Silent monk Baba Hari Dass, who inspired thousands at the Mount Madonna Center, dies at 95

Baba Hari Dass, known affectionately by the honorific Babaji by many in the Mount Madonna community, brought a lightness to what he did, and a tenderness to those he met. (Shmuel Thaler — Santa Cruz Sentinel)

NICHOLAS IBARRA | Santa Cruz Sentinel

September 26, 2018

SANTA CRUZ – Baba Hari Dass, the spiritual leader and silent monk who inspired thousands out of the Mount Madonna Center north of Watsonville, died Tuesday morning in his Bonny Doon home. He was 95.

Known by his students and devotees as Babaji — Hindi for “respected father,” he taught yoga and meditation out of the Watsonville retreat center and school after moving to the U.S. from India in 1971.

Babaji took a vow of silence in 1952, conversing only through his writings and a small chalkboard from which he would dispense terse-yet-profound utterances to those who sought his advice.

Asked once by a Sentinel reporter to describe himself, he wrote simply, “I am what people see me as.” Asked how should one live a good life, he would reportedly respond, “Work honestly, meditate every day, meet people without fear, and play.”

Born March 26, 1923, in Almora, India, in the foothills of the Himalayas, Babaji was said to have left his home at age 8 to pursue what his calling to become a monk, joining a nearby spiritual school.

He is said to have spent his youth practicing yoga and meditation and helping to build temples in the Himalayan foothills, soon becoming a venerated yogi and ascetic in his own right and building a following in India.

He emigrated to the U.S. in 1972 at the invitation of two American students, and took up residence with UC Davis professor Ruth Horsting. His reputation in the U.S. spread on the wings of a 1971 book “Be Here Now” by former Harvard psychologist Richard “Ram Dass” Alpert, who had studied yoga with Babaji in India. A group of devotees formed at UC Santa Cruz and Babaji soon moved to the Santa Cruz Mountains with Horsting.

His followers formed the nonprofit Hanuman Fellowship in 1972 and began hosting retreats. In 1978 the nonprofit purchased 350 acres of rural land north of Watsonville and founded the Mount Madonna Center. The center now sees thousands of visitors each year and is the site of the Mount Madonna School, a private K-12 school with about 200 students.

“Babaji put things in motion around him,” said Ward Mailliard, who led the Hanuman Fellowship for decades and now serves on its board. “He had a way of seeing people’s talents and gifts and helping put them in service to the greater good. That’s how Mount Madonna came about.”

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