Around sixty years ago, Indiaโs countryside watched a frail man in loin cloth walking from village to village, appealing for land for the poor. โThe earth is the Lordโsโ was his refrain. โLand, like air and water, belongs to the Lord and is His gift to all His children, and should therefore be shared in commonโ, he was telling the people, appealing to the landowners to part with a part of their land, and they were responding enthusiasticallyโthe rich and the poor feeling themselves blessed for getting an opportunity to participate in this unique โYajnaโ. His words, overflowing with love and compassion, could just not be resisted. The whole world watched in amazement this unbelievable spectacleโโIndiaโs social miracleโ being brought about by this โSaint on the marchโ. The land problem, identified by economists as the most urgent and the most complex problem of Asia, was being tackled through a novel experiment in psychosocial engineering.