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Meet a Living Master and receive the gift of Darshan

There’s something special about a mother’s love. A divine mother, however, loves the whole world. Her Holiness Sai Maa - spiritual master, healer and humanitarian - is visiting Munich to share her teachings and a whole lot of love.

Meet a Living Master and receive the gift of Darshan

“There’s nothing more beautiful in this world than a human being,” says Sai Maa whose name means Divine Mother. “No monument, no church; so allow yourself to be loved and you will experience your own self.”

Followers looking for guidance on their spiritual journey now have the opportunity to meet her in Munich. On Friday 2, November at 6pm, Sai Maa is inviting the public free of charge to experience Darshan – a Sanskrit word meaning a moment with a divine presence.

“”It activates the divine presence that is dormant in every human being,” she adds. “The more you receive Darshan, the best of you, the divinity in you, comes to the surface.”

Sai Maa’s own journey has taken her from the island of Mauritius, where she was born to Indian parents, on to France where she became a wife and mother to two children and worked for the government, in local politics to reforms at a European Union level.

Having studied a range of alternative medicine, she used her native background and new home in Europe to create a therapeutic practice, which thrived on mixing traditions from both East and West.

“In the West, we disconnect from our own self and mostly keep faith in the material world,” she says. ”The East is more about togetherness, the mind is less distorted and most eastern countries have known enlightenment for a very long time.”

A successful professional, Sai Maa felt drawn to a greater good. In 2000, she founded Humanity in Unity, a non-profit organisation with the aim of providing basic needs of clothes, food and medical care to those less fortunate.

As a firm advocate of interfaith collaboration, Sai Maa tirelessly travels the world, bringing humanitarian relief and comfort to people of all races and doctrines on all continents. Darshan is only a small and initial part of a much wider healing process that Sai Maa practices.

“It’s a feeling of pure love,” she adds. “The light and love channels into energies and you start to wash or cleanse or soften what is happening in your field. The healing starts there.”

Journey of Profound Healing and Journey of Profound Awakening are programmes Sai Maa has developed based on knowledge, innate talents and life experience. “I can see beyond the physical,” she says. “I can see energy, hear energy, smell energy and taste energy,” she says. “I can get to a place in somebody with a deep wound.”

Having studied psychology while living in Europe, Sai Maa believes that no matter how many years people attend therapy, it remains very difficult to become enlightened – the key to the healing process.

According to her, if an emotional body is weak it can reach a point where it starts to crack, which manifests into physical disease.

“Imagine somebody that is really unwell but is completely closed due to wounds of the past,” she adds. “It very difficult to get the healing place of the physical. We have already entered the quantum physics, we are now working on quantum biology.”

Sai Maa will also he hosting a Transformational Healers Programme in Munich to encourage those working within the healing profession to gain greater understanding.

Venue for Sai Maa events in Munich, November 2-4: Hotel Dolce Unterschleissheim.

Article sponsored by Sai Maa Europe

MUNICH

Four injured as WWII bomb explodes near Munich train station

Four people were injured, one of them seriously, when a World War II bomb exploded at a building site near Munich's main train station on Wednesday, emergency services said.

Smoke rises after the WWII bomb exploded on a building site in Munich.
Smoke rises after the WWII bomb exploded on a building site in Munich. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Privat

Construction workers had been drilling into the ground when the bomb exploded, a spokesman for the fire department said in a statement.

The blast was heard several kilometres away and scattered debris hundreds of metres, according to local media reports.

Images showed a plume of smoke rising directly next to the train tracks.

Bavaria interior minister Joachim Herrmann told Bild that the whole area was being searched.

Deutsche Bahn suspended its services on the affected lines in the afternoon.

Although trains started up again from 3pm, the rail operator said there would still be delays and cancellations to long-distance and local travel in the Munich area until evening. 

According to the fire service, the explosion happened near a bridge that must be passed by all trains travelling to or from the station.

The exact cause of the explosion is unclear, police said. So far, there are no indications of a criminal act.

WWII bombs are common in Germany

Some 75 years after the war, Germany remains littered with unexploded ordnance, often uncovered during construction work.

READ ALSO: What you need to know about WWII bomb disposals in Germany

However, most bombs are defused by experts before they explode.

Last year, seven World War II bombs were found on the future location of Tesla’s first European factory, just outside Berlin.

Sizeable bombs were also defused in Cologne and Dortmund last year.

In 2017, the discovery of a 1.4-tonne bomb in Frankfurt prompted the evacuation of 65,000 people — the largest such operation since the end of the war in Europe in 1945.

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