Mother Meera
Mother Meera | |
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![]() Mother Meera | |
Personal life | |
Born | Kamala Reddy 26 December 1960 Chandepalle, Telangana, India |
Religious life | |
Religion | Hinduism |
Mother Meera (born Kamala Reddy on December 26,[1] 1960 in Chandepalle, a small village in the Yadadri Bhuvanagiri district of Telangana, India) is an Indian spiritual teacher and author living in Germany. She gives darshan, a silent blessing, and meditations in Germany and many other countries to which she travels. Although she does not consider herself a guru,[2] and does not promote a particular religion, she is considered a contemporary female saint of India in the Anglo-European hemisphere.[3][4] She is referred to by followers as an avatar.[5]
Life account

Mother Meera allegedly had her first samādhi, a state of complete spiritual absorption, at the age of six, which lasted for a whole day. Her uncle Bulgur Venkat Reddy met her for the first time when she was 11 years old and recognized her as the girl of his visions.[6] He became convinced that she was the divine mother, and he took her under his wing. In 1974, he first brought her to the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Pondicherry, of which he was a member.[7] A few months later, he took her to a girls' school, where she stayed for about two years.[8]
In 1976, she returned to Pondicherry. There she met the first visitors from the West and began giving darshan.[1] In 1979, she was invited by her first followers to Montreal, Canada, where she gave darshan at larger audiences and returned several times.[9] In 1981, she visited Germany, where she settled a year later and married a German. Uncle Reddy died in 1985 and was buried in the local cemetery in Dornburg-Thalheim, Hesse.[10] She currently gives darshan at the "Waldecker Hof," the former outbuilding of Schaumburg Castle in Balduinstein, which has been converted into a hotel.[11]
Activities
Mother Meera receives many thousands of visitors for darshan, which takes place in silence.[11] During darshan, she touches the visitors on the temples and then looks into their eyes. She does not give lectures.[12]
According to her teachings, her task is to bring down the Paramatman light (explained as the "light of the highest Self").[13] One can open oneself to this light through japa, [14] the mental repetition of a divine name or mantra.[15] This can be done quite informally. Her teachings belong to bhakti, the path of loving, emotional devotion to the Divine, in which she embraces all names and forms of God.
About the light she says:
Like electricity, the Light is everywhere, but one must know how to activate it. I have come for that.[16]
She does not claim to be a guru or have followers. To be connected to her work, people do not have to recognise her.
Mother Meera does not belong to any particular Indian tradition. However, her work has a certain affinity with Aurobindo.[17]
Mother Meera opened an international English-language school at her ashram in Madanapalle, India, on June 7, 2010.[18] As of April 2017, the school had approximately 1,300 students.
Trivia
According to an article in Entertainment Weekly in 1994, Madonna's global hit Secret was inspired by Mother Meera.[19]
Critics
After splitting from Mother Meera, the writer and former follower Andrew Harvey wrote The Sun at Midnight.[20] In it, Harvey accused Meera of homophobia, saying that Mother Meera disapproved of Harvey's marriage to another man. In his first book about her, Hidden Journey, Harvey had originally praised her as an avatar, attributing his own claimed enlightenment to her. Harvey's accusation of homophobia is disputed. One of Harvey's former lovers, the writer Mark Matousek (1997),[21] said that: "I do know that the idea that she's homophobic is completely ridiculous. For God's sake, we were served breakfast in bed together in her house."[22]
Books
- Answers, Part I – by Mother Meera, ISBN 0-9622973-3-X
- Answers, Part II – by Mother Meera, ISBN 3-9805475-5-8
Quotes
"One common mistake is to think that one reality is the reality. You must always be prepared to leave one reality for a greater one." – Answers, Part I
See also
Notes
- ^ a b Andrew Harvey 1993.
- ^ Matousek 2024, p. 57.
- ^ Mishra 2014.
- ^ Religion Compass 2022.
- ^ Skloot 1995.
- ^ Matousek 2024, p. 11.
- ^ Matousek 2024, p. 16.
- ^ Matousek 2024, p. 19.
- ^ Harvey 1992, p. 51.
- ^ Olati 1995, p. 7.
- ^ a b Rheinzeitung 2012.
- ^ Schimmelman 2012.
- ^ Cooley 2014.
- ^ Mother Meera 1991, p. 89-98.
- ^ Linebaugh 2004, p. 41.
- ^ Mother Meera 1991.
- ^ Brown, C. Mackenzie 2007, p. 31.
- ^ Matousek 2024, p. 81.
- ^ Jeff Gordinier, Stukin, Stacie 1994.
- ^ Sun at Midnight 2002.
- ^ Matousek Website 2021.
- ^ Sex, Death, Enlightenment 1997.
References
- Andrew Harvey (3 October 1993). "The Merry Mystic". New York Times Magazine.
- Matousek, Mark (26 March 2024). Mother of the Unseen World: The Mystery of Mother Meera. Monkfish Book Publishing. ISBN 978-1-958972-23-6.
- Mishra, Mithilesh (June 2014), "Presence of 'America' in Religious Circles of India", Comparative American Studies, 12 (1/2 ed.), eISSN 1477-5700
- "The contemporary guru field". Religion Compass. 16 (2 ed.). John Wiley & Sons. February 2022. eISSN 1749-8171.
- Skloot, Floyd (1995), "Honeymooning with the feminine divine", Antioch Review, 53 (2 ed.), eISSN 0003-5769
- Harvey, Andrew (1 April 1992). Hidden Journey, a spiritual awakening. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0140194487.
- Olati, Adilakshmi (1 January 1995). The Mother. Mother Meera. ISBN 9783000002410.
- "Rumours about Mother Meera (Gerüchte um Mutter Meera)". Rheinzeitung (in German). Mittelrhein-Verlag. 6 November 2012.
- Schimmelman, Jack (23 October 2012). "Sitting With Mother Meera". Huffpost.
- Cooley, Grace (2014). "Receiving Darshan from Mother Meera". Elephantjournal.
- Linebaugh, Sonia L. (2004). At the Feet of Mother Meera: The Lessons of Silence. ISBN 978-1-4134-1054-9.
- Mother Meera (1 January 1991). Answers, Part I. Meeramma Pubns. ISBN 9780962297335.
- Brown, C. Mackenzie (2007), "Colonial and Post-Colonial Elaborations of Avataric Evolutionism", Zygon: Journal of Religion & Science, 42 (3 ed.)
- Jeff Gordinier, Stukin, Stacie (28 September 1994), "Devotional rescue", Entertainment Weekly (246 ed.), eISSN 1049-0434
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Andrew Harvey (14 October 2002). The Sun at Midnight: A Memoir of the Dark Night. TarcherPerigee. ISBN 9781585421794.
- Mark Matousek. "Mark Matousek Homepage". Retrieved 16 May 2021.
- Mark Matousek (1 March 1997). Sex, Death, Enlightenment: A True Story. Riverhead Trade. ISBN 9781573225816.
Further reading
- The Mother – by Adilakshmi, ISBN 3-00-000241-3
- At the Feet of Mother Meera: The Lessons of Silence – by Sonia Linebaugh, ISBN 1-4134-1053-7
- Hidden Journey: A Spiritual Awakening – by Andrew Harvey, ISBN 0-14-019448-7
- In Search of the Divine Mother: The Mystery of Mother Meera – by Martin Goodman, ISBN 0-06-251509-8
- Sex Death Enlightenment – Mark Matousek (1997), Riverhead books, ISBN 1-57322-581-9
- Mother of the Unseen World: The Mystery of Mother Meera. - by Mark Matousek, ISBN 0-8129-9725-5
External links


