Sri M Explained

Sri M
Birth Name:Mumtaz Ali Khan
Birth Date:6 November 1948
Birth Place:Trivandrum, Travancore–Cochin, Dominion of India
Other Names:Sri Madhukar Nath
Spouse:Sunanda Ali (Sunanda Sanadi)
Children:2
Honors:Padma Bhushan (2020)
Organization:The Satsang Foundation
Chancellor:Maulana Azad National Urdu University, Hyderabad -->

Sri M (born Mumtaz Ali Khan, 6 November 1949), also known as Sri Madhukar Nath, is an Indian yogi, spiritual guide, orator, and educationist. He is an initiate of the Nath tradition of Hinduism and is the disciple of Sri Maheshwarnath Babaji, who was a disciple of Sri Guru Babaji (Mahavatar Babaji). Sri M lives in Madanapalle, Andhra Pradesh, India.[1] He received the Padma Bhushan, India's third-highest civilian award, in 2020.[2]

Early life

Mumtaz Ali Khan was born on 6 November 1949 to an affluent Muslim family in Trivandrum, Travancore–Cochin (now in Kerala).[3] [4] In his autobiography, Apprenticed to a Himalayan Master, Sri M describes meeting his guru Sri Maheshwarnath Babaji in the backyard of his home in Trivandrum: a distinguished, youthful-looking stranger with matted hair, standing near a jackfruit tree. After a brief conversation, the stranger disappeared. This was a turning point in nine-year-old Sri M's life, and he later said about the meeting:

After this, Sri M made contact with a number of South Indian saints who included Bhagawan Nityananda of Ganeshpuri,[5] Yogi Gopala Saami, Kaladi Mastan, Swami Abhedananda, Chempazhanti Swami, Swami Tapasyananda and Mai Ma.[3] [6]

Quest for self-realisation

According to his autobiography,[7] Sri M left his home at age nineteen to find his master in the Himalayas. Exhausted by the search, he met Sri Maheshwarnath Babaji—the same person he had met when he was nine—at the Vyasa Gufa (cave) near Badrinath. Sri M lived with Maheshwarnath Babaji for three-and-a-half years and learned many things. Initiated into the Nath tradition, his Kundalini energy was awakened.[8] Sri M and Sri Maheshwarnath Babaji traveled to a mutt in Tholing, Tibet.[9] His desire to meet Grand Master Sri Guru Babaji (Mahavatar Babaji) was fulfilled on Nilkantha Hill with the help of Maheshwarnath Babaji. Sri M claimed that Sri Babaji was his master in a previous life, and Maheshwarnath Babaji reportedly had the power to materialize and de-materialize in any form on earth or beyond.[10]

Later years

After spending three years in the Himalayas as a wandering yogi with his master, Sri M said that he was asked by his master to go back and prepare for his life mission. He returned from the Himalayas and traveled throughout India, meeting gurus such as Neem Karoli Baba, Lakshman Joo and J. Krishnamurti. Sri M spent substantial time in the Ramakrishna Mission and the Krishnamurti Foundation. While associated with the foundation he met his future wife, Sunanda Sanadi; they have two adult children Roshan Ali and Aisha Ali.[11]

Sri M heads the Satsang Foundation, which runs two schools in Andhra Pradesh: the Peepal Grove School and the Satsang Vidyalaya. The Peepal Grove School, a boarding school, was inaugurated by former President of India A. P. J. Abdul Kalam in 2006. Satsang Vidyalaya is a free school for children in the Madanapalle area, where Sri M lives. The foundation began Bharat Yoga Vidya Kendra, a training programme for yoga teachers, in 2020. He writes in "Speaking Tree", a spiritual forum run by The Times of India.[12] A documentary film, The Modern Mystic: Sri M of Madnapalle,[13] was directed by Raja Choudhury in 2011.

In 2015, Sri M undertook a "Walk of Hope": a 7500km (4,700miles) padayatra from Kanyakumari to Kashmir. The walk began on 12 January, the birth anniversary of Swami Vivekananda (who had undertaken a similar journey over a century earlier). With a group of fellow travelers, Sri M walked through 11 Indian states and considered the Walk of Hope an exercise to restore the country's spirituality.[14] The padayatra ended in Srinagar, Kashmir, on 29 April 2016.[15]

Sri M published The Journey Continues, the second part of his autobiography, in 2017.[16] It exceeds the earlier book in apparently-miraculous incidents; in the introduction, he wrote that his readers might think that he "had finally gone bonkers". Sri M detailed a number of his previous lives over a period of 5,000 years, during which he (or she; in several lives, he was a woman) was associated with Indian saints.[17]

In the year 2020, Sri M has been conferred with the Padma Bhushan Award for the distinguished service of high order in the field of Spirituality.[18]

Books

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://satsang-foundation.org/?page_id=80 Sri M — Founder of Satsang Foundation
  2. Web site: Padma honour for eight Malayalis. January 26, 2020. The Times of India. en. 2020-01-26.
  3. Web site: Sri M | Spiritual guide, Social Reformer and Educationist.
  4. Sri M (2010). Apprenticed to a Himalayan Master. Magenta Press. Chapter 2.
  5. Sri M (2017). The Journey Continues. Magenta Press. Chapter 2.
  6. Sri M (2010). Apprenticed to a Himalayan Master. Magenta Press. Chapters 4–12.
  7. Apprenticed to a Himalayan master: a yogi's autobiography, Sri M, 2010, Magenta Press,
  8. https://web.archive.org/web/20140220082831/http://www.ourkarnataka.com/kannada/articles/srim.htm – Review of Sri M's autobiography
  9. http://www.haindavakeralam.com/HKPage.aspx?PageID=13702 – Another review of Madhukarnath's autobiography
  10. http://www.heraldofindia.com/article.php?id=554 – Article about book
  11. Apprenticed to a Himalayan Master, Chapter 47.
  12. http://www.speakingtree.in/srim Sri M profile in Speaking Tree
  13. http://www.cultureunplugged.com/play/8173/The-Modern-Mystic--Sri-M-of-Madnapalle – Documentary – The Modern Mystic: Sri M of Madnapalle
  14. Web site: Walk of Hope 2015–16. 10 August 2021.
  15. Ajai Kumar Singh (former DGP-IGP), former state police chief from Karnataka, also walked the entire stretch from Kanyakumari to Kashmir with his wife Tara (an ex-IAS officer).News: Age no bar in this walk for a cause. Bangalore Mirror. 10 May 2016. Hemanth Kashyap. https://web.archive.org/web/20190423060829/https://bangaloremirror.indiatimes.com/bangalore/others/Age-no-bar-in-this-walk-for-a-cause/articleshow/52196286.cms. 23 April 2019. live.
  16. Sri M (2017). The Journey Continues. Magenta Press.
  17. Web site: Sri M travels to past lives in search of human consciousness. The New Indian Express.
  18. Web site: Sri M conferred with the Padmabhushan : one of India's highest civilian awards. 26 January 2020.