View Article 

Emptying the Bucket

Audience

When I travel and talk to people, what is my challenge? Of course, what I say has to come from my heart. It’s not a written speech; it's not from a book. But my challenge is for you to empty your bucket.

It’s not about saying wise things, believe me. People think I will tell them something that’s going to help them. And I do, apparently, because people write back and say how they've been helped since they’ve been listening to me. But that’s not what I try to do, because I cannot push wisdom into somebody’s head. All I try to do is to help people to empty their bucket.

Our biggest limitation is our imagination. I’ve never said this before because I know people will immediately say, “No-no-no, we can imagine some outrageous things!” Yes, you can. But there is something so amazing that exists beyond your capacity to imagine. I call it the peace and joy that reside in your heart.

The brain is a funny thing. It tries to fill in as much as it can. If we see an object that we have never seen before, our brain gets very confused. It responds, “What is this?” Imagination can only take you so far. But in the realm of the heart, in the realm of this inner beauty, there is something that is indeed divine, not by our making, but by its very nature.

Prem Rawat

I’m not talking about conjecture. You see, I’m not going to answer your questions. Is that a favor to you? You bet. All I will keep saying is to empty your bucket, and when you do, you will finally make room for answers to come. Because you see, the answers are inside of you.

Do you believe that? We live in a society where if we want to know something, we search on the Internet to find out. But have you found out?

Where is the understanding in this world? People are more educated now than they’ve ever been. Everybody has their reasons for why things are as they are. But understanding is not about reasons. Understanding is about what you have understood, what you have felt. It’s not about preaching. It’s about reaching and grabbing the answer and realizing, “Yes, now I understand.”

That’s what I want for you. I don’t want you to say, “Now I have been given the answer.” That’s pointless. I want you to be able to say, “Now I understand. Now I know.” That's the way it needs to be—because that is the cry of your heart.

Audience

There is an opportunity, a simple opportunity—if you can see it. How can you see it? Empty your bucket. How do you do that? It’s easy. Just start throwing out all that’s not yours, and I guarantee you the bucket will be very, very empty. Because nothing in that bucket is yours.

In your life, you were told things and you said, “Okay.” Every time you agreed, something was placed in the bucket, again and again. Unfortunately, it has gotten to a point where there’s no room for anything else. It’s full.

What’s in the bucket? Part of all that goes around in this world. People fight over God. Nations get polarized. Human beings express anger towards one another just for their opinion. We have created a world where, instead of saying, “Okay, we’ll never be able to figure God out. Let’s just feel God, respect God, and sing God’s praises.” No. It can’t be as simple as that. “Let’s give God a gender.” Do you think God needs a gender? “Let’s give God hands.” Does God need hands? That power, that energy is everywhere: nowhere to come from and nowhere to go to. Does that power need legs? Think about it.

Maybe I’ve inspired you to empty your bucket. Or perhaps I've given you a notion to at least look at your bucket and see how full it is. See if you can recognize that those things are not yours. You never put them there. They are the voices of the people before you, who told you how it had to be. And you said, “Okay.”

I’m not saying that’s good or bad. I’m saying this is your bucket. At least, it should contain what you think should be in it. Because this life is about you. This gift of life has been given to you. When you accept this gift, it fills you with amazing joy. It brings unparalleled clarity. And then your life is filled with gratitude, gratitude to be alive. Could you think of a better story? Could you think of a better ending to a day? Could you think of a better start to a day than to be filled with gratitude? This is the ultimate gift.

Prem Rawat

Prem Rawat

Audience
View Article 

Food for People — Interview with Linda Pascotto

Many people have expressed an interest in The Prem Rawat Foundation’s (TPRF) model program, Food for People (FFP), whose first facility in Bantoli, India, was inaugurated almost three years ago. This 10,000 square-foot facility is located in a very rural area in northeastern India and has become a central part of the life and well-being of several villages in the area. TPRF president, Linda Pascotto, has recently returned from a visit to this facility, and we’re happy to share with you her interview with the Inspire staff.

Food for People

Please tell us about your recent visit to the Food for People facility in India.
I was in New Delhi and realized that I had just enough time for a quick “unofficial” visit to the Food for People facility, which is located about an hour-and-a-half drive from the Ranchi airport in Jharkhand. From the moment I got into the car, I felt I was being taken into a completely different world from the one I live in, with all that was familiar fading rapidly away as my expert driver navigated rough roads that became increasingly narrow and more rutted, weaving and swerving to avoid hitting other vehicles, people, cows, goats, and chickens, and always moving at great speed whenever he could. 

What prompted TPRF to create a facility like this?
This program is the result of Prem Rawat’s vision to help people in need in a way that would offer them a chance to live independent lives in dignity. Several years ago, when he flew by helicopter to this area to speak at events, village children would crowd around the landing site. On one visit, Prem Rawat invited the children to come and see the helicopter close up. He noticed that, although they seemed well cared for and happy, they were very, very thin. He did some research and found that these indigenous Indians had been pushed back into an arid, rocky land in northeast India where it was very difficult to eke out a living. Through the years, they had adapted as best they could but often went hungry because of the limited food available, and they suffered from a variety of illnesses common in such rural areas. Often young children had to work in exchange for food, particularly when one or both parents were too sick to work themselves. He was touched by the shy smiles and curiosity of these malnourished children, and he wanted to help them.

Food for People

What was your first impression when you came to see a meal in progress?
I noticed that a large group of children arrived an hour early so they could watch more of the educational television programs that are shown daily during mealtime. FFP is the only building with electricity in the area, and they are drawn to the big-screen television with pictures and stories of things they would never be able to imagine. The children walked in from all directions and then, after their meal, left for school in small groups of pals with arms linked, vivacious and happy. They had eaten a meal they really liked and had been exposed to something that fascinated them. Life was good.

Tell us about life in these villages and what difference Food for People has made.
There are eight villages that use the FFP facility. Some villagers have to walk at least three miles to get there. I visited the nearest village late one afternoon, along with two local FFP administrators from our partner organization in India, Premsagar Foundation. A cluster of mud houses about half a mile from FFP, the village was the most rural community I have visited in India. Adults were performing their end-of-day activities, some carrying home baskets of food from small plots of land where they grow what food they can, and children were scattered around playing in the narrow lanes between their homes.

It looked like a normal village scene. Later, however, I found out that during the two-and-a-half years FFP has been open, it has made a big difference to the whole community. The villagers’ lives have gradually improved: There is more understanding of good hygiene, and, as a result, less illness. Adults are working more regularly, providing food for themselves and their families in the evenings, and the children are now attending school consistently.

Food for People

How has the program changed over time in response to the villagers’ needs?
The program adjusts to the villagers’ needs under the guidance of the village elders. For many months, we provided two meals each day for children and one meal a day for adults who were too ill to work. As the health of the adults improved, they spent their days working and stopped coming for food. At this point, they decided that they preferred to have the evening meal, meager as it was, at home with their families. So food is now served only once a day to the children, the sick, and the elderly. The time of the daily meal varies with the seasonal changes of the school schedule. The village elders determine the time that works best for those benefiting from the program.

Did you have a chance to speak with any of the children, their parents, or the elders? If so, what did they say to you?
Yes, it was fun to speak to the children and some of the parents. At first, they were shy around me, a stranger who was tall and blonde and didn’t speak their language. But through a translator, the children were soon bubbling with enthusiastic comments about how much they liked the food, smiling happily as they spoke about their favorites. Rice, subgee, or dahl were mentioned repeatedly. It was clear that the nature programs and other educational television shows were extremely popular as well. With few words, parents expressed that the daily meals brought better health and stability to the children’s lives.

What does FFP offer beyond a healthy meal for the day?
After talking to both villagers and administrators, I began to appreciate what a big difference being able to rely on healthy food, clean water, and a regular schedule really made. The consistent FFP meal structures the day in many ways, and it makes regular school attendance the norm. Hygiene, fresh water (often toted home in small quantities), and an orderly process for getting food and eating together are examples of fundamentals that were missing in the children’s lives before. So while they may not even notice, children now have a certain stability in their lives, which, in addition to nutritious food, opens the door to new possibilities in education and future work.

Also, some adult villagers work in the facility, not only earning money for their family’s needs, but learning hygiene, skills of food preparation, and organization. Others work in the fields owned by the facility, where much of the food is grown. They learn good methods for successful farming. What staples are not grown on the land are purchased from the local markets, and this helps the local economy.

For the children, the educational TV shows offer the only contact they have with other people, animals, landscapes, and ways of life outside the world of their very isolated villages. And with this view comes the possibility of considering further education and new opportunities. Walking or riding an old bicycle on rutted roads is the only transportation these rural people have. The villages are scattered throughout the area and are several miles apart from each other and even further from larger villages. Cities are completely out of reach for almost everyone.

Food for People

It sounds as though FFP is playing a significant role in the possibility of a more hopeful future for these people.
There has certainly been progress toward that goal, but it isn’t one that will be reached quickly. The pace is slow and change is slow, but in the relatively short time the facility has been opened, one can already see a difference. Children and adults have gained weight and are healthier. Some of the children are beginning to think about continuing their education beyond the elementary level available locally, even if it means living away from home.

FFP has clearly had a successful beginning. Is the Foundation planning to build facilities in other places based on this model?
TPRF and its partner, Premsagar Foundation Nepal, have begun building a new facility in a rural area in Nepal. Some of the Nepalese people who are involved in the project have visited the FFP facility in Bantoli to understand more about how to run this type of program and to see for themselves the high standards that need to be achieved.

TPRF hopes to continue building facilities like this in other areas. We have come to understand that Prem Rawat’s vision to provide people in need with nutritious meals of the local cuisine is a way to help people prosper naturally and with dignity. With better health and more education, the children are growing up with many opportunities for their future. The cycle of poverty is being replaced with the possibility of a future that they could not have imagined before Food for People came to their area. It is heartening and rewarding to be part of this unique model program.

 


About The Prem Rawat Foundation
The Prem Rawat Foundation was created in 2001 by Prem Rawat, known also as Maharaji, and has a dual mission of bringing his message of peace to people around the world and providing essential humanitarian aid to those in need. TPRF partners with other humanitarian organizations to bring food, water and rapid disaster relief where it is most needed.