Murugan's Vel lance, His 'Jnana Shakti' or 'Power of Gnosis', a vertical shaft of light from heaven symbolising the axis mundi or stambha, the Axis of the World that Murugan the Shakti-Dhara or 'Holder of the Shakti (spear) wields as His ayudha or weapon. Kataragama Devotees Trust banner. For information about the Kataragame Devotees Trust of Sri Lanka go to the Kataragama Kaele Kendra home page.
1956 photo taken at Kataragama of the 'Kutti Kuttam' around German Swami
1956 photo taken at Kataragama of the 'Kutti Kuttam' around German Swami (standing 2nd from right) including Pulikutti (Sam Wickramasinghe, standing at left), with Sam's caption below. Top row left to right: Sam (Pulikutti), Adrian Snodgrass (Punaikutti), German Swami, Allirajah (Trustee of Appaswamy Matham) immediately after all danced kavadi in 1956. Bottom: Barry Windsor (Narikutti), Shankarappillai Swami, Soulbury Swami (Annaikutti).

When a Seething Mass of Humanity Heed an Inner Call

by Sam Wickremasinghe

"Fire Walking.." in The Sunday Times revived memories of a close friend and mentor of mine, known to all as German Swami Gauribala. Before his demise in Jaffna in 1984, he was one who did the fire walking at Kataragama, annually during the July Festival, for over ten years, walking barefoot from the North, along the coastline, via Batticaloa, Pottuvil, and the Yala Sanctuary to this Southern jungle shrine.

German Swami - with whom I was associated very closely as a member of a group of six, including the one-time Governor-General's, son, Soulbury, better known in Kataragama and elsewhere as Soulbury Swami, alias Annaikutty and Sandasawami, two Australians, a Tamil, Swami Gauribala and myself - often told us that the walkathon pilgrimage to this place corresponded to the biblical return of the 'Prodigal Son' to his Father's home, after his wanderings in the temporal world, sans anyone organising the journey back or telling him to do so.

The direction was expected to sprout from within each individual's 'heart' impelled by 'an inner spiritual call' and the Journey was analogically parallel to the return from the periphery of mortal Samsara to the Centre of Spirituality in one's own self. Kataragama was said to symbolically signify this in a spatio-temporal-experiential manner. It was a ritual of self-abnegation and mortification, in a sort of pooja as an offering of one's karmically earned, mortal self to the Unknown. German Swami performed this many times in his lifetime, and when he started on this pilgrimage, others, who had a similar 'inner call' joined him (or he joined them) on the way and their numbers grew, until the whole show became one seething mass of pilgrims, carrying packs on heads and shoulders, by the time the concourse reached Kataragama before the festival-partaking alms doled out to them, en route by householders by way of sustenance.

Having reached the sacred destination, some performed other modes of Penance like rolling half-naked on the scorching sand, skewing their tongues and cheeks with spikes and dangling, roped on hoists etc. German Swami told us that all such acts are possible owing to a dramatic transformation of our normal, familiar, mind-consciousness to a supra-mental state, triggered by intense faith and devotion, similar to the states attained by saints in ancient times when they were tortured or burnt at the stake. In this state of self- hypnosis the conventional consciousness within Time/Space/Experience reaches a Bindu-one-pointedness and other forms of awareness (or non-awareness) takes over, very much like one under an anaesthetic. This is where, perhaps, the activation and attributes of the pineal gland comes into play.


Courtesy: The Sunday Times of January 26, 2003

Sam Wickramasinghe (also known as Pulikutti among Yogaswami's disciples) 22 May 1925 - 23 March 2013

Editor's note: Among Yogaswami's admirers and dedicated devotees, Sam Wickramasinghe was exceptional, not only because he was Sinhalese by birth, but because he spent decades among other devotees (in Kathirkamam) and in solitude (at Guru Madam, island of Kayts in Jaffna District) endeavoring to penetrate into deeper and deeper levels of Yogaswami's multi-leveled deeds and utterances. Still lively and outspoken into his 80s, Sam was widely sought out by younger seekers for his colorful accounts of past experiences and exploits. He was also an accomplished writer, many of whose articles, such as this one, appeared over the years in the Sri Lankan English press.

Sam Wickramasinghe, ca. 1987

 
Other articles by Sam Wickramasinghe
 Yoga Swami the Image-Breaker
German Swami the Bohemian Swami of Jaffna
German Swami Gauribala: Walking the Razor's Edge
Ramana Maharshi: How the Guru called me
Babylon, the Cross and the Cruxificion
Leaves of Life: Journey of Past, Present and Future
Elephant Lore
Kebbilitte: Where Veddahs Cursed and Leopards Dispensed Justice
Six Weeks in a Cave amidst Leopard, Bear and Elephant
When a Seething Mass of Humanity Heed an Inner Call
 
For more about the Yogaswami and his spiritual lineage, see:
Sam's article about Yogaswami's disciple German Swami Gauribala
Homage to Yogaswami by Susunaga Weeraperuma
Yoga Swami: The Sage of Lanka by Viscount Lord Soulbury
Yogaswami's guru Chellappa Swami of Jaffna
Yogaswami's 1910 Pada Yatra to Katirkamam
Chellappa Swami's guru Kadai Swami of Jaffna
Or e-mail Patrick Harrigan: kataragama@gmail.com