Ordinary Life
– Juniper Downs
Baba Loved Us Too
– Wendy Connor
Feeling His Love
– Steve Klein
He is both Father and Mother
– Juniper Downs
A Leap of Faith
– Wendy Connor
Becoming His
– Steve Klein
Don't Worry, Be Happy
– Juniper Downs
A Life Worth Living
– Wendy Connor
Love The One You're With
– Steve Klein
What a Mighty Beloved our Beloved is
– Wendy Connor
To thine own self be true?
– Steve Klein
The Sweets of His Love
– Wendy Connor
Sickness and Health
– Juniper Downs
Giving Advice
– Steve Klein
"Garlic-Faced"
– Wendy Connor
To Love and Be Loved
– Juniper Downs
Talking About The Truth
– Steve Klein
The Script was Written Long Ago
– Wendy Connor
Excuse Me, Which Way to God?
– Steve Klein
Letting Go
– Juniper Downs
The Mosquitoes are Bad Today
– Wendy Connor
What If A Teaching Moment Never Comes?
– Steve Klein
Beads On One String
– Juniper Downs
Youth Sahavas '07
– Wendy Connor
Stop, You're Both Right!
– Steve Klein
God, Please Give me a Job
– Juniper Downs
"It Just Passes More Quickly"
– Wendy Connor
Multiple Meher Babas
– Steve Klein
The Treasure Within
– Wendy Connor
Winking Back
– Juniper Downs
Holding On, But Losing One's Grip
– Steve Klein
1969
– Ann Conlon
Obedience
– Ann Conlon
Meher Center – The Way It Was
– Ann Conlon
Armageddon, Anyone?
– Ann Conlon
What Does Baba Want Me to Do?
– Ann Conlon
Baba's 'Things'
– Ann Conlon
The Way It Was – Meherabad
– Ann Conlon
What Does THAT Mean?
– Ann Conlon
Doing "Baba Work"
– Ann Conlon
Broken Heads
– Ann Conlon
On Being Ill
– Ann Conlon
Enid
– Ann Conlon
To Each His Own
– Ann Conlon
Meherjee
– Ann Conlon
Youth Sahavas
– Ann Conlon
Kitty
– Ann Conlon
The Lonely Path
– Ann Conlon
Isn't He Enough?
– Ann Conlon
Goher
– Ann Conlon
He Said What?
– Ann Conlon
Seeking Suffering
– Ann Conlon
Taking a Dare
– Ann Conlon
Dreams
– Ann Conlon
Amartithi
– Ann Conlon
Margaret
– Ann Conlon
"The Disciple"
– Ann Conlon
I Wonder ...
– Ann Conlon
Backbiting, etc.
– Ann Conlon
Rites, Rituals and Ceremonies
– Ann Conlon
Hearing His Name
– Ann Conlon
"Baba's Group"
– Ann Conlon
His Promise
– Ann Conlon
Then and Now
– Ann Conlon
Middlemen Revisited
– Ann Conlon
Padri
– Ann Conlon
Gateway Days
– Ann Conlon
The New Life
– Ann Conlon
Books, Books and More Books
– Ann Conlon
His "Last Warning"
– Ann Conlon
Elizabeth Patterson
– Ann Conlon
Detachment
– Ann Conlon
Is That A Religion Coming?
– Ann Conlon
Manifestation: Did He Or Didn't He?
– Ann Conlon
A Country of Our Own?
– Ann Conlon
Remembering Mohammed
– Ann Conlon
Advice (Sort-Of) for Newcomers
– Ann Conlon
You're a Baba Lover If...
– Ann Conlon
Real Happiness
– Ann Conlon
Baba Lover, Baba Follower or Both?
– Ann Conlon
Meherazad – The Way It Was
– Ann Conlon
The Strongest Memories
– Ann Conlon
Remembering Mohammed
There is a very large hole in the scene at Meherabad now. Mohammed the mast has finally finished his journey and gone home to his Beloved Meher Baba.
Mohammed died June 17, 2003, a few days after a stroke. It is thought he was about 95 years old. The news of his death went out around the world very quickly, and I was surprised at my own reaction. My heart sank, even though I know his own joy must be boundless. He waited a long time for that union.
I have such wonderful memories of Mohammed, most of them from the early 1970s when I spent months in India. But I saw him for the first time in 1962 when Baba sent us up to Meherabad and Meherazad after the East West Gathering. Mohammed came out on the veranda and looked, with simple and telling dignity, at a mob of Westerners standing below him and waving offerings of candy at him.
It seemed to me that he wore that dignity like a mantle and it was almost always there, along with incredible charm and yes, humor, although occasionally broken by what appeared to be a bad mood. At those times, you were well advised to give him a wide berth.
Early in the 1970s, a friend and I were patching and painting the Rahuri cabin at Meherabad, and Padri was kind enough to provide us with lunch. One day, I was up on a ladder painting near the roof line when we were called to lunch. We were a bit slow responding and I heard a grunt behind me. I turned to see Mohammed standing on the veranda looking at us, scowling, with his arm outstretched and pointing at Padri's kitchen. I didn't climb down the ladder, I slid down and ran for the kitchen. Padri and the cook were laughing out loud and I looked back to see Mohammed grinning from ear to ear.
Mohammed had varying responses to visitors. Sometimes, he sat quietly on his bed totally ignoring visitors. Sometimes he acknowledged visitors briefly. One time, when a young man approached him, Mohammed indicated he wanted his visitor to hold out his hands, palms up. The visitor did so and Mohammed made him stand there immobile for a long time. I think it was probably the longest period of stillness for that young man in his lifetime.
Everyone must be familiar with the "True Love" poster which uses one of a set of three photos of Baba hugging a young Mohammed. The first photo shows a very morose Mohammed, but in the third photo (the one used on the poster) he is smiling blissfully.
Mohammed had some favorite things, one of them a ball of string he had made from bits and pieces found around the compound. One day, a friend and I were sitting on the edge of the veranda near the main hall where Mohammed lived. He quietly appeared, walked up to my friend and dropped in front of her an orange and his ball of string. Precious gifts, indeed, and something I don't believe he did very often. My friend picked up the string and thanked Mohammed. Then we looked at each other and decided we better eat that orange right away. Mohammed looked rather pleased at the whole exchange.
Mohammed spent nearly all his time since 1936 in Baba's ashram. He was one of the most beloved of what Baba called his "children." I remember vividly the explanation Padri once gave of what life was like for Mohammed. "Can you imagine what it's like for him?" Padri said. "He's standing on the edge of a deep abyss, able to see the brilliant light of the Goal on the other side. But he can't cross that abyss on his own. So he stands there and waits and waits and waits." On June 17, I hope that Meher Baba stretched out his hand and pulled Mohammed across that abyss to the other side.