🌺 The Smile on Moulmein Road

Singapore’s skyline glittered like a field of stars as Meera stepped out of her CBD [Central Business District] office, exhausted from another day of deadlines. She wasn’t opposed to faith; she simply found no time for it. Life was busy enough.

She hailed a taxi.

The driver was an elderly Chinese man with a storyteller’s calm voice. As they drove toward Mandalay Road, the city noise softened. The taxi slowed on Moulmein Road, where three places stood like guardians of different prayers:

          • Satya Sai Baba Mandir
          • A small Chinese temple in the center
          • A quiet church beside it

The lanterns of the Chinese temple flickered like tiny hearts between the two larger sanctuaries.

The driver pointed to it.
Photo of Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba“Long ago, an old lady cleaned that temple,” he began. “Very simple woman. Lived with her daughter. Woke before sunrise to sweep every corner. People walked past like she was invisible. But she was always smiling.”

Meera raised an eyebrow. “What made her so happy?”

“Every morning,” he said, lowering his tone, “someone greeted her kindly. A man in orange robes, with big hair and a glowing smile.

Meera leaned forward. “Someone from the Chinese temple?”

The driver smiled mysteriously.
“No. He came from next door—the Indian Mandir. She didn’t know his name. But he always said the same words: ‘Work is worship. Clean well. Every act is prayer.’ He gave her fruits every day. Such love in his voice! It made her broom feel like a sacred tool.”

The rain began to drizzle, temple lights gleaming like halos through the wet glass.

The driver continued:
“The lady once told me, ‘He makes me feel I’m serving God by sweeping the floor. He treats me as equal to anyone who prays. He always says, ‘Love All… Serve All.’

One day she suddenly fell sick. On her final night, she held her daughter’s hand and whispered just one request: ‘Tell the smiling man I cleaned well. I served with love.”

After her passing, her daughter searched for him. She walked through the church courtyard… then stepped into the Sathya Sai Mandir, heart trembling. She looked up at the wall.

And there He was.

The same hair, like a cloud of blessing.
The same robe, orange like a sunrise.
The same gentle, divine smile.

It was Sai Baba.

The man known by millions, who preached Love All, Serve All… had quietly visited a temple sweeper in Singapore simply to honor her sincerity. He recognized her service as prayer—even when no one else did.

Meera sat still. Not converted. Not suddenly devout. But awakened to a truth she had forgotten:

🌼 Dignity is the highest worship.
🌼 Service is greater than ritual.
🌼 Love makes every task divine.

The taxi stopped on Mandalay Road. Behind her, the Chinese temple glowed softly, the church bell chimed, and the Mandir lights seemed to shimmer in the mist—like the echo of a blessing that once said:

Love All. Serve All.
Work is Worship.

~ Meera, India