Abraham Kovoor

Abraham Thomas Kovoor
Born April 10, 1898(1898-04-10)
Thiruvalla,  Travancore
Died September 18, 1978(1978-09-18)
Colombo,  Sri Lanka

Abraham Thomas Kovoor (April 10, 1898 – September 18, 1978) was an Indian professor and rationalist who gained prominence after retirement for his campaign to expose as frauds various Indian and Sri Lankan "god-men" and so-called paranormal phenomena. His direct, trenchant criticism of spiritual frauds and organized religions were enthusiastically received by audiences, initiating a new dynamism in the Rationalist movement, especially in Sri Lanka and India.[1]

Contents

Childhood and education

Born at Thiruvalla in Kerala, Kovoor was the son of Rev. Kovoor Eipe Thomma Katthanar, Vicar General of the Mar Thoma Syrian Church of Malabar. He was educated at Bangabasi College, Calcutta. After working briefly as a junior professor in Kerala, he spent the rest of his life in Sri Lanka, teaching botany in several colleges before retiring in 1959 as a teacher at Thurstan College, Colombo.

As a rationalist

After retirement Kovoor devoted his life to the rationalist movement. He spent most of his time building up the Ceylon Rationalist Association, and was elected in 1960 as its president, a title he retained until his death. He edited an annual journal, The Ceylon Rationalist Ambassador. In 1961 he traveled in Europe and established contact with the World Union of Freethinkers. Under the pseudonym Narcissus, he wrote newspaper and magazine articles about his encounters with the paranormal. These articles were translated and published in India, initially in Malayalam by Joseph Edamaruku (Kovoor’s pseudonym ‘Narcissus’ was no longer used), and later in other Indian languages.

Kovoor traveled in India several times during 1960s and 1970s, addressing hundreds of meetings. His brilliant oratory, enlivened with a scientific approach and critical thinking, worked like magic in Indian villages and towns. During four Miracle Exposure lecture tours in India, all organized by the Indian Rationalist Association, Kovoor challenged and exposed ‘miracles’ performed by godmen. During his last journey to India in 1976 Kovoor visited Sai Baba's ashram and challenged him to face a test. The baba refused.

A controversy arose when Kovoor was awarded an honorary doctorate by the obscure (and now defunct) Minnesota Institute of Philosophy, calling itself the theological seminary of a "Church of Materialism." Kovoor had never visited the US. A strong critic of fake diplomas and doctorates used by charlatans, he later returned the honorary doctorate.

Abraham Thomas Kovoor died on September 18, 1978. "I am not afraid of death and life after death", he wrote in his will. "To set an example, I don't want a burial." He donated his eyes to an eye bank and his corpse to a medical college for anatomical study, with instructions that his skeleton eventually be given to the science laboratory of Thurstan College. All of these wishes were honored.

Exposing the famous guru Sathya Sai Baba

One of the main targets during his miracle exposure campaign was Sathya Sai Baba of Puttaparthi in Andhra Pradesh state, India. Sathya Sai Baba (who died in April 2011) is perhaps the most prominent god-man in India today, and most probably was during Kovoor's time. Sai Baba claimed to materialize vibuthi or holy ash. Kovoor believed that the Baba performed this through sleight of hand. Many Indians throng to the ashrams of holy men who claim to perform such miracles. To expose Sai Baba and others, Dr Kovoor would produce holy ash seemingly from nowhere and distributed it amongst the audience. He would then demonstrate to his audience the sleight of hand, explaining that, after some practice, anybody could perform the feat.

Kovoor wrote repeatedly to Sai Baba, requesting a meeting to discuss the baba's miraculous powers. Upon receiving no response, Kovoor communicated his intention to come to one of Sathya Sai Baba's ashrams, at Whitefield near Bangalore. When Kovoor arrived, Sathya Sai Baba had gone to his other ashram at Puttaparthi.

He was an efficient hypnotherapist and applied psychologist. The famous Malayalam movie "Punarjanmam" (1972), Tamil movie "Maru piravi" (1973) and Telugu film "ninthakatha" were made on the basis of his case diary.

Bharathiya Yuktivadi Sangam declared a national award called 'A. T. Kovoor Award for the secular artist'. The first recipient was the legendary Indian film star Kamal Haasan in acknowledgment of his humanist activities and secular life.

His publications and challenge

After his numerous encounters with god-men, astrologers, and other people who claimed to have psychic powers, he came to the conclusion that there was no objective truth behind such claims. He wrote, "Nobody has and nobody ever had supernatural powers. They exist only in the pages of scriptures and sensation-mongering newspapers." His books Begone Godmen and Gods, Demons and Spirits, about his encounters with people claiming psychic powers, are still best-sellers in India.

In 2008, Punjab Chief Minister, Parkash Singh Badal (leader of Shiromani Akali Dal) imposed an "immediate ban" on Kovoor's renowned 'God, Demons and Spirits', translated into Punjabi by Megh Raj Mitter.[2]

In 1963, Dr Kovoor announced an award of Rs. 100,000 for anyone who could demonstrate supernatural or miraculous powers under foolproof and fraud-proof conditions. The challenge listed 23 miracles or feats that godmen (and some western mystics and performers such as Uri Geller and Jeane Dixon) were claimed to perform, such as reading the serial numbers from currency in sealed envelopes, materializing objects, predicting future events, converting liquids from one kind to another, and walking on water. Some sought publicity by taking on his challenge, but forfeited the initial deposit amount. After Kovoor's death in Sri Lanka, the Indian Rationalist Association has continued his Rs.100,000 challenge. (Similar challenges have been posed by Basava Premanand and James Randi.)

Kovoor's skeleton was donated to Thurstan College to be used as a specimen for scientific study.

Books by and on Kovoor

In English

  1. Begone Godmen - Jaico Publishing House, Mumbai, India.
  2. Gods, Demons and Spirits - Jaico Publishing House, Mumbai, India.
  3. Selected Works of A T Kovoor- Indian Atheist Publishers, New Delhi, India.
  4. Exposing Paranormal Claims - Indian CSICOP, Podannur, Tamil Nadu, India
  5. Soul, Spiril, Rebirth & Possession - Indian CSICOP, Podannur, Tamil Nadu, India
  6. On Christianity - Indian CSICOP, Podannur, Tamil Nadu, India
  7. On Buddhism - Indian CSICOP, Podannur, Tamil Nadu, India
  8. Astrology & Hinduism - Indian CSICOP, Podannur, Tamil Nadu, India

In Hindi

  1. Te Dev Purush Har Gaye - Tarakbharti Parkashan, Barnala, Punjab, India.
  2. Dev, Daint Te Ruhan - Tarakbharti Parkashan

In Malayalam

  1. Kovoorinte Sampoorna Kruthikal (Complete Works of Kovoor) - Translated by Joseph Edamaruku. Indian Atheist Publishers, New Delhi, India.
  2. Kovoorinte Thiranjetutha Kruthikal (Selected Works of Kovoor) - Translated by Joseph Edamaruku. Prabhat Book House, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India.
  3. Samsarikkunna Kuthira (The Talking Horse) - Translated by Joseph Edamaruku. Current Books, Thrissur, Kerala, India.
  4. Yukthivadam(Rationalism) - Translated by Joseph Edamaruku. Current Books, Thrissur, Kerala, India.
  5. Anamarutha - Translated by Joseph Edamaruku. D C Books, Kottayam, Kerala, India.
  6. Indriyatheetha Jnanavum Parapsychologiyum - Translated by Joseph Edamaruku. Indian Atheist Publishers, New Delhi, India.
  7. Yukthichintha(Rational Thought) - Translated by Johnson Eyeroor. Current Books, Kottayam, Kerala, India. http://www.puzha.com/malayalam/bookstore/cgi-bin/book-detail.cgi?code=157

In Punjabi

  1. Tey Dev Pursh Har Gaye - Tarakbharti Parkashan, Barnala, Punjab
  2. Pret Atma Puner Janam Te Kasran - Tarakbharti Parkashan
  3. Kramatan Da Pardan Phash - Tarakbharti Parkashan
  4. Dev, Daint te Ruhan - Tarakbharti Parkashan

In Tamil

  1. Kora Iravukal, Veerakesari Publications,, Colombo
  2. ManakolangkaL, Veerakesari Publications, Colombo

References

External links