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Glossary›The Mother Mirra Alfassa

Glossary

The Mother Mirra Alfassa

Mirra Alfassa (1878–1973), known as The Mother, was a French-born spiritual teacher who co-developed Integral Yoga with Sri Aurobindo in Pondicherry, India.

What is The Mother Mirra Alfassa?

Mirra Alfassa (21 February 1878 – 17 November 1973), known to her followers as The Mother or La Mère, was a French-Indian spiritual guru, occultist and yoga teacher, and a collaborator of Sri Aurobindo, who considered her to be of equal yogic stature to him and called her by the name “The Mother” or “Shri Maa”. According to Sri Aurobindo in 1934, “Mother was doing Yoga before she knew or met Sri Aurobindo; but their lines of sadhana independently followed the same course. When they met, they helped each other in perfecting the sadhana.” Sri Aurobindo recognised in her an embodiment of the dynamic expressive aspect of evolutionary, creative Force, in India traditionally known and approached as the ‘Supreme Mother’. After Sri Aurobindo withdrew into seclusion in 1926, The Mother administered the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Pondicherry for nearly five decades, overseeing its material and spiritual operations and developing Integral Yoga as a practical discipline for collective transformation.

Origins & Lineage

Mirra Alfassa was born in Paris in 1878 to Mathilde Ismalun, an Egyptian Jew, and Moïse Maurice Alfassa, a Turkish Jew who migrated from Edirne via Egypt. Alfassa’s full name at birth was Blanche Rachel Mirra Alfassa. In her youth, she traveled to Algeria to practice occultism along with the occultist Max Théon. After returning to Paris, Alfassa guided a group of spiritual seekers. Between 11 and 13 a series of psychic and spiritual experiences revealed to her not only the existence of God but man’s possibility of uniting with Him, of realising Him integrally in consciousness and action, of manifesting Him upon earth in a life divine.

In 1914, she traveled to Pondicherry, India, and met Sri Aurobindo. She identified him as “the dark Asiatic figure” of her visions, and called him Krishna. During this first visit, she helped publish a French version of the periodical Arya, which serialised most of Sri Aurobindo’s post-political prose writings. Although she had to leave India after the outbreak of the First World War, first returning to France, and then accompanying Richard to an official post in Japan, in April 1920 she returned to join Sri Aurobindo in Pondicherry and never left again. From 1924, Alfassa took over managing the household, which was gradually turned into an ashram. In 1926, Sri Aurobindo began to retire from regular activities and to focus on his yogic practises.

How It’s Practiced

Integral Yoga (or Purna Yoga) is the spiritual philosophy and practice developed by Sri Aurobindo and The Mother (Mirra Alfassa). Central to this philosophy is the concept of involution, a process in which the Spirit plunges into the “Inconscience” of Matter, followed by evolution, where the Spirit progressively manifests itself back through the material world. Unlike other Yoga practices Integral yoga does not propose any kind of physical asanas, breathing techniques or external movements. It is more psychological in nature, with internal reflection and self analysis & correction as main tools of development.

While unassisted natural evolution is a slow process taking centuries or many births, Integral Yoga is defined as a “rapid and concentrated conscious evolution” capable of accelerating this change in a single lifetime. Practitioners engage through aspiration (calling down higher consciousness), rejection (refusing movements of the lower nature), and surrender (offering one’s will to the Divine). The Mother started with just simple conversations and recitations, which later expanded into deeper discussions about integral yoga where she would read a passage from Sri Aurobindo’s or her own writings and comment on them. These sessions grew into a seven-volume book called Questions and Answers.

The Mother Mirra Alfassa Today

Seekers encounter The Mother’s teachings primarily through three channels. First, the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Pondicherry continues to function as a residential spiritual community under her organizational structures. On 28 February 1968 they drew up a charter for the city, Auroville, meaning City of the Dawn (derived from the French word aurore), a model universal township where one of the aims would be to bring about human unity. The city still exists and continues to grow (although not in terms of permanent residents as recorded by census). Second, there are 13 volumes of conversations recorded by her disciple Satprem, titled The Mother’s Agenda, also originally in French. Mother’s Agenda - l’Agenda - is a massive 13 volume, 6,000 page, journal of The Mother’s (born Mirra Alfassa) spiritual and physical experiences, recorded by Satprem over a period of 19 years, beginning with some fragments dating to 1951, and continuing in greater detail (especially with Satprem’s use of a tape recorder) from 1960 to her passing in 1973. Third, The 17-volume Collected Works consists of nine volumes of talks and eight volumes of writings (prayers, reflections, essays, sayings, letters and personal notes).

Common Misconceptions

The Mother is not simply an administrator or organizational figurehead of Sri Aurobindo’s vision. Aurobindo saw her as the incarnation of the divine mother or Mahāśakti and said her spiritual growth “followed the same course” as his, which radically universalized Rāmakṛṣṇa’s teaching of vijñāna, which he called “supermind” and she “the domain of love”. She was not merely a student but a co-creator: “What is known as Sri Aurobindo’s Yoga is the joint creation of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother; they are now completely identified—the sadhana in the Asram [sic] and all arrangement is done directly by the Mother, Sri Aurobindo supports her from behind.”

The Mother is not associated with the Integral Yoga taught by Swami Satchidananda, which is an entirely separate lineage. Integral Yoga as developed by Alfassa and Sri Aurobindo emphasizes psychological transformation and material evolution, not transcendence or escape from the body. Their teaching was an innovation on Asian thought and practice since it sought to transform the material realm into a more divine reality, not transcend it.

How to Begin

Those new to The Mother’s teachings typically begin with one of three entry points. “Questions and Answers” (the seven-volume collection of her talks between 1950–1959) offers accessible guidance on spiritual life in everyday language. For those seeking her intimate spiritual experiences, “Mother’s Agenda” (particularly Volume 1) provides first-person accounts of consciousness work in the physical body. Sri Aurobindo’s “The Mother” (a short book) explains her role and the four powers she embodies—Maheshwari, Mahakali, Mahalakshmi, and Mahasaraswati. Visits to the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Pondicherry or Auroville allow direct encounter with the living communities she established, though neither location requires formal initiation or allegiance to participate.

Related terms

sri aurobindointegral yogaaurovillesupramental consciousnesssatprempsychic being
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