| Author/Contributor(s): | Heehs, Peter |
| Publisher: | Inner Traditions |
| Date: | 3/2/2027 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
• Traces Mirra Alfassa’s extraordinary journey from Belle Époque Paris to the heart of modern India’s most influential ashram
• Reveals the personal, cultural, and spiritual forces that shaped her path, including her Sephardic Jewish heritage, French artistic training, study of occultism, and Sri Aurobindo’s integral yoga
• Offers a deeply human portrait of the woman who co-created and led one of India’s most enduring spiritual communities
Born in Paris in 1878 into a prosperous Sephardic Jewish family, Mirra Alfassa trained as an artist, moved through the cosmopolitan world of Third Republic France, and gradually developed a spiritual vocation that resisted categorization. Her encounter with esoteric thought, including the Cosmic Movement of Max Theon and Mary Ware, and her 1914 arrival in Pondicherry, brought her to Sri Aurobindo. It was a meeting she experienced as one of immediate and profound recognition.
Peter Heehs employs a rigorously historical approach, treating Alfassa’s life not as the inevitable unfolding of spiritual destiny, but as a series of choices shaped by lived experience. Drawing on archival documents, diaries, and letters, the author situates her inner development within the broader currents of her era, including the Dreyfus Affair, the global occult revival, and the Indian independence movement. Heehs illuminates how her personal transformation and world history shaped each other.
From 1926 onward, as Sri Aurobindo withdrew into deeper contemplation, Alfassa—now known as the Mother—assumed full leadership of the ashram and eventually founded Auroville, the international township conceived as a living experiment in human unity. The Mother is essential reading for anyone drawn to modern Indian spirituality and the life of one of its most extraordinary woman practitioners.