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Once
upon a time there was a Mahatma who was a great ascetic and
a great pandit. He was honoured by all, full of years and
wisdom. His name was Junun. Many young boys, many young men
used to come to him to receive initiation. They stayed in
his hermitage, became pandits themselves, then
returned home after a long and studious retreat.
One
day a young man came to him. His name was Yusuf Hussein. The
Mahatma agreed to let him stay with him without even asking
who he was. Four years went by, thus, until one morning Junun
sent for Yusuf and, for the first time questioned him: "Why
have you come here?" Without a second thought Yusuf answered:
"To receive religious initiation." Junun said nothing.
He called a servant and asked him, "Have you prepared
the box as I asked you?" "Yes, master, it is there,
quite ready." "Bring it without further delay,"
said Junun. With great care the servant placed the box before
the Mahatma. He took it and gave it to Yusuf: "I have
a friend who lives there on the banks of the river Neela.
Go and take this box to him from me. But take good care, brother,
don't make any mistake on the way. Keep this box carefully
with you and give it to the man whom it is for. When you come
back I shall give you initiation." Once again the Mahatma
repeated his advice and described the route Yusuf had to
follow to reach the river Neela. Yusuf bowed down at
his Guru's feet, took the box and started on his way.
The
retreat where the Mahatma's friend lived was quite far away
and in those days there were no cars or railways. So Yusuf
walked. He walked the whole morning, then came the afternoon.
The heat was intense and radiated everywhere. He felt tired.
So he sat down in the shade of an old tree by the roadside
to rest a little. The box was very small. It was not locked.
Besides, Yusuf had not even paid attention to it. His Guru
had told him to carry a box, and he had started off without
another word.
But
now, during the afternoon rest, Yusuf began to think. His
mind was free to wander with nothing to occupy it... It would
be very rare indeed if on such occasions some foolish idea
did not cross the mind... Thus his eyes fell on the box. He
began to look at it. "A pretty little box!...
Why, it does not seem to be locked... And how light it is!
Is it possible that there is anything inside? So light... Perhaps it is empty?" Yusuf stretched out
his hand as though to open it. Suddenly he thought better
of it: "But no... Full or empty, whatever is in this
box is not my concern. My Guru asked me to deliver it to his
friend, nothing more. And that's all that concerns me. I should
not care about anything else."
For
some time Yusuf sat quietly. But his mind would not remain
quiet. The box was still there before his eyes. A
pretty little box. "It seems quite empty,"
he thought, "what harm would there be in opening an empty
box?... If it had been locked I would
understand, that would be bad...
A box which is
not even locked, it can't be very serious. I'll just open
it for a moment and then shut it again."
Yusuf's
thought turned round and round that box. It was impossible
to detach himself from it impossible
to control this idea that had crept into him. "Let me
see, only a quick glance, just a glance." Once again
he stretched out his hand, drew it back once more, then again
sat still. All in vain. Finally Yusuf
made up his mind and gently, very gently, he opened the box.
Hardly had he opened it than pfft! a
little mouse jumped out... and disappeared. The poor mouse
all stifled in its box did not waste a second in leaping to
freedom!
Yusuf
was bewildered. He opened his eyes wide and gazed and gazed.
The box lay there empty. Then his heart started throbbing
sadly: "So, the Mahatma had sent only a mouse, a tiny
little mouse... And I couldn't even carry it safe and sound
to the end. Indeed I have committed a serious fault. What
shall I do now?"
Yusuf
was full of regrets. But there was nothing more to do now.
In vain he went round the tree, in
vain he looked up and down the road. The little mouse had
indeed fled... With a trembling hand Yusuf closed the lid
and in dismay resumed his journey.
When
he reached the river Neela and the house of his master's friend,
Yusuf handed the Mahatma's present to him and waited silently
in a comer because of the fault he had committed. This man
was a great saint. He opened the box and immediately understood
what had happened. "Well, Yusuf," he said, turning
to the young aspirant, "so you have lost that mouse...
Mahatma Junun won't give you initiation, I am afraid, for
in order to be worthy of the supreme Knowledge one must have
a perfect mastery over one's mind. Your Master had indeed
some doubts about your will-power, that
is why he resorted to this little trick, to put you to the
test. And if you are not able to accomplish so insignificant
a thing as to keep a little mouse in a box, how do you expect
to keep great thoughts in your head, the true Knowledge in
your heart? Nothing is insignificant, Yusuf. Return to your
Master. Learn steadiness of character, perseverance. Be worthy
of trust so as to become one day the true disciple of that
great Soul."
Crestfallen,
Yusuf returned to the Mahatma and confessed his fault. "Yusuf",
he said, "you have lost a wonderful opportunity. I gave
you a worthless mouse to take care of and you couldn't do
even that! How then do you expect to keep the most precious
of all treasures, the divine Truth? For that you must have
self-control. Go and learn. Learn to be master of your mind,
for without that nothing great can be accomplished."
Yusuf
went away ashamed, head down, and from then on he had only
one thought: to become master of himself... For years and
years he made tireless efforts, he underwent a hard and difficult
tapasya, and finally succeeded in becoming master of his nature.
Then, full of confidence Yusuf went back to his Master. The
Mahatma was overjoyed to see him again and find him ready.
And this is how Yusuf received from Mahatma Junun the great
initiation.
Many,
many years went by, Yusuf grew in wisdom and
mastery. He became one of the greatest and most exceptional
saints of Islam.
*
(Mother
speaks to the children.So, this is to tell you that you must
not be impatient, that you must understand that in order to
really possess knowledge, whatever it may be, you must put
it into practice, that is, master your nature so as to be
able to express this knowledge in action.
All
of you who have come here have been told many things; you
have been put into contact with a world of truth, you live
within it, the air you breathe is full of it; and yet how
few of you know that these truths are valuable only if they
are put into practice, and that it is useless to talk of consciousness,
knowledge, equality of soul, universality, infinity, eternity,
supreme truth, the divine presence and... of
all sorts of things like that, if you make no effort yourselves
to live these things and feel them concretely within you.
And don't tell yourselves, "Oh, I have been here so many
years! Oh, I would very much like to see the result of my
efforts!" You must know that very persistent efforts,
a very steadfast endurance are necessary to master the least
weakness, the least pettiness, the least meanness in one's
nature. What is the use of talking about divine Love if one
can't love without egoism? What is the use of talking about
immortality if one is stubbornly attached to the past and
the present and if one
doesn't want to give anything in order to receive everything?
You
are still very young, but you must learn right away that to
reach the goal you must know how to pay the price, and that
to understand the supreme truths you must put them into practice
in your daily life.
Voila.
The
Mother
22
March 1957
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