguished by the wild, reckless and concocted allegations" against Sathya Sai Baba, and called him "an embodiment of love and selfless service to humanity".

In a 2015 article, writer Paul William Roberts said Sai Baba "definitely emanated love and could perform extraordinary actions defying explanation. No matter what is said about him, I can only speak for myself, and I have never had any reason to doubt that he is what he said he is.”

Publications and documentaries

Sathya Sai Baba authored 15 books, known as "Vahinis" (river or stream), originally written in Telugu and translated into English by Prof. Narayana Kasturi. His public discourses were collected and published into book form known as the "Sathya Sai Speaks" series. There are 42 volumes in total, beginning in 1953 and ending in 2010. During the summer months (from 1972 until 2002), Sai Baba gave discourses to his students at the Brindavan university campus in Whitefield. These were collected to create a 15 volume series known as the "Summer Showers" series.

There is a large known collection of Bhajans (spiritual songs) written and sung by Sai Baba as well as countless numbers of books about him written by devotees and critics.

Sathya Sai Baba has also been featured in various documentaries and films.

Popular culture

In a 1995 X-Files episode, "The Calusari" (season 2, episode 21), during a conversation about vibhuti (sacred ash) Sai Baba's name is cited and mentioned. A fictious character, Dr. Burk elaborates, "In 1979, I witnessed a guru named Sai Baba create an entire feast out of thin air."

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