Renu Singh Parmar
“Solve all your problems through meditation. Exchange unprofitable speculations for actual God-communion”. Lahiri Mahasaya
Occasionally, a spiritual giant moves quietly amongst us, unseen by the world yet blazing a trail for generations to come. One such master was LahiriMahasaya, born on September 30, 1828, in Ghurni, Bengal. His life, as described in Autobiography of a Yogi by Sri Sri Paramahansa Yogananda, marked a turning point in our understanding of spiritual practice.
Lahiri Mahasaya, popularly known as Yogavatar, was not a monk or recluse. He was a householder-a government accountant with a wife and children-who lived a seemingly ordinary life in Varanasi. But in 1861, while stationed near Ranikhet, his destiny changed. Drawn to the Himalayan foothills by the hidden, immortal yogi Mahavatar Babaji, he was initiated into the lost art of Kriya Yoga,an instrument through which spiritual evolution can be quickened, forthe practice of just one Kriyaequals one year of natural spiritual progress.
The event was historic. For centuries, such teachings had been guarded and given only to renunciates. But on the request of Lahiri Mahasaya, Babaji agreed that this technique may be imparted to all genuine seekers. Lahiriji’s mission had begun-not as a guru in saffron robes, but as a living bridge between ancient yoga and the modern world.
On his return to Varanasi, LahiriMahasaya quietly began teaching Kriya Yoga tosincere seekers. Brahmins, businesspeople, scholars, and householders became his students. He broke caste boundaries and religious dogmas with a simple message: God is for everyone.
Among his many teachings, one phrase became iconic: “Banat,banat,banjai”
(“Striving, striving, one day behold!the Divine Goal.”)
This was his answer to those discouraged by slow progress on the spiritual path. It reflects his core message-steady, sincere practice will surely bring results.
One of LahiriMahasaya’s foremost disciples was Swami Sri Yukteswar, a man of deep wisdom who would later become the guru of Paramahansa Yoganandaji. Lahiri Mahasaya also played a pivotal role in Yoganandaji’s destiny. When Yogananda was just a baby, his mother took him to the great sage for a blessing. Lahiri Mahasaya touched the infant’s forehead and proclaimed:
“Little mother, thy son will be a yogi. As a spiritual engine, he will carry many souls to God’s kingdom.”
That prophecy came true. Yoganandaji became the world’s greatest votaries of kriyayoga meditation and founded Self-Realization Fellowship (SRF)in Los Angeles and Yogoda Satsanga Society of India (YSS) in Ranchi. These organizations disseminate theteachings of Yoganandaji, imbibed at the feet of his divine guru, in the lineage of theYogavatar.
Despite his miraculous abilities, Lahiri Mahasaya remained humble and grounded. His life of quiet service has shown that spiritual enlightenment and worldly responsibilities aren’t mutually exclusive.
Today, as we honour LahiriMahasaya’s birthday on September 30, we remember a master who changed the course of spiritual history without ever seeking fame.
Kriya Yoga, once hidden in the Himalayas, is now practised around the world.
In LahiriMahasaya, we see the ultimate integration: the divine lived fully in the human, and the eternal expressed through the everyday.
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