Tribute
to Dada Rudreshvarananda
On Saturday evening, 27th May, 2006, Dada Rudreshvarananda
was flying a small plane with one passenger returning from the north
of Burkina Faso to Ouagadougou. He had contacted the control tower
at Ouagadougou airport requesting permission to land. That plane
never arrived. It had crashed about 80 km north of Ouagadougou near
a town called Kongoussi.
Dadaji was born in France in 1949. He joined Ananda Marga in Laos
in 1975 and by the summer of 1976 he had completed his training
as a monk and wholetime worker of Ananda Marga in the training center
in Sweden.
His first posting was in Africa. He was told he could choose any
country he wanted. He decided on West Africa, perhaps Ivory Coast
where they speak French, thinking that that would be easy for him
to work since he was French-speaking. It took him a while in those
days to collect his air ticket fare from friends and supporters
to go there. Finally he managed. But when he arrived at the airport
he was refused entry despite his intention and strong resolve to
do service work in Africa.
Again he had to collect for his ticket. When he had enough money
he went to the airlines office and told them that he wanted a ticket
to Africa. They asked him for which country. This time he said that
it did not matter. They issued him a ticket for Congo and everything
went smoothly on his arrival. As soon as he was out of the airport
he threw away his passport. He was in Africa and that was where
he would stay and work. His spirit was that he was determined to
stay in Africa despite the inevitable hardships and dangers he knew
he would inevitably encounter there.
He was a pioneer – the first representative of Ananda Marga
in many of Africa's poorest countries. During his 30 years as a
monk with Ananda Marga he spent more than 20 years in Congo, Ethiopia,
Somalia and finally Burkina Faso, which was to become his legacy.
After working in the Ethiopia famine of 1985, which brought the
spotlight of the world onto hunger in Africa, Dada and AMURT Africa
decided to enter into community development work. They selected
Burkina Faso as the poorest country in Africa at the time. He arrived
in Ouagadougou with no contacts, and with his team went to the Burkina
Faso department of health to offer AMURT's services. The officials
explained that the need was greatest in the north-eastern province
of Oudalan, and they suggested that AMURT help construct a hospital
in Deou.

The construction of the hospital in Deou was the first in a long
list of development projects that Dada headed up in Burkina Faso.
Over the next thirteen years Dada gained the respect and affection
of the tribal population throughout the remotest regions of Oudalan
province, implementing a string of projects including well-construction,
cereal banks, cooperatives, communitygardens,
literacy drives, reforestation, road construction, cooperatives,
training of health promoters, and most recently the safe motherhood
and midwifery program. He also founded the Ananda Marga master unit
in southern Burkina Faso in the village of Bisseri.
In 1999 Dada was tranferred to the USA. Again
he made work for the poor his priority and started neighborhood-watch
programs and a food bank in south-central Los Angeles. Following
a brief visit to Burkina Faso in 2004, where he was again received
warmly by the villagers, he had a deep realization that his heart
was in Burkina Faso and was transferred back to the desert regions
of Oudalan province.
Since 2002, AMURT in Burkina Faso has cooperated with the department
of health to provide primary health care to the remote villages
through the training of village health promoters and the Safe Motherhood
and Midwifery program. Dada put his energy into expanding this program
onto another level. He also arranged an ambulance for the Deou hospital.
The last ambulance, also given by AMURT, had been stolen by desert
pirates more than six years before. In the remote areas, a means
to bring the seriously ill to hospital saves lives.
Following the famine in the Sahel regions of Burkina Faso and Niger
in 2005, Dada resumed the cereal bank program for food security.
Failing rains threatened the area with famine once again in 2006.
Dadaji spent about 15 years in Burkina Faso in total, concentrating
his energies in the remote desert communities in Oudalan province,
with his headquarters in Deou. In this area Dada made a profound
impact on the communities. He loved and respected the people there
and in turn was known and loved throughout dozens of villages.
At the memorial service in Deou, the depth of the people's feelings
for Dada was overwhelming. Delegations came from every section of
the community. The first to come was the representatives from the
Mosque, with whom dada had always shared a deep feeling of spiritual
unity and loyalty. The association of cooperatives, the women's
cooperative (which Dada had helped to start), the traditional chief
and his entourage, the local government, all the civil servants,
including army, customs, police, education, agriculture etc., sent
their representatives to offer their condolences and speak about
their feelings for Dada. Even the Catholic church, whose members
in Deou can be counted on one hand, came to express their sympathies.
The biggest contingent was from the health sector, represented by
in-charges and staff from the medical centers in Deou, Gandafabou
and Boulekessi, and all the village health promoters and village
midwives that AMURT has trained over the last four years. Two midwives
from Fadar Fadar, up near the Mali border, arrived the following
day. They had journeyed on foot for two days to give their respects
to Dada. Small delegations of two or three from many villages came
to represent their communities.
Dozens
of neighborhood women joined together and came as a group. Many
told their stories about how Dada had helped them with medicines
and saved the lives of their children, arranging medicines and sometimes
emergency treatment and evacuation to the provincial hospital. An
older man, who with Dada's help had been trained to construct wells,
was deeply moved. He told the story of how he was losing his sight
and Dada had sent funds from the US for his operation. He said,
"If love could save a person from death, Dada would live forever
because he had so much love." He told how he had felt desperate
upon hearing the news of Dada's accident, unable to even speak to
his family. Many parents told of how Dada had paid for 80 poor school
children to advance to the next class. In this area, with one of
the highest illiteracy rates in the world, education is very precious.
Dada was a great personality in Ananda Marga; pioneering service
work in remote areas and working with the poor and neglected on
a grassroots level for true community development. His absence will
be deeply felt. Le Pays, the leading daily newspaper in Ouagadougou,
published Dada's photo and obituary after his death. The headline
read, "The Monk that Loved Burkina".
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