Indian guru Sai Baba buried in state funeral, thousands grieve

PUTTAPARTHI, India, (Reuters) – Indian spiritual  guru Sri Sathya Sai Baba was buried today as hundreds of  thousands of devotees flocked to pay their last respects at his  temple in south India to a man revered as a living God.
Tibetan monks, Muslim clerics, top politicians and military  officers sat with hundreds of family members to commemorate the  charismatic guru who drew millions of followers around the world  with his diverse teachings that blended Hindu and Muslim  beliefs.

Sachin Tendulkar paying his last respects. (Reuters photo)
Sachin Tendulkar paying his last respects. (Reuters photo)

Revered as the reincarnation of Hindu and Muslim saint Sai  Baba of Shirdi, Sai Baba was a cultural icon in a rapidly  modernising Indian economy, where religion and spirituality  still remain an integral part of daily life.
Sai Baba, who last month was admitted to hospital in his  hometown of Puttaparti, in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh,  died of multiple organ failure on Sunday. He was 85.
Hindu chants echoed around the temple during the funeral,  conducted with full state honours, before the guru’s body was  hidden behind a curtain for a private family burial. Giant  screens around the town broadcast the ceremony to crowds of  devotees.
Top politicians such as opposition leader L.K. Advani  attended the ceremony, a day after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh  and ruling Congress party chief Sonia Gandhi visited the temple  in Puttaparthi.
Hundreds of thousands of people have queued for hours in the  stifling heat to file past the guru as his body lay in state  since Sunday, dressed in his trademark orange robes. Local  officials extended the viewing time to midnight on Tuesday to  meet demand.
Queues stretched for kilometres through the town, which has  shuttered its shops and businesses since Sunday. Authorities  blocked traffic entering the town on fears of overcrowding, as  devotees walked tens of kilometres to reach the temple.
His followers, estimated to number six million worldwide,  included top Indian politicians, business tycoons and Bollywood  stars. Indian cricket superstar Sachin Tendulkar wept as he  crouched by the glass casket on Monday.
Sai Baba, with his distinctive frizzy hair and credited with  mystical powers including conjuring objects out of thin air, ran  schools and hospitals through trusts in numerous countries.
Questions have arisen over who will take over the management  of his substantial assets.