Anie Nunnally

Anie lived in the Ashram from 1968-1972 practicing Sri Aurobindo's yoga under The Mother's living guidance. Her name, 'Anie', was given to her by The Mother.

About

Anie Nunnally: In Memoriam by Julian Lines



Author : Julian Lines
Courtesy : Overman Foundation.



Anie Nunnally passed at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram Nursing home at 11:30 pm April 25th at the age of 80. Anie was from Hattiesburg, Mississippi and kept some of her Southern accent and charm until the end.

Her inclination toward music and spirituality started early in life. Initiated in music by her mother, an accomplished piano player, Anie started to sing at an early age and by the time she was two and a half years old she was able to sing thirty songs.

As a teen, Anie had her first spiritual awakening through music:

I remember one of the first times that I was listening to a piece of classical music when I was about 14 (by this time I was in boarding school and singing in the choir and performing in school musicals). I had the experience of an awakening in the center of my chest.  Something inside me soared upwards with the music and it was a sensation that I had never experienced before. It was like a bird had flown out of the center of my being. It was, of course, an awakening in my psychic being to the beauty of the music. So, music had become my way to inner openings and a sense of the higher vital had been experienced.

Her career in music blossomed when she came to New York City. She was an understudy and played one of the nuns in the first Broadway production of the Sound of Music and was also in the national touring company with Florence Henderson. She had numerous good friends in show business including Tom and Dick Smothers. Richard Rogers called her the Fiat (sportscar) with the Big Horn, because even with her diminutive size, she could project her strong soprano voice.

But she also had an inner call:

After a serious auto accident in December of 1962, I had a profound experience of the Mother who had brought me back from the portals of death. I had a concussion and went into shock. My head injuries required 30 stitches. Mother assured me there would be no scars.

This inner contact led to many spiritual experiences and letters to the Mother for guidance on my path. My experience with Her opened all my chakras and everything in my centers of energy within, started to spin like wheels. From that moment, I knew that I wanted to live in the Ashram and around her Presence.

Anie came to Pondicherry in 1968 with her husband, Narad (Richard Eggenberger), and had Mothers Darshan. She spent four years in India and subsequently led a life of service to the Ashram and Auroville back in the U.S.

Anie was close to Jyotipriya (Dr. Judith Tyberg) founder of the East West Cultural Center (EWCC) in Los Angeles, as well as Sam Spanier and Eric Hughes, who founded Matagiri Sri Aurobindo Center in Mount Tremper, NY. She helped at the Sri Aurobindo International Center in Manhattan and lived with Scott (Lalit) Fullman in the apartment across the hall. Anie also served as the first Board Member of the Foundation for World Education after the passing of founder Eleanor Montgomery.

She taught music in New York City, Woodstock (where she also sang in the choir) and Los Angeles and had very warm relationships with her many students. One of her Woodstock students, Cara Cruickshank, writes:

Anie was one of my first artistic mentors and remained one throughout my childhood and early adolescence. She was devoted, empowering and always accessible. Singing and music lessons with her in Woodstock were always fun and joyful. I am honored to have had our connection which has remained into my adulthood. Anie always stayed in contact, with deep interest in my artistic life. She was a mentor who could see both my spirit and potential and appreciatively articulate it with great clarity. No matter which path my artistic career has taken, she has always been interested and supportive. I remember receiving a gift from Anie when I was a young girl: a small bag of blessed soil from Auroville. Recently, she connected me with one of her closest artistic friends and students where I live in Paris, who is connected with both the Auroville and Los Angeles community. This has allowed me to feel closer to Anie, even at a distance, and now will allow her presence and legacy in my life to continue in a meaningful way. Her spirituality was so evidently important to her and was often expressed in her warm generosity of spirit.

Anie moved back to Los Angeles and had a close relationship with fellow devotee, Stuart Schoen. After his passing, she returned to her native Hattiesburg. She was invited to return to California to become the resident director and President of the Sri Aurobindo Center of Los Angeles (former EWCC). She developed a deep friendship with Michael Spector, whose healing work was helpful to her in her later years.

In 1999 Anie had returned to the Ashram to interview disciples who had been close to Mother. After receiving a positive response to the publication of these interviews in the U.S, she returned to create a collection of twelve published as The Golden Path.

Two years ago, she and her friend decided to move to Pondicherry, living on Candapa Muldiar Street. Since her return, she started work on a follow-up volume of interviews when her kidney failure produced a series of strokes. She recovered from the first two setbacks and most recently visited Auroville in mid-February, 2017 for a concert of flute and poetry by Gordon and Jeanne Korstange at Savitri Bhavan.

A few days later she had a more severe stroke limiting her speech and movement on her left side. Anie still rallied enough to speak with visitors. Vikas, a good friend from the Sri Aurobindo Center of Los Angeles, found her whole demeanor inspiring and felt a profound Grace was protecting her from what should have been a very painful process. Friends from the US and France contributed to a fund for her hospital stay and dialysis supplies and sent supporting messages faithfully conveyed by Michael. Dr. Dutta kindly brought her into the Ashram Nursing Home for her final weeks.

Michael reflected, It was a great adventure for us starting at the Sri Aurobindo center in LA and moving after three years to Pondy. Anie knew it was time and planned happily to return to India into the Mothers arms. She was all grace, charm, beauty along with childlike stubbornness, a solid sense of responsibility and a touchingly profound devotion to all that is good and uplifting. We were brought closely together by the wondrous spirit of music and art &so much of it!!!

We sang and danced and meditated and shared these last years with joyous laughter and ever deepening communion with Sri Aurobindo and Mother.

*

About the Author: Julian Lines has been involved with many activities and organizations related to the Integral Yoga, and has organized AUM conferences in the past. He first visited Auroville in 1974 and has been involved with the community ever since. serves on the Matagiri Board Sri Aurobindo Center in Mount Tremper, New York as well as that of Auroville International USA, the Nakashima Foundation for Peace and is also on Aurovilles International Advisory Council. He is Executive Director of Auroville International.



Photographs

Anie with A.B. Purani, Richard Eggenberger, Kailas Jhaveri and Eleanor Montgomery at New York.
Anie with Udar and Mona Pinto in Pondicherry
Anie with Prof. Arabinda Basu
Anie on 18 December 1968 in Sri Aurobindo Ashram.
Anie with Jhumur Bhattacharya
Anie with Amrit and Richard Pearson
Anie with Jyotipriya
Anie with Dimitri von Mohrenschildt, Rene Fulop Muller and family
Anie at At Matagiri with Sam, Eric, Kevin Nakashima, Rusty Selhorst, George Nakashima, Joe Spanier and Muriel Spanier.
Anie with June
Anie with Nick and Lois Duncan
Anie with Tom, June, Rudy, Julian, Tine and Larry in Aptos
Anie with Fanou, Mary, Binah, Gordon, Jack, Jeanne and Bryan in Taos
Anie with Wendy Lines, Eric Hughes, Julian Lines and Rudy
Anie at Lodi with Dakshina, Rohini, Lynda, Angelo and Bahmin
Anie with Wendy
Anie with Verne
Anie with Verne
Anie with Julian Lines
Anie with Michael

 

 

Homages



Homage by Auroville International USA

Anie Nunnally passed at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram Nursing home at 11:30 pm April 25th at the age of 80. Anie was from Hattiesburg, Mississippi and kept her Southern accent and charm until the end.


Introduced to music by her mother, an accomplished piano player, Anie started to sing at an early age and by the time she was two and a half years old she was able to sing thirty songs.


As a teen, Anie had her first spiritual awakening through music:


In an interview with Joseh Garcia Anie said,I remember one of the first times that I was listening to a piece of classical music when I was about 14 (by this time I was in boarding school and singing in the choir and performing in school musicals). I had the experience of an awakening in the center of my chest.  Something inside me soared upwards with the music and it was a sensation that I had never experienced before. It was like a bird had flown out of the center of my being. It was, of course, an awakening in my psychic being to the beauty of the music. So, music had become my way to inner openings and a sense of the higher vital had been experienced.


Her career in music blossomed when she came to New York City. She was an understudy and played one of the nuns in the first Broadway production of the Sound of Music and was also in the national touring company with Florence Henderson. She had numerous good friends in show business including Tom and Dick Smothers. Richard Rogers called her the Fiat (sportscar) with the Big Horn, because even with her diminutive size, she could project her strong soprano voice.


But she also had an inner call:


After a serious auto accident in December of 1962, I had a profound experience of the Mother who had brought me back from the portals of death. I had a concussion and went into shock. My head injuries required 30 stitches. Mother assured me there would be no scars.


This inner contact led to many spiritual experiences and letters to the Mother for guidance on my path. My experience with Her opened all my chakras and everything in my centers of energy within, started to spin like wheels. From that moment, I knew that I wanted to live in the Ashram and around her Presence.


Anie/span came to Pondicherry in 1968 with her husband, Narad (Richard Eggenberger), and had Mothers Darshan. She spent four years in India and subsequently led a life of service to the Ashram and Auroville back in the U.S.


Anie was close to Jyotipriya (Dr. Judith Tyberg) founder of the East West Cultural Center (EWCC) in Los Angeles, as well as Sam Spanier and Eric Hughes, who founded Matagiri Sri Aurobindo Center in Mount Tremper, NY. She helped at the Sri Aurobindo International Center in Manhattan and lived with Scott (Lalit) Fullman in the apartment across the hall. Anie also served as the first Board Member of the Foundation for World Education after the passing of founder Eleanor Montgomery.


She taught music in New York City, Woodstock (where she also sang in the choir) and Los Angeles and had very warm relationships with her many students. One of her Woodstock students, Cara Cruickshank, writes:


Anie was one of my first artistic mentors and remained one throughout my childhood and early adolescence. She was devoted, empowering and always accessible. Singing and music lessons with her in Woodstock were always fun and joyful. I am honored to have had our connection which has remained into my adulthood. Anie always stayed in contact, with deep interest in my artistic life. She was a mentor who could see both my spirit and potential and appreciatively articulate it with great clarity. No matter which path my artistic career has taken, she has always been interested and supportive. I remember receiving a gift from Anie when I was a young girl: a small bag of blessed soil from Auroville. Recently, she connected me with one of her closest artistic friends and students where I live in Paris, who is connected with both the Auroville and Los Angeles community. This has allowed me to feel closer to Anie, even at a distance, and now will allow her presence and legacy in my life to continue in a meaningful way. Her spirituality was so evidently important to her and was often expressed in her warm generosity of spirit.


Anie moved back to Los Angeles and had a close relationship with fellow devotee, Stuart Schoen. They hosted many visitors from the Ashram and Auroville touring the town in Stuart's convertible. After his passing, she returned to her native Hattiesburg. She was invited to return to California to become the resident director and President of the Sri Aurobindo Center of Los Angeles (former EWCC). 


In 1999 Anie had returned to the Ashram to interview disciples who had been close to Mother. After receiving a positive response to the publication of these interviews in the U.S, she returned to create a collection of twelve published as The Golden Path (see the review by Mangesh Nadkarni).


Unfortunately her liver function was deteriorating. Having developed a deep friendship with Michael Spector, whose healing work was helpful to her in her later years, they decided to move to Pondicherry, living on Candapa Muldiar Street. She started work on a follow-up volume of interviews when her kidney failure produced a series of strokes. She recovered from the first two setbacks and most recently visited Auroville in mid-February, 2017 for a concert of flute and poetry by Gordon and Jeanne Korstange at Savitri Bhavan.


A few days later she had a more severe stroke limiting her speech and movement on her left side. Anie still rallied enough to speak with visitors. Vikas, a good friend from the Sri Aurobindo Center of Los Angeles, found her whole demeanor inspiring and felt a profound Grace was protecting her from what should have been a very painful process. Friends from the US and France contributed to a fund for her hospital stay and dialysis supplies and sent supporting messages faithfully conveyed by Michael. Dr. Dutta kindly brought her into the Ashram Nursing Home for her final weeks.


Michael reflected, It was a great adventure for us starting at the Sri Aurobindo center in LA and moving after three years to Pondy. Anie knew it was time and planned happily to return to India into the Mothers arms. She was all grace, charm, beauty along with childlike stubbornness, a solid sense of responsibility and a touchingly profound devotion to all that is good and uplifting. We were brought closely together by the wondrous spirit of music and art &so much of it!!!


We sang and danced and meditated and shared these last years with joyous laughter and ever deepening communion with Sri Aurobindo and Mother.


Anie was cremated in Pondicherry and her ashes will be buried in Auroville.



Homage by Matagiri


Anne Nunnally (Anie) passed at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram Nursing home at 11:30 pm April 25th at the age of 80.
Anie was from Hattiesburg, Mississippi and kept some of her Southern accent and charm until the end. She came to Pondicherry in 1968 with her husband, Narad (Richard Eggenberger), and had Mother's Darshan. She spent four years in India and subsequently led a life of service to the Ashram and Auroville back in the U.S. She maintained a correspondence with Mother and even received Mother's intervention for her recovery after a car accident in the U.S.

She and Narad had one of the first health food stores in New York City. Both were professional singers in the choir of Saint Bartholomew's among many other jobs. Anie was an understudy and nun in the first Broadway production of the "Sound of Music" and was also in the national touring company. She had numerous good friends in show business including the Smothers Brothers. Richard Rogers called her the "Fiat (sportscar) with the Big Horn", because even with her diminutive size, she could project her strong soprano voice. 
Anie was close to Jyotipriya (Dr. Judith Tyberg) founder of the East West Cultural Center (EWCC) in Los Angeles, as well as Sam Spanier and Eric Hughes, who founded Matagiri Sri Aurobindo Center in Mount Tremper, NY. She helped at the Sri Aurobindo International Center in Manhattan and lived with Scott (Lalit) Fullman in the apartment across the hall. Anie also served as the first Board Member of the Foundation for World Education after the passing of founder Eleanor Montgomery.

She taught music in New York City, Woodstock (where she also sang in the choir) and Los Angeles and had very warm relationships with her many students. She moved back to LA and had a close relationship with Stuart Schoen and then after his passing returned to her native Hattiesburg. She was invited to return to LA to become the resident director of the Sri Aurobindo Center of Los Angeles (former EWCC). She developed a deep friendship with Michael Spector, whose healing work was helpful to her in her later years and they decided to move to Pondicherry, living on Candapa Muldiar Street.

In 1999 Anie had returned to the Ashram to interview disciples who had been close to Mother. After receiving a positive response to the publication of these interviews in the U.S, she returned to create a collection of twelve published as "The Golden Path" (please read Mangesh Nadkarni's review online). Since her return to Pondicherry she started work on a follow-up volume when her kidney failure produced a series of strokes. She recovered from the first two setbacks and most recently visited Auroville in mid-February for a concert of flute and poetry by Gordon and Jeanne Korstange.

A few days later she had a more severe stroke limiting her speech and movement on her left side. Anie still rallied enough to speak with visitors. Vikas, a good friend from the Sri Aurobindo Center of Los Angeles, found her whole demeanor inspiring and felt a profound Grace was protecting her from what should have been a very painful process. Friends from the US and France contributed to a fund for her hospital stay and dialysis supplies and sent supporting messages faithfully conveyed by Michael. Dr. Dutta kindly brought her into the Ashram Nursing Home for her final weeks.

Michael reflected, "It was a great adventure for us starting at the Sri Aurobindo center in LA and moving after three years to Pondy Anie new it was time and planned happily to return to India into the Mother's arms. She was all grace,charm,beauty along with childlike stubbornness a solid sense of responsibility and a touchingly profound devotion to all that is good and uplifting. We were brought closely together by the wondrous spirit of music and art ...so much of it !!!

We sang and danced and meditated and shared these last years living together with joyous laughter and ever deepening communion with Sri Aurobindo and Mother."
A retrospective album of photos is online at this link: https://goo.gl/photos/Z9aAtm6Jn2udMQBr9


Narad on Anie



It was around 1966 or 1967 when Anie and I were returning from Connecticut, coming down a mountain in a blizzard with snow falling heavily. We descended a long hill and suddenly, near the bottom we saw a car parked perpendicular to traffic and due to the road being covered with sleet could not stop and hit the car where two old ladies were "rummaging around for a flashlight". Anie went through the windshield and we were taken to the hospital. She was badly cut on the face and I had glass in my arm and elbow.

I wrote to Mother who said that Anie would have no scars. As soon as She said this I was given an inspiration to get Vitamin E capsules and put the liquid directly on the cuts. On healing there were no scars.



Sometime after the accident we received $3000.00 for medical expenses (probably 3 million today) and I wrote to Mother immediately saying that I wanted to send her the money in gratitude for saving Anie's life. Mother wrote back saying "Why don't you use the money to come for the inauguration of Auroville? And so we booked the tickets. the amount was $1500.00 per ticket! We arrived in the Ashram in mid December and Mother called us immediately to see Her on Anie's birthday, December 18th.



It is December 18th, 1968, Anie's birthday and we are called by mother to her room. There are three of us, Isadore from the east-west cultural center, Anie and myself. I enter first, bow and place my head on mother's feet. I kneel and am to mother's right. Anie enter next and is in front of mother. Isadore is enters last and is to her left. She then looks at Isadore and gives him a radiant smile. He leaves in two weeks as this was not his path. Then mother look at Anie and says, and I quote: "this is not the first time we have met. You have been with me many times before, many many times.

I thank all of you, Julian for the beautiful tribute and all who loved her as a friend, fellow disciple and child of the mother.

I am grateful for your prayers, your love and your remembrances.


At their feet,

Narad


A very early photo probably around mid 1970 with Anie and Narad in the Matrimandir Gardens Nursery at the place sanctioned by Mother. The Nursery were started before the laying of the Matrimandir Foundation Stone and Mother once said, The Gardens are as important as the Matrimandir. More to come...



My photo of Anie with Nick and Lois Duncan, circa 1962 was taken at their ranch in Sedona where they founded a Sri Aurobindo Center. It was for me the most beautiful place for a center with vast pastures and black faced sheep, views of the great red rocks and a stream where the stone was so smooth that one could slide down the river for a long stretch. The Center is no longer there with the passing of Nick and Lois but the property was donated by the family and is now a State Part.

Narad

Anie's letter
Anies Letter and Mothers Reply


Narad,

Here is a copy of a dream experience during my days at the Nursery. It was sent to Mother and I have also enclosed Her response.
Her answer certainly seems to underscore the importance of the work of the Nursery and Gardens.

Those Trees and plants now surrounding the Matrimandir stand as living symbols of all the love, consciousness and care that went into the planting of those initial seedlings by the early pioneers of Auroville. AS I see it, they imbibe the Very Force and Presence of the Mother.

In Her Light,
Anie
1971 (A year before Mother gave me the name, Narad)


My Dearest Richard,

I have just had the most wonderful dream about you which I shall record and try to send to you by Ramachandra before I see you in the afternoon.

You and I and some other people (I dont remember anyone in particular, although it seems that Mr. Chandler was present) were walking about what seems to have been a campus. We were standing in front of a very large structure which appeared to be that of St. Pauls School in England where Sri Aurobindo studied. (I had seen a picture of the school before going to sleep as I am again reading Life of Sri Aurobindo). Forming a pinnacle around the top of the school were some tree tos which appeared to have no trunks or roots in the earth.

Suddenly with a great burst of energy you said I must get them for my teacher. With this you began to scale the wall of the school, by rope, with a pair of pruning clippers. All were aghast, but suddenly the branches began to fall and we could see you in the top pruning away.

When we went to see the branches there were all golden and shimmering. When you came down we were all rejoicing and there was much happiness and joy in the atmosphere. You said, Now we can transplant them in the earth.

Afterwards we all began to walk about among the most beautiful plants and flowers I have ever seen, but nothing I could clearly identify. The dream ended here.

I felt so good, as I work up immediately after the dream. It seems to have been more like an experience than a dream.

With love in Their Light.
Anne


Mothers handwritten reply

It is not quite a dream, and it is a very good indication
about the work you are doing.

I hope Richard will recover soon.
The packet enclosed is for him.

With love and blessings
Mother

It was only two years ago that I recounted this dream to Vladimir at Savitri Bhavan.
After a moment he quoted this line from Savitri:  A branch of heaven transplant to human soil.

We started one of the first health food stores in NYC on 14th Street, lower east side. Every day something was stolen from our shop as the area was full of drug users. We were ten years ahead of the time for health food stores! We named ours "New Life Health Food" and we went bankrupt in about 6 months. Here is Anie with a young Hispanic boy who helped us and again at the counter making carrot juice.

Again, I thank you for all your truly beautiful" replies and your love for Anie.



After Anie arrived in the Ashram she invited me to visit her. The flat she and Mikhail were renting was the most beautiful I had seen in Pondicherry, befitting her love of beauty. I can tell you that the Presence of the Mother was very strong and Anie was happier than I had seen her since I visited her at the Sri Aurobindo Center in Los Angeles. Mikhail was not well but he was a great support to her and she told me of all his care.

We agreed that I would do a series of video interviews of her life and work to post on our website, motherandsriaurobindo.in and my YouTube site, Richard Eggenberger, so many more aspiring souls could see the life of a true disciple who had given herself to Their service.

Soon after Anie had the first stroke and then I was fortunate to see her three times in the hospital, in the ICU and later in a room. Gary had given me a small MP3 player so she could listen to music. I uploaded many choral works of exceeding beauty and brought it to her. I am not certain whether she had listened to any of the works as her condition worsened.

The interviews never took place and I had to leave for the U.S. Shortly after my arrival in Mother's Garden I heard from Aurelio and Julian of her passing. For years I prayed for her soul every day and now she is with Mother and will come again in a new body to help in Mother's work on earth.

Narad







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