Ma Satya Priya, a True Rebel

Ma Satya Priya was a unique soul, a true rebel. Here are two posts from her four years apart. You can see that her rebelliousness was what true rebelliousness is; open, fluid, not fixed to the memories of the past or ideals of the future, just present herenow.

In 2012 I posted the letter from Satya Priya, Banned Forever: The Layers of the Onion after getting her permission to do so via email. Four years later I came across the second letter, Be Quiet. Be Loving. Be Fearless. and posted it as well. I don’t remember how I came across the second one. But I know that I did not get it from Pune. It is possible that I saw it on the website for the New York center, I just don’t remember.  At the time I assumed that it portrayed a subsequent visit to the Pune Osho Resort and posted it to Sat Sangha Salon.

When I created this post with the two letters together it was pointed out that the second letter refers to her sannyas age as 30 and the first letter refers to her sannyas age as 35, which would indicate that chronologically they are reversed. That certainly is possible. I do not have any explanation as to why I came across the second four years after the first. Regardless, both of the letters are expressions of Satya Priya and if we invite them both in without choosing one over the other, they make a whole.

Banned Forever: The Layers of the Onion

Last December, in a totally spontaneous movement, I picked up the phone and made a reservation to fly to India. I had enough miles for a free ticket. I then emailed the Osho Guest House to make a reservation. There was no problem. Two or three weeks later I left for India and arrived at the Guest House on January 14, about 3. Next morning, I went to the Welcome Center, got my gate pass, and there I was in the Resort. I had not been there since 2005. I immediately ran into old friends, hugs and hugs. The Resort felt nice, but to me lacked the energy of the rebellious spirit.

As I was talking to an old friend, I was approached and asked to go to Krishna House at 3 pm, if I was available. Of course I was; I had nothing else to do. I certainly felt the energy of this person, which was not friendly. I knew what was coming. What else could it be? I already knew that some people who ran meditation centers were banned because they would not sign what was called the Letter of Understanding. This document was supposedly about Osho International Foundation, a corporation in Zurich, having the right to control Osho’s meditation centers. I went to the office at 3 pm. The Resort official there made a phone call to the West and asked, “What am I to tell Priya?” The answer was, “She is banned forever.” Then I was given the phone, and in a very loud and angry voice the person on the other end said, “How many times have I told you in New York that you are banned?” That really got me angry, and I screamed back, something like, “That’s not true at all.” I had been invited to lunch in an attempt to convince me to sign the Letter of Understanding, and that was the only time I saw this person in New York. I then said I didn’t want to waste any more of my energy with this ridiculous talk. I said, “I’m banned, and that’s it,” and handed the phone to the Resort official.

Perhaps because I was able to express this anger very specifically at the moment, it helped me to immediately feel freer than ever. I felt free of the Resort and soon began to see the subtle ways of compromise – the things we do or don’t do, not easily detected, in order to avoid upsetting the apple cart.

Also, Osho works in mysterious ways, and I feel He has removed much of our seriousness without us even noticing. “Banned forever” – what does that mean? Osho has given new meaning to words having to do with the measurement of time, such as “soon” or “never.” He would say, “Come now, soon I will be gone.” Years later He was still there, but soon He was gone.

Then there’s the famous story of the young man at his first darshan who told Osho he was going to stay forever, and Osho said, “Next time, you stay a little longer.” There also He took away the seriousness.

I hadn’t really unpacked yet, so it was easy to move over to the Surya Villa Hotel. I then found out that on that day, the Times of India carried the story that Osho International Foundation had lost the US trademark case. I have been running the Osho Padma Meditation Center in New York since 1987, and I find it quite mysterious that I was there at that moment.

As I was hanging out at the restaurant at the hotel, someone gave me a book, Love Song for Osho by Ma Anand Devika. What a perfect gift at the perfect moment! If I needed a reminder that the only thing that matters is the love affair with the Master, there it was. The book is pure innocence. I got together with Devika, and she is still the embodiment of innocence. I am so grateful to beloved Devika for exposing herself so totally in her book. The energy and the love I felt from the book somehow came right into the experience of being banned.

I felt I wanted to share this experience. As time passed, I received quite a few emails, even from people I don’t know. I saw that most of the attention was directed at “them” – the ones who ban. And that was not my focus. I was watching myself and what was going on inside me. I told people I don’t care about “them”. I only care about myself and my own inner journey. It’s so easy to forget that this is about the inner journey.

A couple of days after feeling free of the Resort, I suddenly had this sensation in my body of feeling free of Osho in the body. It was as if His body fell away from me – not the Master, but the body of Osho. This was an amazing feeling, impossible to describe. Then, a day or two later, I had the sensation in my body that desire itself had fallen away. Soon I saw that desire was contained in my attachment to Osho’s body. I remember hearing Him tell us to put all our desires on to Him. I had never realized that that’s what had happened, and once free of His body, I was free of desire.

Now, I had to see what that meant to me. How did this feel? What I found, and continue to find, is that I do whatever I’ve been doing, but somehow in a more relaxed way. And I see that relaxation is possible only when we are free of judgment.

A friend said that some people are now going to ask, “Do you think you’re enlightened?” I know nothing about enlightenment. I have only hoped to be free of judgments and to be more loving, more aware of what I am doing, to live totally courageously.

I find myself actually grateful to the organization that runs the Resort. No matter who was in charge, throughout my almost 35 years of sannyas, I never really felt accepted. Somewhere I always wanted to be accepted, even though I did not make any effort to please. I am now freed of that burden. I feel that for quite a while I was trying to believe that there was an Osho place where I could go. But the Osho place is right here. Now, the Resort, as an authority, has really ceased to exist for me, and only the love affair with the Master remains.

-Satya Priya

And here is a post from four years later . . .

Be Quiet. Be Loving. Be Fearless.

To watch new people, especially older people, enter this beautiful bookshop and look at the books and audio CDs; to see them trying to pick one that will perhaps help them the most; to see them go from one to the other and finding it so difficult to choose, is so touching. There is a quality of innocence in the search.

This Osho Buddhafield, the likes of which exists nowhere on this suffering planet, is awesome. To be in the auditorium with hundreds and hundreds of men and women in beautiful white robes, dancing wildly, dancing as they never have before; meditating, listening to Osho on video, laughing at the jokes he reads so carefully, to see them walking across the bridge on the way out of the auditorium and the reflections of the white robes on the water in the darkness of night, sends me totally inside. The beauty is so all-encompassing, I can only go in. This Master, how he works. Things may not be as they appear in Osho’s `Buddhafield. He doesn’t tell us to sit for years, he tells us to move, to cathart (until we can’t anymore), to dance, to sing, to celebrate, and all this outer wealth leads to the wealth inside, because everything is imbued with meditation in a way that has never happened before and I doubt that it will ever happen again.

To see myself, after 30 years, still being totally blown away by the never-ending details that Osho covered in his movements, in his words, in his silence – in an attempt to reach not only every nook and corner of the earth, but every nook and corner of our beings. That there are not millions of people here is a reflection of how poverty stricken this planet is; how committed we are to war, to starvation, to continuing to “live” with pin-headed vision. It seems that very few people have heard him when he said he has a palace waiting for us and we are sitting in the porch. The world insists on a dirt road when there is a most amazing highway.

I heard him say, “I am an invitation”. Of course, it is a dangerous invitation. It is an invitation to expanding our vision, to becoming more beautiful, to go beyond the fear of death, to enjoy this brief little journey we have been given on this beautiful planet, to live with the highest intelligence, the greatest riches.

Perhaps even more mind-boggling are the hundreds of  thousands who have been here and are now stuck in their judgments about the way the resort is being run, thinking they could do it better. Has anyone ever done anything without someone thinking they could do it better? I too have gone through my resistance to change, but perhaps I’m blessed with having been able to go through it. How difficult it is to just simply trust. What is happening here is meditation; is Osho’s energy running through everything. I know many of us miss singing the old songs. But meditation is not about nostalgia. We always want to cling to the past, refusing to see how quickly it becomes dead, refusing to see how Osho was constantly changing everything in the most minute ways. Life is change. And the changes here are happening around the unchanging essence.

While in the bookshop one morning, I pulled a card from the Buddha deck. It said Be Quiet. Be Loving. Be Fearless.

Love, Ma Satya Priya

8 thoughts on “Ma Satya Priya, a True Rebel”

  1. Love and gratitude to Ma Satya Priya !
    It’s an honour to be banned than, to be a slave.
    I was also banned since I have filled a dozen civil and criminal cases against the OIF and a few Inner Circle members in Mumbai and Poona, India. The cases are still going on in respect of Forgery of Osho’s Will and Last Testament as well as illegal siphoning of funds and properties of the Foundation in the private companies of all the OIF members namely Michael Byrne Jayesh (Jayesh), John Andrews (Amrito), Darcy O’Byrne (Yogendra/ Anand Raj), Mukesh Sarda and other members of OIF and Neo Sannyas Foundation. I have exposed a scam of US $ 140 million committed by the OIF.

  2. Hi Purushottama,

    This is really beautiful!! Thanks for posting it. I’m wondering what was the context for the second posting. Had she returned to Pune, banning reversed? Or was she writing about some moments in the bookstore/auditorium that had occurred on a visit prior to her banning?

    oh, I just saw some discussion about this on fb. Ok, we don’t know. To me it doesn’t matter. Your point about her being a true rebel is right, and that’s what matters. Details are unimportant. The fact that she was looking inside for her direction, and it didn’t have to do with opposing ‘them’, is what stands out for me. And her description of the energy in the Resort matches what I have felt all these years of returning … first feeling sad about the outer changes, and then noticing that the Osho Buddhafield energy is still very strong there. Looking in, rather than out.

    Thanks again for posting this. Love to you and Amido….. Sheelu

    On Mon, Aug 16, 2021 at 9:16 PM Sat Sangha Salon wrote:

    > purushottama posted: “Ma Satya Priya was a unique soul, a true rebel. Here > are two posts from her four years apart. You can see that her > rebelliousness was what true rebelliousness is, open, fluid, not fixed to > the memories of the past or ideals of the future, just present her” >

    1. I have added the following explanation to the post for clarification:

      In 2012 I posted the letter from Satya Priya, Banned Forever: The Layers of the Onion after getting her permission to do so via email. Four years later I came across the second letter, Be Quiet. Be Loving. Be Fearless. and posted it as well. I don’t remember how I came across the second one. But I know that I did not get it from Pune. It is possible that I saw it on the website for the New York center, I just don’t remember.  At the time I assumed that it portrayed a subsequent visit to the Pune Osho Resort and posted it to Sat Sangha Salon.

      When I created this post with the two letters together it was pointed out that the second letter refers to her sannyas age as 30 and the first letter refers to her sannyas age as 35, which would indicate that chronologically they are reversed. That certainly is possible. I do not have any explanation as to why I came across the second four years after the first. Regardless, both of the letters are expressions of Satya Priya and if we invite them both in without choosing one over the other, they make a whole.

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