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Paramahansa
Yogananda entered mahasamadhi (a yogis final
conscious exit from the body) in Los Angeles, California,
on March 7, 1952, after concluding his speech at a banquet
held in honor of H.E. Binay R. Sen, Ambassador of India.
The great world teacher demonstrated the value of yoga (scientific
techniques for God-realization) not only in life but in
death. Weeks after his departure his unchanged face shone
with the divine luster of incorruptibility.
Mr. Harry T. Rowe, Los Angeles Mortuary Director, Forest
Lawn Memorial-Park (in which the body of the great master
is temporarily placed), sent Self-Realization Fellowship
a notarized letter from which the following extracts are
taken:
The absence of any visual signs of decay in the dead
body of Paramahansa Yogananda offers the most extraordinary
case in our experience....No physical disintegration was
visible in his body even twenty days after death....No indication
of mold was visible on his skin, and no visible desiccation
(drying up) took place in the bodily tissues. This state
of perfect preservation of a body is, so far as we know
from mortuary annals, an unparalleled one....At the time
of receiving Yoganandas body, the Mortuary personnel
expected to observe, through the glass lid of the casket,
the usual progressive signs of bodily decay. Our astonishment
increased as day followed day without bringing any visible
change in the body under observation. Yoganandas body
was apparently in a phenomenal state of immutability....
No odor of decay emanated from his body at any time....The
physical appearance of Yogananda on March 27th, just before
the bronze cover of the casket was put into position, was
the same as it had been on March 7th. He looked on March
27th as fresh and as unravaged by decay as he had looked
on the night of his death. On March 27th there was no reason
to say that his body had suffered any visible physical disintegration
at all. For these reasons we state again that the case of
Paramahansa Yogananda is unique in our experience.
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