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Friday, 1 May 2026
Autobiography of a Yogi-Qs-Ans-Chapter IV
Saturday, 21 February 2026
Autobiography of a Yogi, Paramhansa Yogananda-Summary-Chapter VI-QS-Ans
Autobiography
of a Yogi, Paramhansa Yogananda-Summary-Chapter VI-QS-Ans
Chapter 6: The Tiger Swami (from Autobiography of a Yogi)
The chapter begins when the narrator, a young Paramahansa
Yogananda, is urged by his friend Chandi to visit the famous Tiger Swami, a
saint who was once known for fighting wild tigers with his bare hands. Curious
and excited, the boys visit him on a cold morning in Bhowanipur. After a long
wait—typical of spiritual teachers who test a seeker’s patience—they are
finally taken to his room. They are astonished to see his massive, powerful
body: huge chest, enormous biceps, long flowing hair and beard, and a tiger
skin wrapped around his waist.
The boys respectfully ask him how he could fight the most
ferocious Royal Bengal tigers. The Swami replies with a laugh that tigers are
“pussycats” to him. He explains that strength alone is not enough; confidence
and mental power are essential. Many strong men faint at the sight of a tiger,
while a man with strong will and determination can defeat the tiger mentally.
The mind is the real controller of the body. Weakness, he says, originates in
the mind and becomes a habit and then a physical state.
At their request, the Tiger Swami narrates his life.
Surprisingly, he says that as a child he had a strong will but a weak body.
Through persistent positive thinking he strengthened his body and fulfilled his
dream of fighting tigers. He achieved fame and pride, performing public shows
where he fought and controlled wild tigers.
Once, his father warned him after hearing a saint’s prophecy:
the Swami would be severely injured in his next tiger encounter, suffer for six
months, and then become a monk. The Swami ignored the warning, thinking it
superstition.
Soon after, he visited Cooch Behar. The prince of the state
invited him and challenged him to fight a newly caught tiger named Raja Begum.
If he defeated the tiger, he would receive wealth and honours; if he refused,
he would be publicly declared a fraud. Angered by the insult, the Swami
accepted the challenge.
The prince arranged a huge pavilion to hold thousands of
spectators. People were excited and terrified because Raja Begum was a fierce,
roaring beast kept hungry to increase his ferocity. Rumours spread that this
tiger was a demon sent to punish the Swami for humiliating the tiger race.
On the day of the fight, the Swami bravely entered the cage
alone. The tiger immediately attacked and tore his right hand, causing blood to
gush out. Summoning his mental power, the Swami hid his injured hand and fought
with his left, delivering heavy blows. The battle was intense—both man and
tiger were covered in blood. The audience cried out in terror, urging guards to
shoot the tiger.
Finally, he delivered a powerful blow, momentarily stunning
Raja Begum. He even forced open the tiger’s jaws and bound him with a chain.
But the tiger returned with a final attack, biting the Swami’s shoulder. Again
the Swami overpowered him and chained him securely before exiting the cage.
Though victorious, the Swami’s body was severely maimed. He
fulfilled the three conditions: stunning the tiger, binding him, and leaving
without assistance. The crowds celebrated him as a hero, showering him with
gold and praise. He was given the tiger as a gift, but victory no longer
brought him joy. A profound spiritual change had come over him.
Soon he fell dangerously ill with blood poisoning and
remained near death for six months—exactly as the saint had predicted. After
recovering, he admitted to his father that the saint must be his true guru.
Miraculously, the saint arrived and told him it was time to leave tiger-taming
and learn to conquer the inner “tigers”—the beasts of ignorance, desire, and
ego. He initiated the Swami into yoga and took him to the Himalayas for
spiritual training.
By the end of the chapter, Yogananda realizes he has
witnessed a man who transformed from a physical hero to a spiritual hero. The
Tiger Swami’s story shows the superiority of mental and spiritual power over
brute strength.
✓
SHORT QUESTION–ANSWERS (40–45 words each)
1. Why did Yogananda and Chandi wish to meet the Tiger Swami?
They wished to meet him because they had heard thrilling
stories about his ability to fight wild tigers with his bare hands. Their
youthful imagination was excited by such extraordinary feats, and they wanted
to see the remarkable man in person.
2. What impressed the boys when they first saw the Tiger
Swami?
They were astonished by his huge, powerful body—broad chest,
massive biceps, strong neck, and flowing hair and beard. His appearance,
combined with the tiger skin around his waist, made him look both fierce and
saintly, exactly matching his legendary reputation.
3. According to the Tiger Swami, what is the real source of
strength?
He explained that the mind is the true wielder of muscles.
Physical power alone is not enough; courage, determination, and confidence are
essential. Weakness begins in the mind and becomes a habit. A strong will can
control even the fiercest tiger.
4. What prediction did the saint make about the Swami’s
future?
The saint predicted that the Swami’s next tiger fight would
leave him severely wounded, followed by six months of deadly illness. After
this suffering, he would give up tiger-taming and become a monk. The Swami
initially dismissed this warning.
5. Why did the Cooch Behar prince challenge the Swami?
The prince doubted the Swami’s abilities and mocked him,
suggesting he fought only opium-fed circus animals. To test him, he challenged
him to fight a newly caught, ferocious tiger named Raja Begum. If he refused,
he would be called a fraud.
✓
LONG QUESTION–ANSWERS (170–180 words each)
1. Describe the fight between the Tiger Swami and Raja Begum.
Why was it a turning point in his life?
The fight between the Tiger Swami and Raja Begum was one of
the most dramatic and dangerous events of his life. Raja Begum was a newly
caught, extremely fierce Royal Bengal tiger, kept hungry to increase his anger.
When the Swami entered the cage alone, the tiger immediately attacked, tearing
his right hand and causing blood to gush out. Despite the shock, the Swami hid
his wounded hand and fought with his left, delivering powerful blows. The
battle was violent—both man and tiger were soon soaked in blood. The audience
screamed in terror and begged the guards to shoot the tiger. After a long
struggle, the Swami stunned Raja Begum, forced open his jaws, and chained him.
Although the tiger attacked once more, the Swami overpowered him again. He left
the cage without help, fulfilling every condition of the challenge.
However, the victory proved costly. His wounds led to six
months of near-fatal illness, exactly as predicted by the saint. This suffering
humbled him and awakened his spiritual consciousness. The fight became the
turning point that transformed him from a proud tiger-tamer into a seeker of
higher truth.
2. How did the Tiger Swami transform from a physical fighter
to a spiritual seeker?
The Tiger Swami’s transformation was gradual but profound. In
his early life, he had a strong desire to fight tigers even though his body was
weak. Through persistent positive thinking, he strengthened himself and became
famous for defeating wild tigers with his bare hands. His fame eventually
filled him with pride, and he began public shows of tiger-taming. His father
warned him, conveying a saint’s prophecy that he would be severely injured in a
tiger encounter and later become a monk. The Swami ignored the prediction.
The prophecy came true when he fought the ferocious tiger
Raja Begum. Although he won, he suffered terrible wounds and was bedridden for
six months. This period of suffering broke his pride and awakened an inner
longing for spiritual guidance. After recovering, he admitted that the saint
must be his true guru. The saint appeared and invited him to give up fighting
outer tigers and learn to conquer the “inner tigers” of desire, ego, and
ignorance. The Swami accepted his guidance and went to the Himalayas for
spiritual training, marking his transformation from physical heroism to
spiritual mastery.
Autobiography of a Yogi, Paramhansa Yogananda-Summary-Chapter V-QS-Ans
Summary:
Autobiography of a Yogi-Chapter V
This chapter
tells the story of young Yogananda's search for his true guru. He quotes a
Bible verse about seasons and times for everything, but he didn't feel wise
like King Solomon. He kept looking for his destined teacher during trips from
home, but didn't meet him until after high school.
Two years
passed since his failed trip to the Himalayas with his brother Amar. In that
time, he met several wise people, including the "Perfume Saint,"
called Gandha Baba. His meeting with the Perfume Saint had two parts: one deep
talk and one funny adventure.
First, at
the famous Kalighat Temple in Calcutta, Yogananda stood quietly before a statue
of Goddess Kali. Kali shows both good and bad sides of nature, which confused
him. A tall wandering holy man, a sadhu, spoke to him wisely. The sadhu said
God is simple, but nature is complex. Don't look for perfect truth in the
changing world. Life is like a riddle of good and evil, like the Sphinx in old
stories. Most people fail to solve it and lose their lives. But a few strong
souls see the truth beyond illusion (maya), that everything is one.
The sadhu
explained that real wisdom comes from strict self-examination. Watching your
own thoughts breaks the ego. Self-expression makes people proud and selfish. To
know truth, free your mind from delusions and fight inner enemies like bad
desires. These enemies are everywhere, even in sleep. Most people give up their
ideals and become weak.
Yogananda
asked if the sadhu felt sorry for confused people. The sadhu said loving God
(who is perfect) and humans (who seem bad) is hard, but inner search shows all
people share selfish motives. This leads to humility and kindness. Saints feel
pity for the world. Self-study expands love for God. Pain drives people to God.
They left
the temple. The sadhu said India's ancient rishis gave timeless spiritual rules
that still work against modern materialism. As Yogananda said goodbye, the
sadhu predicted an "unusual experience" soon.
Outside,
Yogananda met an old friend who talked endlessly about the past six years.
Yogananda wanted to escape and prayed to Kali for help. The friend suddenly
left, then chased him back to say, "Meet Gandha Baba, the Perfume Saint,
in that house. You'll have an unusual experience!" This matched the
sadhu's words exactly.
Intrigued,
Yogananda entered the house. People sat on a carpet, whispering about Gandha
Baba on a leopard skin. He could make scentless flowers smell like any flower,
revive wilted ones, or make skin smell nice. The saint was plump, bearded,
dark-skinned, with big shiny eyes. He welcomed Yogananda and offered perfume.
Yogananda
teased him, asking why waste time on smells when God already makes them. The
saint said he took 12 years to learn from a Tibetan master over 1,000 years
old. He materializes perfumes to show God's power, not to close scent
factories.
Yogananda
stretched out his hand without being touched. He asked for rose smell.
Suddenly, his palm smelled strongly of roses! He took a scentless white flower
and asked for jasmine. It instantly smelled like jasmine. A student said the
saint does this in different ways for different people and has many smart
followers in Calcutta.
Yogananda
politely left, not impressed enough to become a follower. At home, his sister
Uma noticed rose perfume on his hand and loved the jasmine flower, proving it
wasn't his imagination.
Later, a
friend Alakananda told another story. At a party, she asked for out-of-season
tangerines. The saint made luchis (Indian flatbreads) puff up, each hiding a
fresh peeled tangerine inside. Everyone ate them happily.
Yogananda
later understood the science: senses come from tiny vibrations in atoms
(electrons, protons), controlled by "lifetrons" (life forces). The
saint tuned to cosmic energy via yoga to rearrange them and create real smells
or fruits, not illusions.
But
Yogananda says such miracles are fun but useless for true spirituality. They
distract from finding God. Real saints change the world with will tuned to God,
not showy powers. Hypnotism is harmful and fake compared to divine miracles.
He quotes
Persian mystic Abu Said mocking fake holy men proud of powers over water, air,
or space—a frog swims, birds fly, devil is everywhere. A true man lives
righteously, remembers God always, gives up selfish wants, shares what he has,
and faces hardship bravely.
Neither the
temple sadhu nor Gandha Baba became Yogananda's guru. His heart knew a true
master by example alone.
(Endnotes
explain Kali as nature's dual force, maya as illusion, rishis as ancient seers,
and modern science doing similar "miracles" like turning sand to gems
with oxygen.)
(Word count:
998)
Short
Questions and Answers (40-45 words each)
Q1: What
prediction did the sadhu at Kalighat Temple make to Yogananda?
A: The sadhu
predicted that after leaving the temple, Yogananda would have an unusual
experience. This came true when his chatty friend led him to meet Gandha Baba,
the Perfume Saint, matching the words exactly. (42 words)
Q2: How did
Gandha Baba demonstrate his power on Yogananda's hand and flower?
A: Without
touching, Gandha Baba made Yogananda's palm smell strongly of roses. Then, a
scentless white flower from a vase instantly gave off jasmine fragrance when
Yogananda asked, proving real materialization of perfumes. (43 words)
Q3: What did
Alakananda witness at Gandha Baba's home in Burdwan?
A: At a
party, Alakananda asked for out-of-season tangerines. Gandha Baba made luchis
on plates puff up, each revealing a fresh peeled tangerine inside. Guests ate
them, finding them delicious and real. (41 words)
Q4: Why does
Yogananda say miracles like Gandha Baba's are spiritually useless?
A: Such
shows entertain but distract from serious God-search. Real saints use powers
quietly, tuned to God's will, not for display. Showy miracles are like
hypnotism—harmful and not divine. (40 words)
Long
Questions and Answers (180 words each)
Q1: Describe
Yogananda's meeting with the sadhu at Kalighat Temple and the key lessons he
learned.
A: At
Kalighat Temple, Yogananda pondered Kali's mix of good and evil in nature. A
wandering sadhu approached, saying God is simple but nature complex. He
explained life's riddle of duality (maya); few solve it by seeing unity beyond
illusion. True wisdom needs painful self-scrutiny to crush ego and fight inner
enemies like lusts. This reveals human selfishness but grows compassion and
love for God. Pain drives us to the Infinite. The sadhu praised India's ancient
rishis for timeless spiritual rules against materialism and predicted an
unusual experience. Yogananda valued the talk on humility, self-analysis over
ego, and universal pity. It taught that saints feel world's sorrows deeply,
expanding love on ego-free soil. Bricks don't inspire; human hearts do. This
wise chat set up his next adventure, showing philosophy leads to real
encounters. (182 words)
Q2: Narrate
how Yogananda met Gandha Baba and the perfume miracles he performed.
A: After the
temple, Yogananda's long-winded friend trapped him in talk but suddenly
mentioned Gandha Baba and left, echoing the sadhu's prediction. Inside the
house, people admired the saint on leopard skin for giving scents to scentless
things. Plump Gandha Baba offered Yogananda perfume. Skeptical, Yogananda
teased about wasting 12 years learned from a 1,000-year-old Tibetan yogi. He
extended his untouched hand; it smelled of roses. A scentless flower then
wafted jasmine. His sister later confirmed the smells. Alakananda's tale added:
at a Burdwan party, luchis hid tangerines. Yogananda saw the science—yoga tunes
lifetrons (subtle energies) to rearrange atomic vibrations for real sensory
changes, not hypnosis. But he left unimpressed, seeking deeper spirituality.
(179 words)
Q3: Explain
Yogananda's view on miracles, with examples from saints and mystics.
A: Yogananda
calls Gandha Baba's feats spectacular but useless, mere entertainment diverting
from God. Real miracles come from saints awake in God, changing the dream-world
via cosmic will, unlike harmful hypnotism. He quotes Abu Said mocking fakirs
proud of water/air powers—a frog swims, birds fly, devil appears everywhere.
True men live righteously amid daily life, never forgetting God, shedding
selfish desires, sharing freely, facing blows bravely. Neither sadhu nor saint
satisfied his guru quest; his heart recognized masters by sublime example.
Endnotes link to science: oxygen turns sand to gems, like yogic transmutations.
Miracles prove power but aren't spiritual goals; focus on inner realization
over outer shows. (181 words)