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| Meher Baba |
We enjoy the Asheville Daily Planet and saw your (John Northís) article about Meher Baba just as we were leaving for Meherabad, India, where we live every winter. We took you with us on the plane!
My husband, Peter, has written a response. Weíd love to see you publish it in fairness to this subject. It is two hundred words less than your article. We ask you not to publish it if you are not able to present it in its entirety.
Looking forward to hopefully seeing this in your paper soon!
†From Meherabad, India to you in Asheville, in the spirit of ìOne
people, one planet, one futureî.... ìYou and I are not ëweí but
ëone.íî† ó Meher Baba
Iím grateful,
DEBBIE NORDEEN
6 November, 2007, Meherabad, India
ï
ìDo your honest best, then donít worry, be happy ...
Recently, someone shared an article with me written by the publisher of
the Daily Planet, John North, entitled, ìëDonít worry, be happyí† ó OK,
if you prefer tyranny.î
Mr. North cited that the phrase originated from Meher Baba, whom he referred to as a ìguru,î with a ìphilosophy.î
I found it interesting that John North took the liberty to use several
hundred words to criticize this ìphilosophyî which he assumed could be
reduced to four words.
So even though, during his lifetime, Meher Baba was lovingly
indifferent to people who criticized or praised him, I felt the need to
respond for the sake of the few readers who might be genuinely
interested in the truth of Meher Baba.
Meher Baba stated that his lifeís mission was to help all souls come to
a deeper understanding of the inviolable unity of all life in creation,
not by establishing a new religion or cult, but by living a practical
life of loving service without self-interest. He always frowned upon
religious bigotry and spiritual pretension of any type. As such, there
is no carrot-on-a stick in following Meher Baba ó no promise of being a
member of an exclusive dogma while others be damned (since we are all
one).
What then has attracted the growing numbers of people from all
different faiths to Meher Baba, despite the cynical reactions of both
the religious and intellectual orthodoxy?
From the very beginning it has been and continues to be his
unparalleled love. The price and the reward for his followers (known as
Baba-lovers) for enjoying that love is an increased capacity to live
honest, pure, and natural lives.
Meher Baba gave little importance to lectures and speeches, focusing
instead on his work to deliver a great spiritual push to the world,
which he promised would happen within the century after he ìdropped his
bodyî (January 31, 1969). Indeed, one of the elements of that work was
his self-imposed silence of 43-1/2 years. Yet he continued to
communicate eloquently, and many of his messages and explanations have
been recorded and published.
The phrase ìDonít worry, be happyî often loses its context in a world
obsessed with pop culture and sound bites; Meher Baba did not mean
ìdonít be concerned with anything, do whatever you want.î
In a list of directives he gave to his followers entitled ìMy Wish for
My Lovers,î No. 1 is ìDo not shirk your responsibilities.î In the book,
ìDiscourses by Meher Baba,î one can read a chapter with the title, ìThe
Conditions of Happiness.î The explanations of spiritual life in this
book are considered to rank amongst the most beautiful and
comprehensive by serious seekers of truth.
A clearer context for the phrase in question here, often used by Meher
Baba, is: ìI want you to do your honest best, then donít worry, be
happy. Just think of me, and I will help you.î
Of course, this doesnít fit on a bumper sticker. Though it may be less
appealing to our present culture, if we were to ask Meher Baba himself
for one of his short messages, he might reply, ìInscribe these words in
your heart; nothing is real but God ó nothing matters but love for God.î
Oh, and by the way, though he did indeed enjoy the song ìHeartache Following Me,î his favorite song was, ìBegin the Beguine.î
PETER NORDEEN
Meherabad, India
EDITORíS NOTE: Peter Nordeen is the writer and producer of the
biographical documentary, ìGod in Human Form: the Life and Work of
Avatar Meher Baba.î He lives in both Asheville and Meherabad, India.
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