Satprem

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The Mother and Sri Aurobindo

Books:

Collected Works, Life Divine, Synthesis of Yoga,
Savitri, Agenda

Teachings:

Important Places:

Communities:

Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Auroville,

Important Disciples:

Champaklal, N.K.Gupta, Amal Kiran,
Nirodbaran, Pavitra, M.P.Pandit,
Pranab, A.B.Purani, D.K.Roy,
Satprem, Indra Sen, Kapali Shastri

Journals and Forums:

Arya, Mother India, Collaboration, Auroconf,

Satprem (30 October 1923 - 9 April 2007) was a French author and an important disciple of The Mother.

Contents

[edit] Life and Work

Satprem was born Bernard Enginger in Paris and had a seafaring childhood and youth in Brittany. During World War II he was a member of the French Resistance. He was arrested by the Gestapo in late 1943 and spent one and a half years in German concentration camps. Scarred by the experience, after the war he became interested in the existentialism of André Gide and André Malraux [1]. He travelled to Egypt and then India, where he worked briefly as a civil servant in the French colonial administration of Pondicherry, on the Bay of Bengal in India. There he discovered Sri Aurobindo and The Mother and their "new evolution". He resigned from the civil service, and went in search of adventure in French Guiana, where he spent a year in the Amazon (the setting for his first novel The Gold Washer), with his copy of The Life Divine, then Brazil, and after that Africa.

In 1953, aged thirty, he returned to India and Pondicherry to put himself at the service of The Mother and settle in the Ashram. He taught a little at the Ashram school, and was in charge of the French copy for the quarterly Bulletin of the Department of Physical Education which was The Mother's publication, and is still printed in English and French. During this time he met his companion Sujata Nahar.

Then travelled once more — Congo, Brasilia, Afghanistan, Himalayas, New Zealand, sailed round the world, before once again returning.

In March the 3rd 1957, The Mother gave him the name Satprem (‘the one who loves truly’). [2].

Satprem remained restless and dissatisfied for some years, torn between his devotion to the Mother and to Sri Aurobindo's teachings and his wanderlust, and in 1959 he again left the ashram. He became the disciple of a Tantric, a priest of temple at Ramesvaram. Then as the disciple of another Yogi he spent six months and wandering around India as a mendicant sanyasi practicing Tantra, which formed the basis of his second novel, Par le corps de la terre, ou le Sanyassin (Engl. By the Body of the Earth, or The Sanyasi).[3].

After this he returned again (as he put it, "the bird flew back once more" [4]), to the Pondicherry Ashram and the Mother, who started inviting him from time to time to her room, originally for work in connection with the Bulletin. As their relationship developed, he asked more questions, and eventually decided to record their conversations, taking a tape-recorder to her room. The result of this collaboration was The Agenda, the first volume of which (which covers 1951 to 1960) also contains Satprem's letters to The Mother during his wandering days. Also, under The Mother's guidance he wrote Sri Aurobindo, ou l'Aventure de la conscience (Engl. Sri Aurobindo, or the Adventure of Consciousness), which became the most popular introductory book to Sri Aurobindo and The Mother (published 1964). In 1972 and73 he also wrote under the Mother's guidance the essay La Genèse du surhomme (On the Way to Supermanhood), which she regarded very highly. This was published in 1974.

Satprem relates that on 19 May 1973, six months before The Mother's death he was barred admission to her room [5], the beginning of a serious falling out between the Ashram leadership and himself. Moreover, Satprem and his followers believe there is evidence in the recorded audiotapes that the Mother did not actually die but rather entered a "cataleptic trance" or state of suspended animation in which there would not even be a detectable heartbeat [6]. Satprem recorded a famous conversation between the Mother and Pranab which made Satprem conclude that several Ashram sadhaks did not want the Mother to continue her life. However, Pranab has argued in his book "I remember" that on the contrary he was very much concerned about the Mother's health and that he had received precise instructions from her as to what to do when she appeared to have left her body. These instructions, he says, were exactly followed before she was buried in the second chamber of Sri Aurobindo's Samadhi in the Ashram courtyard under the Service tree, which she herself got prepared after Sri Aurobindo's departure in Dec. 1950.

Georges Van Vrekhem disagrees with Satprem's claim that the Mother's work was cut short in those last six months, and argues instead that she did indeed attain a Supramental body and what remained was the residue, like what membrane of a caterpillar after it has become a butterfly [7]

After the Mother's mahasamadhi, all of Satprem's correspondence from 1962 to 1973 with the Mother was confiscated, and he fled with the tapes of the Agenda to Auroville, where, at the age of fifty, he edited the 13 volumes of the Agenda, while at the same time wrote the trilogy Mère (Mother) - The Divine Materialism, The New Species, The Mutation of Death - both a biography of the Mother and his own analyses and commentary on the Agenda material.

Satprem became a rallying point for the community shocked by the attitude the ashram leaders had taken [8]. His one-man revolt against the Ashram leadership began in 1974, and involved two issues. One was his wish to publish, unexpurgated, the entire transcript of his talks with the Mother. He saw the resistance of the ashram trustees and elders in this regard as symptomatic of the way they had directed the ashram from 1962 onwards. The other was his claim that under the current leadership the Yoga had become institutionalised and dogmatic, like the yogas of the past. For their part, the elders wished to publish the transcripts but only in edited form. And where Satprem saw conservatism and dogmatism, they saw a loyal commitment to their gurus to uphold the original truth of their teachings[9]

During this time, Satprem was looked to by the French-speaking Aurovillians as the successor and inheritor of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother's work, and a number of radicals were drawn to him because of his revolt against the Ashram elders [10]

After numerous unsuccessful attempts to get the 13 volumes of the Agenda published by the Ashram, Auroville, and Sri Aurobindo Society presses, Satprem founded the Institut of Recherches Evolutives (Institute for Evolutionary Research) in Paris in July 1977 as a non-profit organisation to do so."[11].

Soon after, there was an allegation of an assassination attempt against him in August 1976, and in December 1977 (or 1978) the Ashram trustees "expelled" him for "anti-ashram activities" as he attempted to publish the Agenda, and he became persona non grata in the Ashram [12]. Satprem and Sujata left Pondicherry in 1978.

In 1980 Satprem wrote Le mental des cellules (Engl The Mind of the Cells), a synopsis and introduction of the whole Agenda, with many fascinating and important excerpts, and written with great passion, even if his frequent Darwinian metaphors hardly bear resemblance to the actual scientific theory of Darwinism. He also refers to personal experiences, including the 1976 attempt upon his life, which he only survived by going into a state of complete non-resistance[13].

In 1982 all thirteen volumes of the Agenda were published in French, and Satprem felt he had completed all his external work [14]. The following year, he and Sujata decided to withdraw completely from public life to devote themselves exclusively to Sri Aurobindo's and Mother's work of the transformation of the cellular consciousness of the body and realisation of the new evolution, and the search for the "great passage" in the evolution beyond Man. The 1985 book La vie sans mort (Life without Death) is a follow-up to Mind of the Cells, co-written with Luc Venet, and provides a glimpse of Satprem in his post-Ashram life in this period [15]. .

After seven years, Satprem emerged and began producing a steady stream of books on his experiences, Sri Aurobindo and the Mother's teachings, and the future evolution of man. In 1989, he wrote The Revolt of the Earth, in which he describes his years "digging" in the body. This was followed in 1992 by Evolution II, where he asks "After Man, who? But the question is: After Man, how?" In 1994 came his Letters of a Rebel, two volumes of autobiographical correspondence. In 1995 he wrote The Tragedy of the Earth - From Sophocles to Sri Aurobindo, an urgent message for mankind to take action against the cycle of death. This was followed in 1998 The Key of Tales, and in 1999 The Neanderthal Looks On, an essay on the betrayal of Man in India as in the West. This was followed in 2000 by The Legend of the Future. In 1999, Satprem also started the publication of his Notebooks of an Apocalypse (in French, five volumes published, in English, vol.1, 1973-1978, dealing with the years and his experiences immediately after the passing of the Mother, has just been released), which records his work in the depths of the body consciousness [16].

Satprem died on April 9 2007.

His companion Sujata Nahar died after him on May 4, 2007.

[edit] Partial Bibliography

  • Satprem (ed.) Mother's Agenda (1982) Institut de Recherches Evolutives, Paris, & Mira Aditi, Mysore (13 vol set)
  • Satprem (2000) Sri Aurobindo or the Adventure of Consciousness Mira Aditi, Mysore, & The Mother's Institute of Research, New Delhi
  • Satprem (1982, 1999) The Mind of the Cells Institut de Recherches Evolutives, Paris, & Mira Aditi, Mysore
  • Satprem (2002) On the Way to Supermanhood Mira Aditi, Mysore, & The Mother's Institute of Research, New Delhi
  • Satprem (1992), Evolution II Institut de Recherches Evolutives, Paris, & Mira Aditi, Mysore
  • Satprem (1998), The Revolt of the Earth Institut de Recherches Evolutives, Paris, & Mira Aditi, Mysore
  • Satprem (1998), The Tragedy of the Earth Institut de Recherches Evolutives, Paris, & Mira Aditi, Mysore
  • Satprem (1981), My Burning Heart, Ingram, Tennessee

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Georges van Vrekham, Beyond the Human Species p.370
  2. ^ Agenda vol.1, p.48 n.2, and p.100
  3. ^ Beyond the Human Species p.371
  4. ^ Mother's Agenda vol.1 p.327
  5. ^ Satprem Mind of the Cells, 1982 p.200, and Agenda vol.13
  6. ^ Mind of the Cells pp.198-202
  7. ^ van Vrekham, Beyond the Human Species pp.496ff.
  8. ^ Savitra, "When Intensity overtakes Intgerality; a personal look at the man and the myth called Satprem", NexUS, the newsletter for the USA Centres of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother Winter 1994-95, pp.27-30
  9. ^ David J. Lorenzo, Tradition and the Rhetoric of Right p.223-5
  10. ^ Tradition and the Rhetoric of Right p.223
  11. ^ Robert Minor, The Religious, the Spiritual, and the Secular p.177 note 4
  12. ^ Richard Titlebaum (1985-1986) http://www.rtitlebaum.com/TheMother.html "Commentary" From The Journals, Boston, MA, 1985-1986
  13. ^ Satprem relates the experience in Mind of the Cells pp.124-125
  14. ^ Luc Venet Life without Death, p.113
  15. ^ Life without Death, Part 3: Satprem (pp.107ff.)
  16. ^ http://www.ire-miraditi.org/miraditi/sat-suj.html "Satprem and Sujata"

[edit] References

  • Mother's Agenda (1979-??) (Engl. transl) Institute for Evolutionary Research, New York, NY (13 vol set)
  • David J. Lorenzo, Tradition and the Rhetoric of Right: Popular Political Argument in the Aurobindo Movement, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1999 ISBN 0838638155
  • Robert N. Minor, The Religious, the Spiritual, and the Secular: Auroville and Secular India, SUNY Press, 1998, ISBN 0791439917
  • Satprem (1982) The Mind of the Cells Institute for Evolutionary Research, New York, NY ISBN 0-938710-06-0
  • Georges van Vrekhem, Beyond the Human Species Paragon House, St Paul, Minnesota, 1998 ISBN 1-55778-776-2 (first published in Dutch 1995)
  • Luc Venet (1985) Life without Death, Institute for Evolutionary Research, New York, NY ISBN 0-938710-23-0

[edit] External links

  • [1] - page includes Photos of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother