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Monastic Name : Swami Premananda
[1861 - 1918]
Baburam Ghosh (Swami Premananda) was born in 1861 in the village of Antpur,
in the Hooghly district of Bengal. His parents were pious, and the boy
showed a strong religious vocation from childhood.
Baburam's sister was married to Balaram Bose, a wealthy man who became
one of Ramakrishna's most prominent devotees during the last years of
his life. When Baburam started his secondary education in Calcutta, the
principal of his school was Mahendra Nath Gupta and one of the students
in his class was Rakhal. Rakhal took Baburam to visit Dakshineswar in
the autumn of 1882.
During his first visit, Ramakrishna subjected Baburam to certain physical
tests. Ramakrishna often did this, saying that an examination of a man's
physical characteristics reveal his spiritual character - at least to
the insight of an initiated person. For example, Ramakrishna would say
that eyes shaped like lotus petals betokened good thoughts; that eyes
like those of bull betokened a predominance of lust; that the eyes of
a yogi were reddish and had an upward cast. Those who are in a habit of
looking out of the corners of their eyes from time to time, during a conversation
are more intelligent than the common run. Again, a man of devotional nature
has a soft body with flexible joints; even he is thin, his joints do not
seem angular. Ramakrishna would weigh your forearm, asking you to hold
it loose; if it was lighter than ordinary he would say that this showed
a 'benefit intelligence".
He weighed Baburam's forearm in this manner, and also gazed into his
face and examined his limbs. The verdict was evidently satisfactory, for
Ramakrishna urged Baburam to visit him again. He particularly praised
the young man's purity, saying that, when he was in a high spiritual mood,
Baburam was one of the only few he could bear to have touched him. Two
years later, he asked Baburam to become his attendant, and he told M.:
'When I ask Baburam, "Why don't you come here?" he answers,
"Why don't you make me come?". Baburam's hesitation to accept
Ramakrishna's invitation was due to his fear of making his mother unhappy.
But, soon after this, Baburam's mother, who had also become a devotee
of Ramakrishna, came to Dakshineswar. Ramakrishna asked her to give her
son the necessary permission and she did so gladly, only asking him in
return that she might become perfect in devotion to God and not live to
witness the death of her children.
Baburam begged Ramakrishna to give him the lower form of samadhi, bhava
samadhi or ecstasy. Ramakrishna appealed to divine Mother and was told
that Baburam could not have ecstasy but he would have non-dualistic knowledge
of Brahman instead.
Baburam impressed all who met him by his sweetness. Ramakrishna would
say of him that he had the nature of a woman; adding that he was like
a clean new pot in which milk could safely be kept without fear of its
turning sour. Yet this self-effacing young man matured into a marvelous
teacher and trainer of the young, during the period when, as Swami Premananda,
he virtually presided over the Ramakrishna Math (monastery) at Belur,
from 1902 to 1916, two years before his death. He looked after the young
monks and novices in his charge devotedly. His love seemed inexhaustible;
it forgave and often overcame even their worst failings. Nevertheless,
he would say to them, "Do I love you? No-for it I really did, I should
have bound you to me forever. Oh, how dearly the Master loved us! We don't
have even a hundredth part of that love towards you".
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