'Miracles' and hope: Hathras stampede spotlights India's craze for godmen

"Bhole Baba" gains popularity in India's northern states due to claims of miraculous healings. Former police constable turned preacher attracts followers with promises of divine blessings. Recent gathering led to deadly stampede in Hathras, result...

PTI
Devotees at the religious gathering where a stampede broke out, in Hathras district
Just a pat on the back by preacher "Bhole Baba" and Ramkumari said a stone in her kidney vanished. The 85-year-old gave no proof but this story and countless others of similar "miracles" led to Baba's following rocketing in India's northern states.

A gathering addressed by the former police head constable in a crowded field last week drew a quarter of a million people and caused one of the deadliest stampedes in the country.

Bhole Baba, or Innocent Elder, was born Suraj Pal Singh Jatav. He quit the police in 2000 to join a series of Hindu preachers and gurus in India who are sought by millions for miracle cures and spiritual advice. They are often called godmen, and many have been wooed by politicians for the influence they wield.


Their patrons have included international celebrities like the Beatles, who spent days in the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in the late 1960s. Some of these gurus expanded beyond India, most famously Osho, who lived and preached in the United States in the early 1980s.

Almost all of them are credited by their followers with miraculous powers.

"I had gone to one of his early gatherings and told him I had chronic pain from a kidney stone for many months," said Ramkumari, Baba's former neighbour in Bahadurnagar village in India's Uttar Pradesh state, where he was born and still has a home.
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The village has only about 50 homes in all and is set amid fields which grow corn, wheat and rice. On the periphery is a sprawling, pearly-white ashram run by devotees of Baba.

"He smiled and blessed me with a pat on the back. The stone vanished soon after," said Ramkumari, who gave just one name.

Another resident in the village, 55-year-old Surajmukhi, said Baba's blessing helped her give birth to a son after seven daughters. Sons are sought after in many Indian families.

"We desperately wanted a boy," said Surajmukhi. "Then I met Baba with my husband. He made me chant some mantras (verses), gave me some water to drink and patted me on my back. After nine months I had a baby boy."
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Lying on a cot next to her, Baba's older sister Sonkali, thin and frail, said: "It was a miracle".

Baba, formally known as Narayan Sakar Hari now, is estimated to be about 72 by his family and followers, who are spread across India's heartland states of Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana and Madhya Pradesh.
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LINE TO GOD


Two neighbours who have known him since his childhood, including Ramkumari, said he took the path after a dream one night about 25 years ago that a divine spirit had given him supernatural powers. He quit the police in the city of Agra and started preaching, they said.

Baba would later claim he had a direct line to God and could channel divine blessings to people.

"Soon after we saw a line of cars bringing Suraj Pal into the village and people said he would henceforth be called a Baba (elder)," Ramkumari said.

Reuters could not contact Baba. He told Reuters partner ANI that he was grieving and his aides would help the injured and the families of the deceased.

The stampede at his gathering on Tuesday killed 121 people, mostly women, and injured scores out of about 250,000 who had congregated in a canopied paddy field to listen to him, many trampling over one another as they ran after his car when he was leaving.

Police say authorities had allowed only 80,000 to attend, and have arrested six aides to Baba who were involved in organising the event. The main organiser surrendered to police on Friday.

Police said that in the initial days of his rise to fame, Baba had claimed that he could bring the dead back to life and even tried to take away the body of a 16-year-old girl from a crematorium promising a miracle to the family. Police intervened and the matter was closed soon after.

Posters and videos posted on YouTube show him dressed in traditional Indian kurta tunics or pristine white suits and ties, often sporting sunglasses, a departure from the spartan image of most godmen.

Still, his clout is smaller than other gurus and godmen in India, including Sri Sri Ravi Shankar and Sadhguru. Yoga guru Baba Ramdev runs the Patanjali consumer goods brand that has boomed in recent years.

Two godmen, Asaram Bapu and Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, were both convicted of rape in separate cases and jailed, after years of drawing thousands of devotees to their sermons and ashrams.

GIVE PEOPLE HOPE


Sociologists say such gurus are often believed to possess healing powers, and are especially popular among those who are poor, sick or feel underprivileged.

"People are insecure - economically, socially and otherwise," said Dipti Ranjan Sahu, head of sociology at the University of Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh.

"Unemployment, deprivation, discrimination, ignorance, illiteracy - these things play a part. So they see hope in the godmen, maybe some miracle will happen."

Surinder Singh Jodhka, who teaches social sciences at New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University and has researched on the subject, said "people are kind of looking for some meaning in their life" and that's where godmen come in.

"People are feeling lost and they are looking for some sense through which they can identify with other people, they feel less lonely," he said. "This gives them hope and they are willing to believe in it."

Hathras Stampede: Who is Bhole Baba? Cop-turned-godman, Covid rule flouting history, now missing
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The deadly stampede in Hathras on Tuesday that claimed over 100 lives occurred at a congregation of Baba Narayan Hari alias Saakar Vishwa Hari 'Bhole Baba'. Most of the victims of the stampde were women, who wanted to catch a glimpse of the self-proclaimed godman and wet to collect some dust from where his convoy passed. They were stopped by Bhole Baba's personnel and later started pushing one another due to which several people fell to the ground, leading to chaos at the site.

The deadly stampede in Hathras on Tuesday that claimed over 100 lives occurred at a congregation of Baba Narayan Hari alias Saakar Vishwa Hari 'Bhole Baba'. Most of the victims of the stampde were wo..
Read More

Baba Narayan Hari alias Saakar Vishwa Hari 'Bhole Baba' is a former policeman who turned into a religious preacher two decades ago and gained a following, especially in western Uttar Pradesh. The real name of Bhole Baba is Surajpal. He is a native of Bahadur Nagar in Kasganj district, a retired IPS officer said. His journey began in his village, where he used to be a farmer with his father. He did his education in Etah and then started to work at the police force at a young age.

Baba Narayan Hari alias Saakar Vishwa Hari 'Bhole Baba' is a former policeman who turned into a religious preacher two decades ago and gained a following, especially in western Uttar Pradesh. The rea..
Read More

Surjpal left his job as a policeman in the late 1990s and turned to spirituality, PTI reported quoting Circle Officer (CO) of Patiyali Vijay Kumar Rana. He started conducting 'satsang' (religious sermons). He has no children and takes his wife along with him to 'satsang'. Surajpal, while leaving his job, said that he had experienced divine intervention from God, and that's how his spiritual journey started. After he established his ashram in Bahadur Nagar, his fame grew rapidly among the poor and deprived sections and lakhs of people became his followers, according to locals. A follower from Hathras said, "Baba conducts sermons and keeps his own volunteers for security who take care of the arrangements of his satsang."

Surjpal left his job as a policeman in the late 1990s and turned to spirituality, PTI reported quoting Circle Officer (CO) of Patiyali Vijay Kumar Rana. He started conducting 'satsang' (religious ser..
Read More

Despite his general avoidance of media attention, the self-styled guru has been involved in several controversies. In 2022, amidst a surge in COVID-19 cases, he organised a satsang in Farrukhabad, Uttar Pradesh, where only 50 people were permitted by the district administration. However, over 50,000 people congregated at the venue. In 1997, he faced legal troubles due to alleged sexual asault, and served jail term.

Despite his general avoidance of media attention, the self-styled guru has been involved in several controversies. In 2022, amidst a surge in COVID-19 cases, he organised a satsang in Farrukhabad, Ut..
Read More

After the Uttar Pradesh police carried out a search operation at Ram Kutir Charitable Trust in Mainpuri district in search of 'Bhole Baba', Deputy Superintendent of Police Sunil Kumar revealed that Baba ji was not found inside the campus. "We did not find Baba ji inside the campus...He is not here..." said Deputy SP Sunil Kumar.

After the Uttar Pradesh police carried out a search operation at Ram Kutir Charitable Trust in Mainpuri district in search of 'Bhole Baba', Deputy Superintendent of Police Sunil Kumar revealed that B..
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