In the maha Kumbh, baba Kalpurush has been enthralling bystanders. Those who see him find him both fascinating and disturbing because to his remarkable look, which includes a human skull gripped in his hand from which he sips water and a face covered in ash. According to legend, his voice has a booming tone because he spent years meditating in the Himalayas.
"I have attended the last seven Kumbh Melas," baba Kalpurush stated, pointing to the Sangam plain in front of him. The signage are different this time than they have been each time I have strolled through this region. At the cremation ghat, crows are singing a different tune. The deceased are more agitated.
The Aghori baba went on to say, "The earth is changing its breath," "When the river changes its course, cities built along its banks are starkly reminded that their foundations rest on borrowed land," he remarked, drawing a sacred sign with ashes. The perception of permanence and the illusion of the eternal will be significantly shaped by the events of the following four years.
The oldest Aghori sadhu to attend this maha Kumbh is baba Kalpurush. He frequently makes forecasts about water, including scarcity and calamities, which have often come true.
"The snow on the mountains will go. Slowly at first, then all at once. The sacred rivers will discover new routes. He has previously prophesied that "many temples will return to earth."
Baba Kalpurush's most important prophecy relates to the maha Kumbh. "This Sangam will change," he said. The river is moving. Sangam will eventually locate a new site. The next generation will organize Kumbh where there is a conflict now.
But baba Kalpurush's prophecies make no reference to any devastation. He said, "Earth will not experience the impending shift. What the middle generation has forgotten, the younger generation will recall. What we have forgotten will be remembered by the children of today. The wind will make sense to them. They will know when the Earth is going to rotate. Young people will once more learn to interpret the skies.