Talk:Mirra Alfassa/Archive 1

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Serious New Age

Do you take this New Age crab serious?

do you take sceptical materialism seriously? Or naive naturalism? Or do you only allow socially acceptable established religions such as a belief in an external Judeo-Christian deity? Why should one culturally conditioned point of view be favoured over another?
What I'm trying to point out is that everyone has a bias, no-one is immune. M Alan Kazlev 00:13, 28 Mar 2005 (UTC)
This thing still is heavily POV. Rlquall 21:50, 8 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Biased text removal

OK, I know I'm about to get hit here big time, but this article had a near-complete off-the-scale bias problem and was non-encyclopedic in almost every respect. Much of it read like a religious text and appeared to be stated in a proselytizing voice.

Although I didnt find it that way, I do agree that at various points the wording could be changed, so that instead of things just baldly stated, it might be worded as "in her biography (Author, Date)" and "her followers claim" and "in The Agenda volume such and such (reference here) she speaks of", but once we allow that the content of the essay faithfully reproduces Mirra's life and teachings

I'm not against an article on this subject per se, but it has to at least make some attempt at being neutral in the discussion of its topic. It's either that, or a big NPOV tag and a CiteSources as well.

I absolutely agree (as I indicated above) that sources should be cited. How about I have a go at restoring this page, editing it to remove the "proslytising tone" you found offensive, and adding references?

If there are facts necessary to a good treatment of the subject that were in the text, they are still available in the Page History, but only neutral and unbiased language will be accepted here, as per Wikipedia's guidelines.

I agree

And, no, I know nothing of the subject, but I do know what biased language looks like. Sorry for all the toes I may have stepped on, but this has to be done.

that's cool, I understand where you are coming from, I just feel you have thrown the baby out with bathwater. M Alan Kazlev 00:13, 28 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Also, just so you, dear editor, know: edits will be given greater consideration if they come from registered users. --NightMonkey 11:01, Jan 5, 2005 (UTC)

okay I restored the essay, removed a lot of the non-NPOV stuff, and added some references. It still needs lots more references; I'll add some later, and if there are any people here familar with Mirra's teachings, the Agenda etc, could you add whatever references you see fit. Also some of the essay could probably be improved some more, but I feel the present version is a big improvement on both the origianl hagiography and Night Monkey's truncated version. M Alan Kazlev 06:00, 29 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I've also had a go at removing some charged language that escaped earlier edits. There is nothing wrong with having an article on this person, but it has to be an encyclopaedia article, not a shrine. Her self-described visions have to be labelled as such, or the npov disputation tag goes on the article. Fire Star 02:44, 3 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Old version here

merge}} Talk:Mirra Richard/Original POV version

Mirra Richard, known as The Mother (February 21, 1878 - November 17, 1973), was the spiritual partner of the sage and seer Sri Aurobindo. She was born in Paris to Turkish and Egyptian parents and came to his ashram on March 29, 1914 visiting Pondicherry several times and finally settling there in 1920. After November 24, 1926, when Sri Aurobindo retired into seclusion, she supervised the organization of his ashram and institutes. She became the leader of the community after Sri Aurobindo's death in 1950. She died in 1973.

The experiences of the last thirty years of her life were captured in the 13-volume work The Agenda. In those years she attempted the physical transformation of her body in order to become the first of a new type of human individual by opening to the Supramental Truth Consciousness, a new power of spirit that Sri Aurobindo had allegedly discovered. Her followers and those of Sri Aurobindo consider(ed) her an incarnation of the Divine Mother, hence her name "the Mother." The Divine Mother is the feminine aspect of the Divine consciousness and spirit.

Mira becomes The Mother

The Mother was born Mira Alfassa in 1878. She was born into a middle class family; her father a mathematician, her mother a strict disciplinarian. Little Mira's parents were not in any way spiritually inclined; they were solid materialists.

As a child in Paris, France Mira had extraordinary inner and outer experiences. For example, at the age of five Mira would lapse into bliss and go into a trance sometimes when she was placed in an easy chair or during of a meal. Once in the middle of a meal with her outstretched hand holding a spoon, she found herself in trance, much to the annoyance of her iron-willed mother, who regarded this behaviour as a social embarrassment. Neither the mother nor the daughter believed that she was a Divine child meant to preside over the affairs of the world and to try an evolutionary experiment in her own body to evolve the first member of the next species, which Sri Aurobindo called "Supramental Man".

Eventually she began to study all aspects of culture, history, poetry, painting, and in her 20s moved among Paris's artistic circles. At one point her search was intense, and yet she did not know what she was searching for. She met an Indian in Paris who sensed her deep aspiration. He suggested she read the Bhagavad-Gita and she obtained a copy of it in French. The French translation was quite poor but she understood the substance of it and received the necessary help. When she found out that there was something inside to be sought for, she says she rushed like a cyclone and made the discovery of her "inner being," i.e. her higher self and soul. What normally would take decades of efforts for spiritual type individuals, she was able to realize in a few short months while in the middle of Parisian life.

In her meditations she saw several spiritual figures, all of whom offered her help of one type or another. Among them she saw a dark Asiatic figure whom she called to herself ‘Krishna’. She said that Krishna guided her in her inner journey. She came to have total implicit faith in Krishna, and was hoping to meet him one day in real life.

Later in 1906 she met the enigmatic occultist named Max Theon in Algeria. A man of vision, knowledge, and occult power, Theon lived with his wife Madam Theon, an occultist herself, and published a journal on spiritualism and mysticism. As it would turn out Theon's teachings were not very different from Sri Aurobindo's, the sage she would meet some years thereafter.

Theon had significant occult powers. The Mother once saw Theon divert a lightning bolt from its natural course. She once saw Madam Theon sit on her bed and make her slippers, which were some distance away, move towards her.

Then there was the extraordinary time that Theon led The Mother through an out of the body experience:

"Theon was taking Mira to other worlds in her subtle body while her physical body lay on the floor. Traveling thus in various places of mystical interest, Mira arrived at a place where the "mantra of Life" was inscribed in Sanskrit. The Mother knew no Sanskrit at that time but took the mantra into her memory. Theon, standing beside her and presiding over the operation, wanted Mira to give him the mantra. It was clear to Mira that the mantra was not intended for him or, perhaps, it should not fall into his hands. She refused the unspoken authoritative demand of the occult guru in whose hands her very body and life were now entrusted. Mira was quiet and her refusal was also quiet. Theon flew into a rage and snapped the chord that bound her to the body. Theon who had severed the chord of life through which alone Mira could reenter her body, saw the purpose of obtaining the mantra was not going to be served. Knowing Mira as he did, the enormity of his impulsive act dawned on him and he revived the connection." (MSS)

Eventually she was married to Paul Richard. On a trip to India, Richard met the well-known spiritual sage Sri Aurobindo in Pondicherry India. When The Mother saw Sri Aurobindo for the first time she recognized him as the person she saw in her visions of the dark Asiatic figure.

During the meeting Sri Aurobindo and Paul Richard sat across a table to discuss politics, the election, and his personal prospects. Mira sat at the foot of the table on the floor, an unusual act for an accomplished Westerner. She found something was happening inside her head. Thoughts ceased to run, her mind became quiet, and silence began to gather momentum. Sri Aurobindo, while engaged in a conversation was conferring on her eternal silence, something that normally would take decades of inner effort. Sri Aurobindo was transferring it to her without her asking for it; not through a ceremony of initiation, but casually, in spite of diverting himself in a conversation. Mira prostrated before him without knowing that that was what Indian followers do before their gurus.

The next day she noted in her journal, “It does not matter that thousands of beings are plunged in darkness. He whom we saw yesterday is on earth. His presence is enough to assure us that one day Truth will rule here.”

They then discussed their plans to serve the spirit, the Divine, and to finally dissolve pain and suffering from the earth. Together they agreed on a course of action. Mira then spent a year in France and four years in Japan before she returned to Sri Aurobindo in 1920. There Mira became his spiritual partner on a journey to try to change the way life exists on earth.

The Vision of Sri Aurobindo

Years before Sri Aurobindo first met Mira, he had given up his revolutionary quest to help India throw out the British and focused his efforts on bringing down a spiritual Force that could transform humanity and life on earth to end suffering, to move us out of ignorance, division, and falsehood.

Sri Aurobindo started his personal "yoga," that is, the attempt at personal transformation and union with the Divine, thinking he could gain enough inner power to effect events on the outside, and liberate India from British domination. As soon as his yoga revealed to him that India was free in the subtle plane, he realized that the Divine had henceforth given him the new work of emancipating all of humanity from falsehood and suffering.

So Sri Aurobindo gathered around him a number of disciples to help him in the undertaking, so that suffering, pain, falsehood, cruelty, and poverty in any form would be fully and finally abolished from earth’s life. If about a dozen people could accomplish this feat in their bodies, the Divine's truth would descend into the earthly realm, they declared. Hence they allowed seekers to collect around them. Disciples in small numbers gathered around them to participate in their yoga. That was how the Sri Aurobindo Ashram was founded.

The Mother and the Ashram

From 1920 she started organizing the Sri Aurobindo Ashram efficiently. She had to start with lessons in keeping material things and books in proper order and proceed up to a life of personal transformation, utilizing Sri Aurobindo's technique of Integral Yoga.

Sri Aurobindo in 1926 reached the highest spiritual domains in his own personal transformation. This was a turning point in his yoga and at this point, he thought it necessary to withdraw into his room and into total silence so that the further ascent to the Force, the Supramental consciousness and descent of that world would be accelerated.

He called all the disciples and announced to them that henceforth The Mother would take full charge of the ashram and he would live in retirement. Mother heard for the first time that this new responsibility was conferred on her and she had been installed officially as The Mother. Sri Aurobindo did not consult her prior to the declaration nor did he inform her of his intention. She too heard the news for the first time along with the disciples.


At 6:15 every morning The Mother appeared on the ashram balcony to initiate the day with her blessings. Sadhaks, who got up at 3 a.m., finished their own meditations and a good portion of the day’s work, and then assembled under the balcony to receive her blessings. Here she collected all the aspiring souls and lifted them upward, charging them with her spiritual energy.

In those days there were only a few departments. Later, after the ashram grew, many departments sprang up: the office, library, dining room, press, workshops, playground, art gallery, dispensary, farms, dairies, flower gardens, guest houses, legal department, audit department, and many others, too. Her sadhaks (ardent followers) worked in all the departments and ran them as a service to the Divine. The heads of the departments met her in the morning and took her blessings and orders. Again at 10 a.m. she used to meet all the sadhaks individually and bless them. Once again, in the evening at 5:30 p.m., she conducted meditation and met each sadhak to give her blessings to them. In this way she transmitted the force that had built inside her to those immediately around her.

Four times a year she used to give public Darshans (a spiritual gathering where the guru bestows blessings and force) at which a few thousand devotees gathered and received her Grace.


Affecting World Events; Renown Visitors, Interactions

Mother and Sri Aurobindo participated in the affairs of the earth and the universe according to the mission and the work they were doing. When it was clear that the Second World War was inevitable, they saw the Lord of Nations leading Hitler on and urging him to conquer the world with very tall promises. The Lord of Nations, it was said, appeared before Hitler in a dazzling light in shining white armor and gave him detailed advice. Sri Aurobindo called this war, “Mother’s war.”

Sri Aurobindo used to send his spiritual force in support of the Allies and eagerly awaited the results of individual battles. At every important turning point of the war, Sri Aurobindo took great interest. At the famous Dunkirk battle the British troops were miraculously saved when they crossed the channel under the cloak of fog. Sri Aurobindo used to refer to that with a smile as the mysterious fog’.

When Hitler gained success after success and The Mother tried in the opposite direction, she said the shining being that was guiding Hitler used to come to the Ashram from time to time to see what was happening. Things changed from bad to worse. The Mother decided on a fresh strategy. She took on the appearance of that shining being, appeared before Hitler and advised him to attack the Soviet Union. On her way back to the Ashram, she met that being. The being was intrigued by The Mother having stolen a march over him. Hitler’s attack on the Soviet Union apparently ensured his downfall.

For years The Mother and Sri Aurobindo worked for the freedom of India from colonial rule. India became independent in 1947. Years later the Mother was preoccupied with other events related to India, in particular the Chinese invasion of India in 1962, the confrontation with Pakistan in 1965, and the Bangladesh war, which ended in the partition of Pakistan in the early 1970s. She was consulted by a number of key individuals in Indian government during this time, and in her consciousness she focused her Force on these events in order for them to have the most positive outcomes.

The Mother along with Sri Aurobindo believed that India would be the teacher and guru of the world as it relates to the inner and spiritual life. They believed that India and Pakistan would one day reunite, that Tibet would become independent again, and that a number of the countries currently around India would one day form a confederation with India. They worked in the inner, subtle realms to see this one day come about.

Many renowned people from around the world visited The Mother in those years. For example, the daughter of Woodrow Wilson, the US President, came to the Ashram in the 1920s and chose to remain there for the rest of her life.

Henry Ford, the automobile king, heard of The Mother and wanted to meet her. On the eve of his departure, World War II broke out and prevented his coming to India.

Much later in the 1960s a friend of John F. Kennedy took interest in The Mother and examined in depth the philosophy and yoga of Sri Aurobindo. He met The Mother and asked her what were the external signs by which one could discern the attainment of the Force, the Supramental power in a person. His question was reminiscent of Arjuna asking Sri Krishna in the Bhagavad-Gita on the battlefield of Kurekshetra, “How does a realized person sit, walk and speak?” The Mother explained to him the three conditions that would reveal the attainment of the Supramental consciousness and told him that of the three, equality, was the most significant. The visitor arranged for Kennedy to visit The Mother, but it could not take place.

The Mother’s plan for Auroville, the world spiritual community founded by The Mother was presented to Khrushchev in the 1960s while he was in power. He felt the idea of Auroville was something worth the support of his government.

The Mother believed throughout the 1950s to the 1970s in the rapprochement between Russia and the US, and worked inwardly for that goal. She thought it might happen when Khrushchev and Kennedy were in power in the early 60s, but noted that hostile forces worked for their removal. The rapprochement never took place in her lifetime. Though she was not alive when Gorbachev almost single-handedly ended the Cold War, there are those followers of hers who believe she had a hand in his emergence and in the unfolding of the "velvet revolutions" that ended the Cold War.

When India's first premier Nehru visited Pondicherry, he commented that Pondicherry was saturated with peace; little knowing that it was the peace of The Mother and Sri Aurobindo.

In 1971 Indira Gandhi was in a political turmoil because of the split in the Congress party's organization. Her government had lost its majority and on important occasions in the Parliament she relied on the support of the opposition group. She had ordered interim elections but thought she would be lucky if she could muster 250 seats in the house. It was at that time friendly advice brought her the suggestion that if she sought The Mother’s support, her political and legislative uncertainty would end. Indira heeded the advice and came to Pondicherry to meet The Mother. Her prayer was for 250 house seats. The Mother smiled broadly, nodded her head vigorously and granted the prayer made through her cabinet colleague Nandini. The electoral victory was a landslide win. An Indira wave swept across the nation giving her 356 seats and the coveted two-thirds majority required to amend the constitution.

In later years she met with other renowned individuals, including the king of Nepal. She had a significant meeting with the Dalai Lama who had recently escaped from Chinese occupation of Tibet. She found him to be a man of great compassion. He asked Mother if Tibet would one day be freed of Chinese rule. She affirmed it would one day happen.

Interaction with Disciples

One of The Mother's primary roles was to serve as an intermediary between the followers in the ashram (and others around the world) to the new evolutionary spiritual Force, the Truth Consciousness or Supramental consciousness, discovered by Sri Aurobindo years before.

The Mother had accumulated a great amount of Force in her consciousness, or we could say she was a powerful conduit of the Force. Since she was a person living in close proximity to the disciples, the disciples had a more accessible and personal way to open to the Force by opening to her consciousness. By opening themselves to this force the disciples could transform themselves, from ignorance to knowledge, from incapacity to capacity, from ill-health to health, from difficulty to happiness and joy. By developing themselves the disciples were collaborating in the effort by Sri Aurobindo and The Mother to bring about transformation of humanity. Even now after the passing of The Mother, people all over the world open to this Force, to this power concentrated in the consciousness of The Mother. People doing so are supposed to be relieved from problems, overcome illness, see miraculous turn arounds in their fortunes, and so forth. In fact, many suggest that the effectiveness and responsiveness of the Force by opening to The Mother is greater now since her passing. I.e. there is a faster response to individuals who open to the Force, and the answers bring a fuller result.

(One need not open to the Mother per se; one can simply open to the Force, the Supramental power, without thinking of the Mother. The force is universal, belongs to no one. Its effects would allegedly be staggeringly positive in one's life thereafter.)

Interaction with Other Individuals

The Mother was able to bestow this force on the disciples as well as those famous and not so famous individuals who came to visit her.

A number of people not necessarily interested in yoga came to The Mother with their prayers, and had them answered. Parents would come when a child had lost his speech or when a boy had run away; industrialists brought their woes of strikes; unemployed graduates prayed for jobs; patients with incurable diseases visited the ashram to find out whether there was any hope for them; and so forth. Virtually all of them went back rewarded; their problems solved at some point immediately or shortly thereafter. That was (and is) The Mother's power.

If any problem or news was brought to the notice of The Mother or even the message enters the area of The Mother’s power or was brought to the ashram, the problem would be solved. (The Mother said she holds herself responsible for every one who had seen her, even if it is only for a second.)


The Physical Transformation

In 1950 Sri Aurobindo left his body, fully aware that though he had discovered the Force, and had seen its astonishing movements and functionings through inner experiments, he could not bring the Force fully enough into his own body to transform it into the new species he wished to bring about. However he did believe that The Mother's body was capable of this physical transformation; that her body was flexible enough to bring in the Force, so that she could make the change, she could in essence become the harbinger of a new species.

Sri Aurobindo said that in Mother he found surrender to the Force, to the Divine down to physical body itself, the cells of the body (beyond just the mind and emotions), the likes of which could not be found in any human being.

Just before Sri Aurobindo died he poured all of the Force from his body into her body. Also before he died she agreed to make the effort of physical transformation that Sri Aurobindo had tried but was not able to complete. In fact in one sense it was because he was unable to carry out the physical transformation that he felt it was time to leave his physical body, so he could work at the non-physical level, where he believed he could become more effective.

After Sri Aurobindo's passing, the Mother took up in full the transformation of her own physical body. That is where one of the two great legacies of The Mother begins.

The other is that The Mother continued to be the focal point, the intermediary if you will for the followers of the Force. If the followers opened themselves to the spiritual power, to this Force, they did so by thinking of or otherwise connecting to The Mother. The Mother would concentrate the Force in her being, which she could then pass onto her disciples; or the followers could call on the Force, the power from The Mother, which could help them individually in their own personal evolution and transformation. So in one sense The Mother became the instrument of the force. Some would say that in one way she was the Force.

After Sri Aurobindo's passing in 1950 The Mother fully took up in earnest her promise to Sri Aurobindo to attempt the physical transformation. In addition she continued the effort by Sri Aurobindo to bring down the Force, the Supramental consciousness into the earthly plane. She also worked inwardly to effect world events, including the positive emergence of India, which she believed to be the teacher and guru of the world, into the world stage.


From around 1962 onward The Mother began in earnest her experiment in physical transformation. One of the primary focuses of her endeavor was to keep herself continuously open to the Force, the dynamic, element of the Divine that Sri Aurobindo called the Supramental power. In fact Like Sri Aurobindo before her she continued in the effort to bring this Force down into the earthly realm. In 1956(?) she announced that the Supramental Force had descended fully into the earth's consciousness.

In the mean time she begin to see a changing of functioning in a number of her physical senses. She experienced seeing, hearing, even tasting in a different way. For example, she could look at something in a book and note how the truly important thing stood out or shined in some manner. She could walk into a darkened room and see even as her eyesight was deteriorating. Likewise she could hear people better who were more organized in their thought, as opposed to those whose thoughts processes and consciousness was muddled.

Thus she was developing a new way of seeing and experiencing the world; perhaps a harbinger of the way humans of the future would experience the world. Also, these experiences indicated that she was able to experience the world "directly" without the intervention of the senses. Experiencing the world directly is how the Supramental consciousness (and hence a Supramental being) would operate. One just "knows" without the intervention of the mind, or in this case the senses. There is direct knowledge; which is a fundamental property of the Truth (Supramental) consciousness.

Another related example of this change in Mother's physical being is the fact that the Mother reached a stage in her 80s and 90s where she no longer slept. She would go into an inner repose for a few hours to regenerate her energy. Once again we could speculate that this is an attribute of a future divinized individual; perhaps one who can replenish one's energies without the need for a descent into the subconscious that current sleep requires.

She also began to experience great changes as it relates to time and space. For example, as it related to time, often she would do something that she perceived as taking only a few moments, when an hour actually had gone by. Or she would have done something that she perceived as taking only an hour, when only a few minutes had gone by.

Along the way she had various visions of the new species. At one point she had a vision of a body, which she perceived as the Supramental body, or the body of the new species. The being she saw appeared tall, slim, with no breasts, and likely had shed the normal human functioning of breathing, digesting, and procreating, amongst others. These functions had become incorporated in the new body as states of consciousness rather than physical organs such as lungs, liver, kidneys, etc.

Another time she had a vision of a "Supramental ship" where individuals seem to be covered in a type of gray, sticky, liquefied, clay-like substance, that was perhaps a substance significant to and necessary to the future race. Individuals in her vision seemed to love playing and wading in this substance.

Another time she had a vision of Sri Aurobindo, very tall and very athletic, racing across a distance such as 100 yards at unbelievable speeds. She noted that this super athletic Sri Aurobindo had an incredible head, a Supramentalized head.

A number of times she mentioned that Sri Aurobindo would return to earth in a new Supramental body.

At various points in the 1960s and 1970s she referred to the fact that the cells of her body were becoming more conscious, a key to the physical transformation. This cellular transformation, that is a "mind of the cells" was perhaps along with the Force the key to the physical transformation. She would say that the cells of her body were learning to organize themselves, to a have a kind of mind of their own.

She often referred to death as a mere state of mind, a state of mind of the cells that the cells accepted. If they could change their perspective, if they did not accept death as an inevitability, this could help the cells maintain their form without their deteriorating. This perhaps echoes recent discoveries in science that each cell has the genetic code of life, and that the code if understood could surely be altered. The difference is that with the Mother's approach, the code, if you will, would be modified through consciousness, through the Force, through the cells own evolution and transformation, instead of having physical changes to the code made by scientists and engineers.

She noted that one of the keys to the physical transformation was overcoming the effect of the "physical mind" and the subconscious (which they called the subconscient). She said that this part of the nature is defeatist, grumbling, filled with inertia, where illness gets reinforced, and perhaps the great physical barrier to the physical transformation. Realizing that this was one of the great impediments to the emergence of the new species, she tried to bring in the Force into this part of her being.

Often the physical transformation that she was attempting was felt as a great strain and physical pain. She had acquired so much of the Force in her being, had begun to live so much under the Divine influence, that her current body could not in one sense keep up. She would often say that she was often in a sort of half way state between the incredible new experiences of the Force, and the inability of her body to keep up, which put her in a difficult position. Some have suggested that this is the reason she left; i.e. she could make no further progress in the body she had. In later years under this strain she said that her consciousness had never been greater, her mental alertness never greater, her power to effect change in the world and for those around her never greater, yet her body could not keep up with the change.

The Mother had a number of near weekly meetings from 1960 till her passing in 1974 with one of her closest disciples, Satprem. There she discussed her progress in her physical transformation, world events and her effect on world events, the new workings of the force in the world, her earlier life's experiences including her spiritual experiences, her visions of the new race, and many other topics. These conversations were kept and were published in French and English in the 13-volume set known as The Agenda.

Sri Aurobindo and The Mother had experiences in which they perceived the Supramental, truth consciousness was becoming more firmly fixed in the universe. In 1956, 1962, and in others years that followed she experienced the first firm descent of the Supramental consciousness, the Force, into the earthly realm, into human consciousness, into her own body, and in other ways.

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In the 1960s, while her attempt at physical transformation was well under way, she was instrumental in another endeavor. It was The Mother’s dream to create a place where humanity could seek the Divine without having to dredge for food and shelter. It was in fulfillment of this dream that she was instrumental in the development of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram for those who dedicated themselves to yoga, of personal and spiritual transformation. With the same underlying principle and the same actuating aspiration The Mother founded Auroville — i.e. town of Sri Aurobindo — for those who have not taken to yoga as their main ideal in life. Auroville is an international city meant for those whose ideal is to live according to truth.

The Mother had years before an original grand scheme for Auroville, but then did not outwardly act on it for years. In the mid 60s she received a letter from a disciple who had a vision which rekindled The Mother's interest in the project. She then embarked on a more modest version of her original plan.

The city has, in the conception of the initial architects, several zones with roads on which automobiles are prohibited. The soul of Auroville is Matrimandir or ‘The Mother’s temple’. Matrimandir is constructed as a sphere that houses in its center a meditation hall. The construction is uniquely arranged so that sunlight enters the building during all hours of the day through a small hole in the roof. At the time of the foundation in 1968 an urn of lotus bud shape was constructed, into which earth from all nations of the world was deposited by youth from each nation.

The Mother’s conception of the city and life there includes several features. Money has no role to play in Auroville. Cars are banned. No administration with authority over the lives of the members is created. No one is appointed as the head or leader whom all should obey. Each member is to be guided by his inner light only. Any structure of authority that is created is to be functional and not to have legal or administrative power vested in it.

One main reason The Mother had in mind in founding Auroville was that the city must be a symbol of human unity and thus prevent the next world war by its very presence on earth. She even declared that as long as Auroville existed, no war would break out.

Human tendencies of pugnacity, competition, spite, jealousy, rivalry are bound to surface in a cosmopolitan place where hundreds of men and women gather and live. Their daily lives offer thousands of occasions for human interactions. The Mother wanted those innumerable occasions to become the anvil on which human nature would consent to be beaten into a divine shape. If in Auroville individuals shape themselves anew in the image of the Divine and endeavor to transform their own human nature into Divine nature, life on earth would gently turn to the Divine. This was The Mother’s intention. She even said that Auroville was a field of experimentation, not an exhibition of already accomplished perfection.

It was The Mother’s way to name the different communities in Auroville as peace, harmony, aspiration, etc.

The spiritual atmosphere in the city is very powerful and unmistakable. No one can miss it. It is easy to imagine what amount of uncertainties would loom large in the life of a city where there is no central authority, no fixed provision of income, no one enjoys property rights, no one has any say over anyone else.

Still, people who visit the place are powerfully attracted to live there. To a visitor’s query, an Aurovillian doing duty at the Indian pavilion, Bharat Nivas, answered, “Nothing is certain here, but everything works.” More than the comment of the man, the visitor was struck by the Aurovillian’s sparkling face expressing the inner light.

A regular visitor to the ashram in 1960 was crossing a road junction and suddenly noticed the figures of The Mother and Sri Aurobindo in the distance. The splendor of the vision was great and so real that he lost himself totally. A few days later when the devotee was crossing the same spot the vision recurred. Only then he took notice of the spot on the road where he had had the same vision miles away in the sky. He could make nothing of it. Several years later when Auroville was founded, he understood that the spot of his vision was the future site of the city.

Auroville has now been transformed from acres of barren land to richly forested and planted landscape. There are dozens of mini settlements in the town, and a number of pavilions and centers. There are major experiments and implementations in the latest new age technologies, such as computers, the Internet, solar technology, the latest agricultural and conservation techniques, and so forth.

At the center of the town lies the Matrimandir, the temple of the Mother, a fabulous round sphere, topped by a great crystal that directs the sunlight into the structure. People move freely in and out of the temple, mediating or otherwise opening to the Force there.

Mother, The

--NightMonkey 11:08, Jan 5, 2005 (UTC)

Removed

I removed this paragraph as it is an almost exact duplicate of another appearing in the article.

In 1910 Mirra had an experience of a reversal of consciousness in which she realised the Divine Will at the very center of her being, and from that moment onwards was no longer motivated by personal desire, but only wanted to do the Divine Will (Agenda vol I pp.163-4).

Morgan Leigh 03:39, August 28, 2005 (UTC)

Fair use rationale for Image:Mother2.jpg

Image:Mother2.jpg is being used on this article. I notice the image page specifies that the image is being used under fair use but there is no explanation or rationale as to why its use in this Wikipedia article constitutes fair use. In addition to the boilerplate fair use template, you must also write out on the image description page a specific explanation or rationale for why using this image in each article is consistent with fair use.

Please go to the image description page and edit it to include a fair use rationale. Using one of the templates at Wikipedia:Fair use rationale guideline is an easy way to insure that your image is in compliance with Wikipedia policy, but remember that you must complete the template. Do not simply insert a blank template on an image page.

If there is other fair use media, consider checking that you have specified the fair use rationale on the other images used on this page. Note that any fair use images uploaded after 4 May, 2006, and lacking such an explanation will be deleted one week after they have been uploaded, as described on criteria for speedy deletion. If you have any questions please ask them at the Media copyright questions page. Thank you.

BetacommandBot 03:29, 6 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Moving?

The page should belong to the most famous mother. Though Google is not the last arbiter of everything, a simple search indicates as follows:

In most of the Google search results, wikipedia entry remains most prominent. In this case, it is not like that: her entry as mentioned in the official site is most prominent. The natural corrollary is that people go more to the official site to know about her and not to Wikipedia. As such, the page The Mother should go to her where it was for long. Her spiritual Guru bestowed on her the title of The Mother, and at least she can never be called The Mother (yogini). If The Mother has to be there, and if people want The Mother to be a disambiguation page, let us talk to the people at Sri Aurobindo Ashram and its trustees for a better, acceptable, and alternative name. It is an encyclopedia and it should reflect the reality and not the personal fancies. --Bhadani (talk) 16:29, 28 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The Mother did not refer to or define herself as a yogini, nor did Sri Aurobindo nor any of her disciples. A google search for "The Mother" + Yogini turns up very few relevant hits, the first of which is a reference to a redirect at Wikipedia. "The Mother" + Yogini + Pondicherry (I thought I would narrow the field a bit) turns up 182 hits, almost all of which are totally non relevant. The first hits are to Wikipedia. So referring to the Mother as a "Yogini" seems to be original research on the part of a wikipedia editor. The only non-Wikipedia reference I could find was
o Mother Aurobindo -- AUMzine Issue 17
where a two paragraph section is headed "The Mother as Yogini". Google Book Search didn't turn up anything. So relocating this page to The Mother (Yogini) would be inappropriate. If you want to find an alternative title, Bhadani's suggestion of contacting the Sri Aurobindo Ashram and asking their suggestions seems the best option. Otherwise, just leave the page name as it is, with a link to a disambiguation page M Alan Kazlev (talk) 22:22, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Moving the page Yogini to The Mother (yogini) is not appropriate as Yogini and the word, The Mother, has no relevance. I do agree that Mirra Alfassa is the name of The Mother, but please try to understand that she is well known by her name The Mother that was bestowed on her by Sri Aurobindo. Please try to understand the position in this way: Gautama Buddha is well known as Buddha and not by her childhood name of Siddhārtha Gautama. It is not a matter of being known by the devotees - devottes knows The Mother by her original name of Mirra Alfassa but she is known by The Mother by a wider section of people. This is also established by the fact that a simple google search (http://www.google.co.in/search?hl=en&q=The+Mother&btnG=Google+Search&meta=) gives The Mother more prominence. Accordingly, I am moving the page back. --Bhadani (talk) 16:43, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
However, pending more discussion, I am making a redirect from The Mother to Mirra Alfassa as redirecting The Mother to Yogini is really not correct. --Bhadani (talk) 16:48, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Moreover, few months back, I had some discussion with devotees and select members of Sri Aurobindo Ashram, and they do not depend on Wikipedia to promote The Mother - she has her own auro and devotees, and they are least bothered about her presentation here! The onus lies on the Wikipedia community to reflect true encyclopedic name for the page dealing with contents about Mirra Alfassa, and not on others. --Bhadani (talk) 16:56, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The Mother, like the Father, is a religious term that applies to many people. The Buddha does not. Having the Mother redirect here is extremely biased; it would be like having the Prophet redirect to Mohammed, as if he were the only prophet. kwami (talk) 00:11, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]

You have given a good logic. The redirection to Mother (disambiguation) appears to be fine. --Bhadani (talk) 17:29, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]