The life of this 20th century extraordinary Buddhist master runs an
eerie parallel to the story of the legendary Kisa Gotami, the frail
mother who had been stricken from the loss of her only son, later
overcame her sorrow and became an enlightened arhant.
Dipa Ma was born in Bangladesh on March 25, 1911 with the given name
Nani Bala Barua. According to the customs of the time Nani was
married at the age of twelve to Ranjani Ranjan. One week after she
was married Ranjani went to Rangoon where he worked as an engineer,
leaving Nani alone to live with his family. At the age of fourteen
she joined her husband in Burma. Nani was unable to have children,
which naturally is a source of deep sorrow for any married woman, but
for a married woman in the Far East it was a family catastrophe. As a
result Ranjani’s family summoned him home under false pretenses and
tried to convince him to abandon his wife for another who could bear
him a child. Ranjani refused stating he had not married Dipa for her
ability to have children. As life is often stranger than fiction, a
child was born to Nani and Ranjani many years later and her status
shifted from person-non-grata to being a mother. Then, tragically,
the child died. The combined grief of the death of her child and loss
of status caused Nani to collapse. She survived and some years later
another child was born who was named Dipa – Dipa Ma literally means
Dipa’s mother. A third child was born but died as well. Ranjani was
a kind, attentive and loving man but the increased need to care for
Dipa and Dipa Ma took its toll on his health and he collapsed and died
suddenly in 1957. Within a ten year period Dipa Ma had experienced
the death of two children, the death of her husband, and a severe
decline in her own health. She was frail, heart-broken and devastated.
One day a doctor said to her, "You know, you're actually going to die
of a broken heart unless you do something about the state of your
mind." Because she was living in Burma, a Buddhist country, he
suggested that she learn how to meditate. It was then she had a dream
in which the Buddha appeared to her as a luminous presence and softly
chanted a verse from the Dhammapada:
"Clinging to what is dear brings sorrow, Clinging to what is dear
brings fear. To one who is entirely free from endearment, There is no
sorrow or fear."
With poor health and a broken spirit she found her way to the
meditation center in Rangoon. So much loss in her life and now told
by doctors there was nothing more they could do to help her physical
being get well, she literally crawled up the steps on her hands and
knees to the front doors of the meditation center and began her
journey.
Dipa Ma had grown up with an unusual and intense interest in the
rituals and care of the monks. She had joined her grandmother’s
regular trips to the monastery offering food to the monks and felt a
keen interest in meditation. When married she would ask for
permission to go to the monastery to learn meditation and was told no,
it was not the right time.
Although she expected to die in a short time, her meditation practice
progressed very rapidly, leading to profound realization – a
realization that knows the end of suffering, where the traces of ill
will and unwholesome desire are uprooted from the mind. At age 53,
after six days of serious practice, Dipa Ma reached the first stage of
enlightenment. In a very short time she emerged from being a sickly,
broken, dependent woman to one who was radiant, peaceful, calm,
independent, deeply loving and available to others.
In Dipa Ma's own words: "You have seen me. I was disheartened and
broken down due to the loss of my children and husband, and due to
disease. I suffered so much. I could not walk properly. But now, how
are you finding me? All my disease is gone. I am refreshed, and there
is nothing in my mind. There is no sorrow, no grief. I am quite happy.
If you come to meditate, you will also be happy. There is no magic to
Vipassana, only follow the instructions.
In 1967, she moved to Calcutta where she taught meditation to a wide
range of students. Her first formal student was her neighbor, Malati
Barua, a widow trying to raise six young children alone. Malati
presented an interesting challenge: she was eager to meditate but
unable to leave her house. Dipa Ma, believing that enlightenment was
possible in any environment, devised practices that her new student, a
breastfeeding mother, could carry out at home. In one such practice,
she taught Malati to steadfastly notice the sensations of the suckling
infant at her breast, with complete presence of mind, for the duration
of each nursing period. This amounted to hours each day and, as Dipa
Ma had hoped, Malati attained the first stage of enlightenment without
ever leaving her house.
When someone asked Dipa Ma if she found her worldly concerns as a
single mother and dutiful grandmother a hindrance, she said, "My
worldly concerns are not a hindrance, because whatever I do, the
meditation is there. It never really leaves me. Even when I'm talking,
I'm meditating. When I'm eating or thinking about my daughter, that
doesn't hinder the meditation."
She passed away in 1989 in India, while meditating before a statue of
the Buddha. She is survived by her daughter Dipa, an employee of the
Indian government, and her grandson, Rishi.
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dipa_Ma
http://awakeningtruth.org/blog/?p=22