Swami Vivekanand once happened to visit Hyderabad.
Swamiji had heard about a Brahmin, who lived there, that he had some mysterious
powers by which he could materialize anything anywhere. He was a highborn
merchant of repute. Swamiji went to him and requested him to exhibit his
miraculours powers. The merchant, however, was bed-ridden with some illness.
There is a generally prevalent belief in India that a man's illness disappears
if a holy man places his hand on the ailing man's head. The merchant appealed
to Swamiji, " Swamiji, if you kindly put your hand on my head, my fever
will disappear, and then I can show you miracles." Swamiji agreed to do
so.
The man kept
nothing but a lion cloth on his body; he had removed all other clothes. As the
days were cold, he was given blanket to cover himself. Quite a large crowd had
gathered there. Having covered himself with the blanket, the man went and sat
in a corner. Then he said, "Please, give me in writing the names of things
that you want me to materialize for you." Everybody did so. Swami himself
wrote the names of those fruits which were not produced in that area. To the
surprise of all, he produced from the blanket bunches of grapes and oranges in
such abundance that their weight was double the weight of that man. All partook
of the fruits, which were very sweet in taste. Finally at Swamiji's behest, he
produced about a hundred or more fully-bloomed rose flowers whose petals were
wet with morning dew and not one of them was loose or withered.
Endorsing the veracity of this incident, Swamiji writes,
"People may consider this as a magical or miraculous display, but I don't.
There is nothing that is not rooted in desire. This was an exhibition of fact.
How can the shadow be there if the substance is absent? This was not 'Maya' but
truth or fact. It is a proof of the limitless powers of the mind. Our mind is
capable of producing anything desired. The mind is internally packed with all
the wealth and abundance of the earth. The only condition is that we must
handle the mind properly. An uncontrolled mind can not only ruin itself but al
others too. This Brahmin from Hyderabad controls his mind, but is ignorant of
the basic fact that he is dealing with his controlled mind. Under a delusion he
has taken a halt at the limit of miracles. He has failed to recognize that
Almighty, who resides within." The miracles and miraculous powers of the
mind have been proved in many ways. It is capable of conquering time and space
through the force of its imagination.
It is reported about Rabbi Elijah of Lithuania, that in
spite of his having some miraculous mental power, he could not turn it to his personal
advantage on account of his inability to control it. Reading only once, he had
memorized about 2000 books. Being asked to quote from memory any page from any
book, he could do so faultlessly. His brain was ever active, so he had to have
a book in his hand always and when he had nothing else to do he would start
reading.
Harry Nelson of Pittsburg (USA) had also such wonderful
mental faculty. He was reputed as "the magicial of the Chess Board."
He could play with twenty contestants at a time remembering the moves of each
of them. Sometimes thus engaged against twenty opponents he world feel some
mental fatigue, to remove which he would indulge in a game of cards also.
A German emperor had his big library in Prussia. The
librarian Mathurin Bassire had miraculous memory regarding sounds. Just to test
his phenomenal memory, ambassadors of twelve different countries went to him
and spoke twelve different sentences each doing so in his own mother tongue. No
sooner did they stop, Bassire repeated twelve different sentences of twelve
different tongues immediately. The fact was that once he heard the sound of man's
voice, it was permanently fixed in his memory. Politician Leon Garobatta of
France and Richard Pearson, a learned scholar of Greek, also had such wonderful
capability.
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