SATHYA SAI BABA AS A NARCISSIST
Åsa Samsioe, Swedish psychologist and former devotee of Sathya Sai Baba has written as follows:-
Sathya Sai Baba's confusing behaviour, I think, is just another symptom and a result of his mental disease... I think that he has an extremely narcissistic personality. Otto Kernberg has written a lot about the narcissistic personality disorder. These persons have a psychological disturbance on the borderline level... The most conspicuous characteristic for the narcissistic personality is the paradoxical split between two images of the self. One image of the self is the grandiose self (Sai Baba is God himself- can it be more grandiose?). The other image of the self, which is on a deeper level, is filled of shame, hate and feelings of worthlessness... And if there is at threat to him from this other image of the self to break through, ( threat - because this would be very painful for him) he will have to deny its existence or project it on other persons... But there are situations when Sai Baba obviously has been deprived of narcissistic supply or frustrated in some way... |
[Åsa Samsioe also makes a subtle point about the young man Krishna Kumar - brother of Amarendra Kumar – who both spent a number of years with Sai Baba as personal attendant on a day and night basis in the early fifties. Krishna Kumar was declared by Sai Baba to be his 'soul-brother' and whom he made sit beside him on the chariot at Guru Purnima celebrations in Puttaparthi. Krishna shared Sathya Sai's bedroom for some years until he left Sai Baba mainly because of his dishonesty and imperiousness - as he told the parapsychologist Erlendur Haraldsson during two long interviews in the 1970s]
In her book, 'Other than You refuge there is none' (Anyatha Saranam Nasthi) by the elderly Indian woman devotee, Smt. Vijaya Kumari, who was with Sathya Sai Baba already in the 1940s when he was in his teens, we read (p. 194-5): ' Krishna was very mild-mannered. He was not brisk, but very slow while walking. He was slim and fair, and of a sensitive temperament. Everyone would tease him saying that he should have been born a lady. While walking with him, Swami would stay very close to him. It showed how much Swami liked him. Looking at them both, we would playfully refer to them as Radha and Krishna . We do not know what merit accrued from previous lives it was that gave Krishna the privilege of staying upstairs in the company of Swami. Because Krishna was fond of bed coffee, Swami himself would make sure that the tray with coffee and biscuits was ready, and then wake him up. His meals also were with Swami. Making Krishna sit by His side serving him items from His own plate, Swami would watch over him very affectionately. ... or how much God thinks about some of his male devotees (above all the young, beautiful one with feminine appearance). As far as I know, I have never read anything similar about any female devotee. Is it only male devotees that have gathered up merits from past lives, that makes them targets for Sai Baba's grace?" One has to admit, this also underpins the descriptions by so many young men who convincingly detail how they were sexually molested by Sai Baba. It also reminds of what Terry Gallagher, the long-term devotee and Australian Central Coordinator who resigned, wrote about how his observations and information led him to investigate, especially that: "relating to students being sexually interfered with in grotesque ways by Sai Baba. It wasn't until 1993, following the assassination attempt on Sai Baba, resulting in the murder of four college students and two assistants in the Mandir, that we made our last visit to India. The purpose of this visit was to find the reason why former students of Sai Baba's college would want to kill him, particularly when they had been given a free education! I made further inquiries about Sai Baba having sexual relations with college boys and male students –and whether this was the reason for former students wanting to kill him. I was told, to my horror, that this was an acceptable Indian practice!" |