Venezuela's former President Nicolás Maduro and current acting President Delcy Rodríguez — both raised Catholic in an overwhelmingly Christian country — have a deep reverence for an Indian spiritual leader who died in 2011.
Religious identity is complex in Venezuela, where it is common for people to blend multiple religious and spiritual practices. For Maduro and Rodríguez, that blend includes the teachings of Sathya Sai Baba, who has had a strong global following for over 50 years for his message of unity, love and spiritual oneness that transcends religious, social and cultural barriers.
Maduro frequently invoked Christ, the Holy Spirit and God in his speeches as president, framing his government's struggles as a spiritual battle for Venezuela's soul and sovereignty. Just weeks before his Jan. 3 capture by U.S. forces, he celebrated the centenary of Sai Baba in a social media post, expressing his hope that ''the wisdom of this great teacher will continue to illuminate us in the mission of building a homeland of love, peace and high spirituality.''
Rodríguez visited Sai Baba's ashram in southern India as recently as 2024. She said during her first presidential media briefing last month that the Venezuelan people faced ''a new moment where coexistence, mutual respect, and recognition of others allow for the construction and building of a new spirituality.''
Rodríguez also said in an interview with the organization's official channel during a 2023 visit that she still feels the guru's presence in trying times.
''Many times, when I was in danger, I felt Baba with me, my family and also with my country,'' she said. ''He is always with us, teaching us … and showing a path for peace and love.''
Top leaders' fondness for Sathya Sai Baba
The U.S. military seized Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, from their Caracas home Jan. 3 in a stunning operation that landed them in New York to face federal drug trafficking charges. Maduro called himself ''a man of God'' while pleading not guilty.