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Ramana Maharshi stories

  1. Sati Devi
  2. Saint Kabir
  3. Saint Appar
  4. Dakshinamurti
  5. Parvati's Test
  6. Saint Tukaram
  7. Brahma's Pride
  8. Sundaramurthy
  9. Silent Upadesa
  10. Siddhas' Lesson
  11. Gautam Buddha
  12. Brahmin's Curse
  13. King Bhagiratha
  14. Enter the Heart
  15. Bhakta Ekanath
     
  16. Fire of Devotion
  17. Kaduveli Siddhar
  18. Lord Jagannatha
  19. Jnani and Siddha
  20. Manikkavachakar
  21. Universal Equality
  22. Ardhanareeswara
  23. Jnana Sambandar
  24. Greatness of Japa
  25. Initiation in Mantra
  26. Headship of a Mutt
  27. Kamal, Son of Kabir
  28. Story of Garlic Plant
  29. Sadhu and 3 Stones
  30. Brahma, The Creator
     
  31. Swami is Everywhere
  32. Sundaramurthi's Bond
  33. Sage Ribhu & Nidagha
  34. King and His Ministers
  35. Story of Tiruvachakam
  36. Lord Daittatreya Gurus
  37. Sambandhar and Appar
  38. Gautama Muni & Ahalya
  39. Subrahmanya Ganapathi
  40. Moksha of a Thorn Bush
  41. Charm of Self Realization
  42. Characteristics of a Jnani
  43. Sage Ashtavakra & Janak
  44. Namdev & Saint Jnaneswar
  45. Pilgrimage to SriArunachala
 
 

Brahmin's Curse

Ramana Maharshi : One day a sage called Pakanar was weaving a basket in front of his house. Hearing a loud voice chanting, “Hare Ram”, he asked his sister who it was that was chanting.

His sister replied that it was a brahmin who is keeping his own daughter. Pakanar replied, “You are the hundredth person to repeat the scandal”.

Meanwhile, the brahmin having come to that place, the sage
told the brahmin that his curse was lifted and that he could
return home.

Later, he explained to his sister thus: “This brahmin was living with his widowed daughter. They were generous and kind-hearted. They would invite sadhus and feed them with love. On hearing of their generosity a sadhu came to visit them. He was well received and fed. The sadhu was immensely pleased with their devotion and decided to bless them.

He just glanced once and knew what was in store for them when they die. He called the brahmin and told him that after his death he would be tortured by a mountain of leeches in hell.

On hearing this, the brahmin fell at his feet in terror and implored him for some means of escape. The sadhu told him, ‘Once while you were cooking food a leech fell from the roof into the cooking pot and died unobserved. You offered that
food to a realised sage. Since whatever is given to a sage will be received back a thousand-fold a mountain of leeches are in store for you’.

The sadhu then advised the brahmin that in order to escape this fate he should conduct himself towards his grownup widowed daughter in such a way, as to provoke a scandal
that he was having illicit intimacy with her.

He assured him that when a hundred persons had uttered the scandal the sin would leave him completely, having been distributed among the scandal-mongers. The brahmin did accordingly and you are the hundredth person to tell the scandal. So I say that the brahmin’s curse is now removed.”

Sri Bhagavan drew from the story the following moral: “Have the best intention, but act in such a way not to win praise, but to incur blame. Resist the temptation to justify yourself even when you are just.”