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Bibliography of Prem Rawat and related organizations

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Bibliography of Prem Rawat and related organizations lists bibliographical material regarding Prem Rawat and organizations like Divine Light Mission, Elan Vital and the Prem Rawat Foundation.

This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (August 2008)
Legenda
  • Except in verbatim quotations (of titles etc.) Prem Rawat is always listed under that name in the columns below, whatever the dominant alternative name (Guru Maharaj Ji, Maharaji,...) at the time of the publication.
  • Click icon to sort table according to entries in the column under it.
Author(s) Date Type Title Published in/by Place Other specifics
Rawat, Prem November 8, 1970 Public address Peace Bomb satsang And It Is Divine (transcript: 1972)
The Golden Age (transcript: 1978)
India, Delhi (in Hindi)
U.S. (1972)
Australia (1978)
November 9, 1970 Article (newspaper) Hindustan Times India
November 10, 1970 Article (newspaper) Navbharat Times India (in Hindi)
1970 Book (part) Guinness Book of World Records Sterling Publishing U.S.
June 17, 1971 Article (newspaper) Hallelujah! The mini Guru, aged 13, cometh Evening Standard UK, London
June 18, 1971 Article (newspaper) Worshippers greet the boy guru 'straight from Heaven' Daily Mirror UK, London p. 12
Rawat, Prem June 1971 Public address Glastonbury Festival address Glastonbury Fayre (footage: 1972) UK, Glastonbury
UK (footage)
August 2, 1971 Article (magazine) Boy Guru Newsweek U.S. p. 72
Allen, Henry September 14, 1971 Article (newspaper) Pretty Far-Out Little Dude The Washington Post U.S., Washington, D.C. p. B1
Rawat, Prem September 17, 1971 Public address Colorado Satsang Who Is Guru Maharaj Ji? (transcript: 1973) U.S., Colorado
1970s Magazine Divine Times Divine Light Mission U.S.
1970s Periodical The Divine Times Divine Light Mission UK
Rawat, Prem 1972 Book Reflections on an Indian Sunrise Divine Light Mission
Ashokanand (mahatma)
Sandoz, Jaques (directors)
1972 Film (documentary) Satguru Has Come Shri Hans Films
October 23, 1972 Article (newspaper) Pilgrims jet to see Divine Light The Times UK, London p. 12
November 9, 1972 Article (newspaper) Guru's 'Bank' Seized Los Angeles Times (Reuters) U.S., Los Angeles p. A15
November 19, 1972 Article (newspaper) India investigates guru's finances The Times (AP) UK, London p. 8
November 27, 1972 Article (magazine) Junior Guru Time U.S.
Daniel, Leon December 10, 1972 Article (newspaper) 15-Year-Old Hottest Star of Guru Circuit Los Angeles Times U.S., Los Angeles p. C8
1970s Magazine And It Is Divine Shri Hans Productions
Divine Light Mission
U.S.
Blue Aquarius
(Bhole Ji et al.)
1973 Album (music) Blue Aquarius Stax: Gospel Truth Series U.S. GTS-2725
February 3, 1973 Article (newspaper) Guru's Pupil Slates Talk Syracuse Post-Standard U.S. p. 3
Rawat, Prem April 1, 1973 Article (magazine)
Film
DUO proclamation and satsang Divine Times Vol. II No. 6 by Shri Hans Productions (DLM)
(film:) Shri Hans Films
U.S., Denver, Colorado
August 1973–
September 1973
Magazine Divine Light News Divine Light Mission Australia Vol. I, Nos. 1-3
August 8, 1973 Article (newspaper) Guru Gets Testimonial And Some Pie in Face The New York Times U.S., New York p. 43
August 8, 1973 Article (newspaper) 15-Year Old Guru Slapped in Face by Shaving Cream Pie Los Angeles Times (UPI) U.S., Los Angeles p. 2
August 8, 1973 Article (newspaper) Guru Set For Honor, Gets Pie In Face Independent
Press-Telegram
(UPI)
U.S., Long Beach, California p. A-6
September 3, 1973 Article (newspaper) Guru Maharaj Ji: Ulcer The Washington Post U.S., Washington, D.C. p. B7
September 4, 1973 Article (newspaper) The 'Perfect Master' from India has an ulcer Stars and Stripes (AP) U.S. p. 6
Carter, Malcolm N. September 23, 1973 Article (newspaper) Guru Keeps Track Of Subjects With Computer Great Bend Tribune (AP) U.S., Kansas p. 11
Milner, Bart September 23, 1973 Article (newspaper) Casting some shadows on the movement of Divine Light The Times UK, London
1973 Film Who Is Guru Maharaj Ji Shri Hans Productions U.S.
Cameron, Charles
Davis, Rennie
Rawat, Prem
et al.
November 1973 Book Who Is Guru Maharaj Ji? Bantam Books U.S.
Rawat, Prem
Griffin, Merv
November 28, 1973 TV show (interview) The Merv Griffin Show U.S.
Morgan, Ted December 9, 1973 Article Oz in the Astrodome: Middle-class premies find Guru The New York Times Magazine U.S., New York Section 6, pp. 37–39, 84, 86, 88, 90, 92, 94, 96, 104
Du Plessix Gray, Francine
Kelley, Ken
December 13, 1973 Article (magazine) Blissing out in Houston (du Plessix Gray)
Blackjack Love (Kelley)
The New York Review of Books Vol. 20 No. 20 U.S., New York pp. 36–43
Winder, Gail
Horowitz, Carol
December 1973 Article (magazine) What's Behind the 15-Year-Old Guru Maharaj Ji? The Realist No. 97-C U.S., San Francisco, California pp. 1–5
Latimer, Dean January 1974 Article (magazine) Who is Guru Maharaj Ji and why is he saying all these terrible things about God? Penthouse Vol. 5 No. 5 U.S. pp. 65–66
Kelley, Ken January 19, 1974 Article (newspaper) Get Your Red-Hot Panaceas! The New York Times U.S., New York p. 31
Du Plessix Gray, Francine
Kelley, Ken
Apter, Joan
et al.
January 24, 1974 Article (magazine) Knowledge of the Guru, replies to Joan Apter and to Nicholas B. Dirks, Charles R. D. Lindley, Leela A. Wood The New York Review of Books Vol. 20 Nos. 21 & 22 U.S., New York
Kelley, Ken February 1974 Article (magazine) Over the hill at 16 Ramparts No. 12 U.S. pp. 40–44
Goldsmith, Paul
Traum, Artie
February 1974 Article (magazine) Bliss and Bones in the Astrodome Crawdaddy U.S. pp. 62–65
Adler, Dick February 23, 1974 Article (newspaper) TV Review: Videotape Explorers on Trail of a Guru Los Angeles Times U.S., Los Angeles p. B2
Shamberg, Michael (dir.)
Rawat, Prem
Davis, Rennie
et al.
February 24, 1974 Film (documentary) Lord of the Universe Top Value Television U.S.
O'Connor, John J. February 25, 1974 Article (newspaper) TV: Meditating on Young Guru and His Followers: Maharaj Ji Is Focus of P.B.S. Documentary: Astrodome Gathering Yields Splendid Show The New York Times U.S., New York p. 53
Kelley, Ken March 1974 Article (magazine) An East Indian Teen-Ager Says He Is God Vogue U.S.
Elman, Richard March 1974 Article (magazine) Godhead Hi-Jinx: Starring the Guru Maharaj Ji Creem U.S. p. 37-39
March 1974–
October 1979
Magazine The Golden Age Divine Light Mission
Duo Productions
Australia Vol. 1-55
Levine, Richard March 14, 1974 Article (magazine) When The Lord of All The Universe Played Houston: Many are called but few show up Rolling Stone No. 156 U.S. pp. 36–50
Gortner, Marjoe May 1974 Article (magazine) Who Was Guru Maharaj Ji? Just think of him as a spare tire Oui U.S. pp. 90–133
Scheer, Robert June 1974 Article (magazine) Death of the Salesman: for rennie davis (model high school student, antiwar spokesman and chief proselytizer for guru maharaj ji) the media always meant the message Playboy U.S. pp. 107–108, 112, 236, 238-240
Kelley, Ken July 1974 Article (magazine) I See The Light: In which a young journalist pushes a cream pie into the face of His Divine Fatness and gets his skull cracked open by two disciples Penthouse U.S. pp. 98–100, 137-138, 146, 148, 150-151
Baxter, Ernie August 1974 Article (magazine) The multi-million dollar religion ripoff Argosy No. 380 U.S. pp. 72, 77-81
Dart, John November 27, 1974 Article (newspaper) Maharaj Ji Buys $400,000 Home Base in Malibu Area Los Angeles Times U.S., Los Angeles p. B2
1974 Entry in encyclopedic resource Current Biography Yearbook: 1974, entry: "Maharaj Ji, Guru" H. W. Wilson Company U.S. p. 254 ff.
Frazier, Deborah March 23, 1975 Article (newspaper) Growing Pile of Unpaid Bills Beneath Guru's Spiritual Bliss Sunday Journal and Star (UPI) U.S., Lincoln, Nebraska p. 11A
March 24, 1975 Article (newspaper) Riches Called Goal of Divine Light Winnipeg Free Press (CP) U.S.
April 1, 1975 Article (newspaper) Mother Ousts Young Guru as Playboy Los Angeles Times U.S., Los Angeles p. 2
Belkind, Myron L. April 2, 1975 Article (newspaper) Guru's mother rejects him as religion chief Independent
Press-Telegram
(AP)
U.S., Long Beach p. 9
April 9, 1975 Article (newspaper) Guru Tries to Take Control of Mission Ruston Daily Leader U.S.
April 18, 1975 Article (newspaper) Court Halts Heiress' Money Gift To Guru Charleston Daily Mail (API) U.S.
Frazier, Deborah July 14, 1975 Article (newspaper) Guru Maharaj Ji: Pizza, Sports Cars and Millions of Followers Mansfield News Journal (UPI) U.S.
Rawat, Prem
et al.
1975 Book The Sayings of Guru Maharaj Ji Divine United Organization
Shri Sant Yogashram, Hans Marg
India, New Delhi Several volumes
February 20, 1976 Article (newspaper) Maharaj Ji Wins Fight For Mission The Washington Post U.S., Washington, D.C. p. C7

Cornell, George W. March 5, 1976 Article (newspaper) Group Led by Teen Guru Toning Down Eastern Style Albuquerque Journal U.S.
March 6, 1976 Article (newspaper) Spiritual group's claims, practices are changing Evening Capital (AP) U.S.
Brown, Mick April 17, 1976 Article (magazine) Perfect Master and unholy squabbles: The Guru comes of age Street Life UK pp. 18–19
Mishler, Bob
Frazier, Deborah (UPI: interviewer)
May 1976 Interview (magazine) Part of the mainstream The Golden Age No. 29 Australia p. 8 ff.
Thurmond, Strom (U.S. Congress senator) July 20, 1976 US Congressional Record Prem Rawat's Inspirational Message to the United States Citizen's Congress US Congress U.S., Washington, D.C.
Messer, Jeanne 1976 Essay in book Guru Maharaj Ji and the Divine Light Mission The New Religious Consciousness by Charles Y. Glock and Robert N. Bellah (eds.), University of California Press U.S., Berkeley, California pp. 52–72
1977–1980s Magazine (quarterly) Élan Vital Divine Light Mission U.S. ISSN 0195-2145
October 19, 1977 Article (newspaper) Guru Maharaj Ji becomes a citizen of the U.S. Rocky Mountain News U.S., Denver, Colorado
Como, Don (dir.)
Donovan (music)
Davis, Rennie
Rawat, Prem
et al.
1977 Film (part) Aliens from Spaceship Earth U.S.
Stoner, Carroll
Parke, Jo Anne
1977 Book (part) All Gods Children: The Cult Experience - Salvation Or Slavery? Chilton U.S. ISBN 0-8019-6620-5
Foss, Daniel A.
Larkin, Ralph W.
1978 Essay in periodical Worshiping the Absurd: The Negation of Social Causality among the Followers of Guru Maharaj Ji Sociological Analysis Vol. 39 No. 2 by Association for the Sociology of Religion U.S. doi:10.2307/3710215, pp. 157-164
Rawat, Prem 1978 Book The Living Master: quotes from Guru Maharaj Ji Divine Light Mission U.S., Denver
Collier, Sophia 1978 Book (autobiography) Soul Rush: The Odyssey of a Young Woman of the '70s William Morrow & Co. U.S., New York ISBN 0-688-03276-1
Pilarzyk, Thomas 1978 Essay in periodical The Origin, Development, and Decline of a Youth Culture Religion: An Application of Sectarianization Theory Review of Religious Research Vol. 20 No. 1 by Religious Research Association U.S. pp. 23–43
1978
2001
Book (part) Religious Requirements and Practices of Certain Selected Groups: A Handbook for Chaplains
Army Pamphlet 165-13
U.S. Department of the Army
Kirchner Associates
(2001:) The Minerva Group
U.S. (2001:) ISBN 0-89875-607-3 p. II-5 ff.
Forster, Mark January 12, 1979 Article (newspaper) Firm Loyalty: Guru's Sect: Misgivings in Malibu
Malibu Guru Maintains Following Despite Rising Mistrust of Cults
Los Angeles Times U.S., Los Angeles p. A1, 3,...
Mishler, Bob
Tesler, Gary
et al.
February 12, 1979 Interview (radio) Bob Mishler Radio Interview KOA radio station U.S., Denver, Colorado
Downton, James V., Jr. July 1979 Book (monography) Sacred journeys: The conversion of young Americans to Divine Light Mission Columbia University Press U.S., Columbia ISBN 0-231-04198-5
Kemeny, Jim 1979 Essay in periodical Comment: On Foss, Daniel A. and Ralph W. Larkin. 1978. "Worshiping the Absurd: The Negation of Social Causality among the Followers of Guru Maharaj Ji." Sociological Analysis 39, 2: 157-164 Sociological Analysis Vol. 40 No. 3 by Association for the Sociology of Religion U.S. pp. 262–264
Nelson, G. K. 1979 Essay in periodical A Comment on Pilarzyk's Article "The Origin, Development and Decline of a Youth Culture Religion" (RRR, Fall, 1978) Review of Religious Research Vol. 21 No. 1 U.S. pp. 108–109
Pilarzyk, Thomas 1979 Essay in periodical The Cultic Resilience of the Divine Light Mission: A Reply to Nelson Review of Religious Research Vol. 21 No. 1 U.S. pp. 109–112
Price, Maeve 1979 Essay in periodical The Divine Light Mission as a social organization The Sociological Review Vol. 27 UK, Keele, Staffordshire pp. 279–296
Galanter, Marc
Buckley, P.
1979 Essay in periodical Mystical Experience, spiritual knowledge, and a contemporary ecstatic religion British Journal of Medical Psychology No. 52 UK pp. 281–289
Davis, Ivor December 19, 1979 Article (newspaper) Malibu opposes plan to build heliport for Divine Light guru The Times UK, London p. 12
Rawat, Prem 1980 Book Light Reading Divine Light Mission U.S., Miami Beach
Rudin, James A.
Rudin, Marcia R.
June 1980 Book (part) Prison or Paradise?: The New Religious Cults Fortress Press U.S., Philadelphia ISBN 0-8006-0637-X
p.63-65
Robbins, Thomas
Anthony, Dick
1980 Essay in periodical The Limits of 'Coercive Persuasion' as an Explanation for Conversion to Authoritarian Sects Political Psychology Vol. 2 No. 2 by International Society of Political Psychology U.S., New York pp. 22–37
Stones, C. R.
Philbrick, J. I.
1980 Essay in periodical Purpose in Life in South Africa: A Comparison of American and South African Beliefs Psychological Reports Vol. 47 South Africa pp. 739–742
Aagaard, Johannes 1980 Article (periodical) Who Is Who In Guruism? Update: A Quarterly Journal on New Religious Movements Vol. IV No. 3 by Dialogcentret Denmark
Kriegman, Daniel 1980 Book (part) A Psycho-social Study of Religious Cults From the Perspective of Self Psychology, Appendix A: "The Guru Mahara Ji Group: An experiential description: the journey to God" Boston University U.S. Doctoral dissertation
pp. 164–188
references: pp. 218–220
Downton, James V., Jr. December 1980 Essay in periodical An Evolutionary Theory of Spiritual Conversion and Commitment: The Case of Divine Light Mission Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion Vol. 19 No. 4 U.S.
UK
ISSN 0021-8294
pp. 381–396
Lammers, Jos February 14, 1981 Article (magazine) Het concern van Guru Maharaj ji: Vijf jaar zakenman in dienst van de verlichting Haagse Post Vol. 68 No. 7 (in Dutch) Netherlands, The Hague pp. 48–53
May 22, 1981 Article (newspaper) 1-Year Trial OKd for Sect's Helipad Los Angeles Times U.S., Los Angeles p. F6
Godfrey (justice) October 19, 1981 Court decision Dotter v. Maine Employment Sec. Commission Supreme Judicial Court of Maine U.S., Maine Case 435 A.2d 1368
McGuire, Meredith B. 1981
2002
Book (part) Religion: the Social Context Ch. 5 "The Dynamics of Religious Collectivities", section "How Religious Collectivities Develop and Change", sub-section "Organizational Transformations" Wadsworth U.S. ISBN 0-534-00951-4
ISBN 0-534-54126-7
p. 175
Robbins, Thomas
Anthony, Dick
February 1982 Essay in periodical Deprogramming, Brainwashing and the Medicalization of Deviant Religious Groups Social Problems Vol. 29 No. 3. by Society for the Study of Social Problems
University of California Press
U.S. pp. 283-297
Brown, Chip February 15, 1982 Article (newspaper) Parents Versus Cult: Frustration, Kidnaping, Tears; A Question of Will: Law-Abiding Couple ... Who Became Kidnapers to Rescue Daughter from Her Guru The Washington Post U.S., Washington, D.C. p. A1
Schwartz, Lita Linzer
Kaslow, Florence W.
June 7, 1982 Essay in periodical The Cult Phenomenon: Historical, Sociological, and Familial Factors Contributing to Their Development and Appeal Marriage & Family Review Volume 4 Issue 3-4
Haworth Press
U.S. ISSN 0149-4929
pp. 3–30
Robbins, Thomas
Anthony, Dick
June 7, 1982 Essay in periodical Cults, Culture, and Community Marriage & Family Review Volume 4 Issue 3-4
Haworth Press
U.S. ISSN 0149-4929
pp. 57–79
Ottenberg, Donald J. June 7, 1982 Essay in periodical Therapeutic Community and the Danger of the Cult Phenomenon Marriage & Family Review Volume 4 Issue 3-4
Haworth Press
U.S. ISSN 0149-4929
pp. 151–173
Kranenborg, Reender 1982 Book (part) Oosterse Geloofsbewegingen in het Westen Netherlands (in Dutch) ISBN 90-210-4965-1
Schnabel, Paul 1982
(2007)
Book (part) Tussen stigma en charisma: nieuwe religieuze bewegingen en geestelijke volksgezondheid Van Loghum Slaterus
Digital library for Dutch literature
Netherlands
(in Dutch)
ISBN 90-6001-746-3, p. 32, p. 53, p. 99, 101-102, p. 142
October 6, 1983 Article (periodical) Whatever Happened to Guru Maharaj Ji? Hinduism Today by Himalayan Academy U.S. ISSN 0896-0801
Lans, Jan M. van der
Derks, Frans
1984 Essay in book Subgroups in Divine Light Mission Membership: A Comment on Downton Of Gods and Men: New Religious Movements in the West by Eileen Barker, ed.
Mercer University Press
U.S., Macon, GA ISBN 0-86554-095-0 pp. 303-308
Chagnon, Roland January 1985 Book (part) Trois nouvelles religions de la lumière et du son: la Science de la spiritualité, Eckankar, la Mission de la lumière divine Paulines
Médiaspaul (in French)
Canada, Montréal
France, Paris
ISBN 2-89039-985-0
Kriegman, Daniel
Solomon, L.
April 1985 Essay in periodical Cult groups and the narcissistic personality: The offer to heal defects in the self International Journal of Group Psychotherapy Vol. 35 No. 2 U.S. pp. 239–261
Pasternak, Judy July 7, 1985 Article (newspaper) Maharaji Denied in Bid to Triple Copter Use Los Angeles Times U.S., Los Angeles p. 1
Melton, J. Gordon 1986 Entry in encyclopedic resource Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America, entry: "Divine Light Mission" Garland U.S., New York
UK, London
ISBN 0-8240-9036-5, pp. 141–145
Lans, Jan M. van der
Derks, Frans
June 14, 1986 Essay in periodical Premies Versus Sannyasins Update: A Quarterly Journal on New Religious Movements Vol. X No. 2 by Dialogcentret Denmark
DuPertuis, Lucy 1986 Essay in periodical How People Recognize Charisma: The Case of Darshan in Radhasoami and Divine Light Mission Sociological Analysis: A Journal in the Sociology of Religion Vol. 47 No. 2 by Association for the Sociology of Religion U.S., Chicago ISSN 0038-0210
pp. 111-124
Sharma, Arvind 1986 Essay in book New Hindu Religious Movements in India New Religious Movements and Rapid Social Change by James A. Beckford
Unesco/Sage Publications
UK, London ISBN 0-8039-8003-5, p. 224
Galanter, Marc May 4, 1989
1999
Book (part) Cults: Faith, Healing and Coercion Oxford University Press U.S. ISBN 0-19-505631-0
ISBN 0-19-512369-7
ISBN 0-19-512370-0
Tucker, Ruth A. 1989
1991
2004
Book (part) Another Gospel: alternative religions and the new age movement (1989)
Strange Gospels: a comprehensive survey of cults, alternative religions and the New Age movement (1991)
Another Gospel: Cults, Alternative Religions, and the New Age Movement (2004)
Academie Books (1989)
Zondervan (1989, 2004)
Marshall Pickering, Harpercollins (1991)
U.S. (1989, 2004)
UK (1991)
ISBN 0-310-40440-1 (1989)
ISBN 0-551-02277-9 (1991)
ISBN 0-310-25937-1 (2004)
p. 320, p. 364-365
Björkqvist, Kaj 1990 Essay World-rejection, world-affirmation, and goal displacement: some aspects of change in three new religious movements of Hindu origin Encounter with India: Studies in Neohinduism (Nils G. Holm, ed.)
Åbo Akademi
Finland ISBN 951-649-731-4, pp. 79-99
McIlwain, Doris J. F. 1990
June 2006
Book (part) Impatient for paradise: a rites of passage model of the role of the psychological predispositions in determining differential openness to involvement in new religious movements University of Sydney
Sydney eScholarship Repository
Australia, Sydney PhD Doctorate
Melton, J. Gordon 1991
(March 1999)
(2008)
Entry in encyclopedic resource Religious Leaders of America, entry: "Guru Maharaj Ji" Gale; Gale Group
(2008:) Biography Resource Center
U.S., Michigan pp. 285–286.
ISBN 0-8103-8878-2
Juergensmeyer, Mark 1991
1996
Book (part) Radhasoami Reality: The Logic of a Modern Faith Princeton University Press U.S. ISBN 0-691-07378-3
ISBN 0-691-01092-7
pp. 206–207
Mangalwadi, Vishal
Hoeksema, Kurt
1992 Book (part) The world of gurus: a critical look at the philosophies of India’s influential gurus and mystics. Cornerstone Press U.S., Chicago ISBN 0-940895-03-X (revised edition), pp. 137–138
Melton, J. Gordon (Project Director)
Lewis, James R.
et al.
1993 Book (part) Religious Requirements and Practices of Certain Selected Groups: A Handbook for Chaplains The Institute for the Study of American Religion U.S. chapter on Sikh/Sant Mat Groups, section: Elan Vital
Barbour, John D. 1994 Book (part) Versions of Deconversion: Autobiography and the Loss of Faith University of Virginia Press U.S. ISBN 0-8139-1546-5
p. 170 ff.
Gest, Alain
et al.
December 22, 1995 Report (government) N° 2468: Rapport Fait au nom de la commission d'enquête sur les sectes, Ch. I.B: "Un phénomène difficile à mesurer" National Assembly, Parliamentary Commission on Cults (1995) (in French) France p. 14 ff.
Melton, J. Gordon (ed.)
Shepard, Leslie (ed.)
1996
(November 2000)
(2008)
Entry in encyclopedic resource Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology, entry: "Maharaj Ji, Guru" Gale; Thomson Gale
(2008:) Biography Resource Center
U.S. p. 803
ISBN 0-8103-8570-8
Winter, Mark
et al
July 17, 1996 Magazine (special edition) The Divine Times: Special Edition July 17, 1996
Scheer, Robert April 1, 1997 Article (newspaper) How I Was Stood Up by the Venusians: Even a brief encounter with a cult's absurdity reveals its power to attract Los Angeles Times U.S., Los Angeles p. 7
Brauns, John
et al.
1997– Web site Ex-Premie.org
Jones, Rebecca January 30, 1998 Article (newspaper) Former Guru on a Different Mission Rocky Mountain News U.S., Denver, Colorado
Lewis, James R. November 1, 1998
2005
Entry in encyclopedic resource Cults : A Reference Handbook, entries "Elan Vital (Divine Light Mission)" and "Maharaji (b. 1957)" ABC-Clio, Contemporary World Issues series U.S. ISBN 1-57607-031-X
ISBN 1-85109-618-3
pp. 84-85, 121-122, 286-287, 307-308
Richardson, James T. 1998 Entry in encyclopedic resource Encyclopedia of Religion and Society (William H. Swatos, Jr., ed.), entry: "Divine Light Mission" AltaMira Press
Sage publications
U.S.
UK
India
ISBN 0-7619-8956-0, p. 141
Melton, J. Gordon 1999 Essay Brainwashing and the Cults: The Rise and Fall of a Theory in forthcoming The Brainwashing Controversy: An Anthology of Essential Documents CESNUR Italy
Abgrall, Jean-Marie 2000 Book (part) Soul Snatchers: The Mechanics of Cults U.S., New York Algora Publishing ISBN 1-892941-04-X p. 285
Rhodes, Ron 2001 Book (part) The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions: The Essential Guide to Their History, Their Doctrine, and Our Response Zondervan U.S. ISBN 0-310-23217-1
pp. 32, 170
Barrett, David V. 2001
May 2003
Book (part) The New Believers: Sects, 'Cults' and Alternative Religions Cassell UK ISBN 0-304-35592-5
ISBN 1-84403-040-7
p. 65; Part Two: Alternative Religions & Other Groups, Ch. 14: Eastern Movements in the West, Elan Vital, p. 325-329
Kent, Stephen A. October 2001 Book (part) From Slogans to Mantras: Social Protest and Religious Conversion in the Late Vietnam War Era Syracuse University Press U.S. ISBN 0-8156-2923-0
ISBN 0-8156-2948-6
Hassan, Steve
et al.
2001– Web page Elan Vital Steven Alan Hassan's Freedom of Mind Center U.S.
Macgregor, John August 31, 2002 Article (magazine) Blinded by the Light Good Weekend Australia, Sydney pp. 38–42
Geaves, Ron 2002
March 2004
Essay From Divine Light Mission to Elan Vital and Beyond: an Exploration of Change and Adaptation 2002 International Conference on Minority Religions, Social Change and Freedom of Conscience at University of Utah
(2004:) Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions Vol. 7 No. 3
U.S., Salt Lake City
(2004:) U.S.
(2004:) pp. 45–62
Rawat, Prem
et al.
2003– TV series Words of Peace South America
North America
Europe
Satellite
Rawat, Prem 2003 Book Clarity The Prem Rawat Foundation U.S. ISBN 0-9740627-1-5
2003 Essay "Premies" Complain to Google of "Ex-Premie.org" site Chilling Effects U.S.
2003-07 Entry in encyclopedic resource The Houghton Mifflin Dictionary of Biography, entry: "Maharaj Ji" Houghton Mifflin U.S. ISBN 0-618-25210-X
p. 994
Jackson, Sally March 11, 2004 Article (newspaper) Court lets 'cult' gag journalist The Australian Australia p. 21
O’Regan, Mick (host)
Macgregor, John
et al.
March 18, 2004 Interview (radio) Suppression Orders & the Media The Media Report on ABC Radio National Australia
Thomas, Hedley April 24, 2004 Article (newspaper) Peace at a price The Courier-Mail Australia, Brisbane p. 35
November 29, 2004 Press release Words of Peace by Prem Rawat receives TV Award in Brazil tprf.net Press Room by The Prem Rawat Foundation U.S.
Rawat, Prem
Wolf, Burt (interviewer)
2005 Interview (DVD) Inner Journey: A Spirited Conversation About Self-discovery The Prem Rawat Foundation U.S. OCLC 85767576
ASIN B000EDUGI4
Rawat, Prem May 17, 2005 Public Address Maharaji at Thamamssat University Wikisource (transcript: 2006) Thailand, Bangkok
June 30, 2005 Article (newspaper) US names June 16 after Indian. Times of India India
2006 Web page About Us Raj Vidya Kender India
Geaves, Ron 2006 Essay in periodical Globalization, charisma, innovation, and tradition: An exploration of the transformations in the organisational vehicles for the transmission of the teachings of Prem Rawat (Maharaji) Journal of Alternative Spiritualities and New Age Studies Vol. 2 by Alternative Spiritualities and New Age Studies Association UK ISBN 978-1-4196-2696-8
pp. 44–62
Mather, George
Nichols, Larry A.
Schmidt, Alvin J.
August 1, 2006 Entry in encyclopedic resource Encyclopedic Dictionary of Cults, Sects, and World Religions: Revised and Updated Edition, entry "Elan Vital / Divine Light Mission" Zondervan U.S. ISBN 0-310-23954-0
Geaves, Ron October 30, 2006 Essay in book From Guru Maharaj Ji to Prem Rawat: Paradigm Shifts over the Period of Forty Years as a "Master" (1966-2006) Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America by Eugene V. Gallagher and W. Michael Ashcraft (eds.), Vol. IV: Asian Traditions, Greenwood Publishing Group US ISBN 0-275-98712-4
pp. 63–84
December 20, 2006 Newsletter (digital) Prem Rawat’s “Words of Peace” Receives Brazilian TV Award Inspire by The Prem Rawat Foundation U.S.
Cagan, Andrea January 16, 2007 Book (biography) Peace is Possible: The Life and Message of Prem Rawat Mighty River Press U.S. ISBN 0-9788694-9-4
OCLC 123014238
Mendick, Robert May 31, 2007 Article (newspaper) Cult leader gives cash to Lord Mayor appeal Evening Standard UK, London p. 4
Rawat, Prem
et al.
June 1, 2007 Public address Prem Rawat at Guildhall, London The Prem Rawat Foundation (DVD release) UK, London
Rossiter, Joe November 25, 2007 Article (newspaper) Patrick Halley: Outgoing reporter lived colorful life Detroit Free Press U.S., Detroit
Mendick, Robert November 30, 2007
December 2, 2007
Article (newspaper) Guru followers asked to target Gandhi party Evening Standard
Gulf Times
UK, London
Qatar, Doha
Rawat, Prem
Robles, Marta (interviewer)
2007 Interview (DVD) Journey Within: a conversation between journalist Marta Robles and Prem Rawat, Barcelona, Spain The Prem Rawat Foundation
Bromley, David G. 2007 Book (part) Teaching New Religious Movements Aar Teaching Religious Studies Series by American Academy of Religion U.S. ISBN 0-19-517729-0
Metz, Cade February 6, 2008 Article (magazine) Misplaced Pages ruled by 'Lord of the Universe' The Register UK
Finch, Michael 2009 Book Without the Guru: How I Took My Life Back After Thirty Years BookSurge Publishing U.S. ISBN 1-4392-4504-5

ISBN 978-1-4392-4504-0


References

  1. ^ Religious Requirements and Practices of Certain Selected Groups: A Handbook for Chaplains by U.S. Department of the Army, published 2001 by The Minerva Group, ISBN 0-89875-607-3 - reprint of Army Pamphlet 165-13, published in 1978 by Kirchner Associates in Honolulu, p. II-5 ff.
    Quotation
    Following his death, Shri Hans Ji appointed the youngest of his four sons, Sant Ji as the next Perfect Master and therefore he assumed the head of the Divine Light Mission as decreed by his father.
  2. "Guru Maharaj Ji was twelve years old when he gave the following discourse at the 1970 Hans Jayanti. Here he proclaimed that he was going to establish peace on the earth. The effect of this satsang was so profound that it has become known as the 'Peace Bomb'. Hundreds of thousands of people wept to hear him, but their tears were all of love." in And It Is Divine. Divine Light Mission, 1972.
  3. "The Peace Bomb" in The Golden Age. Divine Light Mission, Australia, November 1978, No. 49, pp. 15-21
  4. ^ Mahatma Ashokanand and Jaques Sandoz (directors). Satguru Has Come. Shri Hans Films, 1972
  5. ^ (in Dutch) Kranenborg, Reender. Oosterse Geloofsbewegingen in het Westen ("Eastern faith movements in the West"). 1982, ISBN 90-210-4965-1
    Quotation
    (p. 64) In 1969 stuurt Maharaj ji de eerste discipel naar het Westen. In het daaropvolgende jaar houdt hij een toespraak in Delhi voor een gehoor van duizenden mensen. Deze toespraak staat bekend als de 'vredesbom' en is het begin van de grote zending naar het Westen. In 1969 Maharaj ji sends the first disciple to the West. In the next year he holds a speech for an audience of thousands of people in Delhi. This speech is known as the 'peace bomb' and is the start of the great mission to the West.
  6. Hindustan Times. India, November 9, 1970
    Quotation
    Roads in the Capital spilled over with 1,000,000 processionists, men, women and children marched from Indra Prasha Estate to the India Gate lawn. People had come from all over the country and belonged to several religions. A few Europeans dressed in white were also in the procession.
  7. (in Hindi) Navbharat Times. India, November 10, 1970
    Quotation (translated)
    A three-day event in commemoration of Sri Hans Ji Maharaj, the largest procession in Delhi history of 18 miles of processionists culminating in a public event at India Gate, where Sant Ji Maharaj addressed the large gathering.
  8. Guinness Book of World Records. Sterling Publishing, 1970
  9. "Hallelujah! The mini Guru, aged 13, cometh" in Evening Standard. London, UK, June 17, 1971
  10. "Worshippers greet the boy guru 'straight from Heaven'" in Daily Mirror, London, UK, June 18, 1971, p. 12
  11. Neal, Peter (director). Glastonbury Fayre (1972 documentary, commercial release)
  12. ^ Elman, Richard. "Godhead Hi-Jinx: Staring the Guru Maharaj Ji" in Creem. March 1974, p. 37-39
    Quotation
    The Maharaj Ji made his first Western appearance in 1971 at England's Glastonbury pop festival. He cruised up to the stage in a white Rolls-Royce and harangued the crowd about peace and the one true path to salvation until a merciful stagehand cut off the power on his microphone.
  13. ^ Brown, Mick. "Perfect Master and unholy squabbles: The Guru comes of age" in Street Life magazine. UK, April 17–30, 1976, pp. 18-19
    Quotation
    Guru Maharaj Ji made his first public appearance in England in 1971 at the Glastonbury Festival - a final spasm in the death-throes of what was the love and - peace movement. Glastonbury is a place of legends, Arthurian, Christian, and mystical, and the Gurus appearance was imbued with appropriate cosmic significance. It was said that the position of the planets on an alignment with Glastonbury at the time of the Festival would herald the dawn of a new, Golden Age and the coming of a Great Man. Two rainbows appearing in the sky would signal his arrival.

    The thirteen-year-old Guru Maharaj Ji astonished festival organisers and the assembled multitudes by turning up unannounced in a white Rolls-Royce, taking over the stage, and delivering an impromptu five-minute satsang (literally, 'truth talk') before the power on the microphone was cut. The next day, so the legend has it, two rainbows appeared in a clear blue sky.

  14. "Lost weekends" in The Guardian. June 18, 2004
    Quotation
    They have been lectured on the transience of possessions by a guru, who may have undermined his argument somewhat by being chauffeur-driven to the stage in a Rolls-Royce.
  15. "Boy Guru" in Newsweek. August 2, 1971, p. 72
  16. Allen, Henry. "Pretty Far-Out Little Dude" in The Washington Post. September 14, 1971, p. B1. At thewashingtonpost.com
  17. Rawat, Prem. "Colorado Satsang: The following discourse was given by Guru Maharaj Ji on the 17th of September, 1971, at Boulder, Colorado" in Who Is Guru Maharaj Ji?. 1973.
  18. Divine Times by Divine Light Mission, U.S., 1970s
  19. The Divine Times by Divine Light Mission, UK, from early 1970s
  20. ^ "Pilgrims jet to see Divine Light" in The Times. London, October 23, 1972, p. 12
  21. Rawat, Prem. Reflections on an Indian Sunrise. Divine Light Mission, 1972.
  22. ^ Melton, J. Gordon. Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America. New York/London: Garland, 1986 (revised edition), ISBN 0-8240-9036-5, pp. 141-145.
  23. ^ Cameron, Charles (Ed.); Rennie Davis (Introduction). Who Is Guru Maharaj Ji?. Bantam Books, Inc., 1973
  24. "Guru's 'Bank' Seized" in Los Angeles Times (Reuters). Los Angeles, November 9, 1972, p. A15. At L.A. Times Archives
  25. "India investigates guru's finances" in The Times (AP). London, November 19, 1972, p. 8
  26. "Junior Guru" in Time. November 27, 1972. Available at Time website
  27. Daniel, Leon. "15-Year-Old Hottest Star of Guru Circuit" in Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, December 10, 1972, p. C8. At L.A. Times Archives
    Abstract
    The hottest star on the international guru circuit these days is 15-year-old Maharaj Ji, a chubby cherub who transmits something his transported devotees call perfect knowledge.
  28. And It Is Divine by Shri Hans Productions, Divine Light Mission. U.S., mid-1970s
  29. Blue Aquarius (Bhole Ji's band). Blue Aquarius. Stax: Gospel Truth Series, GTS-2725
  30. "Guru's Pupil Slates Talk" in Syracuse Post-Standard. February 3, 1973, p. 3
  31. "World Set Up to Provide for Mankind: Divine Satsang Filmed" in Divine Times Vol. II No. 6 by Shri Hans Productions (DLM). Denver, Colorado, April 1, 1973
    Introduction
    By the Divine Times press date of April 1 the DUO film should have reached distribution to ashrams and premie houses around the nation. In this 16-minute presentation from Shri Hans Films, Guru Maharaj Ji addresses His premies, and announces the formation of Divine United Organization.

    Filmed earlier this year in India, the movie primarily shows Guru Maharaj Ji sitting at His desk, as He reads the DUO Proclamation: then, turning His eyes to the camera, He gives His satsang directly to the premies viewing the film.

    At the Beginning of the film, the new DUO flag is shown. A brief segment at the end of the film shows our Lord at play on the ashram roof with the flag in the background.

    Below are the Proclamation and a transcription of Shri Guru Maharaj Ji's satsang in the film.

  32. Divine Light News by Divine Light Mission. Australia, August–September 1973
  33. "Guru Gets Testimonial And Some Pie in Face". The New York Times. August 8, 1973.
  34. "15-Year Old Guru Slapped in Face by Shaving Cream Pie" in Los Angeles Times (UPI). August 8, 1973, p. 2. At L.A. Times Archives
    Lede
    A bearded young man pulled a shaving cream pie out of a bouquet of roses and slapped it into guru Maharaj Ji's face, then said, "I always wanted to throw a pie in God's face."
  35. "Guru Set For Honor, Gets Pie In Face" in Independent and Press-Telegram (UPI). Long Beach, Calif., Sunday, August 8, 1973, p. A-6
  36. "Guru Maharaj Ji: Ulcer" in The Washington Post. September 3, 1973, p. B7. At washingtonpost.com
    Lede
    Denver -- Guru Maharaj Ji, the 15-year-old "Perfect Master" from India, has an ulcer. His doctor says the teen-age guru's body is showing the stresses of a middle-aged executive.
  37. "The 'Perfect Master' from India has an ulcer" in Stars and Stripes (AP). September 4, 1973, p. 6
  38. Carter, Malcolm N. (Associated Press Writer). "Guru Keeps Track Of Subjects With Computer" in Great Bend Tribune. Great Bend, Kansas, September 23, 1973, p 11.
    Editor's Note
    To a swelling number of followers, Guru Maharaj Ji is the "Perfect Master". Some even call him God. But to others, he is a pudgy, 15-year-old business titan who processes his disciples through a personnel department and keeps track of them with a computer. Here is a look at the guru and his mushrooming missionary corporation.
  39. Milner, Bart. "Casting some shadows on the movement of Divine Light" in The Times. UK, September 23, 1973
  40. And It Is Divine: Millennium Program by Shri Hans Productions, Divine Light Mission. Denver, Colorado, U.S., 1973, p. 6
  41. Rawat, Prem on The Merv Griffin Show. November 28, 1973
  42. Morgan, Ted (December 9, 1973). "Middle-class premier find". The New York Times.
  43. du Plessix Gray, Francine: "Blissing out in Houston" and Kelley, Ken: "Blackjack Love" in The New York Review of Books Vol. 20 No. 20. December 13, 1973, pp. 36-43.
    Lede (Kelley)
    Last August 7 Pat Haley, a reporter from Detroit's underground newspaper The Fifth Estate, threw a shaving cream pie in the Guru Maharaj Ji's face. 'I always wanted to throw a pie in God's face,' Haley joked afterward. A week later Haley was beaten to within an inch of his life.
  44. Winder, Gail; Horowitz, Carol. "What's Behind the 15-Year-Old Guru Maharaj Ji?" in The Realist No. 97-C. San Francisco, December 1973, pp. 1-5.
  45. Latimer, Dean. "Who is Guru Maharaj Ji and why is he saying all these terrible things about God?" in Penthouse. January 1974, pp. 65-66.
  46. Kelley, Ken (January 19, 1974). "Get Your Red-Hot Panaceas!". The New York Times.
  47. Du Plessix Gray, Francine; Kelley, Ken; Apter, Joan; et al. "Knowledge of the Guru," replies to Joan Apter and to Nicholas B. Dirks, Charles R. D. Lindley, Leela A. Wood in The New York Review of Books Vol. 20 Nos. 21 & 22. January 24, 1974
  48. Kelley, Ken. "Over the hill at 16" in Ramparts No. 12. February 1974, pp. 40-44.
  49. Goldsmith, Paul with Traum, Artie. "Bliss and Bones in the Astrodome" in Crawdaddy. February 1974, pp. 62-65
  50. Adler, Dick "TV Review: Videotape Explorers on Trail of a Guru" in Los Angeles Times. February 23, 1974, p. B2. At L.A. Times Archives
  51. Shamberg, Michael (dir.); Prem Rawat; Rennie Davis; et al. Lord of the Universe. Top Value Television (TVTV), February 1974.
  52. O'Connor, John J. (February 25, 1974). "TV: Meditating on Young Guru and His Followers". The New York Times.
  53. Kelley, Ken. "An East Indian Teen-Ager Says He Is God" in Vogue. March 1974.
  54. The Golden Age by Divine Light Mission, Duo Productions. Australia, 1974-1979, Vol. 1-55
  55. Levine, Richard. "When The Lord of All The Universe Played Houston: Many are called but few show up" in Rolling Stone No. 156. March 14, 1974, pp. 36-50.
  56. Gortner, Marjoe. "Who Was Guru Maharaj Ji? Just think of him as a spare tire" in Oui. May 1975, pp. 90-133
  57. Scheer, Robert. "Death of the Salesman: for rennie davis (model high school student, antiwar spokesman and chief proselytizer for guru maharaj ji) the media always meant the message" in Playboy. June 1974, pp. 107-108, 112, 236, 238-240.
  58. Kelley, Ken. "I See The Light: In which a young journalist pushes a cream pie into the face of His Divine Fatness and gets his skull cracked open by two disciples" in Penthouse. July 1974, pp. 98-100, 137-138, 146, 148, 150-151.
  59. Baxter, Ernie "The multi-million dollar religion ripoff" in Argosy No. 380. August 1974, pp. 72, 77-81.
  60. Dart, John. "Maharaj Ji Buys $400,000 Home Base in Malibu Area" in Los Angeles Times. November 27, 1974, p. B2. At L.A. Times Archives
    Lede
    The 16-year-old Guru Maharaj Ji, the Indian-born "perfect master" who claims six million devotees worldwide, has moved his home to the Malibu foothills, it was announced Tuesday.
  61. "Maharaj Ji, Guru" in Current Biography Yearbook: 1974. H. W. Wilson Company, p. 254 ff. At Google Book Search
  62. Frazier, Deborah. "Growing Pile of Unpaid Bills Beneath Guru's Spiritual Bliss" in Sunday Journal and Star (UPI). Lincoln, Nebraska, March 23, 1975, p. 11A
  63. Riches Called Goal of Divine Light in Winnipeg Free Press (CP). March 24, 1975.
  64. "Mother Ousts Young Guru as Playboy" in Los Angeles Times. April 1, 1975, p. 2. At L.A. Times archives
    Lede
    The mother of Guru Maharaj Ji. the 17-year-old Indian religious leader now living in Malibu, Calif., with an American wife, renounce her son today and accused him of being a playboy instead of a holy man.

    Note: the next day, the Los Angeles Times returned to the issue: Mother Ousts 'playboy' Guru (p. 6A)CALLS MAHARAJ JI A PLAYBOY: Mother Ousts Guru, 17 (p. D1)

  65. Belkind, Myron L. "Guru's mother rejects him as religion chief" in Independent/Press-Telegram (AP). Long Beach, April 2, 1975, p. 9
  66. "Guru Tries to Take Control of Mission" in the Ruston Daily Leader, April 9, 1975.
  67. "Court Halts Heiress' Money Gift To Guru" in Charleston Daily Mail (API). April 18, 1975.
  68. "Guru Maharaj Ji: Pizza, Sports Cars and Millions of Followers" in Mansfield News Journal (UPI). July 14, 1975.
  69. Rawat, Prem et al. The Sayings of Guru Maharaj Ji (Vol. 3; Part IV). Divine United Organization, Shri Sant Yogashram, Hans Marg, Mehrauli, New Delhi - 110030, 1975.
  70. "Maharaj Ji Wins Fight For Mission" in The Washington Post. February 2, 1976, p. C7. At washingtonpost.com
  71. Cornell, George W. "Group Led by Teen Guru Toning Down Eastern Style" in Albuquerque Journal. March 3, 1976
  72. "Spiritual group's claims, practices are changing" in Evening Capital (AP). March 6, 1976
    Lede
    The asserted change comes amid extensive criticism of various novel spiritual groups including that of Maharaj Ji, from ex-members and parents, but Anctil says the opposition isn't what caused the reforms. "We're maturing," he said. "It's evolution."
  73. Mishler, Bob; Frazier, Debbie (UPI: interviewer). "Part of the mainstream" in The Golden Age No. 29. May 1976, p. 8 ff.
    Lede
    Recently Bob Mishler, President of Divine Light Mission, recorded an interview with Debbie Frazier of the United Press International Wire Service. The interview gives a good idea of the recent change and growth within DLM, so we've printed some excerpts from it here.
  74. Thurmond, Strom (United States Congress senator). Prem Rawat's Inspirational Message to the United States Citizen's Congress. US Congressional Record, July 20, 1976.
  75. Messer, Jeanne. "Guru Maharaj Ji and the Divine Light Mission", in The New Religious Consciousness by Charles Y. Glock and Robert N. Bellah, editors. University of California Press, Berkeley, California, 1976, pp. 52-72
  76. Moberg, David O. (1978). "Review of The New Religious Consciousness". American Journal of Sociology. 83 (4): 1074–1077. doi:10.1086/226672. JSTOR 2777756.
  77. Élan Vital by Divine Light Mission. U.S., 1977–early 1980s, ISSN 0195-2145
  78. "Guru Maharaj Ji becomes a citizen of the U.S." in Rocky Mountain News. Denver, Colorado, U.S.A., Wednesday, October 19, 1977
  79. Como, Don (dir.); Donovan (music); Rennie Davis; Prem Rawat; et al. Aliens from Spaceship Earth. U.S., 1977. At IMDb
  80. Stoner, Carroll; Parke, Jo Anne. All Gods Children: The Cult Experience - Salvation Or Slavery?. Radnor, Pa: Chilton, 1977, ISBN 0-8019-6620-5.
  81. Foss, Daniel A.; Larkin, Ralph W. (1978). "Worshiping the Absurd: The Negation of Social Causality among the Followers of Guru Maharaj Ji". Sociological Analysis. 39 (2): 157–164. doi:10.2307/3710215. JSTOR 3710215.
  82. Rawat, Prem. The Living Master: quotes from Guru Maharaj Ji. Denver: Divine Light Mission, 1978.
  83. Collier, Sophia. Soul Rush: The Odyssey of a Young Woman of the '70s. New York, William Morrow & Co., 1978, ISBN 0-688-03276-1
  84. Pilarzyk, Thomas (1978). "The Origin, Development, and Decline of a Youth Culture Religion: An Application of Sectarianization Theory". Review of Religious Research. 20 (1): 23–43. doi:10.2307/3509939. JSTOR 3509939.
  85. Forster, Mark. "Firm Loyalty: Guru's Sect: Misgivings in Malibu" and "Malibu Guru Maintains Following Despite Rising Mistrust of Cults" in Los Angeles Times. January 12, 1979, p. A1, 3. At L.A. Times Archives
  86. Mishler, Bob; Tesler, Gary (interviewer). Bob Mishler Radio Interview. KOA radio station, Denver, Colorado, February 12, 1979
  87. ^ Brown, Chip. "Parents Versus Cult: Frustration, Kidnaping, Tears; A Question of Will: Law-Abiding Couple ... Who Became Kidnapers to Rescue Daughter from Her Guru" in The Washington Post. February 15, 1982, p. A1. At washingtonpost.com
    Quotation
    In addition to his ulcer, the Perfect Master who held the secret to peace and spiritual happiness 'had tremendous problems of anxiety which he combatted with alcohol,' Mishler said in a Denver radio interview in February 1979.
  88. Downton, James V., Jr. Sacred journeys: The conversion of young Americans to Divine Light Mission. Columbia University Press, 1979, ISBN 0-231-04198-5
  89. Kemeny, Jim (1979). "Comment: On Foss, Daniel A. and Ralph W. Larkin. 1978. 'Worshiping the Absurd: The Negation of Social Causality among the Followers of Guru Maharaj Ji.' 'Sociological Analysis' 39, 2: 157-164". Sociological Analysis. 40 (3): 262–264. doi:10.2307/3710245. JSTOR 3710245.
  90. Nelson, G. K. (1979). "A Comment on Pilarzyk's Article 'The Origin, Development and Decline of a Youth Culture Religion' (RRR, Fall, 1978)". Review of Religious Research. 21 (1): 108–109. doi:10.2307/3510159. JSTOR 3510159.
  91. Pilarzyk, Thomas (1979). "The Cultic Resilience of the Divine Light Mission: A Reply to Nelson". Review of Religious Research. 21 (1): 109–112. doi:10.2307/3510160. JSTOR 3510160.
  92. Price, Maeve (May 1979). "The Divine Light Mission as a Social Organization". The Sociological Review. 27 (2): 279–296. doi:10.1111/j.1467-954X.1979.tb00335.x. S2CID 144659402. INIST 12681125.
  93. Buckley, Peter; Galanter, Marc (September 1979). "Mystical experience, spiritual knowledge, and a contemporary ecstatic religion". British Journal of Medical Psychology. 52 (3): 281–289. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8341.1979.tb02527.x. PMID 486374.
  94. Davis, Ivor. "Malibu opposes plan to build heliport for Divine Light guru" in The Times. December 19, 1979, p. 12.
  95. Rawat, Prem. Light Reading. Miami Beach, Florida: Divine Light Mission, 1980.
  96. Rudin, James A. & Marcia R. Prison or Paradise?: The New Religious Cults. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1980, ISBN 0-8006-0637-X, p. 63-65
  97. Robbins, Thomas; Anthony, Dick (1980). "The Limits of 'Coercive Persuasion' as an Explanation for Conversion to Authoritarian Sects". Political Psychology. 2 (2): 22–37. doi:10.2307/3790815. JSTOR 3790815.
  98. Stones, Christopher R.; Philbrick, Joseph L. (December 1980). "Purpose in Life in South Africa: A Comparison of American and South African Beliefs". Psychological Reports. 47 (3): 739–742. doi:10.2466/pr0.1980.47.3.739. S2CID 144573253.
  99. Aagaard, Johannes (1980). "Who Is Who In Guruism?". Update: A Quarterly Journal on New Religious Movements Vol. IV No. 3. Dialogcentret. Archived from the original on December 6, 2008. Retrieved July 7, 2008.
  100. Kriegman, Daniel. A Psycho-social Study of Religious Cults From the Perspective of Self Psychology, Appendix A: "The Guru Mahara Ji Group: An experiential description: the journey to God". Boston University, pp. 164-188 (references: pp. 218-220)
  101. Downton, James V. (1980). "An Evolutionary Theory of Spiritual Conversion and Commitment: The Case of Divine Light Mission". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 19 (4): 381–396. doi:10.2307/1386132. JSTOR 1386132.
  102. (in Dutch) Lammers, Jos. "Het concern van Guru Maharaj ji: Vijf jaar zakenman in dienst van de verlichting" in Haagse Post Vol. 68 No. 7. 1981-02-14, pp. 48-53.
  103. "1-Year Trial OKd for Sect's Helipad" in Los Angeles Times. May 22, 1981, p. F6. At L.A. Times Archives
  104. Dotter v. Maine Employment Sec. Commission, Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 435 A.2d 1368, argued March 2, 1981 - decided October 19, 1981. Web copy at Wikisource
  105. McGuire, Meredith B. Religion: the Social Context. Belmont California : Wadsworth Publishing, fifth edition, 2002, ISBN 0-534-54126-7, Ch. 5 "The Dynamics of Religious Collectivities", section "How Religious Collectivities Develop and Change", sub-section "Organizational Transformations", p. 175. first edition of this book was 1981, ISBN 0-534-00951-4
  106. Robbins, Thomas; Anthony, Dick (1982). "Deprogramming, Brainwashing and the Medicalization of Deviant Religious Groups". Social Problems. 29 (3): 283–297. doi:10.2307/800160. JSTOR 800160.
  107. Schwartz, Lita Linzer; Kaslow, Florence W. (June 7, 1982). "The Cult Phenomenon: Historical, Sociological, and Familial Factors Contributing to Their Development and Appeal". Marriage & Family Review. 4 (3–4): 3–30. doi:10.1300/J002v04n03_02.
  108. Robbins, Thomas; Anthony, Dick (June 7, 1982). "Cults, Culture, and Community". Marriage & Family Review. 4 (3–4): 57–79. doi:10.1300/J002v04n03_05.
  109. Ottenberg, Donald J. (June 7, 1982). "Therapeutic Community and the Danger of the Cult Phenomenon". Marriage & Family Review. 4 (3–4): 151–173. doi:10.1300/J002v04n03_11.
  110. (in Dutch) Schnabel, Paul. Tussen stigma en charisma: nieuwe religieuze bewegingen en geestelijke volksgezondheid ("Between stigma and charisma: new religious movements and mental health"). Van Loghum Slaterus, Deventer (Netherlands), 1982, ISBN 90-6001-746-3. On-line version in Digital library for Dutch literature (2007): Ch. II p. 32, Ch. III A.1 p. 53, Ch. IV C p. 99, 101-102, Ch. V p. 142.
    Quotations
    (p. 53) ... de voor Nederland relevante cijfers ... begin 1981 ... ... numbers relevant for the Netherlands ... early 1981 ...
    1. Divine Light Mission - naar schatting hoogstens nog 150 aanhangers in Nederland, waarvan in 1980 ongeveer 15 in communaal verband leven. De beweging lijkt op zijn retour. 1. Divine Light Mission - estimated at most 150 adherents remaining for the Netherlands, of which in 1980 approximately 15 lived in a community setting. The movement appears to be over the hill.
    (p. 99) De meest zuivere voorbeelden van charismatisch leiderschap zijn op dit moment wel Bhagwan en Maharaj Ji. Daaruit blijkt meteen al hoe persoonlijke kwaliteiten alleen onvoldoende zijn voor de erkenning van het charismatisch leiderschap. De intelligente, steeds wisselende en dagelijks optredende Bhagwan is niet meer een charismatisch leider dan de verwende materialistische en intellectueel weinig opmerkelijke Maharaj Ji. Als charismatisch leider hebben beiden overigens wel een eigen publiek en een eigen functie. The purest examples of charismatic leadership are at this moment, still, Bhagwan and Maharaj Ji. This shows immediately that personal qualities alone are insufficient for the recognition of the charismatic leadership. The intelligent, ever-changing Bhagwan who gives daily performances is not more a charismatic leader than the pampered materialistic and intellectually quite unremarkable Maharaj Ji. As charismatic leaders, they, by the way, both have their own audience and their own function.
    (p. 101-102) Tegelijkertijd betekent dit echter ook, dat charismatisch leiderschap als zodanig tot op grote hoogte ensceneerbaar is. Maharaj Ji is daar een voorbeeld van. In zekere zin gaat het hier om geroutiniseerd charisma (erfopvolging), maar voor de volgelingen in Amerika en Europa geldt dat toch nauwelijks: zij waren bereid in juist hem te geloven en er was rond Maharaj Ji een hele organisatie die dat geloof voedde en versterkte. At the same time, this means however that charismatic leadership, as such, can also to a high degree be staged. Maharaj Ji is an example of this. Certainly, Maharaj Ji's leadership can be seen as routinized charisma (hereditary succession), but for the followers in America and Europe this is hardly significant: they were prepared to have faith specifically in him and Maharaj Ji was embedded in a whole organisation that fed and reinforced that faith.
    (Ch. V: reference texts by Jan van der Lans quoted by Schnabel)
    • Lans, Jan van der. "Religious Experience: An Argument for a multidisciplinary approach" in Annual Review of the Social Sciences of Religion 1, 1977, pp. 133-143.
    • Lans, Jan van der. Volgelingen van de goeroe: Hedendaagse religieuze bewegingen in Nederland. Ambo, Baarn, 1981, ISBN 90-263-0521-4.
  111. "Whatever Happened to Guru Maharaj Ji?" in Hinduism Today by Himalayan Academy, United States, ISSN 0896-0801, October 1983. Web copy at hinduismtoday.com
  112. Derks, Frans; Jan M. van der Lans. "Subgroups in Divine Light Mission Membership: A Comment on Downton" in Of Gods and Men: New Religious Movements in the West : proceedings of the 1981 Annual Conference of the British Sociological Association, Sociology of Religion Study Group by Eileen Barker (ed.) Macon, GA : Mercer University Press, 1984, ISBN 0-86554-095-0 pp. 303-308
  113. (in French) Chagnon, Roland. Trois nouvelles religions de la lumière et du son: la Science de la spiritualité, Eckankar, la Mission de la lumière divine. Montréal: Éd. Paulines and Paris: Médiaspaul, 1985, ISBN 2-89039-985-0.
  114. Champion, Françoise (1986). "Chagnon (Roland) Trois nouvelles religions de la lumière et du son: La Science de la spiritualité, Eckankar, La Mission de la Lumière Divine". Archives de sciences sociales des religions. 62 (2): 242.
  115. Kriegman, Daniel; Solomon, Leonard (April 1985). "Cult Groups and the Narcissistic Personality: The Offer to Heal Defects in the Self". International Journal of Group Psychotherapy. 35 (2): 239–261. doi:10.1080/00207284.1985.11491415. PMID 4008134.
  116. Pasternak, Judy. "Maharaji Denied in Bid to Triple Copter Use" in Los Angeles Times. July 7, 1985, p. 1. At L.A. Times Archives
  117. Lans, Jan M. van der; Derks, Frans. "Premies Versus Sannyasins Archived 2008-02-13 at the Wayback Machine" in Update: A Quarterly Journal on New Religious Movements by Dialogcentret, Vol. X No. 2. June 14, 1986.
    Abstract
    It is argued that Divine Light Mission and Rajneeshism are excellent examples of early and late post-movement groups (Foss & Larkin, 1978). Rajneeshism’s stance towards the dominant culture is much more radical. Its ideology not only implies a resection of the socially accepted means to find "truth," it also disclaims the final product of those means, that is, the content of socially accepted truth. Divine Light Mission’s ideology mainly deals with the means employed to come to "knowledge." Consequently, it is hypothesized that both movements will recruit their members from different populations. Although an inspection of personal characteristics in terms of age, education, religious background, and time of seekership shows no difference, it is found that premies' pre-conversion seeking proceeded mostly along paths of individual experiences, while sannyasins had been seeking more along interpersonal paths. Additional differences concern the evaluation of pre-adolescent family life, especially personal religious experiences during childhood.
  118. DuPertuis, Lucy (1986). "How People Recognize Charisma: The Case of Darshan in Radhasoami and Divine Light Mission". Sociological Analysis. 47 (2): 111–124. doi:10.2307/3711456. JSTOR 3711456.
  119. "New Hindu Religious Movements in India" by Arvind Sharma, in New Religious Movements and Rapid Social Change by James A. Beckford. Unesco/Sage Publications: London, 1986, ISBN 0-8039-8003-5, p. 224
  120. Galanter, Marc. Cults: Faith, Healing and Coercion. Oxford University Press, May 4, 1989, ISBN 0-19-505631-0. Second edition: 1999, ISBN 0-19-512369-7ISBN 0-19-512370-0
  121. Favazza, Armando (June 2002). "Cults: Faith, Healing, and Coercion, 2nd ed". American Journal of Psychiatry. 159 (6): 1074–1075. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.159.6.1074.
  122. Tucker, Ruth A. Another Gospel: Cults, Alternative Religions, and the New Age Movement U.S., Zondervan, 2004, ISBN 0-310-25937-1 (first edition was 1989 ISBN 0-310-40440-1), p. 320, p. 364-365
    From publisher's presentation Archived September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
    Ruth A. Tucker's book is a comprehensive survey of all the major alternative religions in the United States, including the new groups since the 1960s
  123. Björkqvist, Kaj. "World-rejection, world-affirmation, and goal displacement: some aspects of change in three new religious movements of Hindu origin" in Encounter with India: Studies in Neohinduism edited by Nils G. Holm. Finland, Åbo Akademi, 1990, ISBN 951-649-731-4, pp. 79-99
  124. McIlwain, Doris J. F. Impatient for paradise: a rites of passage model of the role of the psychological predispositions in determining differential openness to involvement in new religious movements. PhD Doctorate, University of Sydney, 1990. At Sydney eScholarship Repository (June 2006)
  125. Melton, J. Gordon. "Guru Maharaj Ji" in Religious Leaders of America: A Biographical Guide to Founders and Leaders of Religious Bodies, Churches, and Spiritual Groups in North America. Detroit, Michigan, Gale, 1991, pp. 285-286; Second edition: Gale Group, 1999, ISBN 0-8103-8878-2; Reproduced in Biography Resource Center Archived July 20, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, Gale, 2008
  126. Juergensmeyer, Mark. Radhasoami Reality: The Logic of a Modern Faith. Princeton University Press, 1996, ISBN 0-691-01092-7, pp. 206-207. First edition was 1991, ISBN 0-691-07378-3
    Publisher's description
    In this book, Mark Juergensmeyer seeks to explain why the religious logic of Radhasoami, which is based on the teachings of medieval Hindu saints, is so compelling to hundreds of thousands of businessmen, intellectuals, office managers, and other urban professionals in North India. Juergensmeyer addresses the perplexing relationship between modernity and religious faith and examines it from historical, sociological, and phenomenological points of view.
  127. Mangalwadi, Vishal and Hoeksema, Kurt. The world of gurus: a critical look at the philosophies of India’s influential gurus and mystics. Cornerstone Pr Chicago, revised edition (1992), ISBN 0-940895-03-X, pp. 137-138
  128. "Elan Vital" in Religious Requirements and Practices of Certain Selected Groups: A Handbook for Chaplains by The Institute for the Study of American Religion (J. Gordon Melton, Project Director - James R. Lewis, Senior Research Associate). 1993. At Internet Archive: MS Word documenttext format
    From the introduction of the chapter on Sikh/Sant Mat Groups
    one Sant Mat group which had separated itself from the tradition in India enjoyed great success in the West in the 1970s as the Divine Light Mission under the then‑youthful Guru Maharaj Ji. That group has recently assumed a very low profile and changed its name to Elan Vital.
  129. Barbour, John D. Versions of Deconversion: Autobiography and the Loss of Faith. University of Virginia Press, 1994, ISBN 0-8139-1546-5, p. 170 ff. Presentation and limited preview at Google Books
  130. (in French) Gest, Alain et al. N° 2468: Rapport Fait au nom de la commission d'enquête sur les sectes, Ch. I.B: "Un phénomène difficile à mesurer. France: National Assembly, Parliamentary Commission on Cults (1995), December 22, 1995, p. 14 ff.
  131. Melton, J. Gordon. "Maharaj Ji, Guru" in Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. 4th edition, Gale, p. 803; 5th edition, Thomson Gale, 2000, ISBN 0-8103-8570-8; Reproduced in Biography Resource Center, Gale, 2008.
  132. Winter, Mark et al. The Divine Times: Special Edition July 17, 1996. July 17, 1996
  133. Scheer, Robert. "How I Was Stood Up by the Venusians: Even a brief encounter with a cult's absurdity reveals its power to attract" in Los Angeles Times. April 1, 1997, p. 7. At L.A. Times Archives
    Quotation
    there was one time when I got to cover God and experienced the full rapture of tens of thousands of believers cast suddenly into his presence here on Earth. That was at a weeklong encampment at the Houston Astrodome in 1973, when God appeared as a chubby and giggly 13-year-old Indian named Guru Mahara Ji. I was following the guru because he was rapidly making celebrity converts, including Rennie Davis, then well-known as a defendant in the Chicago Seven trial.
  134. ^ Jones, Rebecca. "Former Guru on a Different Mission" in Rocky Mountain News, Denver, Colorado, January 30, 1998 Available via HighBeam Research
    Quotation
    For an extensive backgrounder on , his successes and his foibles, check out the Web site www.ex-premie.org.
  135. ^ Hassan, Steve et al. Elan Vital page at Steven Alan Hassan's Freedom of Mind Center Archived October 17, 2006, at the Wayback Machine website. Accessed August 9, 2008.
  136. ^ "Blinded by the Light" in Good Weekend, Sydney, Australia, August 31, 2002, pp. 38-42.
    Lede
    Back in 1972, John Macgregor fell under the spell of Guru Maharaji, a plump 14-year-old who promised – and for a while delivered – divine peace of mind. The former follower recalls, on the eve of Maharaji’s latest Australian visit, his 28-year journey to disillusionment.
    Quotation
    In 1996, Canadian lawyer and ex-premie Jim Heller was cruising the early cult newsgroups on the Internet, looking for some mention of Maharaji. Nothing. Then, slowly, other ex-premies materialised, including one who happened to have web design skills: www.ex-premie.org was born. As bits of information – recollections, documents, photos – trickled into the web site from all over the world, an entirely new picture of the Perfect Master began to emerge.

    As Heller argues, "Without , I’d have been just another guy with some quirky past who, if I was lucky, might get a chance to hash it all out in an airport bar with some other former comrade 20 years down the line. But the Net has spurred us all on to being cold-case detectives – scrutinising our collective past with the benefit of maturity, hindsight and relief from the information-deprivation all cults seem to thrive on."

  137. "Working the web: Cults" in The Guardian, Technology news & features section, p. 4. London, UK, February 13, 2003.
    Quotation
    Remember the Divine Light Mission? Recovering members can be seen licking their wounds at www.ex-premie.org
  138. ^ '"Premies" Complain to Google of "Ex-Premie.org" site' by Chilling Effects, 2003.
  139. ^ Geaves, Ron (March 1, 2004). "From Divine Light Mission to Elan Vital and Beyond: An Exploration of Change and Adaptation". Nova Religio. 7 (3): 45–62. doi:10.1525/nr.2004.7.3.45.
  140. ^ Mather, George; Nichols, Larry A.; Schmidt, Alvin J. "Elan Vital / Divine Light Mission" in Encyclopedic Dictionary of Cults, Sects, and World Religions: Revised and Updated Edition. Zondervan, August 1, 2006, ISBN 0-310-23954-0
    Quotation
    www.ex-premie.org (a website of Maharaji's ex-followers)
  141. ^ Metz, Cade. "Misplaced Pages ruled by 'Lord of the Universe'" in The Register. February 6, 2008
  142. Lewis, James R. Cults : A Reference Handbook. ABC-Clio, Contemporary World Issues series, 1998: ISBN 1-57607-031-X – 2005: ISBN 1-85109-618-3, pp. 84-85, 121-122, 286-287, 307-308. At Google Book Search
  143. Richardson, James T. "Divine Light Mission" in Encyclopedia of Religion and Society (William H. Swatos, Jr., ed.). Rowman Altamira, 1998, ISBN 0-7619-8956-0, p. 141. Web copy at Hartford Institute for Religion Research website
  144. Melton, J. Gordon. "Brainwashing and the Cults: The Rise and Fall of a Theory" in forthcoming The Brainwashing Controversy: An Anthology of Essential Documents edited by J. Gordon Melton and Massimo Introvigne. CESNUR, 1999. At CESNUR website
  145. Abgrall, Jean-Marie. Soul Snatchers: The Mechanics of Cults (English translation of La mécanique des sectes). New York, Algora Publishing, 2000, ISBN 1-892941-04-X p. 285
  146. Rhodes, Ron The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions: The Essential Guide to Their History, Their Doctrine, and Our Response. Zondervan, 2001, ISBN 0-310-23217-1, pp. 32, 170.
  147. Barrett, David V. The New Believers: Sects, 'Cults' and Alternative Religions. Cassell, 2001–2003, ISBN 0-304-35592-5ISBN 1-84403-040-7, p. 65 & p. 325-329: Part Two: Alternative Religions & Other Groups, Ch. 14: Eastern Movements in the West, Elan Vital.
    Presentation on dedicated website
    The New Believers covers the origin, history, beliefs, practices and controversies of 60+ new religious movements, including the Family (formerly the Children of God), International Church of Christ, Osho (Rajneesh), New Kadampa Tradition, Wicca, Druidry, Chaos Magick, Scientology etc.

    The New Believers incorporates the fully revised, updated and much-expanded text of the author’s well-received Sects, "Cults" & Alternative Religions (1996), plus much more, with ten completely new chapters including:

    • Is it a cult, or a real religion?—The problem of definition
    • Sects appeal—Conversion, recruitment, mind control or brainwashing?
    • Would you let your daughter marry one?—Problems for families of members
    • Cults that kill—How, why, and can it happen again?
    • Watching the watchers—The variety of cult experts

    plus a major case study, "Schism in a Sect", on the Worldwide Church of God and its many offshoots; addresses and websites of every movement in the book; and dozens of rarely seen photographs.

    Detailed, authoritative, challenging and often controversial, The New Believers is essential reading for anyone with a personal or professional interest in sects, “cults” and new religions and their effects on members and their families.

  148. Kent, Stephen A. From Slogans to Mantras: Social Protest and Religious Conversion in the Late Vietnam War Era. Syracuse University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8156-2923-0 ISBN 0-8156-2948-6. At Syracuse University Press
    Publisher's summary
    This book takes a provocative look at the early 1970s—an often overlooked yet colorful period when the Vietnam War and student protests were on the wane as new religious groups grew in size and visibility.

    Description

    Certainly, religious strains were evident through postwar popular culture from the 1950s Beat generation into the 1960s drug counterculture, but the explosion of nontraditional religions during the early 1970s was unprecedented. This phenomenon took place in the United States (and at the edges of American-influenced Canadian society) among young people who had been committed to bringing about what they called "the revolution" but were converting to a wide variety of Eastern and Western mystical and spiritual movements.

    Stephen Kent maintains that the failure of political activism led former radicals to become involved with groups such as the Hare Krishnas, Scientology, Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church, the Jesus movement, and the Children of God. Drawing on scholarly literature, alternative press reportage, and personal narratives, Kent shows how numerous activists turned from psychedelia and political activism to guru worship and spiritual quest as a response to the failures of social protest—and as a new means of achieving societal change.

  149. Words of Peace (US site)
  150. "eu/en site". Archived from the original on September 21, 2008. Retrieved August 7, 2008.
  151. Rawat, Prem. Clarity. The Prem Rawat Foundation, 2003, ISBN 0-9740627-1-5
  152. "Maharaj Ji" in The Houghton Mifflin Dictionary of Biography. U.S., 2003, ISBN 0-618-25210-X, p. 994
  153. Jackson, Sally. "Court lets 'cult' gag journalist" in The Australian. March 11, 2004, p. 21.
  154. O’Regan, Mick (host); Macgregor, John; et al. "Suppression Orders & the Media" in The Media Report on ABC Radio National. Australia, March 18, 2004. Transcript at ABC website Archived September 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  155. Thomas, Hedley. "Peace at a price" in The Courier-Mail. Australia, April 24, 2004, p. 35.
    Lede
    Thousands of devotees mill about the tent sites pitched for an international love-in with the Maharaji. But, as Hedley Thomas tells, there are unhappy campers trying to bring the affluent peace guru down a peg or two
  156. Words of Peace by Prem Rawat receives TV Award in Brazil by The Prem Rawat Foundation
  157. Rawat, Prem; Wolf, Burt (interviewer). Inner Journey: A Spirited Conversation About Self-discovery. The Prem Rawat Foundation, 2005, ASIN B000EDUGI4, OCLC 85767576. Video excerpts at tprf.org
  158. Rawat, Prem. Maharaji at Thamamssat University. May 17, 2005. At Wikisource
  159. "US names June 16 after Indian." in Times of India June 30, 2005
  160. "About Us". Raj Vidya Kender. 2006. Archived from the original on May 14, 2008. Retrieved July 7, 2008.
  161. Geaves, Ron. "Globalization, charisma, innovation, and tradition: An exploration of the transformations in the organisational vehicles for the transmission of the teachings of Prem Rawat (Maharaji)" in Journal of Alternative Spiritualities and New Age Studies Vol. 2. UK, 2006, ISBN 978-1-4196-2696-8, pp. 44-62. "Online version at the "Alternative Spiritualities and New Age Studies Association" website" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on June 27, 2008. Retrieved June 14, 2008.
  162. Geaves, Ron. "From Guru Maharaj Ji to Prem Rawat: Paradigm Shifts over the Period of Forty Years as a "Master" (1966-2006)" in Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America by Eugene V. Gallagher and W. Michael Ashcraft (eds.) US, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006, ISBN 0-275-98712-4, Vol. IV: Asian Traditions, pp. 63-84
  163. "Prem Rawat's "Words of Peace" Receives Brazilian TV Award". The Prem Rawat Foundation. December 20, 2006. Retrieved July 7, 2008.
  164. Cagan, Andrea. Peace is Possible: The Life and Message of Prem Rawat. Mighty River Press, U.S., January 2007, ISBN 0-9788694-9-4, OCLC 123014238. Preview at publisher's website
    Quotation (from author's note)
    when I discovered that Maharaji rarely stayed in one place for more than a few days at a stretch, the concept of personal interviews with him to gather information seemed impractical and next to impossible. So, in preparation for this book, I decided to interview those who knew him well, and I met with everyone from his cook to his photographer, from his friends to his lifelong students. I taped conversations, I watched DVDs, and I read his talks that have been meticulously saved for posterity. Finally, after reviewing thousands of pages of interviews and media clippings, watching many of his taped addresses, and speaking to a multitude of people who knew him during different phases of his life, a picture began to emerge.
  165. Mendick, Robert. "Cult leader gives cash to Lord Mayor appeal" in Evening Standard. London, 2007-05-31, p. 4. At HighBeam Research
  166. Rawat, Prem et al. Prem Rawat at Guildhall, London. June 1, 2007. Transcript (excerpt) at tprf.org
    Publisher's presentation
    Prem Rawat was the keynote speaker at a gala event called "Giving From The Heart", hosted by the Lord Mayor of the City of London, England at Guildhall in honor of The Prem Rawat Foundation's contribution to Voluntary Service Overseas' efforts in Mozambique. The event was attended by government and civic leaders, diplomats, and members of the international media.
  167. Rossiter, Joe. "Patrick Halley: Outgoing reporter lived colorful life" in Detroit Free Press. November 25, 2007
  168. Mendick, Robert. "Guru followers asked to target Gandhi party" in Evening Standard (November 30, 2007) and Gulf Times (December 2, 2007). At HighBeam Research (Evening Standard)At Gulf Times website
  169. Rawat, Prem; Robles, Marta (interviewer). Journey Within: a conversation between journalist Marta Robles and Prem Rawat, Barcelona, Spain. The Prem Rawat Foundation, 2007. Video excerpts at tprf.org
    Publisher's presentation
    An hour-long conversation between Prem Rawat and journalist Marta Robles. Ms. Robles has been one of the most popular anchors and show hosts on Spanish radio and television for more than 15 years. Prem Rawat has traveled the world for more than four decades, inspiring people to find peace within.
  170. Bromley, David G. Teaching New Religious Movements (Aar Teaching Religious Studies Series, American Academy of Religion). 2007, ISBN 0-19-517729-0

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